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<strong>Routledge</strong> <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, <strong>Volume</strong> <strong>VIII</strong>Continental philosophy, as it has emerged in the twentieth century, is less a seamlessfabric than a patchwork <strong>of</strong> diverse strands. Phenomenology, hermeneutics, existentialism,structuralism, critical theory, deconstruction—these are some <strong>of</strong> the salient movementswhich have developed in continental Europe between 1900 and the 1990s, though theirinfluence is by no means confined to geographical location. Continental thought hasproved highly exportable, circulating far beyond the frontiers <strong>of</strong> Europe to provokestrong responses in the intellectual world at large.The fourteen articles in this volume outline and assess some <strong>of</strong> the issues andexperiments <strong>of</strong> continental philosophy. The first five span the twin movements <strong>of</strong>phenomenology and existentialism, running from Husserl and Heidegger to Sartre,Merleau-Ponty and Levinas. Subsequent essays deal with specific currents <strong>of</strong> continentalthought in such areas as science, Marxism, linguistics, politics, aesthetics, feminism andhermeneutics. A final chapter on postmodernism highlights the manner in which so manyconcerns <strong>of</strong> continental thought culminate in a radical anti-foundationalism.This volume provides a broad, scholarly introduction to this period for students <strong>of</strong>philosophy and related disciplines, as well as some original interpretations <strong>of</strong> theseauthors. It includes a glossary <strong>of</strong> technical terms and a chronological table <strong>of</strong>philosophical, scientific and other cultural events.Richard Kearney is a Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> at University College, Dublin and aVisiting Pr<strong>of</strong>essor at Boston College. He is the author <strong>of</strong> Poetics <strong>of</strong> Modernity (1994),Poetics <strong>of</strong> Imagining (1991), The Wake <strong>of</strong> Imagination (1988), Modern Movements inEuropean <strong>Philosophy</strong> (1986) and Dialogues with Contemporary Continental Thinkers(1984).


<strong>Routledge</strong> <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>General editors—G.H.R.Parkinson and S.G.ShankerThe <strong>Routledge</strong> <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> provides a chronological survey <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong>Western philosophy, from its beginnings in the sixth century BC to the present time. Itdiscusses all major philosophical developments in depth. Most space is allocated to thoseindividuals who, by common consent, are regarded as great philosophers. But lesserfigures have not been neglected, and together the ten volumes <strong>of</strong> the <strong>History</strong> includebasic and critical information about every significant philosophy <strong>of</strong> the past and present.These philosophers are clearly situated within the cultural and, in particular, the scientificcontext <strong>of</strong> their time.The <strong>History</strong> is intended not only for the specialist, but also for the student and the generalreader. Each chapter is by an acknowledged authority in the field. The chapters arewritten in an accessible style and a glossary <strong>of</strong> technical terms is provided in eachvolume.


<strong>Routledge</strong> <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong><strong>Volume</strong> <strong>VIII</strong>Twentieth-CenturyContinental <strong>Philosophy</strong>EDITED BYRichard KearneyLondon and New York


First published 1994by <strong>Routledge</strong>11 New Fetter Lane, London EC4P 4EESimultaneously published in the USA and Canadaby <strong>Routledge</strong>29 West 35th Street, New York, NY 10001<strong>Routledge</strong> is an imprint <strong>of</strong> the Taylor & Francis GroupThis edition published in the Taylor & Francis e-Library, 2005.“To purchase your own copy <strong>of</strong> this or any <strong>of</strong> Taylor & Francis or <strong>Routledge</strong>’scollection <strong>of</strong> thousands <strong>of</strong> eBooks please go to www.eBookstore.tandf.co.uk.”© 1994 Richard Kearney and individual contributorsAll rights reserved. No part <strong>of</strong> this book may be reprinted or reproduced orutilized in any form or by any electronic, mechanical, or other means, nowknown or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in anyinformation storage or retrieval system, without permission in writing from thepublishers.British Library Cataloguing in Publication DataTwentieth-Century Continental <strong>Philosophy</strong>—<strong>Routledge</strong> <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>Series;Vol. 8I. Kearney, Richard190.9A catalogue record for this book is available from the British LibraryLibrary <strong>of</strong> Congress Cataloging-in-Publication DataTwentieth-century Continental philosophy/edited by Richard Kearney.p. cm.—(<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy: v. 8)Includes bibliographical references and index.1. <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Modern-20th century. 2. <strong>Philosophy</strong>, European.I. Kearney, Richard. II. Series.B804.T884 1994190’.9’04–dc2093–15763ISBN 0-203-03067-2 Master e-book ISBNISBN 0-203-06010-5 (Adobe ebook Reader Format)ISBN 0-415-05629-2 (Print Edition)


ContentsGeneral editor’s prefaceviNotes on contributorsviiiChronologyxiIntroductionRichard Kearney 11 The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology: Husserl and his predecessorsRichard Cobb-Stevens 52 <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 1: HeideggerJacques Taminiaux 323 <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 2: SartreThomas R.Flynn 614 <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 3: Merleau-PontyBernard Cullen 865 Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion: Marcel, Jaspers, LevinasWilliam Desmond 1086 Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science: Mach, Duhem, BachelardBabette E.Babich 1447 Philosophies <strong>of</strong> Marxism: Lenin, Lukács, Gramsci, AlthusserMichael Kelly 1848 Critical theory: Horkheimer, Adorno, HabermasDavid Rasmussen 2109 Hermeneutics: Gadamer and RicoeurG.B.Madison 24010 Italian idealism and after: Gentile, Croce and othersGiacomo Rinaldi 28911 French structuralism and after: de Saussure, Lévi-Strauss, Barthes,Lacan, FoucaultHugh J.Silverman 32212 French feminist philosophy: de Beauvoir, Kristeva, Irigaray, LeDoeuff, CixousAlison Ainley 33813 Deconstruction and DerridaSimon Critchley and Timothy Mooney 36514 Postmodernist theory: Lyotard, Baudrillard and othersThomas Docherty 392Glossary 418Index 423


General editors’ prefaceThe history <strong>of</strong> philosophy, as its name implies, represents a union <strong>of</strong> two very differentdisciplines, each <strong>of</strong> which imposes severe constraints upon the other. As an exercise inthe history <strong>of</strong> ideas, it demands that one acquire a ‘period eye’: a thorough understanding<strong>of</strong> how the thinkers whom it studies viewed the problems which they sought to resolve,the conceptual frameworks in which they addressed these issues, their assumptions andobjectives, their blind spots and miscues. But as an exercise in philosophy, we areengaged in much more than simply a descriptive task. There is a crucial aspect to ourefforts: we are looking for the cogency as much as the development <strong>of</strong> an argument, forits bearing on questions which continue to preoccupy us as much as the impact which itmay have had on the evolution <strong>of</strong> philosophical thought.The history <strong>of</strong> philosophy thus requires a delicate balancing act from its practitioners.We read these writings with the full benefit <strong>of</strong> hindsight. We can see why the minorcontributions remained minor and where the grand systems broke down: sometimes as aresult <strong>of</strong> internal pressures, sometimes because <strong>of</strong> a failure to overcome an insuperableobstacle, sometimes because <strong>of</strong> a dramatic technological or sociological change, and,quite <strong>of</strong>ten, because <strong>of</strong> nothing more than a shift in intellectual fashion or interests. Yet,because <strong>of</strong> our continuing philosophical concern with many <strong>of</strong> the same problems, wecannot afford to look dispassionately at these works. We want to know what lessons areto be learnt from the inconsequential or the glorious failures; many times we want toplead for a contemporary relevance in the overlooked theory or to reconsider whether the‘glorious failure’ was indeed such or simply ahead <strong>of</strong> its time: perhaps even ahead <strong>of</strong> itsauthor.We find ourselves, therefore, much like the mythical ‘radical translator’ who has s<strong>of</strong>ascinated modern philosophers, trying to understand author’s ideas in their and theirculture’s eyes, and at the same time, in our own. It can be a formidable task. Many timeswe fail in the historical undertaking because our philosophical interests are so strong, orlose sight <strong>of</strong> the latter because we are so enthralled by the former. But the nature <strong>of</strong>philosophy is such that we are compelled to master both techniques. For learning aboutthe history <strong>of</strong> philosophy is not just a challenging and engaging pastime: it is an essentialelement in learning about the nature <strong>of</strong> philosophy—in grasping how philosophy isintimately connected with and yet distinct from both history and science.The <strong>Routledge</strong> <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> provides a chronological survey <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong>Western philosophy, from its beginnings up to the present time. Its aim is to discuss allmajor philosophical developments in depth, and, with this in mind, most space has beenallocated to those individuals who, by common consent, are regarded as greatphilosophers. But lesser figures have not been neglected, and it is hoped that the readerwill be able to find, in the ten volumes <strong>of</strong> the <strong>History</strong>, at least basic information about anysignificant philosopher <strong>of</strong> the past or present.Philosophical thinking does not occur in isolation from other human activities, and this


<strong>History</strong> tries to situate philosophers within the cultural, and in particular the scientific,context <strong>of</strong> their time. Some philosophers, indeed, would regard philosophy as merelyancillary to the natural sciences; but even if this view is rejected, it can hardly be deniedthat the sciences have had a great influence on what is now regarded as philosophy, and itis important that this influence should be set forth clearly. Not that these volumes areintended to provide a mere record <strong>of</strong> the factors that influenced philosophical thinking;philosophy is a discipline with its own standards <strong>of</strong> argument, and the presentation <strong>of</strong> theways in which these arguments have developed is the main concern <strong>of</strong> this <strong>History</strong>.In speaking <strong>of</strong> ‘what is now regarded as philosophy’, we may have given theimpression that there now exists a single view <strong>of</strong> what philosophy is. This is certainly notthe case; on the contrary, there exist serious differences <strong>of</strong> opinion, among those who callthemselves philosophers, about the nature <strong>of</strong> their subject. These differences are reflectedin the existence at the present time <strong>of</strong> two main schools <strong>of</strong> thought, usually described as‘analytic’ and ‘continental’ philosophy respectively. It is not our intention, as generaleditors <strong>of</strong> this <strong>History</strong>, to take sides in this dispute. Our attitude is one <strong>of</strong> tolerance, andour hope is that these volumes will contribute to an understanding <strong>of</strong> how philosophershave reached the positions which they now occupy.One final comment. <strong>Philosophy</strong> has long been a highly technical subject, with its ownspecialized vocabulary. This <strong>History</strong> is intended not only for the specialist but also for thegeneral reader. To this end, we have tried to ensure that each chapter is written in anaccessible style; and since technicalities are unavoidable, a glossary <strong>of</strong> technical terms isprovided in each volume. In this way these volumes will, we hope, contribute to a widerunderstanding <strong>of</strong> a subject which is <strong>of</strong> the highest importance to all thinking people.G.H.R.ParkinsonS.G.Shanker


Notes on contributorsAlison Ainley is Lecturer in <strong>Philosophy</strong> at Anglia Polytechnic University, Cambridge,and author <strong>of</strong> a forthcoming book on Luce Irigaray.Babette Babich is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> at Fordham University, New York, andauthor <strong>of</strong> several studies on continental thought.Richard Cobb-Stevens is Head <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Philosophy</strong> Department at Boston College andauthor <strong>of</strong> James and Husserl (1974) and Husserl and Analytic <strong>Philosophy</strong> (1989).Simon Critchley is Lecturer in <strong>Philosophy</strong> at the University <strong>of</strong> Essex and author <strong>of</strong> TheEthics <strong>of</strong> Deconstruction (1992) and co-editor <strong>of</strong> Re-Reading Levinas (1991).Bernard Cullen is a Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> at Queen’s University, Belfast, editor <strong>of</strong> theIrish Philosophical Journal and author <strong>of</strong> Hegel and Political Theory.William Desmond is Chair <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> at Loyola College, Baltimore, visitingpr<strong>of</strong>essor at Louvain University and author <strong>of</strong> Desire, Dialectic and Otherness (1988),Art and the Absolute (1986) and <strong>Philosophy</strong> and its Others (1991).Thomas Docherty is Chair <strong>of</strong> the Department <strong>of</strong> English at Trinity College, Dublin andauthor <strong>of</strong> On Modern Authority (1987), Reading (Absent) Character (1983), JohnDonne, Undone (1986) and After Theory (1991).Thomas R.Flynn is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> at Emory University and author <strong>of</strong> severalstudies <strong>of</strong> modern continental thought.Michael Kelly is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> French at the University <strong>of</strong> South-hampton, and author <strong>of</strong>several books including Modern French Marxism (1982).Gary Madison is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> at McMaster University, Canada and founderdirector<strong>of</strong> the Canadian Society <strong>of</strong> Hermeneutics and Postmodern Thought. He is theauthor <strong>of</strong> Phénoménologie de Merleau-Ponty (1973), Understanding (1982), Logic <strong>of</strong>Liberty (1986) and Hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> Postmodernity (1988).Timothy Mooney is a Lecturer in <strong>Philosophy</strong> at University College, Dublin, and author<strong>of</strong> several studies <strong>of</strong> modern European thought.Mara Rainwater is a Lecturer in <strong>Philosophy</strong> at University College, Dublin. Her specialareas <strong>of</strong> interest include Critical Theory, Nietzsche, and Communicative Ethics.David Rasmussen is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> at Boston College, founder-editor <strong>of</strong> thejournal <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Social Criticism and author <strong>of</strong> Reading Habermas (1991).Giacomo Rinaldi is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> at the University <strong>of</strong> Urbino and an expert inGerman and Italian idealist philosophy.Hugh J.Silverman is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Comparative Literature at the StateUniversity <strong>of</strong> New York at Stony Brook and author <strong>of</strong> Inscriptions: BetweenPhenomenology and Structuralism (1987), editor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Non-<strong>Philosophy</strong>since Merleau-Ponty (1988) and Executive Director <strong>of</strong> the International Associationfor <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Literature.Jacques Taminiaux is Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> at the University <strong>of</strong> Louvain and BostonCollege, Director <strong>of</strong> the Centre d’études phénoménologiques at Louvain University,


and author <strong>of</strong> many books on continental philosophy including Dialectic and Difference(1985), Heidegger’s Project <strong>of</strong> Fundamental Ontology (1991) and Poetics,Speculations and Judgment (1994).


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ChronologyMara Rainwater, University College DublinUnless otherwise specified, the dates assigned to books or articles are the dates <strong>of</strong>publication, and the dates assigned to musical or stage works are those <strong>of</strong> firstperformance. The titles <strong>of</strong> works not written in English have been translated, unless theyare better known in their original form.Continental philosophy: roots and The artsdialogue1755 Rousseau, Discourse on the Origin <strong>of</strong>Inequality1756 Voltaire, ‘Poem on the Disaster atLisbon’ (1755 earthquake)1759 Hamann, Socratic Memorabilia Sterne, Tristram ShandyVoltaire, Candide1762 Rousseau, EmileDiderot, Rameau’s NephewRousseau, The Social Contract1764 Voltaire, Philosophical Dictionary17651766 Lessing, Laöcoon‘Sturm und Drang’ Movement to1787 (Goethe, Schiller, Herder)1772 Herder, On the Origin <strong>of</strong> Language1774 Goethe, The Sorrows <strong>of</strong> YoungWerther1779 Lessing, Nathan the Wise1781 Kant, Critique <strong>of</strong> Pure Reason (‘A’ Schiller, The Robbersedition)1783 Kant, Prolegomena to any FutureMetaphysics1784 Herder, Outlines <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> the Beaumarchais, The Marriage <strong>of</strong><strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Mankind (4 vols, 1784–91) FigaroKant, ‘Idea for a Universal <strong>History</strong>’1785 Kant, Foundations <strong>of</strong> the Metaphysics <strong>of</strong>Morals1787 Jacobi, ‘On the Transcendental Idealism’Kant, Critique <strong>of</strong> Pure Reason (‘B’Mozart, Don GiovanniSchiller, Don Carlos


edition)Science and technology PoliticsMagnesium discovered (Davy) War between French and British in North 1755AmericaLisbon earthquake kills 35,000Seven Years War in Europe (1756–63) 1756French defeated in Quebec by British 1759Catherine II (The Great); Tsarina 1762–96 1762Spinning jenny (Hargreaves) 1764Condensing steam engine Joseph II <strong>of</strong> Austria; Holy Roman Emperor 1765(Watt)until 1790Hydrogen discovered1766(Cavendish)Nitrogen discovered Poland partitioned among Russia, Prussia, 1772(Rutherford)and AustriaOxygen (Priestly and Scheele) Louis XVI; King <strong>of</strong> France (to 1792) 1774First cast-iron bridge at Spain joins French and Americans against 1779Coalbrookdale, Shropshire BritainBritish surrender to French and American 1781forces at Yorktown, VirginiaFirst successful hot-air balloon Treaty <strong>of</strong> Paris ending American War <strong>of</strong> 1783(Montgolfier brothers) Independence1784Power loom (Cartwright) Frederick the Great establishes League <strong>of</strong> 1785German Princes against Joseph II <strong>of</strong> AustriaFrench Assembly dismissed for refusal tointroduce financial reforms1787Continental philosophy: roots and dialogue The arts1788 Kant, Critique <strong>of</strong> Practical Reason Goethe, Egmont1789 Blake, Songs <strong>of</strong> Innocence1790 Kant, Critique <strong>of</strong> Judgment1791 Mozart, The Magic Flute1792 Fichte, Attempt at a Critique <strong>of</strong> All RevelationWollstonecraft, Vindication <strong>of</strong> the Rights <strong>of</strong>Women17931794 Condorcet, Sketch for a Historical Picture <strong>of</strong> the Blake, Songs <strong>of</strong> ExperienceHuman Mind Fichte, Jena Wissenschaftslehre1795 Schelling, Philosophical Letters on Dogmatism Goethe, Wilhelm Meister’s


and Criticismvon Humboldt, On Thought and Language17961797 Kant, Metaphysics <strong>of</strong> MoralsSchelling, Ideas for a <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> NatureApprenticeshipSchiller, On the AestheticEducation <strong>of</strong> MankindGoethe and Schiller,BalladsHölderlin, Hyperion1798 Wordsworth and Coleridge,1799 Schleiermacher, ‘On Religion’von Humboldt, Aesthetic Essays1800 Fichte, The Vocation <strong>of</strong> ManSchelling, System <strong>of</strong> Transcendental IdealismSchleiermacher translates Plato into German(1800–28)Lyrical BalladsGoya, Los CaprichosSchiller, Wallenstein’sDeathSchlegel, LucindeBeethoven, First SymphonyNovalis, Hymn to the Night1802 Mme. de Stael, DelphineNovalis, Heinrich vonOfterdingen1804 Schiller, Wilhelm Tell1807 Hegel, Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Spirit (Jena) Beethoven, FourthSymphonyScience and technology PoliticsFirst convicts shipped from Britain toAustraliaTheory <strong>of</strong> Combustion(Lavoisier)Metric system proposed byFranceCotton gin (Whitney)Lithography invented(Senefelder) Laplace, System<strong>of</strong> the WorldStorming <strong>of</strong> the Bastille, Paris; the FrenchRevolution begins178817891790Louis XVI and family captured; he affirms 1791new French ConstitutionFrance declared a Republic; Austria and 1792Prussia unite against FranceLouis XVI and Marie Antoinette executed; 1793Reign <strong>of</strong> Terror under RobespierreDanton and Robespierre executed; ends 1794Reign <strong>of</strong> TerrorFrance makes peace with Spain and Prussia 1795Napoleon Bonaparte leads French army to 1796conquer Italy


Malthus, Essay on thePrinciple <strong>of</strong> PopulationFrench occupy Rome, Switzerland, Egypt;Vinegar Hill Rebellion in Ireland forseparation from BritainNapoleon rules France as Consulate until1804179717981799First electric battery (Volta) 1800Bonaparte created First Consul for life 1802Steam locomotive (Trevithick) Napoleon crowns self Emperor ‘Napoleon I’ 1804and the First Empire beginsThe Clermont, first steamship British abolish slave trade throughout their 1807(Fulton)empireContinental philosophy: roots and dialogue The arts1808 Goethe, Faust (Pt I)1809 Schelling, Philosophical Inquiries into the Chateaubriand, Les MartyrsNature <strong>of</strong> Human Freedom18111812 Hegel, Science <strong>of</strong> Logic (3 vols, 1812–16)1813 Schopenhauer, On the Fourfold Root <strong>of</strong> thePrinciple <strong>of</strong> Sufficient Reason1814 Goya, Executions <strong>of</strong> 3rd May1815 de Tracy, Elements <strong>of</strong> Ideology (4 vols, 1801–15)Schopenhauer, On Vision and Colours1817 Hegel, Encyclopedia <strong>of</strong> the PhilosophicalSciences1818 Schopenhauer, The World as Will and Grillparzer, SapphoRepresentation1820 Lamartine, Meditations1821 Hegel, <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> RightSchleiermacher, The Christian Faith (2 vols)De Quincey, Confessions <strong>of</strong>an Opium EaterHeine, Poems18221825 Saint-Simon, The New Christianity1826 Hölderlin, Lyrical Poems18271830 Comte, Positive <strong>Philosophy</strong> (6 vols, 1830–42)Feuerbach, Thoughts Concerning Death andImmortalityBerlioz, SymphonieFantastiqueStendhal, The Red and theBlack


18311832 Goethe, Faust (Pt II)1837 Bolzano, Scientific Writings (4 vols) Balzac, Lost Illusions (1837–43)Science and technology PoliticsFrench occupy Spain; Joseph Bonaparte 1808becomes King <strong>of</strong> Spain1809Avogadro’s Molecular Hypothesis Luddite riots in England against 1811mechanization in the textile industry500,000 <strong>of</strong> Napoleon’s army die in 1812retreat from MoscowCoalition <strong>of</strong> Austria, Prussia, Russia, 1813Britain and Sweden invades FranceLaplace, A Philosophical Essay on Treaty <strong>of</strong> Paris ends Napoleonic Wars; 1814ProbabilitiesNapoleon abdicates and is exiled to Elba;Congress <strong>of</strong> ViennaNapoleon escapes Elba; marches on 1815Paris; Battle <strong>of</strong> Waterloo; Napoleonexiled to St HelenaKaleidoscope (Brewster) 1817Aix-la-Chapelle: France joins great 1818powers in Quintuple AllianceElectromagnetism (Oersted) Liberal revolutions in Spain, Portugal,and Italy18201821Camera (Niepce) 1822Electromagnet (Sturgeon) In Russia, Decembrist Rising against 1825TsarLaws <strong>of</strong> Electromagnetism1826(Ampère) First permanentphotograph (Niepce)Ohm’s Law <strong>of</strong> Electromagnetic1827ConductionLyell, Principles <strong>of</strong> Geology (3vols)Electromagnetic induction(Faraday and Henry)Paris July Revolution1830Charles X overthrown; Louis-PhilippeKing (to 1848)Mazzini forms ‘Young Italy’ movement; 1831Polish revolution crushed by RussiansReform Act passed in Britain 1832


Telegraph (Morse) Victoria Queen <strong>of</strong> England (to 1901) 1837Continental philosophy: roots and The artsdialogue1839 Feuerbach, Towards a Critique <strong>of</strong>Hegelian <strong>Philosophy</strong>1841 Feuerbach, The Essence <strong>of</strong> Christianity Emerson, Essays (1841–4)Proudhon, What Is Property? Turner, Snowstorm—Steamboat <strong>of</strong>f aHarbour’s Mouth1842 Gogol, Dead SoulsG.Sand, Consuelo1843 Feuerbach, Provisional Theses Ruskin, Modern PaintersKierkegaard, Fear and TremblingKierkegaard, RepetitionKierkegaard, Either/OrMarx, Critique <strong>of</strong> Hegel’s <strong>Philosophy</strong><strong>of</strong> Right1844 Kierkegaard, The Concept <strong>of</strong> Dread Chateaubriand, Life <strong>of</strong> RancéMarx, The Paris ManuscriptsStirner, The Ego and Its Own1845 Marx, Theses on Feuerbach Gautier, EspañaMarx and Engels, The Holy Family1846 Kierkegaard, Concluding Unscientific Michelet, The PeoplePostscriptMarx and Engels, The GermanIdeology1848 Marx and Engels, CommunistManifesto1851 Proudhon, General Idea <strong>of</strong> the Sainte-Beuve, LundisRevolution in the 19th Century1852 Grimm, German Dictionary (vol. 1,1852–4)1854 Nerval, Aurélia1855 Transformation <strong>of</strong> Paris byHaussmann1857 Marx, drafts Grundrisse Flaubert, Madame BovaryBaudelaire, Les Fleurs du mal18591862 Brentano, On the Manifold Sense <strong>of</strong>Being in AristotleHugo, Les MisérablesTurgenev, Fathers and Sons1863 Proudhon, On the Federal Principle Salon des Refusés—ParisTolstoy, War and Peace (1863–9)


Science and technology PoliticsVulcanized rubber (Goodyear)Opium War between ChinaOzone discovered (Schönbein)and Britain‘Doppler Effect’ predicted the apparent changein wavelength when the observer and wavesource are in relative motion (C.Doppler)Planet Neptune discovered (Galle)Sewing machine (Howe)18391841Hong Kong ceded to Britain 1842Natal becomes BritishcolonyPotato famine in Ireland (amillion dead by 1851)Revolutions throughoutEuropeLouis-Philippe abdicates inParis18431844184518461848Bakunin imprisoned by Tsar 1851(1851–7)Gyroscope (L.Foucault) 1852Crimean War: France, 1854Britain, and Turkey againstRussia (to 1856)Celluloid (Parkes)Conversion process for steel (Bessemer)Darwin, The Origin <strong>of</strong> SpeciesInternal combustion engine (Lenoir)Rapid repeat-fire gun (Gatling)Indian mutiny (Lucknow)against Britain185518571859Bismarck becomes Prime 1862Minister in PrussiaFrench occupation <strong>of</strong> 1863Mexico CityLincoln emancipates slavesContinental philosophy: roots and dialogueThe arts1864 Dostoyevsky, Notes fromUnderground1865 Taine, <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Art Wagner, Tristan and Isolde1866 Dostoyevsky, Crime andPunishment


1867 Marx, Das Kapital Ibsen, Peer Gynt1869 Wagner, Ring Series produced1869–761870 Dilthey, The Life <strong>of</strong> Schleiermacher Rosetti, Poems1871 Zola, Rougon-MacquartSeries1873 Nietzsche, Untimely MeditationsRimbaud, A Season in HellStumpf, On the Psychological Origin <strong>of</strong> theIdea <strong>of</strong> Space1874 Brentano, Psychology from an Empirical First Impressionist ExhibitionStandpointin Paris1876 Turgenev, Virgin Soil1877 Rodin, Age <strong>of</strong> Bronze1879 Frege, The Foundations <strong>of</strong> Arithmetic Ibsen, A Doll’s House1880 French Symbolist Movement(1880–95)Mallarmé, Verlaine1882 Nietzsche, The Gay Science Wagner, Parsifal1883 Dilthey, Introduction to the Human SciencesMach, The Science <strong>of</strong> Mechanics1885 Cézanne, Mont S.VictoireVan Gogh, The Potato-EatersVan Gogh, The Sunflowers1886 Nietzsche, Beyond Good and Evil Pointillism (Seurat, Signac,Luce)1887 Husserl, On the Concept <strong>of</strong> Number: A Strindberg, The FatherPsychological AnalysisNietzsche, On the Genealogy <strong>of</strong> MoralsScience and technology PoliticsMaxwell’s Electromagnetic Marx founds First International in London; 1864Theory <strong>of</strong> LightBakunin challenges his leadershipEnd <strong>of</strong> American Civil War; Lincoln 1865assassinatedDynamite invented (Nobel) Treaty <strong>of</strong> Paris ends Austro-Prussian War 1866Typewriter (Scholes) Prussian leadership <strong>of</strong> North GermanConfederation1867Periodic arrangement <strong>of</strong>elements (Mendeleev)Kingdom <strong>of</strong> Italy annexes Papal StatesFrench Third Republic begins18691870


Darwin, ‘The Descent <strong>of</strong> Man’ Paris Commune crushed1871German Empire declared by Wilhelm IFirst Republic <strong>of</strong> Spain (to 1874) 18731874Telephone (Bell)Britain and France take joint control <strong>of</strong> 1876Egypt’s financesPhonograph (Edison) Queen Victoria as Empress <strong>of</strong> India 1877Incandescent lamp (Edison) Irish Land League under Parnell 1879Boers revolt against British control in South 1880AfricaTriple Alliance: Germany, Austria, Italy (to 18821914)Health insurance introduced in Germany 1883First rabies innoculation French protectorate over Indochina 1885(Pasteur)Electric transformer (Stanley)Electromagnetic waves Gladstone’s Irish Home Rule Bill defeated in 1886discovered (Hertz)ParliamentGramophone (Berliner) Italy and Ethiopia at war 1887Motor car engine (Daimler andBenz)Continental philosophy: roots and The artsdialogue1888 Natorp, Introduction to thePsychology <strong>of</strong> Critical Method1889 Bergson, Time and Free Will Hauptmann, Before Sunrise1890 Frazer, The Golden BoughVan Gogh, Road with Cypress TreesGuyau, The Origin <strong>of</strong> the Idea <strong>of</strong> Time1891 Husserl, <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arithmetic Gauguin leaves France for Tahiti1893 Durkheim, The Division <strong>of</strong> Labour in Art Nouveau in architecture: Horta’sSociety‘Tassel House’ (Brussels)Mach, Popular Scientific Lectures1894 Husserl, Psychological Studies onElementary LogicMonet, Rouen Cathedral SeriesWilde, Salomé, with Beardsleyillustrations1895 Freud, Studies on Hysteria Munch, The Cry1896 Bergson, Matter and MemorySantayana, The Sense <strong>of</strong> Beauty1897 Durkheim, Suicide1898


1899 Tolstoy, Resurrection1900 Freud, The Interpretation <strong>of</strong> Dreams Chekhov, Uncle VanyaHusserl, Logical Investigations (vol. Mahler, Fourth Symphony1)Sibelius, Finlandia1901 Husserl, Logical Investigations (vol. T.Mann, Buddenbrooks2)1902 Croce, Aesthetics as a Science <strong>of</strong>Expression and General LinguisticsPoincaré, Science and HypothesisStrindberg, The Dance <strong>of</strong> DeathGide, The ImmoralistMonet, Waterloo Bridge1903 Schoenberg begins teaching inViennaSalon d’Automne in Paris1904 Duhem, The Aim and Structure <strong>of</strong>Physical Theory (1904–6)Meinong, On the Theory <strong>of</strong> the ObjectIsadora Duncan performs in BerlinPuccini, Madame ButterflyScience and technology PoliticsKodak camera (Eastman)Wilhelm II German Emperor (to 1888Pneumatic tyre (Boyd)1918)French collapse <strong>of</strong> Panama Canal 1889Company in financial scandalRotogravure process (Klic) 1890Cinema history: Edison patents the1891Kinetoscope and KinetographFrench protectorate over Ivory 1893CoastDreyfus Affair in France 1894Nicholas II last Russian Tsar (to1918)Marconi’s wireless (radio)Discovery <strong>of</strong> X-Ray (Roentgen)1895Edison patents Kinetophone for soundRadioactivity discovered (Becquerel)‘Cinematographie’ in France (Lumière)France annexes MadagascarBoundaries <strong>of</strong> Siam (Thailand)settled by British and French1896Diesel engine (Diesel)1897Discovery <strong>of</strong> electron (Thomson)Radium discovered (P. & M.Curie) Treaty <strong>of</strong> Paris: Cuban1898independence from SpainTape recorder (Poulsen)First Hague Peace Conference to 1899settle international disputesMax Planck’s Quantum Theory German Navy Law begins arms 1900


increase with BritainBoxer Rebellion in ChinaIncreasing terrorist activity in 1901RussiaRadio-Telephone invented (Fessenden) 1902Wright Brothers first aeroplane flight Bolshevik-Menshevik split 1903Emmeline Pankhurst formsWomen’sSocial and Political UnionDiode (Fleming)Entente-Cordiale between Franceand Britain1904Continental philosophy: roots and The artsdialogue1905 Mach, Knowledge and ErrorWeber, The Protestant Ethic and theSpirit <strong>of</strong> Capitalism1906 Santayana, The Life <strong>of</strong> Reason1907 Bergson, Creative EvolutionHusserl, The Idea <strong>of</strong> PhenomenologyMatisse, Woman with a Hat (Fauvism)German artists (Kirchner, Bleyl) formDie Brücke (The Bridge)Debussy, La MerPicasso, Les Demoiselles d’AvignonStefan George, The Seventh RingW.James, Pragmatism1908 Poincaré, Science and Method Brancusi’s sculpture, The Kiss1909 Croce, Pragmatic <strong>Philosophy</strong> Diaghilev and Fokine, Ballets RussesW.James, A Pluralistic Universe in Paris1910 Husserl, <strong>Philosophy</strong> as a RigorousScience (1910–11)Russell and Whitehead, PrincipiaMathematica (3 vols, 1910–13)Marinetti, Futurist ManifestoRilke, The Notebooks <strong>of</strong> Malte LauridsBriggeStravinsky, The Firebird for Diaghilev1911 Bergson, ‘Philosophical Intuition’ German Expressionism: Der BlaueReiter (Blue Rider) group, 1911–14(Klee, Marc, Kandinsky)1912 Durkheim, The Elementary Forms <strong>of</strong>Religious Life1913 Husserl, Ideas, General Introductionto Pure PhenomenologyJung, Psychology <strong>of</strong> the UnconsciousR.Luxemburg, The Accumulation <strong>of</strong>CapitalDuchamp, Nude Descending aStaircaseNijinsky performs Afternoon <strong>of</strong> a Fawnfor Diaghilev’s companyApollinaire, AlcoolsProust, Remembrance <strong>of</strong> Things PastStravinsky, Rites <strong>of</strong> Spring


Unamuno, The Tragic Sense <strong>of</strong> Life1914 Ortega y Gasset, Meditations on Joyce, DublinersQuijote1915 D.W.Griffith, Birth <strong>of</strong> a NationKafka, The Metamorphosis1916 Gentile, General Theory <strong>of</strong> Spirit asPure ActSaussure, Course in GeneralLinguisticsScheler, Formalism in EthicsPound begins CantosDada Movement in Zurich (Arp,Tzara)1917 Lenin, State and Revolution Satie, Parade for Ballets RussesPicasso, designs costumes for Parade1918 Masaryk, The New Europe Tzara, Dada ManifestoMalevich, White Square on a WhiteBackgroundScience and technology PoliticsEinstein’s Special Theory St Petersburg ‘Bloody Sunday’: troops fire on 1905<strong>of</strong> Relativitycrowd resulting in general strike and revoltTriode (DeForest) First Russian Duma meets but is dissolved 1906Second Hague Peace Conference 1907Austria annexes Bosnia-Herzegovina 1908Henry Ford begins Old-age pensions introduced in Britain 1909‘Assembly-Line’productionPeary reaches North PoleSuffragette movement increases demands 1910Combine harvester (Holt) German-French confrontation in Morocco 1911Amundsen reaches SouthPoleManchu Dynasty falls to Sun Yat-senFrench protectorate in Morocco 1912Atomic Number (Moseley) Third Irish Home Rule Bill defeated 1913Bohr’s Model <strong>of</strong> the AtomTank (Swinton)Einstein publishes GeneralTheory <strong>of</strong> RelativityArchduke Franz Ferdinand <strong>of</strong> Austria 1914assassinated in SarajevoFirst World War beginsSinking <strong>of</strong> the Lusitania 1915Easter Rising in Ireland suppressed1916German <strong>of</strong>fensive on Western FrontOctober Revolution in Russia; 1917


Bolsheviks victoriousAutomatic rifle (Browning) Armistice ending First World War 1918Continental philosophy: roots and The artsdialogue1919 Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus1920 Freud, Beyond the PleasurePrinciple1921 Mach, The Principles <strong>of</strong> PhysicalOpticsRosenzweig, The Star <strong>of</strong>RedemptionBauhaus Architecture and Design(1919–33): Kandinsky, Albers, Klee;Wieve, The Cabinet <strong>of</strong> Dr. Caligari;German Expressionist films (1919–30)Pirandello, Six Characters in Search <strong>of</strong>an AuthorMan Ray, Rayographs1922 Bergson, Duration and Simultaneity Eliot, The Waste LandJoyce, Ulysses1923 Buber, I and ThouCassirer, The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong>Symbolic Forms (3 vols, 1923–9)Korsch, Marxism and <strong>Philosophy</strong>Lukács, <strong>History</strong> and ClassConsciousnessLe Corbusier, Vers une architectureRilke, Duino ElegiesYeats receives Nobel Prize1924 N.Hartmann, Ethics A.Breton, Surrealist ManifestoT.Mann, The Magic MountainSchoenberg, 12-tone Suite for Piano1925 Eisenstein, Battleship Potemkin1926 Scheler, Forms <strong>of</strong> Knowledge Lang, Metropolis1927 Heidegger, Being and TimeSantayana, Realms <strong>of</strong> Being (4 vols,1927–40)Artaud & Vitrac, Théâtre Alfred JarryV.Woolf, To the Lighthouse1928 Bachelard, The New Scientific Spirit Brecht & Weill, The Threepenny Opera1929 Dewey, Experience and Nature Bakhtin, Problems <strong>of</strong> Dostoyevsky’sHeidegger, What is Metaphysics? PoeticsHeidegger, Kant and the Problem <strong>of</strong> Rivera, Workers <strong>of</strong> the RevolutionMetaphysicsVertov, Man with a Movie CameraHusserl, Formal and TranscendentalLogicMannheim, Ideology and UtopiaPiaget, The Child’s Concept <strong>of</strong> theWorldVolosinov, Marxism and the


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Language1930 Freud, Civilization and ItsDiscontentsOrtega y Gasset, The Revolt <strong>of</strong> theMassesBuñuel & Dali, Surrealist film, L’Aged’orEmpson, Seven Types <strong>of</strong> AmbiguityScience and technology PoliticsDiscovery <strong>of</strong> proton (Rutherford)Treaty <strong>of</strong> Versailles sets 1919reparations RosaLuxemburg murdered inGermanyMussolini’s fascistmovement in Italy League<strong>of</strong> Nations foundedWeimar Republic in 1920GermanyCivil War in IrelandIrish Free State established 1921March on Rome by 1922MussoliniHitler imprisoned after 1923abortive Munich ‘putsch’Wave nature <strong>of</strong> electron (de Broglie) Lenin dies; succeeded by 1924StalinFirst working television (Baird) 1925Rocket (liquid) fuel (Goddard) Schrödinger’s Germany admitted to 1926Wave MechanicsLeague <strong>of</strong> NationsHeisenberg’s ‘Uncertainty Principle’ that Civil War in China: 1927position and momentum <strong>of</strong> a body cannot besimultaneously determined; First transatlanticflight (Lindbergh)Communists againstNationalistsKellogg-Briand Pact: Major 1928Zworykin’s electronic television system adoptedas standardJet engine (Whittle)powers renounce warCollapse <strong>of</strong> Wall Streetleads to worldwideeconomic depressionLondon Naval Conference:failure to agree on armslimitation19291930Continental philosophy: roots anddialogueThe arts


1931 Husserl, Cartesian MeditationsJaspers, Man in the Modern Age1932 Bergson, Two Sources <strong>of</strong> Moralityand ReligionMaritain, The Degrees <strong>of</strong> KnowledgeGide, OedipusRavel, Piano Concerto for the LeftHandCéline, Journey to the End <strong>of</strong> Night1933 Kojève, Paris Seminars on Hegel’s Malraux, The Human ConditionPhenomenology (1933–9)1934 René Char, The Hammer without aMasterH.Miller, Tropic <strong>of</strong> CancerWebern, Concerto for NineInstruments1935 Berdyaev, The Fate <strong>of</strong> Man in theModern WorldMarcel, Being and HavingCanetti, Auto-da-Fé1936 W.Benjamin, ‘The Work <strong>of</strong> Art in the International Surrealist ExhibitionAge <strong>of</strong> Mechanical Reproduction’Husserl, Crisis <strong>of</strong> European Sciencesand Transcendental Phenomenology1937 C.Caudwell, Illusion and Reality Picasso, GuernicaJ.Renoir, The Grand Illusion1938 Bachelard, The Psychoanalysis <strong>of</strong> Artaud, The Theatre and Its DoubleFireBeckett, MurphyHusserl Archives established at Brecht, Mother CourageLouvainSartre, Nausea1939 Sartre, Sketch for a Theory <strong>of</strong>Emotions1940 Marcel, Creative FidelitySartre, Psychology <strong>of</strong> Imagination1941 Bultmann, The New Testament andMythologyMarcuse, Reason and RevolutionWhorf, Language, Thought andReality (1941–56)1942 Merleau-Ponty, The Structure <strong>of</strong>Comportment1943 Hjelmslev, Prolegomena to a Theory<strong>of</strong> LanguageSartre, Being and NothingnessJoyce, Finnegans WakeSaurraute, TropismsPicasso, Woman Dressing Her HairMaltese Falcon; cinematic style (filmnoir) influenced by Cain, Hammett,ChandlerAnouilh, AntigoneCamus, Myth <strong>of</strong> SisyphusCamus, The OutsiderMusil, The Man Without QualitiesSartre, The Flies


Science and technology PoliticsPauli’s predicts massless neutrino Britain abandons gold standard 1931Gödel’s Incompleteness Theorumclaiming the unprovability <strong>of</strong>mathematical first principlesJapanese aggression in ManchuriaNeutron discovered (Chadwick) Geneva Disarmament Conference 1932Hitler appointed Chancellor by von 1933Hindenburg; Reichstag burned;Germany withdraws from League <strong>of</strong>NationsHitler becomes Führer1934Stalin purges Communist PartyRadar discovered (Watson-Watt) Hitler renounces Treaty <strong>of</strong> Versailles 1935Mao Tse-tung: The Long MarchSpanish Civil War (1936–9) Germanyreoccupies Rhineland19361937Anschluss: Hitler annexes Austria 1938Munich Pact: Germany, Italy, Britain,and FranceElectron microscope (Zworykin) Second World War begins Germany 1939invades PolandPlutonium discovered (Seaborg) Nazi occupation <strong>of</strong> Paris1940Trotsky assassinated in MexicoJapan joins Axis PowersGermany invades Russia; Leningrad 1941siegePearl Harbor bombed by Japan;American entry into Second World WarBattle <strong>of</strong> Stalingrad; Germany defeated 1942Rommel defeated by Allies in NorthAfricaItalian government surrenders 1943Continental philosophy: roots and The artsdialogue1944 Adorno and Horkheimer, Dialectic<strong>of</strong> EnlightenmentMarcel, Homo Viator1945 Bataille, On NietzscheMerleau-Ponty, Phenomenology <strong>of</strong>PerceptionBartok, Violin ConcertoEliot, Four QuartetsSartre, No ExitBroch, The Death <strong>of</strong> VirgilSartre, Roads to Freedom; vol. 1—TheAge <strong>of</strong> Reason; vol. 2—The Reprieve


1946 Collingwood, The Idea <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong>Sartre, Existentialism andHumanism1947 de Beauvoir, Ethics <strong>of</strong> AmbiguityGramsci, Letters from PrisonHeidegger, ‘Letter on Humanism’Horkheimer, Eclipse <strong>of</strong> ReasonLevinas, Existence and Existents1948 Adorno, <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> ModernMusicGramsci, Prison Notebooks (6 vols,1948–51)Merleau-Ponty, Sense and Non-Sense1949 de Beauvoir, The Second SexS.Weil, The Need for Roots1950 Austin, How to Do Things withWordsMarcel, The Mystery <strong>of</strong> Being1951 Adorno, Minima MoraliaArendt, The Origins <strong>of</strong>TotalitarianismCamus, The RebelItalian Neo-Realism in film (1946–54)De Sica, Fellini, Rossellini, ViscontiRossellini, Rome Open CityPollock, Full Fathom FiveCamus, The PlagueRené Char, Fury and MysteryDe Sica, Bicycle ThievesOrwell, 1984R.Strauss, Four Last SongsGenet, Death-watchSartre, Iron in the Soul (vol. 3 <strong>of</strong> trilogyRoads to Freedom)Blanchot, The Space <strong>of</strong> LiteratureIonesco, The Bald SopranoBeckett, Molloy; Malone DiesDali, Christ <strong>of</strong> St. John <strong>of</strong> the Cross1952 Goldmann, The Human Sciences and Boulez, Structures<strong>Philosophy</strong>Buñuel, El1953 Barthes, Writing Degree ZeroDufrenne, The Phenomenology <strong>of</strong>Aesthetic ExperienceHeidegger, Introduction toMetaphysicsLacan, ‘Rome Discourse’ (‘Function<strong>of</strong> Language in Psychoanalysis’)Lacan, Seminar I (1953–78:XXVISeminars)Wittgenstein, PhilosophicalInvestigationsBeckett, Waiting for GodotMilosz, The Usurpers1954 Heidegger, Discourse on Thinking Balthus, Nude Playing with a CatFellini, La StradaScience and technology PoliticsAutomatic digital computer Allied Normandy Landing(Aikin)Paris and Brussels liberated1944


Electronic computer (Eckert &Mauchly)Polaroid camera (Land)Xerography invented (Carlson)Long-playing record(Goldmark)Transistor (Bardeen, Brattain,Schockley)von Neumann, ‘Recent Theories<strong>of</strong> Turbulence’Einstein’s Unified Field TheoryTuring, ‘Computing Machineryand Intelligence’Atomic Bomb on Hiroshima and NagasakiMussolini assassinatedHitler suicideYalta ConferenceUN replaces League <strong>of</strong> NationsNuremburg trialsFrench Indo-China War beginsMarshall Aid Program for EuropeUN approves partition <strong>of</strong> PalestineSoviet blockage <strong>of</strong> West BerlinState <strong>of</strong> Israel declared1945194619471948Germany divided: Federal Republic and 1949German Democratic RepublicMao Tse-tung Communist victory in ChinaKorean War begins 1950West Germany admitted to the Council <strong>of</strong>EuropeSchuman Plan proposes Coal and SteelCommunity1951European Coal and Steel Community 1952implementedCrick & Watson’s Double Helix Stalin dies 1953Theory for DNASolar battery (Fuller, Pearson) French defeat at Dien Bien Phu 1954Continental philosophy: roots and The artsdialogue1955 Canguilhem, The Formation <strong>of</strong> the Béjart choreography, SymphonyConcept <strong>of</strong> Reflex in the XVII and X<strong>VIII</strong> for a Lone ManCenturiesde Chardin, The Phenomenon <strong>of</strong> ManLévi-Strauss, Tristes TropiquesMarcuse, Eros and CivilizationMerleau-Ponty, Adventures <strong>of</strong> theDialectic1956 Durrenmatt, The VisitCamus, The Fall


1957 Barthes, MythologiesBataille, EroticismChomsky, Syntactic Structures1958 Arendt, The Human ConditionLévi-Strauss, Structural AnthropologyWinch, The Idea <strong>of</strong> a Social Science andStockhausen, Gruppen (for threespatially arranged orchestras)Bergman, The Seventh SealBeckett, Krapp’s Last TapePrimo Levi, If This Is a ManIts Relationship to <strong>Philosophy</strong>1959 Bloch, The Principle <strong>of</strong> Hope French ‘New Wave’ (NouvelleVague) in film, 1959–64Goddard, BreathlessTruffaut, The 400 BlowsDuras, Hiroshima Mon Amour1960 Gadamer, Truth and MethodIngarden, The Literary Work <strong>of</strong> ArtMerleau-Ponty, SignsRicoeur, The Symbolism <strong>of</strong> Evil1961 Fanon, The Wretched <strong>of</strong> the EarthHeidegger, Neitzsche (2 vols)Levinas, Totality and Infinity1962 S.Breton, Essence and ExistenceDeleuze, Neitzsche and <strong>Philosophy</strong>Derrida, Husserl’s Origin <strong>of</strong> Geometry1963 Arendt, On RevolutionHabermas, Theory and PraxisRichardson, Through Phenomenology toThought1964 Barthes, Elements <strong>of</strong> SemiologyLacan, Seminar XI; The FourFundamental Concepts <strong>of</strong> PsychoanalysisLévi-Strauss, The Raw and the CookedMarcuse, One-Dimensional ManFellini, La Dolce VitaPenderecki, Threnody to theVictims <strong>of</strong> HiroshimaMiró, Blue IIRobbe-Grillet, Last Year inMarienbadFellini, 8½Solzhenitsyn, One Day in the Life<strong>of</strong> Ivan DenisovitchWarhol, Campbells Soup Cans200Paul Celan, Die Niemandsrose(The No One’s Rose)G.Grass, Dog YearsPasolini, The Gospel According toSt. MatthewScience and technology PoliticsThe Contraceptive Pill (Pincus) Warsaw Pact for Eastern Bloc 1955Antiproton (Segré, Chamberlain)Discovery <strong>of</strong> neutrino predicted by Pauli Hungarian uprising crushed by 1956in 1931Videotape recording (Poniat<strong>of</strong>f)SovietsSputnik launched (USSR)Treaty <strong>of</strong> Rome establishesCommon Market (EEC)1957


Radiation belts surrounding the earth (Van De Gaulle elected first President 1958Allen)<strong>of</strong> French Fifth RepublicSpace race escalates with launch <strong>of</strong>Explorer 1 (US)Luna space probes (USSR) enter solar Fidel Castro overthrows Batista 1959orbit; photograph far side <strong>of</strong> the moon government in CubaLaser (Maiman)EFTA (European Free Trade 1960Pioneer 5 (US): first deep-space probe Assn)First ‘Cosmonaut’ in space Vostok 1 Berlin Wall constructed 1961(USSR)Mariner 2 (US): first successful flybys <strong>of</strong> Algeria gains independence from 1962VenusFranceCuban Missile CrisisQuasars discovered (Matthews & John F.Kennedy assassinated 1963Sandage)Mariner 4 (US): first successful flybys <strong>of</strong>MarsUS enters Vietnam War insupport <strong>of</strong> South VietnamContinental philosophy: roots and The artsdialogue1965 Althusser, For MarxBachelard, The Poetics <strong>of</strong> SpaceFoucault, Discipline and PunishFoucault, Madness and CivilizationRicoeur, Freud and <strong>Philosophy</strong>: AnEssay on Interpretation1966 Adorno, Negative DialecticsBeneviste, Problems in GeneralLinguisticsChomsky, Cartesian LinguisticsFoucault, The Order <strong>of</strong> ThingsGreimas, Structural SemanticsLacan, EcritsMacherey, A Theory <strong>of</strong> LiteraryProduction1967 Derrida, Speech and PhenomenaDerrida, Of GrammatologyDerrida, Writing and DifferenceHorkheimer, Critique <strong>of</strong> InstrumentalReasonJauss, Toward an Aesthetic <strong>of</strong>Reception1968 Althusser and Balibar, Reading Capital Berio, SinfoniaPostmodernist architecture (1965–85) Venturi, JencksH.Miller, The Rosy CrucifixionS.Plath, ArielChina’s Cultural Revolution; RedGuard formedMoravia, The LieGarcia-Marquez, One HundredYears <strong>of</strong> SolitudeKundera, The Joke1964


Dumézil, Myth and Epic (2 vols, 1968– C.Metz, Film Language: Semiotics71)<strong>of</strong> the Cinema (1968–72)Habermas, Knowledge and Human Solzhenitsyn, Cancer WardInterests1969 Blanchot, Infinite Conversation Beckett receives the Nobel PrizeS.Breton, <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Mathematicsin ProclusFoucault, The Archaeology <strong>of</strong>KnowledgeKristeva, SemeiotikéRicoeur, The Conflict <strong>of</strong>Interpretations: Essays inHermeneuticsSerres, Hermès (vols 1–5, 1969–80)1970 Barthes, S/ZKuhn, The Structure <strong>of</strong> ScientificRevolutions1971 de Man, Blindness and Insight Tarkovsky, SolarisHabermas, Legitimation CrisisHassan, The Postmodern TurnLefort, Elements <strong>of</strong> a Critique <strong>of</strong>BureaucracyRawls, A Theory <strong>of</strong> justiceScience and technologyPoliticsGabor’s Holography using laser Malcolm X assassinated 1965Surveyor 1 (US): probe returns with UN imposes economic sanctions on 1966detailed photographs <strong>of</strong> lunar surface RhodesiaPulsars discovered (Cambridge) Six-Day Arab-Israeli War 1967Venera 4 (USSR): first successful entry France vetoes British application to<strong>of</strong> Venus atmosphereenter Common MarketParis Riots1968N.Ireland Civil Rights MovementSoviet troops to Czechoslovakia tohalt reforms (Prague Spring)Astronauts land on moon (US) British troops to Northern Ireland 1969Venera 7 (USSR): first probe to survive US announces invasion <strong>of</strong> Cambodia 1970Venusian surfaceEMI Scanner (Hounsfield)Independence <strong>of</strong> East Pakistan asBangladeshCommunist China joins UN—Taiwan expelled1971


Continental philosophy: roots and The artsdialogue1972 Baudrillard, For a Critique <strong>of</strong> the Bertolucci, Last Tango in ParisPolitical Economy <strong>of</strong> the Sign Heinrich Böll receives Nobel PrizeBourdieu, Outline <strong>of</strong> a Theory <strong>of</strong>PracticeDeleuze and Guattari, Anti-OedipusDerrida, DisseminationGenette, Figures III: NarrativeDiscourseGirard, Violence and the SacredS.K<strong>of</strong>man, Nietzsche and MetaphorMarcuse, Counter-revolution andRevolt1973 Apel, Towards a Transformation <strong>of</strong> Calvino, The Castle <strong>of</strong> Crossed<strong>Philosophy</strong>DestiniesBataille, Inner Experiences Solzhenitsyn, Gulag Archipelago (3Bloom, The Anxiety <strong>of</strong> Influence vols, 1973–8)Geertz, The Interpretation <strong>of</strong>CulturesJay, The Dialectical Imagination1974 Derrida, GlasD.Lessing, The Memoirs <strong>of</strong> a SurvivorIrigaray, Speculum <strong>of</strong> the OtherWomanKristeva, Revolution in PoeticLanguage1975 Barthes, The Pleasure <strong>of</strong> the Text Havel, AudienceCastoriadis, The Social ImaginaryCixous and Clément, The Newly BornWomanFeyerabend, Against MethodG.Hartman, The Fate <strong>of</strong> ReadingPatočka, Heretical EssaysRicoeur, The Rule <strong>of</strong> MetaphorSteiner, After Babel1976 Dufrenne, Aesthetics and <strong>Philosophy</strong> Twyla Tharp choreographs Push(2 vols)Comes to Shove for BaryshnikovEco, A Theory <strong>of</strong> SemioticsFoucault, The <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Sexuality (3vols, 1976–84)Gadamer, PhilosophicalHermeneuticsIser, The Act <strong>of</strong> Reading: A Theory <strong>of</strong>


Aesthetic Response1977 Derrida, Limited, Inc.Irigaray, This Sex Which Is Not One1978 Castoriadis, Crossroads in theLabyrinthDerrida, Truth in PaintingLefort, The Forms <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong>Marcuse, The Aesthetic DimensionNouveaux Philosophes Movement(Levy, Benoist, and Glucksmann)Stockhausen, Licht CycleScience and technology PoliticsApollo Lunar Rover used on lunar surface Britain takes over direct rule in(US)Northern IrelandMars 6 (USSR): first probe to enter Britain, Ireland, and DenmarkMartian atmospherejoin ECParis Peace Settlement endingVietnam WarOil crisis—OPEC Nationsrestrict supplyFormer Portuguese coloniesgain independence (Angola,Mozambique)Watergate ScandalFirst international docking in space: Apollo18 (US) and Soyuz 19 (USSR)Mandelbrot’s Fractal Geometry claimsmathematical order exists in apparentlyrandom phenomenaGeneral Franco dies in SpainS.Vietnam surrenders toN.Vietnam1972197319741975Mao Tse-tung dies 1976Prigogine awarded Nobel Prize Czech ‘Charta 77’ Movement 1977Feigenbaum, ‘Quantitative Universality for UN Peace Force to Lebanon 1978a Class <strong>of</strong> Non-Linear Transformations’Continental philosophy: roots anddialogue1979 Baudrillard, Seductionde Man, Allegories <strong>of</strong> ReadingLyotard, The Postmodern ConditionLyotard, Just Gaming (Au Juste)1980 Kristeva, Powers <strong>of</strong> HorrorLe Doeuff, The Philosophical ImaginaryOlsen, SilencesThe artsFassbinder, Lili MarleneBalthus, Sleeping NudeEco, The Name <strong>of</strong> the RoseKundera, The Book <strong>of</strong>


Rorty, <strong>Philosophy</strong> and the Mirror <strong>of</strong> NatureVattimo, Adventure <strong>of</strong> DifferenceR.Williams, Problems in Culture andMaterialism1981 Baudrillard, SimulationsHabermas, Theory <strong>of</strong> Communicative Action(2 vols)Jameson, The Political Unconscious:Narrative as a Socially Symbolic ActMacIntyre, After Virtue1982 Girard, The Scapegoat (Le Boucémissaire)Rorty, The Consequences <strong>of</strong> Pragmatism1983 Habermas, Moral Consciousness andCommunicative ActionLyotard, The DifferendRicoeur, Time and Narrative (3 vols, 1983–5)Said, The World, the Text, and the Critic1984 Eco, Semiotics and the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong>LanguageGiddens, The Constitution <strong>of</strong> Society: Outline<strong>of</strong> a Theory <strong>of</strong> StructurationParfit, Reasons and PersonsPrigogine and Staengers, Order out <strong>of</strong> Chaos1985 Benhabib, Critique, Norm and UtopiaHabermas, The Philosphical Discourse <strong>of</strong>ModernityHavel, The Power <strong>of</strong> the PowerlessHonneth, The Critique <strong>of</strong> PowerTaminiaux, Dialectic and DifferenceVattimo, The End <strong>of</strong> Modernity1986 de Certeau, HeterologiesDworkin, Law’s EmpireLaughter and ForgettingRushdie, Midnight’s ChildrenHerzog, FitzcarraldoGarcia-Marquez receivesNobel PrizeMurdoch, The Philosopher’sPupilRushdie, ShameKundera, The UnbearableLightness <strong>of</strong> BeingEco, Foucault’s PendulumMagris, DanubeScience and technology PoliticsFirst direct elections for European 1979Parliament held in all nine memberstatesVoyager Spacecraft flies by Saturn Lech Walesa: Solidarity trade union 1980confronts Communist governmentin PolandFirst US Space Shuttle flight Greece accepted as tenth member <strong>of</strong> 1981Common Market


Hao Bai-Lin, Chaos (first attempt tocollect the scientific literature on chaosand complexity)Challenger (US) Space Shuttle explodeson take-<strong>of</strong>fChernobyl nuclear disaster in USSRBritish force reoccupies Falklands 1982Indira Ghandi assassinated 1983Chernenko becomes leader <strong>of</strong> 1984Soviet Communist PartyReagan re-elected by landslide inUS electionsGorbachev succeeds Chernenko inSoviet UnionSpain and Portugal join CommonMarketPhilippine President MarcosoverthrownContinental philosophy: roots and dialogue The arts1987 Derrida, Psyché: Inventions <strong>of</strong> the OtherDerrida, The Post CardDerrida, SchibbolethCalvino, The LiteratureMachineVargas-Llosa, TheStoryteller1988 S.Breton, Poetics <strong>of</strong> the SensibleHabermas, Postmetaphysical ThinkingLyotard, The InhumanVattimo, The Transparent Society1989 C.Taylor, Sources <strong>of</strong> the Self C.J.Cela receives NobelPrize1990 Nussbaum, Love’s Knowledge: Essays on<strong>Philosophy</strong> and LiteratureRicoeur, Oneself as Another1991 Derrida, Given Time/Counterfeit MoneyJameson, Postmodernism, or the CulturalLogic <strong>of</strong> Late CapitalismKristeva, Strangers to OurselvesRorty, Philosophical PapersSaid, Musical Elaborations1992 Benhabib, Situating the SelfHabermas, Facticity and ValidityHonneth, The Struggle for RecognitionMurdoch, Metaphysics as a Guide to MoralsRicoeur, Lectures I and II (1991–2)1993 Derrida, Spectres <strong>of</strong> MarxDerrida, KhôraS.K<strong>of</strong>man, Explosion 2Kristeva, Les SamuraïsEnzensberger, Europe inRuinsMurdoch, Message to thePlanet19851986Jordan, The Crying GameKoslowski, Imagine EuropeSchmidt/Cohn-Bendit,Heimat BabylonG.Grass, Novemberland


Lyotard, The Postmodern ContradictionJ.-L.Nancy, The Sense <strong>of</strong> the WorldLevinas, God, Death and TimeScience and technology PoliticsMinsky’s ‘Mental Kollectivs’: TheSociety <strong>of</strong> MindUSSR and US agree to cut nucleararsenals and reduce nuclearmissilesNeurocomputing (Anderson and Lockerbie: Terrorist sabotage <strong>of</strong> aRosenfeld)jumbo jet kills 270Prigogine/Grégoire, Exploring Fall <strong>of</strong> Berlin WallComplexitySanta Fe Institute studies on chaos,entropy and complexityS.Kauffman, Origins <strong>of</strong> Order: Self-Organization and Selection in EvolutionHavel elected Czech PresidentNelson Mandela freed after 27years imprisoned in South AfricaSaddam Hussein annexes Kuwait1987198819891990Soviet Union dissolved 1991Gulf War drives Iraq from KuwaitBreak-up <strong>of</strong> Yugoslavia 1992Croats, Serbs, Bosnians at warRatification <strong>of</strong> Maastricht Treaty 1993on European Union


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IntroductionRichard KearneyContinental philosophy, as it has emerged in the twentieth century, is less a seamlessfabric than a patchwork <strong>of</strong> diverse strands. Phenomenology, hermeneutics, existentialism,structuralism, critical theory, deconstruction—these are some <strong>of</strong> the salient movementswhich have developed in continental Europe between 1900 and the 1990s, though theirinfluence is by no means confined to their area <strong>of</strong> origin. Continental thought has provedhighly exportable, circulating far beyond the frontiers <strong>of</strong> Europe to provoke strongresponses in the intellectual world at large.It is worth recalling at the outset that the term ‘continental’ philosophy was coined notby European thinkers themselves but by academic philosophy departments in the Anglo-American world eager to differentiate it from ‘analytic’ thought. It was initially more alabel <strong>of</strong> convention than a category corresponding to a given essence <strong>of</strong> thought. Butwhatever the origin or accuracy <strong>of</strong> the distinction, what became known as ‘continentalphilosophy’ has managed to exert a decisive impact on contemporary thought over thedecades—an impact which exceeds the specialized discipline <strong>of</strong> academic philosophy andembraces such diverse fields as sociology, political science, literary theory, theology, arthistory, feminism and a variety <strong>of</strong> cultural studies.Some view this protean character <strong>of</strong> continental thought as a defect—a sign that itcannot be rigorous or reliable. If it can be applied to anything in general it must be sayingnothing in particular! More an art (Kunst) than a science (Wissenschaft)! More anexercise in poetic intuition than ratiocinative inquiry! What these objections tend toignore, however, is that most founding fathers <strong>of</strong> continental thought were committed to aview <strong>of</strong> philosophy as science and saw themselves as guided by a basic notion <strong>of</strong> criticalreason. Edmund Husserl, for instance, spoke <strong>of</strong> phenomenology as a ‘rigorous science’,while his disciple Heidegger regarded it as a transcendental science <strong>of</strong> thecategories <strong>of</strong>Being. Even Sartre, the combative pioneer <strong>of</strong> French existentialism, sought to applyphenomenology to an historical ‘critique <strong>of</strong> dialectical reason’.Similar scruples operate in other major currents <strong>of</strong> continental thought. Ferdinand deSaussure, founder <strong>of</strong> structuralism, spoke <strong>of</strong> semiology as a ‘science <strong>of</strong> signs’; and theworks <strong>of</strong> such disciples as Lévi-Strauss, Foucault, Althusser, Lacan or the early Bartheswere each marked by a determination to apply the structural model <strong>of</strong> language to avariety <strong>of</strong> disciplines (anthropology, historiography, historical materialism,psychoanalysis, sociology). One even finds critical theory and hermeneutics combiningphilosophical inquiry with other human sciences—with Paul Ricoeur calling for acreative dialogue between a historical ‘understanding’ (Verstehen) alert to thecontingencies <strong>of</strong> human circumstance, and scientific ‘explanation’ (Erklären) committedto goals <strong>of</strong> universal objectivity. Many continental thinkers have sought to redefine andreinterpret reason, but few would claim to jettison it altogether.


Introduction 2Perhaps the most persistent feature <strong>of</strong> continental philosophy, through all its multiplemutations, is a commitment to the questioning <strong>of</strong> foundations. From phenomenology todeconstruction, one encounters the persuasion that the old foundationalist arguments nolonger suffice. Meaning is not some metaphysical essence or substance; it is a task <strong>of</strong>intersubjective and intertextual relations. Truth cannot be grounded on a given system <strong>of</strong>being (realism) or mind (idealism); it must be radically rethought as an interplay <strong>of</strong>differences (perspectives, Abschattungen, intentionalities, situations, structures,signifiers, etc.). Continental philosophy thus finds itself renouncing the metaphysicalquest for absolute grounds, even if some <strong>of</strong> its proponents—Husserl in particular—foundthis renunciation vexed and regrettable. Kant’s claim to ‘lay the foundation <strong>of</strong>knowledge’, Hegel’s appeal to Absolute Spirit, Kierkegaard’s recourse to a TranscendentDeity, Marx’s call for a Total Science, are largely superseded (albeit <strong>of</strong>ten reinterpreted)by continental thinkers in the twentieth century.But if metaphysical foundationalism is one adversary, positivism is another.Reductionist attempts to explain away meaning in terms <strong>of</strong> facts are invariably resistedby phenomenologists, existentialists, critical theorists and postmodernists. Philosophicalquestioning, they argue, requires the specific methodology <strong>of</strong> a human science(Geisteswissen-schaft); and while remaining in critical dialogue with the empiricometricprocedures <strong>of</strong> natural sciences (Naturwissenschaft), it must not be reduced to the latter.Both methods are valid. It is the effort to confound or conflate them that leads tomisunderstanding.This is not to suggest that the critique <strong>of</strong> positivism is an exclusively continentalconcern. Analytic thinkers inspired by the laterWittgenstein, Ryle, Davidson or Dummett,show equal resolve in disentangling such category mistakes. But the reasons for doing soare different in each case. Generally speaking, analytic thinkers seek to avoid such errorin the interests <strong>of</strong> clarity, evidence, verification and coherence; continentals appear moreimpelled by ontological scruples to keep thought open to ‘irreducibles’ and‘undecidables’—that is, to questions which surpass the limits <strong>of</strong> ‘pure reason’—questions<strong>of</strong> being and nothing, <strong>of</strong> transcendence and difference, <strong>of</strong> alterity and historicity.The reference to Kant here is perhaps useful. Continental philosophers have <strong>of</strong>tentended to privilege the moral and aesthetic questioning <strong>of</strong> the Second and Third Critiquesover the strictly epistemological reading <strong>of</strong> the First. This is not to say that they ignorethe First but that they read it in a particular way. For example, while both analytic andcontinental thinkers share a common commitment to Kant’s transcendental aesthetic,(the origination <strong>of</strong> all experience in sensible time and space), the former tend to showpreference for the transcendental analytic (dealing with objective categories <strong>of</strong>understanding), whereas the latter incline more towards the ‘limit ideas’ <strong>of</strong> World, Souland Freedom contained in the transcendental dialectic. To put this more succinctly,continental thought is on balance more likely than analytic thought to bypass the confines<strong>of</strong> pure reason, venturing into the liminal areas <strong>of</strong> noumenal experience and dialectic.Indeed Husserl’s repudiation <strong>of</strong> the Kantian distinction between phenomenal andnoumenal in his Logical Investigations (1900–1) already signalled this direction.Continental philosophy, it could be said, favours dialectical and practical reason over‘pure’ reason. It holds that being is ultimately irreducible to verification, meaning toevidence, truth to coherence, time to measurement, paradox to problem.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 3This raises the controversial subject <strong>of</strong> style. Continental philosophy is marked bydistinctive signatures <strong>of</strong> thinking and writing. Its practitioners would claim, for instance,that extraordinary questions <strong>of</strong> experience cannot always be expressed in ordinarylanguage. Ideas <strong>of</strong> ‘dialectical’ reason (as both Kant and Hegel realized in their differentways) cannot be translated into categories <strong>of</strong> ‘pure’ reason. And the attendant surplus <strong>of</strong>meaning requires that standard criteria <strong>of</strong> correspondence and coherence have to beoccasionally transgressed. This is by no means unprecedented in philosophy. AsHeidegger points out in his introduction to Being and Time, Aristotle’s innovative use <strong>of</strong>language to express his discovery <strong>of</strong> being was far from transparent to his original Greekreaders. This line <strong>of</strong> reasoning could be construed as an ‘anything goes’ argument; butthere is more to it than that. A certain experimental style de pensée is the risk certainphilosophers are prepared to take in order to say the unsayable (or, in Beckett’s ludicphrase, to ‘eff the ineffable’). Adorno, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Lacan, Levinas,Derrida, Kristeva—each has his or her own inimitable voices.Finally, it must be acknowledged that continental philosophy does not arise in avacuum. True to its conviction that thought is always situated, the predominant mood <strong>of</strong>such philosophy, from existentialism to postmodernism, is one deeply committed tomoral and political questions. Thinking is no longer regarded as some neutral exercise incognition but an intervention in the ‘lived world’ <strong>of</strong> history and society. Thisresponsiveness <strong>of</strong> ideas to the Lebenswelt was, in the case <strong>of</strong> modern continental thought,radically informed by the experience <strong>of</strong> two world wars on European soil—and thecorresponding horrors <strong>of</strong> Auschwitz and the Gulag. Husserl was one <strong>of</strong> the first toregister this sense <strong>of</strong> breakdown and disorientation when, fleeing from Nazi Germany, hecalled for a fundamental rethinking <strong>of</strong> the western intellectual tradition. And mostcontinental philosophers after him have shared this persuasion, advancing forms <strong>of</strong>inquiry that are increasingly exploratory, tentative, iconoclastic, engagé. Critical theoristsfrom Horkheimer to Habermas, existentialists from Merleau-Ponty to de Beauvoir,structuralists from Barthes to Foucault, not to mention postmodernist thinkers likeLyotard and Vattimo, all demonstrate a keen preoccupation with social and politicalissues. The common challenge is to start all over again, seeking alternative modes <strong>of</strong>questioning. Totalizing Archimedean principles are renounced. Meaning and value are tobe reinterpreted from first to last. Recurrent crises call for perpetual revision. And it isperhaps this urgency to respond to the trauma <strong>of</strong> historical change that has compelled somany continentals to abandon the metaphysical obsession with foundations in favour <strong>of</strong>post-metaphysical experiments <strong>of</strong> thought.The fourteen essays in this volume outline and assess some <strong>of</strong> these experiments. Thefirst five span the twin movements <strong>of</strong> phenomenology and existentialism, running fromHusserl and Heidegger to Sartre, Merleau-Ponty and Levinas. Subsequent essays dealwith specific currents <strong>of</strong> continental thought in such areas as science, Marxism,linguistics, politics, aesthetics, feminism and hermeneutics, while a final essay onpostmodernism highlights the manner in which so many concerns <strong>of</strong> continental thoughtculminate in a radical anti-foundation-alism. Each study speaks for itself; but I wish tothank the contributors, drawn from six different countries, for their co-operation andcollegiality in putting this volume together. It has been a gratifying reminder that for allthe controversies surrounding continental philosophy, it remains a forum <strong>of</strong> debate where


Introduction 4critical intelligence, scholarly expertise and a passionate commitment to the burningissues <strong>of</strong> our time are still alive and well.


CHAPTER 1The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenologyHusserl and his predecessorsRichard Cobb-StevensEdmund Husserl was the founder <strong>of</strong> phenomenology, one <strong>of</strong> the principal movements <strong>of</strong>twentieth-century philosophy. His principal contribution to philosophy was hisdevelopment <strong>of</strong> the concept <strong>of</strong> intentionality. He reasserted and revitalized the premodernthesis that our cognitional acts are intentional, i.e., that they reach out beyond sensa tothings in the world. When we think or speak about things, and when we perceive them,we deal with those things and not with mental intermediaries. Intentionality is ouropenness to the world, our transcending mode <strong>of</strong> being. Husserl also developed theimplications <strong>of</strong> this fundamental thesis. He repudiated Locke’s interpretation <strong>of</strong> ‘mind’ asan inner space set <strong>of</strong>f from the rest <strong>of</strong> nature, and he rejected Kant’s distinction betweenphenomena and things-in-themselves. He also rejected the view that the task <strong>of</strong>philosophy is to guarantee that our concepts and theories somehow mirror the world.These themes brought a sense <strong>of</strong> liberation to many philosophers who by the earlydecades <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century had become weary <strong>of</strong> the insoluble problems generatedby the modern account <strong>of</strong> cognition. Husserl’s analysis <strong>of</strong> signs and semantic systems hada similar effect in the fields <strong>of</strong> linguistics and logic which had been dominated byassociationist and psychologistic accounts <strong>of</strong> the production <strong>of</strong> meaning. Hisinterpretation <strong>of</strong> the complementarity <strong>of</strong> pre-scientific and scientific modes <strong>of</strong> rationalitycontributed to the demise <strong>of</strong> positivism and inspired new and fruitful approaches in thesocial sciences. His theories <strong>of</strong> time and ego-identity provided much-needed correctivesto reductionist tendencies in psychology. Finally, his balanced interpretation <strong>of</strong> theinterplay between historical horizons and the drive fortruth <strong>of</strong>fers a reasonable alternativeto the contemporary tendency to regard all truths as relativized by their historicalconditions.It is unfortunate that Husserl’s writings had little influence on the development <strong>of</strong> thetradition <strong>of</strong> analytic philosophy, the other major movement <strong>of</strong> twentieth-centuryphilosophy. Husserl himself engaged in spirited but amicable debate with Gottlob Frege,who is generally considered to be the proximate founder <strong>of</strong> analytic philosophy.However, such exchanges became increasingly rare among their followers who havetended on the whole to ignore one another’s works. This breakdown <strong>of</strong> communicationwas due in part to an early misunderstanding. Frege thought that Husserl was a proponent<strong>of</strong> psychologism, i.e., the view that numbers, propositions and logical laws are reducibleto mental states. Frege’s critique <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s alleged psychologism was decisive for awhole generation <strong>of</strong> analytic philosophers whose goal was to defend rationality fromrelativism by detaching logic and semantics from all dependence on what they took to be


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 66irremediably subjective intuitions. On the other hand, Frege’s decision to divorce logicalanalysis entirely from cognitive intuition alienated philosophers within thephenomenological tradition who saw in this strategy only a revival <strong>of</strong> Hobbes’spreference for an exclusively calculative rationality. Ironically, Husserl’s critique <strong>of</strong>psychologism was in fact more coherent and more complete than that <strong>of</strong> Frege and hisfollowers, for he showed how propositions are grounded in cognitive intuitions withoutthereby being reduced to merely subjective phenomena. In recent years bothphenomenological and analytic traditions have found themselves increasingly vulnerableto contemporary forms <strong>of</strong> historicism and relativism. This situation has had the felicitouseffect <strong>of</strong> encouraging within both traditions a reappraisal <strong>of</strong> the reasons for their mutualdistrust. Considerable progress has been made <strong>of</strong> late in restoring a climate conducive torenewed dialogue.In the judgment <strong>of</strong> many, the originality <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s thought and the rigour <strong>of</strong> hisanalyses guarantee him a place among the greatest <strong>of</strong> philosophers. However, his writingstend to be excessively abstruse and technical. As a result, his readership has generallybeen limited to pr<strong>of</strong>essional philosophers. By contrast, Martin Heidegger’s moreevocative philosophical style and Jean-Paul Sartre’s literary brilliance assured for thesubsequent phenomenological tradition a wider audience and an unusually immediatecultural influence. This is not to say that these thinkers were merely commentators onHusserl (indeed, many regard Heidegger as a more pr<strong>of</strong>ound and original thinker), butonly that they <strong>of</strong>ten succeeded in communicating the basic insights <strong>of</strong> Husserl’sphenomenology more clearly and forcefully than did Husserl himself. There is anotherreason why Husserl’s writings <strong>of</strong>ten failed to convey to his readers the full force <strong>of</strong> hiscriticism <strong>of</strong> the modernepistemological perspective. It seems clear, in retrospect, that hewas not sufficiently sensitive to the gravitational pull that the language <strong>of</strong> modernphilosophy exercised on his thought. He explicitly modified the senses <strong>of</strong> such keymodern terms as ‘presentation’, ‘content’, ‘immanence’, ‘subjectivity’, ‘phenomenon’,but he never completely jettisoned the lexicon <strong>of</strong> modern philosophy. Indeed, he alwaysmaintained a conservative stance with regard to innovative philosophic language,preferring to take familiar terms to their limits rather than to introduce unusual metaphorsand neologisms. He therefore failed to appreciate the extent to which the familiarlinguistic matrix <strong>of</strong> modern philosophy conceals a long history <strong>of</strong> accumulated premiseswhich determine the kinds <strong>of</strong> questions that readers would bring to his texts. His goal wasto call those premises into question, but his philosophical vocabulary tended too <strong>of</strong>ten toreinforce them. It is unfortunate, too, that Husserl seems to have had little first-handfamiliarity with ancient and medieval philosophic texts. He was always more at homewith the traditions <strong>of</strong> British empiricism and Kantian criticism. Had he been more attunedto the weight <strong>of</strong> words in the development <strong>of</strong> philosophic concepts, and better informedabout the ancient and medieval traditions, his breakthrough would no doubt have beenless plagued by ambiguities and less subject to misinterpretations.Husserl was born in Prossnitz, a town then located in Austria. He took courses inmathematics at the universities <strong>of</strong> Leipzig, Berlin and Vienna. In Berlin, he studied withthe renowned mathematicians Leopold Kronecker and Karl Weierstrauss, and alsoattended occasional lectures in philosophy by Wilhelm Wundt. He received his Ph.D. in1882 from the University <strong>of</strong> Vienna for a dissertation entitled ‘Contributions to the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 7Theory <strong>of</strong> the Calculus <strong>of</strong> Variations’. After a year in Berlin as assistant to Weierstrauss,he returned to Vienna to study philosophy with Franz Brentano, who had recentlyresigned his chair <strong>of</strong> philosophy. In 1886, on Brentano’s recommendation, Husserl wentto Halle to work with Karl Stumpf, who supervised the thesis submitted for hisHabilitation, a study <strong>of</strong> the concept <strong>of</strong> number. From 1887 to 1928, Husserl held teachingpositions at Halle, Göttingen, and Freiburg im Breisgau.As a Jew, Husserl was increasingly the subject <strong>of</strong> harassment during his retirementyears in Freiburg. It must have been an especially cruel blow to have found himselfdenied access to the library <strong>of</strong> the university he had served so well. After his death in1938, Husserl’s unpublished manuscripts were saved from destruction by Hermann VanBreda, a Belgian priest and philosopher, who also arranged for Husserl’s wife anddaughter to be sheltered in a Belgian convent during the occupation. Van Bredasubsequently founded the Husserl Archives at Louvain.Husserl was a person <strong>of</strong> high moral character and <strong>of</strong> impeccable intellectual integrity.He looked upon philosophy as a vocation, and felt personally called upon to defendreason against the various forms <strong>of</strong> relativism prevalent in his day. However, his wasnever a merely defensive or narrowly conservative project. Indeed, he <strong>of</strong>ten expressedadmiration for the sceptical tradition in philosophy, and thought that Hume’s radicalcritique <strong>of</strong> presuppositions made him the greatest <strong>of</strong> modern philosophers. He alsorejected the arrogance and chauvinism <strong>of</strong> those who claimed that philosophy hadachieved its culmination in German thought and expression. <strong>Philosophy</strong>, he argued,cannot be the exclusive property <strong>of</strong> any single culture or language, for the emergence <strong>of</strong>the philosophic spirit introduced a new mode <strong>of</strong> teleology characterized by thecomplementary traits <strong>of</strong> universality and infinity. The telos <strong>of</strong> philosophy is universal inthat it strives to attain an identical truth which is valid for all who are no longer blindedby traditions, and infinite in that this goal <strong>of</strong> truth can never be fully realized and thusremains always a regulative idea. By reason <strong>of</strong> its universality, therefore, philosophycannot be limited to a particular period or people, and by reason <strong>of</strong> its infinity philosophyremains always an unending process ([1.33], 286; [1.89], 151–60).During his lifetime Husserl published several books and also left an extraordinarynumber <strong>of</strong> manuscripts, lecture notes and working papers. Both the published works andthe unpublished materials contain many repetitive passages, tantalizingly unfinisheddescriptions, and agonizing reappraisals <strong>of</strong> earlier positions. As a result, it is <strong>of</strong>tendifficult to co-ordinate earlier and later works, or even to be sure <strong>of</strong> the directionultimately taken by his thought. Husserl would not be entirely displeased by thissituation, for he concluded finally that there can be no totalizing syntheses. We muststrive for objectivity, and hope for progress towards that goal, but we must alsoacknowledge all the while that the goal <strong>of</strong> truth functions always as ‘the idea <strong>of</strong> aninfinite task’ ([1.33], 291).EARLY WORKS: INFLUENCE OF FREGE BRENTANO, HERBART,STUMPF AND LOTZEHusserl’s first published work, <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arithmetic (1891), was a revised version <strong>of</strong>


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 8his earlier analysis <strong>of</strong> the concept <strong>of</strong> number. Adopting a distinction first made byBrentano, Husserl distinguishes between intuitive presentation and symbolic intention <strong>of</strong>numbers. He describes how our primitive intuitions about numbers and theirinterrelationships are based upon the experiences <strong>of</strong> counting, comparing and collecting,and how we think in symbols <strong>of</strong> more complex numbers for whichthere can be no suchauthenticating intuitions. Unfortunately, he makes several remarks which give theimpression that he conflated numbers and their presentations. For example, he refers tothe unity <strong>of</strong> a number as a psychic relation, and claims that understanding the concept <strong>of</strong>a number requires reflection on its presentation in relevant acts <strong>of</strong> collective combination.In 1894, Frege called attention to these compromising remarks in a critical review <strong>of</strong>Husserl’s book. He objected that Husserl’s analysis blurs the distinction betweensubjective and objective domains, and concluded that his work was a typical example <strong>of</strong>psychologism ([1.65], 200–1). While Frege’s critique finds some justification inHusserl’s text, this extreme conclusion is unwarranted. Frege was inclined to regard aspsychologistic any attempt to relate the status <strong>of</strong> numbers to the activities <strong>of</strong> counting andcollecting. Hence, he was not likely to be attuned to the nuances <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s intentionwhich was surely not to collapse the objectivity <strong>of</strong> numbers into their acts <strong>of</strong> presentationbut rather to describe just how their objectivity manifests itself to us. At any rate, Husserllater distinguished clearly between numbers and their presentations, and between theconcept <strong>of</strong> number and the concept <strong>of</strong> collective combination ([1.35], 784; [1.86], 24).Frege also criticized Husserl for holding the view that numbers are totalities (determinatemultitudes) comprised <strong>of</strong> mere ‘somethings’ having no specific content and yet somehowdiffering from one another. However, this is a caricature <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s position, for heclearly maintains that objects are always identified by way <strong>of</strong> their features. His point issimply that, once we have identified objects to be counted, we prescind from thedeterminate content <strong>of</strong> those objects in the instance numbering them.It took some time, however, for Husserl to clarify the ambiguities generated by hiscontinued dependence on the linguistic and conceptual framework <strong>of</strong> the empiricisttradition, which was the remote forerunner <strong>of</strong> late nineteenth-century psychologism. Inhis essay ‘Psychological Studies in the Elements <strong>of</strong> Logic’ (1894), he makes theunequivocal claim that our cognitive intuitions truly present the things intended by ourspeech acts. Moreover, he distinguishes clearly between mental acts and their contents, adistinction that had been blurred by the empiricist notion <strong>of</strong> a mental ‘process’, which ineffect reduces cognitive acts to the mere having <strong>of</strong> associatively modified impressions.Nevertheless, he constantly uses the term ‘contents’ in an ambiguous fashion, sometimesto refer to ill-defined mental representations and sometimes to refer to things in the worldin so far as they are known. Hence he does not yet make it clear that the intended objects<strong>of</strong> both our signitive and intuitive acts are, ordinarily at least, things in the world ratherthan mental substitutes ([1.40], 126–42; [1.122], 34–8).These ambiguities testify to the influence <strong>of</strong> Brentano on the earlyHusserl. Brentanorejected the empiricists’ reduction <strong>of</strong> mental acts to associative reactions, reaffirmed atleast vaguely the medieval distinction between acts and contents, and retrieved in part theancient thesis that cognitive acts reach out to the intended objects themselves. He istherefore rightly celebrated for having revived the theory <strong>of</strong> intentionality. However, hisinterpretation <strong>of</strong> this notion intermingled modern and premodern themes. His early


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 9writings described intentional contents in ways that evoke the modern notion thatimpressions and ideas function as intra-mental substitutes for inaccessible real objects <strong>of</strong>reference. He said, for example, that every intentional experience ‘contains something asits object within itself, and referred also to this ‘immanent objectivity’ as the ‘intentionalin-existence <strong>of</strong> an object’ ([1.45], 88–9).Although Brentano explicitly related his account <strong>of</strong> intentionality to the scholastictradition, and traced its origin to Aristotle’s books on the soul, he unfortunately tended toread the modern interpretation <strong>of</strong> immanence into the medieval theme <strong>of</strong> esseintentionale. It is true that the Scholastics used the term ‘intentional’ (and morefrequently the term ‘objective’) to refer to the mode <strong>of</strong> being had by things known, in s<strong>of</strong>ar as they are present in the knower. The point <strong>of</strong> the medieval distinction betweenintentional (objective) being and real being was to clarify Aristotle’s claim that theknower ‘is somehow’ the form <strong>of</strong> the thing known, without thereby entering into physicalidentity with the thing. It was thought that the intentional object (‘inner word’, ‘formalconcept’, ‘expressed species’) functions as a unique sort <strong>of</strong> intermediary, i.e., as atransparent sign through which the mind is related to reality ([1.101], 62 n. 3). Althoughthis emphasis on the mediating function <strong>of</strong> formal concepts may well have prepared theway for the modern thesis that to know is to have a representation <strong>of</strong> something (its ‘idea’or ‘concept’) within the mind’s interiority, the medieval thinkers themselves clearlymaintained that the intentional object is the very thing itself, considered as known(Aquinas, De Veritate, iv, 2 ad 3).Aristotle does not seem to have thought it necessary to postulate any intermediary,however special, between intellect and thing known. Indeed, he suggests that the intellectmust itself be free <strong>of</strong> formal structure, and hence empty <strong>of</strong> content, so that it can becomethe forms <strong>of</strong> all things. The intellect, says Aristotle, possesses the same son <strong>of</strong>adaptability as the human hand. It takes on the forms <strong>of</strong> things in the way that the humanhand grasps tools (Aristotle, De Anima, 423a 1–3; [1.90], 132–7). Thus, the intellectoperates within the realm <strong>of</strong> nature itself rather than within some subjective enclosure. Itsmode <strong>of</strong> being is its transcending function. Aristotle further describes a thing’s form as itssortal feature, its ‘look’ (eidos). The look is what we know when we know this particularthing. Although there is a difference between intuiting an individual qua individual (theprimary substance), and intuiting its species-look (the secondary substance), these modes<strong>of</strong> intuition are complementary and interdependent. We grasp the species-look both as asurplus whose sense exceeds the particularity <strong>of</strong> this instance and as a condition for themanifestation <strong>of</strong> the particular (Aristotle, Metaphysics, 1042a 17–49). Aristotle alsoemphasizes the continuity between perception and predication. Predicative discoursegives syntactical articulation to the inarticulate nuances <strong>of</strong> intuition (Aristotle, OnInterpretation, 16b 25–6). Judging is therefore directed primarily upon things and theirperceived features, not upon propositions as such.Brentano revived the Aristotelian notion that the intellect’s intentional targets arethings in the world, but he imagined the intellect’s grasp <strong>of</strong> forms as taking place withinthe mind’s inner space. He therefore concluded that the intellect could never effectivelyreach those targets. Brentano also subscribed wholeheartedly to the modern interpretation<strong>of</strong> perception. He claimed that our perceptions yield merely subjective appearances, andhe appealed to physical causality alone in order to account for the relationship between


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 10these appearances and real objects. Corresponding to perceived colours, he claimed, thereare only the ‘vibrations’ which emanate from the interaction <strong>of</strong> atoms, molecules andforces. A thing’s true being, therefore, is its hidden quantifiable reality accessible only tothe methods <strong>of</strong> the natural sciences. Perceived objects do not exist really outside <strong>of</strong> us;they are mere phenomena ([1.45], 9–10). In his later works, Brentano neverthelessclaimed that linguistic references are ordinarily directed upon transcendent real entities,rather than upon mental contents. However, there is no indication that this new positionentailed a critique <strong>of</strong> the empiricist account <strong>of</strong> intuition. Everything suggests acompromise: we refer to real things, but we see only phenomena. Moreover, Brentanoadopted the modern interpretation <strong>of</strong> the relationship between assertive and predicativemoments <strong>of</strong> judgment. Judgment, he says, is an act <strong>of</strong> acceptance or denial directed uponsome presentation. This definition implies that judging is not primarily directed uponthings and their perceived features, but upon intra-mental or ideal contents ([1.45], 198–9).Dallas Willard’s historical research has demonstrated how the influence <strong>of</strong> JohannFriedrich Herbart, Karl Stumpf and Hermann Lotze helped Husserl to make a moredecisive break with the empiricist tradition than that achieved by Brentano ([1.122], 30–4). Herbart defined ‘apperception’ as the ‘awareness <strong>of</strong> what is going on in us’, andsubsequently distinguished clearly between awareness <strong>of</strong> the activity <strong>of</strong> thinking andawareness <strong>of</strong> its content ([1.72], v, 43). Stumpf, to whom Husserl dedicated his LogicalInvestigations, held that second-order representations (such as the idea <strong>of</strong> a causal nexus)may arise out <strong>of</strong> first-order representations, and that the former are not reducible toassociative manipulations <strong>of</strong> the latter. In short, he held that we somehow perceive causalconnections ([1.112], 5). Lotze broke away even more completely from the empiricistposition. Whereas Hume had claimed that the impression <strong>of</strong> the mind’s transition (whichaccounts for the idea <strong>of</strong> necessary connection) is reducible to the process <strong>of</strong> transitionitself, Lotze asserted unequivocally that ideas <strong>of</strong> relations depend on a reflexiveawareness <strong>of</strong> the mind’s transitions. Moreover, he drew a distinction between the object<strong>of</strong> the reflexive act (a second-order mental content) and the relationship represented asobtaining between the transcendent objects <strong>of</strong> the first-order impressions ([1.78], 537–8).Willard points out that these distinctions are unthinkable within the context <strong>of</strong> the usualempiricist account <strong>of</strong> cognition. There is no way, for example, <strong>of</strong> reducing Lotze’srelating activities to the mere having <strong>of</strong> automatic transitional processes, or <strong>of</strong> reducinghis second-order contents to faded and less forceful copies <strong>of</strong> impressions. On the otherhand, these authors continue to interpret mental activities as purely inner psychologicalhappenings, and they do not explicitly call into question the empiricist description <strong>of</strong>mind as a theatre <strong>of</strong> representations. Hence, their modifications <strong>of</strong> the Humean accountdo not constitute a full fledged revival <strong>of</strong> the premodern notion <strong>of</strong> cognition. None theless, once the distinction between activity and content had been re-established, and oncethe notion <strong>of</strong> irreducible second-order operations and contents had been elaborated, thestage was set for a comprehensive reappraisal <strong>of</strong> the modern thesis that the terminus <strong>of</strong>our knowing is located within the mind’s inner space.LOGICAL INVESTIGATIONS


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 11Husserl was the first to challenge the modern position squarely. During the period from1894 to 1900, further reflection on the incoherence <strong>of</strong> psychologism and on the need for anew foundation for logic led him to make a more decisive break with the modernepistemological model for mind. There is no evidence that he engaged during these yearsin any prolonged study <strong>of</strong> medieval or later scholastic literature on the topic <strong>of</strong> cognition,or that he was markedly influenced by a reading <strong>of</strong> the relevant texts <strong>of</strong> Aristotle. Yet hewas able to achieve what amounts to a reconstruction <strong>of</strong> the premodern notion <strong>of</strong> theintentional continuity between mind and nature. His reflections during this periodculminated in the publication <strong>of</strong> his greatest work, Logical Investigations (1900–1). Thisbook begins with a series <strong>of</strong> prolegomena which make a powerful critique <strong>of</strong> the tenets <strong>of</strong>psychologism. The rest <strong>of</strong> the work develops a more positive account <strong>of</strong> how ourcognitive acts have the capacity to yield access to objective truths. Its six investi-gationsare devoted to the following related topics: signs and signification, universals andparticulars, parts and wholes, logical grammar, intentionality, evidence and truth.In the prolegomena, Husserl demonstrates the incoherence <strong>of</strong> trying to reduce theobjectivity <strong>of</strong> numbers, propositions, and truth itself to subjective states or activities. LikeFrege, he calls attention to the self-contradiction involved in every attempt to defend thethesis that truth is reducible to our acceptance <strong>of</strong> it. One cannot coherently propose atheory that subjectivizes truth and then go on to make objective claims for that theory. Tomake any statement whatsoever, including a statement in defence <strong>of</strong> relativism, is tomake a claim that something is the case independently <strong>of</strong> one’s making that claim. LikeFrege, Husserl also contends that the principles <strong>of</strong> logic cannot be regarded as provisionalgeneralizations because inductively derived laws could never serve as standards foradjudicating between valid and invalid arguments. It would make no sense to criticizesome individual’s thinking as illogical or inconsistent on the basis <strong>of</strong> inductivegeneralizations about how thinking occurs. The idiosyncratic thinking in question mightlegitimately be characterized as unusual, but not as invalid. Husserl holds thatpsychologism also fails to account for the kind <strong>of</strong> evidence belonging to principles <strong>of</strong>logic, such as the laws <strong>of</strong> the syllogism. He criticizes John Stuart Mill’s description <strong>of</strong>logical laws as inductive generalizations on the grounds that the evidence for logical lawsis absolutely certain rather than merely probable and provisional ([1.35], 187–96). Thissort <strong>of</strong> argument would be unacceptable to Frege, who insisted that any appeal toevidence blurs the distinction between a proposition’s truth and its being recognized astrue. According to Frege, a proposition is simply true or false in itself. He argued thatgenetic accounts <strong>of</strong> how people come to think <strong>of</strong> propositions as true are irrelevant to theissue <strong>of</strong> truth ([1.64], vi; [1.66], 133; [1.86], 32–8). Husserl contends, on the contrary,that there is no reason why an appeal to evidence should email the reduction <strong>of</strong> truth to itsrecognition. When the objective truth <strong>of</strong> a proposition makes itself manifest to the seeker<strong>of</strong> truth, it does not thereby become subjective.The first investigation opens with a discussion <strong>of</strong> two kinds <strong>of</strong> signs: indications andexpressions. Indications either stand for what they signify (a flag as the sign <strong>of</strong> a nation)or point to the existence <strong>of</strong> some absent reality (smoke as a sign <strong>of</strong> fire). In both cases,association provides the link between sign and signified. As opposed to indications,linguistic expressions introduce a stratum <strong>of</strong> meaning. Their use requires acts <strong>of</strong>interpretation on the part <strong>of</strong> speakers and listeners. A speaker’s words ordinarily


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 12accomplish three functions: they express meanings, refer to objects, and ‘intimate’ to alistener the intellectual activity <strong>of</strong> the speaker. Husserl observes that the ‘intimating’function <strong>of</strong> expression is a kind <strong>of</strong> indication, in the sense that spoken or written wordsare indices <strong>of</strong> the existence <strong>of</strong> the speaker’s hidden and therefore ‘absent’ thoughts. Headds that many philosophical errors arise from the failure to distinguish properly betweenindication and expression. He takes Mill’s account <strong>of</strong> naming as an example. Mill heldthat proper names denote but do not connote. They point to an object without in any waypresenting or conveying information about the object. Proper names, he added, are likethe distinctive chalk-marks made by the robber (<strong>of</strong> a popular tale) on a house that heintended to plunder at a later hour. Husserl observes that this comparison unfortunatelysuggests that proper names function only as indications. It is true that when the robberlater sees the chalk-marks, he recalls by association his earlier thought ‘This is the houseI must rob’. But in relation to its object a name does not function as an indication orsignal. An indication always motivates belief in the existence <strong>of</strong> whatever it indicates.However, a names does not similarly entail the existence <strong>of</strong> the object named ([1.35],295–8). Named objects may be real, ideal, imaginary or even impossible. Thus,meaningful reference to an object does not perforce entail the existence <strong>of</strong> the object. Thecontext <strong>of</strong> its use determines the kind <strong>of</strong> ontological commitment entailed by a linguisticexpression. Husserl thus elegantly avoids the paradoxes that Bertrand Russell laterdiscovered were implicit in Mill’s view that names are like purely indexical signs.The second investigation makes a convincing critique <strong>of</strong> the empiricist reduction <strong>of</strong>universals to blurred particulars. Husserl contends that recognition <strong>of</strong> some particularfeature requires a grasp <strong>of</strong> the primitive relationship between species and instances. Wecould not discern a distinctive particular feature as such (e.g., this particular red) if we didnot also intuit the corresponding universal (the species, Red). The two modes <strong>of</strong> intuitionare interdependent. We grasp the particular feature as an instance <strong>of</strong> a range <strong>of</strong> similarinstances in which the species is realized, and we grasp the identity <strong>of</strong> the species as thecondition for the possibility <strong>of</strong> identifying the particular as such an instance.The third investigation deals with the relationships between parts and wholes. Husserlfirst distinguishes between independent parts, or ‘pieces’, and non-independent parts, or‘moments’. Pieces are parts that are separable from their wholes. Moments are parts thatare so interrelated with one another, or with their wholes, that they cannot be givenseparately. We learn to recognize the various relationships between parts and wholes byattempting successfully or unsuccessfully to vary these relationships in imagination. Forexample, we may conclude that the colour <strong>of</strong> a thing is inseparable from its surface (orextension) because we cannot successfully imagine eliminating one without alsoeliminating the other.The fourth investigation discusses the relationship between grammar and logic. Husserlcontends that grammatical laws governing distinctions between complete and incompleteexpressions, and senseless and absurd expressions, are grounded in ontological structures.Laws governing the compounding <strong>of</strong> meanings are also similarly grounded in the waythings are. All such rules have their origins in the interplay <strong>of</strong> parts and wholes given inperception. Husserl acknowledges that various languages may organize perceptual partwholecomplexes differently. He suggests, however, that a study <strong>of</strong> the different ways inwhich various languages accomplish this task will reveal common categorial structures


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 13concealed by empirical differences ([1.35], 526; [1.100], 206).In the fifth investigation, Husserl objects to the above-mentioned expressions thatBrentano had used to describe the status <strong>of</strong> intentional objects (‘immanent objectivity’,‘intentional in-existence’). He points out that these phrases suggest that the intentionalobject enters into consciousness as a component <strong>of</strong> the flux <strong>of</strong> experience and that itfunctions within the enclosure <strong>of</strong> the mind as a substitute for the object <strong>of</strong> reference.Husserl insists, on the contrary, that the intentional object and the object <strong>of</strong> reference areone and the same: ‘It need only be said to be acknowledged that the intentional object <strong>of</strong>a presentation is the same as its actual object…it is absurd to distinguish betweenthem’ ([1.35], 595). He thus affirms unequivocally that our intentional acts target thingsin the world. Husserl also clarifies the relationship between intentional contents andintentional objects. He says that the term ‘intentional content’ may legitimately beinterpreted in the following ways: (1) as the intentional object (either the object toutcourt, or the object considered as it is intended); (2) as that feature (the act’s ‘matter’) invirtue <strong>of</strong> which the act achieves determinate reference; (3) as the ‘intentional essence’ <strong>of</strong>the act, i.e., the ‘matter’ combined with its ‘quality’. The term ‘quality’ refers in thiscontext to the type <strong>of</strong> intentional act, e.g., question, wish, statement, etc. ([1.35], 578–80,589, 657; [1.54], 26–36). These distinctions are consistent with Husserl’s claim, in thefirst investigation, that propositions are related to the acts in which they are expressed ina manner comparable to the way in which species are related to their instances.Considered as an intentional essence, the intentional content (matter and quality) is anideal proposition that is independent <strong>of</strong> particular intentional acts. Taken as instantiated,the matter and quality are non-independent ‘moments’ <strong>of</strong> a particular act ([1.35], 330).Many commentators have rejected this thesis on the grounds that it seems to commitHusserl to the questionable view that ideal propositions may somehow be particularizedas moments <strong>of</strong> individualintentional acts. John Drummond has called attention to twopassages that suggest that Husserl eventually modified his position. A note in the secondedition (1913) strongly implies that the intentional content should not be regarded as aparticularized feature <strong>of</strong> the intentional act ([1.35], 576; [1.54], 26–36, 39–42). Moreover,in Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological <strong>Philosophy</strong>(1913), Husserl adds that what he had formerly taken to be a property <strong>of</strong> acts was really aproperty <strong>of</strong> the ‘meant as such’ ([1.41], 308; [1.54], 41). In other words, Husserl finallyidentifies intentional matter and intentional object (in the sense <strong>of</strong> the ‘object consideredas it is intended’). This is an important statement, for it effectively eliminates any residue<strong>of</strong> the medieval notion that we must postulate some son <strong>of</strong> intermediary content inbetween intentional acts and their objects.Husserl agrees with Brentano that we must distinguish between predication andjudgmental assent. However, he disagrees with Brentano’s view that judgment is theacceptance or rejection <strong>of</strong> a neutralized presentation. According to Husserl, judgment isan assertive attitude which pervades the achievement <strong>of</strong> predication. This attitude isdetermined by anticipated or concomitantly experienced intuitions <strong>of</strong> things and theirfeatures, rather than by some sort <strong>of</strong> appraisal <strong>of</strong> the sense <strong>of</strong> the sentence. Husserl alsoagrees with Frege, as opposed to Brentano, that judgment is always a positive attitude,even when the content to which it assents includes a negation. In the context <strong>of</strong> discourse,assertoric statements make truth claims by reason <strong>of</strong> their form, not by reason <strong>of</strong> their


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 14predicative content as such, nor by reason <strong>of</strong> some tacit prefixed existential proposition([1.35], 612–16). He thus firmly rejects the modern view that judgments are appraisals <strong>of</strong>nominalized propositional contents. In our straightforward dealings with the world, weare ordinarily preoccupied with things and their properties, rather than with what we aresaying. Our speech is guided not by a scan <strong>of</strong> meanings but rather by anticipated orachieved intuitions <strong>of</strong> the essential structures <strong>of</strong> things. It follows that we need notpostulate mediating structures (ideas or concepts) between words and things, nor do weneed to speculate about a ‘place’ in which they dwell. To know something is simply topossess its form, to intuit it through its essence, i.e., its intelligible structure. Speech actsexpress meanings as ideal objects, but meanings are not grasped as such in the instance <strong>of</strong>articulation.Husserl also develops more in detail the guiding metaphor <strong>of</strong> his account <strong>of</strong>intentionality. He contrasts the ‘emptiness’ <strong>of</strong> symbolic intentions with the ‘fullness’ <strong>of</strong>intuitive presentations. An empty act is directed toward an object in its absence. Afulfilling act registers its presence. Symbolic intentions may be either nominal (simple) orpropositional (complex). A nominal act is single-rayed and directed towards a whole. Apropositional act is multi-rayed, since it articulates discrete parts within a complex object.Intuitive presentations may be either perceptual or categorial.These distinctions prepare the way for a discussion <strong>of</strong> truth in the sixth investigation.According to Husserl, the experience <strong>of</strong> truth occurs when we recognize the identity <strong>of</strong> anobject in the transition from empty intention to fulfilling intuition ([1.35], 621–4, 765–70). This description displaces the problem <strong>of</strong> truth from its traditional locus in thejudgment, since the identity-synthesis may occur both in nominal and propositionalcontexts. Truth is achieved on the pre-predicative level in the identity-synthesis <strong>of</strong> anempty nominal intention and its correlative perceptual intuition. If judgments achievetruth in a comparable sense, it is not by reason <strong>of</strong> their propositional structure but byreason <strong>of</strong> a parallel intuitive fulfillment <strong>of</strong> their emptily intended objects ([1.76], 68).The sixth investigation also <strong>of</strong>fers a more extensive critique <strong>of</strong> the restrictive account<strong>of</strong> intuition proposed by British empiricism. Husserl approaches this issue indirectly byfirst criticizing the interpretation that the empiricist tradition had given to the role <strong>of</strong>those components <strong>of</strong> a proposition that belong to its categorial form, e.g., prepositions,conjunctions, cases and the copula. According to Locke and Hume, these syntacticaloperators refer to intra-mental processes rather than to aspects <strong>of</strong> the world. Husserldismisses this thesis on the grounds that, when we use such expressions, we are directedtowards things rather than towards inner processes. For example, if we say ‘This paper iswhite’, it is because we find that the property ‘white’ belongs to the paper. Hence wesurely use the term ‘is’ in such a sentence to refer to the objective situation rather than tosome inner psychological happening. Besides syntactical terms, he adds, there are otherformal components <strong>of</strong> propositions that cannot find their fulfillment in ordinary simpleintuitions. Nouns, verbs and even adjectival expressions introduce senses which cannotbe fulfilled by simple intuitions: ‘The intention <strong>of</strong> the word “white” only partiallycoincides with the colour-aspect <strong>of</strong> the appearing object; a surplus <strong>of</strong> meaning remainsover, a form which finds nothing in the appearance itself to confirm it’ ([1.35], 775).Husserl concludes that we must acknowledge the role <strong>of</strong> nonsensuous or ‘categorial’intuitions which function in conjunction with simple perceptions and which bring the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 15formal components <strong>of</strong> predication to intuitive fulfillment. The fulfilling intuition <strong>of</strong> anyexpression describing a particular thus involves the intuition <strong>of</strong> formal senses that exceedwhat is intuited in the simple perception <strong>of</strong> the particular. These expressions refer toparticular things by way <strong>of</strong> accidental or essential descriptive features whose surplussenses function as conditions for the manifestation <strong>of</strong> the particulars as such ([1.114], 70–1). Categorial intuition is therefore the first step in the process <strong>of</strong> discernment <strong>of</strong>essences, for to grasp the essence <strong>of</strong> some thing or situation is first <strong>of</strong> all to grasp itssortal property, i.e., its specific form. Translated into Aristotelian terms, intuition <strong>of</strong> thelooks <strong>of</strong> things (secondary substances) is the condition for the presentation <strong>of</strong> particulars(primary substances).THE TRANSCENDENTAL TURNDuring the period from 1900 to 1913, Husserl developed more fully his criticism <strong>of</strong> themodern account <strong>of</strong> cognition. He spelled out his new position in a series <strong>of</strong> five lectureswhich introduce the theme <strong>of</strong> transcendental phenomenology for the first time. Given inGöttingen in 1907 and later published as The Idea <strong>of</strong> Phenomenology, these lectures aredevoted to a clarification <strong>of</strong> the notions <strong>of</strong> immanence and transcendence. According toHusserl, modern descriptions <strong>of</strong> the relationship between immanence and transcendencetend to invoke two complementary themes: inside versus outside and accessibility versusinaccessibility. When immanence is described as an enclosure containing mentalprocesses and impressions, transcendence is correspondingly defined as whateverremains outside <strong>of</strong> that enclosure. When immanence is described as a region <strong>of</strong>indubitable givenness, transcendence is defined as a region populated by unknowablethings-in-themselves. Most epistemologies combine these two senses <strong>of</strong> the relationshipbetween immanence and transcendence. They first conflate mental acts and their contentsby describing both as ‘contained’ within the mind’s psychic processes. They thenconstrue the enigma <strong>of</strong> cognition as a problem <strong>of</strong> how to establish a connection betweenintra-mental representations and extra-mental things. The ‘unspoken assumption’ <strong>of</strong> thesetheories is that our cognitive processes are devoid <strong>of</strong> intentional import. This, accordingto Husserl, is the ‘fatal mistake’ <strong>of</strong> modern philosophy. Husserl praises Hume foracknowledging that this way <strong>of</strong> formulating the problem would in the end lead only toscepticism, but he adds that Hume’s scepticism is itself riddled with contradictions. Onthe one hand, Hume degrades to the status <strong>of</strong> fictions everything that transcendsimpressions and ideas. On the other hand, he ascribes to the processes <strong>of</strong> mind the samesort <strong>of</strong> reality as the transcendent things that we would reach if we could somehow breakout <strong>of</strong> the circle <strong>of</strong> immanence. Husserl concludes that whenever philosophers ask aboutthe possibility <strong>of</strong> cognition in a way that implies that ‘cognition is a thing apart from itsobject’, or that ‘cognition is given but the object <strong>of</strong> cognition is not given’, they introducean inappropriate notion <strong>of</strong> transcendence, which in turn entails an inappropriateinterpretation <strong>of</strong> immanence ([1.34], 27–30).According to Husserl, philosophy needs to adopt a new way <strong>of</strong> thinking and a newcritique <strong>of</strong> reason: ‘philosophy lies in a wholly new dimension. It needs an entirely newpoint <strong>of</strong> departure and an entirely new method distinguishing it in principle from any


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 16“natural” science’ ([1.34], 19). He therefore proposes a new and radical method whichrequires the bracketing (epoche) or suspension <strong>of</strong> natural convictions: ‘At the outset <strong>of</strong>the critique <strong>of</strong> cognition the entire world <strong>of</strong> nature, physical and psychological, as well asone’s own human self together with all the sciences which have to do with theseobjective matters, are put into question’ ([1.34], 22). Husserl immediately distinguisheshis new method from Descartes’ doubt. Descartes’ goal was to establish certitude aboutthe existence <strong>of</strong> the thinking self and transcendent things. Husserl has no interest in sucha project. His goal is simply to uncover the essence <strong>of</strong> cognition. He points out thatDescartes failed to grasp the essence <strong>of</strong> cognition because he defined himself, qua,inquirer, as a ‘thinking thing’ having the same status as the transcendent things whoseexistence he had called into doubt ([1.34], 5–7). The purpose <strong>of</strong> the new method is to freeus from this incoherent interpretation <strong>of</strong> transcendence, and consequently to enable us toredefine both transcendence and immanence. When we bracket everything within therealm <strong>of</strong> transcendence (as it is understood by Descartes and Hume), we in fact excludenothing more than the incoherent interpretation <strong>of</strong> transcendent being as a region situatedbeyond the range <strong>of</strong> our knowledge. In so far as the mind’s ‘inside’ is interpreted ashaving the same sort <strong>of</strong> ontological status, it too must be bracketed. This approachpermits us to redefine immanence, in a broader sense, as the zone <strong>of</strong> all manifestation,wherein both immanent objects (considered now, in a narrower sense, as reflectivelyintuited experiences) and their intentional correlates (transcendent things) appear to us.Immanent and transcendent objects are now distinguished in terms <strong>of</strong> their differentstyles <strong>of</strong> appearing, rather than by appeal to the difference between intra-mentalappearance and extra-mental being.In the first volume <strong>of</strong> Ideas, Husserl describes this broader field <strong>of</strong> immanence as arealm <strong>of</strong> transcendental consciousness. He distinguishes in this work between the ‘naturalattitude’, in which we are preoccupied by things in the world, and the ‘phenomenologicalattitude’, in which we reflect on the intentions at work in the natural attitude and on theobjective correlates <strong>of</strong> those intentions. We achieve the latter transcendental point <strong>of</strong>view by suspending our natural attitude <strong>of</strong> belief in the reality <strong>of</strong> things and the world.Husserl emphasizes once again that the purpose <strong>of</strong> this procedure is not to call naturalconvictions into doubt but rather to achieve a distance that will enable us to reflect uponthem. He adds that the method may also be called ‘reduction’, for it ‘leads back’ fromlived acts and attitudes to reflective consideration <strong>of</strong> those acts and attitudes. After thereduction, we no longer live in our intentions. We step back from them in order to reflecton them in their full concreteness. For example, we step back from our participation inthe positing <strong>of</strong> things as real, but continue to maintain that positing as something uponwhich we reflect. We also maintain our contact with things. The same things in the worldare still there for our consideration, but the change in focus initiated by the reduction nowpermits us to appreciate them precisely as intended objects. We now notice them asperceived, as judged, as posited, as doubted, as imagined. Husserl calls any object soconsidered a noema, and he calls the correlative intention a noesis ([1.41], 214; [1.54],46–56, 256–7).Many commentators equate the phenomenological reduction with the reflective turn <strong>of</strong>consciousness away from things and facts towards concepts and propositions. Theycontend that the purpose <strong>of</strong> the reduction is to orient philosophical analysis towards


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 17semantic issues. Proponents <strong>of</strong> this view find striking similarities between Husserl’sconcept <strong>of</strong> the noema and Frege’s concept <strong>of</strong> ‘sense’ (Sinn). They hold that both Fregeansenses and Husserlian noemata ordinarily serve as intermediaries between our linguisticexpressions and their referents ([1.61], 680–7). Frege claimed that the sense conveyed byan expression shapes or determines its reference. Certain passages from Ideas seem toassign an analogous role to the noema. For example, in one passage Husserl speaksenigmatically <strong>of</strong> a ‘determinable X’ that functions as a centre for the noematic contentswhich present an object in diverse ways ([1.41], 313–14, 320–2). Proponents <strong>of</strong> theFregean interpretation <strong>of</strong> the noema suggest that Husserl meant to say that the noematic‘X’ functions like the sense conveyed by a demonstrative pronoun. It identifies the object<strong>of</strong> reference not through its properties but as the bearer <strong>of</strong> properties ([1.95], 195–219).On this interpretation, the role <strong>of</strong> the phenomenological reduction is to disclose thesemantic entities through which intentional direction to objects is achieved.Robert Sokolowski points out that this interpretation fails to take into account the laterHusserl’s remarks, in Formal and Transcendental Logic (1929), on the differencebetween the kind <strong>of</strong> reflection that yields access to propositions and the properlyphilosophical reflection made possible by the reduction ([1.31, 110–27; [1.100], 45–7).Husserl makes it clear in this work that there is nothing specifically philosophical aboutpropositional reflection, i.e., the reflective turn away from the ‘ontological’ realms <strong>of</strong>things and facts towards the ‘apophantic’ realm <strong>of</strong> concepts and propositions. This shiftin focus occurs quite naturally whenever we reflect on what we ourselves or others havesaid, in such a way as to take what has been said as a mere supposition or proposal, i.e.,as a proposition. It also occurs regularly in the context <strong>of</strong> scientific inquiry. Scientificverification requires a constant oscillation between investigation <strong>of</strong> facts and reflectionon propositions. Both ordinary and scientific forms <strong>of</strong> prepositional reflection take placewithin the natural attitude, and therefore do not require the phenomenological reductionas their condition.What then is the difference between prepositional reflection and philosophicalreflection? Prepositional reflection turns our attention from things and facts to conceptsand propositions. Philosophical reflection focuses on the correlation between intentionalacts and attitudes (noeses) and the ways in which things are presented (noemata). Itconsiders things and facts as the correlates <strong>of</strong> the attitude <strong>of</strong> straightforward involvementin the world, and it considers propositions as the correlates <strong>of</strong> the intentional attitude <strong>of</strong>prepositional reflection. We may therefore conclude that, for Husserl, the noema issimply the object itself, considered under the reduction as presented. It follows that the‘determinable X’ is not a semantic entity that functions as a medium <strong>of</strong> reference. It is theintentional object itself considered as an identity genuinely given in each <strong>of</strong> itspresentations ([1.54], 181–91).Husserl’s description <strong>of</strong> the relationship between the ontological and apophanticdomains reinforces his thesis that concepts and propositions do not function as mentalintermediaries. Concepts and propositions emerge only when we shift from anontological to an apophantic focus. Hence, they do not serve as mediating entities thatsomehow link speech acts to their intentional referents. As we have seen, Husserlexplicitly rejected Locke’s view that concepts are mental representations, and implicitlyrejected the medieval view that concepts are transparent media <strong>of</strong> reference. Moreover,


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 18he never claimed, as does Frege, that concepts and propositions belong to a ‘thirdrealm’ (the first realm is the outer world <strong>of</strong> physical things; the second realm is the innerworld <strong>of</strong> psychic processes) that functions as a non-subjective medium <strong>of</strong> reference.Robert Sokolowski suggests that the tendency to regard concepts and propositions asreified intermediaries is probably due to a confusion between object-oriented andreflective stances <strong>of</strong> consciousness. We enjoy a marginal awareness <strong>of</strong> what we aresaying in the process <strong>of</strong> saying it. However, we do not at that moment objectify what weare saying as a proposition, for our consciousness remains directed towards the world.We can, none the less, easily shift back and forth between ontological and prepositionalattitudes. The very mobility <strong>of</strong> our consciousness inculcates a forgetfulness <strong>of</strong> the changein attitude requisite for the manifestation <strong>of</strong> concepts and propositions. Concepts andpropositions then easily come to be thought <strong>of</strong> as having a status analogous to things andfacts. We thus come to think <strong>of</strong> them as separate entities situated in some psychic orsemantic realm. For those who are looking for a solution to the modern epistemologicalproblem <strong>of</strong> establishing a link between our speech acts and their targets, it is thenperfectly natural to assign this mediating role to concepts and propositions. According toHusserl, however, there is no such need for mediation. Our consciousness is intentionalby its very nature ([1.101],110–11; [1.106], 451–63).This does not mean, <strong>of</strong> course, that there is no mediating role for language. Husserldraws a distinction between genuinely thoughtful speech and routine linguisticperformances. He observes that when we speak, we ordinarily focus upon what we see, oranticipate seeing, and only marginally upon what we are saying. Though marginal, ourconsciousness <strong>of</strong> the meanings <strong>of</strong> linguistic expressions testifies to a familiarity with avast network <strong>of</strong> culturally established distinctions and nuances whose ultimatejustification lies in the intuitive disclosure <strong>of</strong> the looks <strong>of</strong> things. Once in command <strong>of</strong> thestandardized senses <strong>of</strong> words, we need no longer focus on those senses. When we speakabout things, we let ourselves be guided only by our categorial intuitions. Our choice <strong>of</strong>words is governed directly by the looks <strong>of</strong> the things we struggle to describe. Sometimeswe simply repeat standard formulae. We then fail to exercise the potential for clarity ordistinctness provided by the linguistic code. Sometimes we are more conscious <strong>of</strong> makinglinguistic choices. At such moments, we shift our focus away from things towards thesenses <strong>of</strong> words ([1.31], 56–60). Husserl thus suggests that our ability to shift back andforth easily between these orientations accounts for the interdependence <strong>of</strong> intuitive andlinguistic discriminations. Finding the appropriate word, therefore, is not just a matter <strong>of</strong>familiarity with the rules <strong>of</strong> a language-game. An exclusively pragmatic account <strong>of</strong>linguistic use amounts to a nominalism that rejects any link between predicates and theintuited forms <strong>of</strong> things. Thoughtful speech is the product <strong>of</strong> an artful integration <strong>of</strong>seeing and saying. Mastery <strong>of</strong> an extensive linguistic repertoire makes for more nuancedperceptions, which in turn call for more nuanced linguistic options.In the first volume <strong>of</strong> Ideas, Husserl takes up again the effort to redefine the notions <strong>of</strong>immanence and transcendence. He attempts to bring the reader gradually to therealization that the new dimension revealed by the reduction is not a region comparableto other regions <strong>of</strong> being. He first defines a region <strong>of</strong> being as a specific domain <strong>of</strong>objects (e.g., the regions ‘material thing’ and ‘culture’) whose unity is determined bysome maximally broad genus. He notes that empirical sciences which deal with a given


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 19region <strong>of</strong> being ought to be grounded in a corresponding science <strong>of</strong> essences which hecalls a ‘regional ontology’. The task <strong>of</strong> a regional ontology is to specify the essences thatstructure all objects in its domain, and to spell out the hierarchically ordered relationshipsbetween them. In addition to the various regional ontologies, Husserl proposes that thereshould be a new science, called ‘formal ontology’, devoted to the study <strong>of</strong> thefundamental categories that govern the relations and arrangements between objects in anyregion whatsoever. He then criticizes the thesis, common to most epistemologicalaccounts, that consciousness is confined within a psychic region, opposed to the region <strong>of</strong>things. Whenever consciousness is described in this manner, there is a tendency, heargues, to reduce intentionality to representation within the enclosure <strong>of</strong> the mind.Repeating the themes developed earlier in The Idea <strong>of</strong> Phenomenology, he then describesthe transcendence <strong>of</strong> things as a mode <strong>of</strong> givenness within immanence, now more broadlyunderstood as the range <strong>of</strong> intentionality’s transcending power. He again stresses that thereduction does not exclude anything that is genuinely given. Finally, he points out thatthis new dimension <strong>of</strong> immanence cannot coherently be understood as situated within theco-ordinates <strong>of</strong> a pre-given world. Even the horizon <strong>of</strong> the world is given as such withinthe sphere <strong>of</strong> immanence. Unlike all other regions, therefore, the transcendental domainis absolute and all-inclusive. It has no perimeters, no outside. Husserl thus takes themetaphor <strong>of</strong> ‘region’ to its limits, in order to demonstrate that it is, in fact, incoherent tothink <strong>of</strong> immanence as a sector within a broader whole. Any attempt to conceive <strong>of</strong> adimension <strong>of</strong> being beyond the zone <strong>of</strong> possible consciousness is nonsensical.Consciousness and being belong together. Their ranges are co-extensive. There can be nooutside for a being whose mode <strong>of</strong> being is to be open to all things.EGO AND WORLDOne <strong>of</strong> the most controversial theses <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s transcendental phenomenology is hisclaim that both ego and world may be considered as noemata by the transcendentalinquirer. He frequently distinguishes between the ego considered as part <strong>of</strong> the world andthe transcendental ego for whom the world itself is a noema. He contends that ourcapacity to function as transcendental subjects permits us to achieve a reflective distancefrom our own natural way <strong>of</strong> being in the world, and therefore to understand that way <strong>of</strong>being more fully. Husserl develops these themes in Ideas II, Cartesian Meditations, andin a manuscript published posthumously under the title The Crisis <strong>of</strong> European Sciencesand Transcendental Phenomenology.Ideas II introduces the theme <strong>of</strong> the human ego in an oblique fashion by firstdescribing the role <strong>of</strong> corporeal orientation and intellectual perspective in the presentation<strong>of</strong> things. Things appear to us in quite different ways, depending on the condition <strong>of</strong> oursense organs, on variations in our kinesthetic orientation, and especially on whether wetake a pragmatic or theoretical attitude towards them. Husserl situates his analysis withinthe context <strong>of</strong> an understanding <strong>of</strong> nature that has been substantially affected by modernscience. The contemporary sense <strong>of</strong> nature, he contends, is the intentional correlate <strong>of</strong> anattitude which he describes as both ‘doxic’ and ‘theoretical’. It is doxic because it ispermeated by an unthematic belief in the existence <strong>of</strong> its objects; it is theoretical because


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 20it prescinds from the practical, aesthetic and ethical features <strong>of</strong> its objects. While ordinaryexperience does not constantly maintain an exclusively theoretical stance, none the lessthe influence <strong>of</strong> science has generated the everyday conviction that the true sense <strong>of</strong> thething is what remains when we bracket the useful, the beautiful and the good ([1.5], 1–11;[1.89], 39–40). Further analysis <strong>of</strong> the presentation <strong>of</strong> things reveals that the full sense <strong>of</strong>their objectivity is dependent upon a recognition <strong>of</strong> intersubjectivity. For example, asense <strong>of</strong> relatively fixed spatial positions is essential to our sense <strong>of</strong> objectivity. It wouldsurely be difficult to develop this notion from an exclusively private perspective. Wemanage eventually to locate ourselves within a public system <strong>of</strong> co-ordinates by firstrecognizing that one individual’s ‘here’ may be another’s ‘there’, and then agreeing uponsome convention for relating all positions to a stable network <strong>of</strong> places. This is a typicalexample <strong>of</strong> phenomenological analysis. Husserl’s goal is always to unpack the layers <strong>of</strong>meaning sedimented in the senses <strong>of</strong> various types <strong>of</strong> objects, and thus to reveal theintentional acts and attitudes tacitly at work in the presentation <strong>of</strong> these objects.In Cartesian Meditations (1931), Husserl continues his analysis <strong>of</strong> intersubjectivity byintroducing a modification <strong>of</strong> the bracketing technique that he calls ‘reduction to thesphere <strong>of</strong> ownness’. He proposes to abstract from everything in our experience thattestifies to the presence <strong>of</strong> others. The purpose <strong>of</strong> this strategy is not to describe theproduction <strong>of</strong> meaning by a subjectivity actually cut <strong>of</strong>f from others and the world, or toassure us that we are really in contact with other people. Despite its title, CartesianMeditations is not motivated by any such epistemological concern. On the contrary,Husserl’s purpose is simply to uncover the contribution <strong>of</strong> the sense that there are otherselves to the individual’s sense <strong>of</strong> self and <strong>of</strong> world. Phenomenological analysis is areconstruction, not a creation <strong>of</strong> meaning.In his Lectures on the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Inner Time-Consciousness (1928), Husserlclaims that a second-order reflection reveals a level <strong>of</strong> time-consciousness that accountsfor the identity <strong>of</strong> the transcendental ego. He first distinguishes between transcendenttemporal objects, such as musical performances or public lectures, and immanenttemporal objects, such as our perceptions <strong>of</strong> these events. He then points out that theperception <strong>of</strong> a temporal object may itself be taken as temporal object. Whenever weperceive the elapsing <strong>of</strong> a speaker’s words into the past, we also experience the fading <strong>of</strong>our perceptions <strong>of</strong> those words into the past. We thus learn to situate transcendenthappenings within the context <strong>of</strong> objective time, and also to locate our perceptions <strong>of</strong>those events within the horizon <strong>of</strong> immanent time. Finally, he claims that reflection onthe correlation between the flux <strong>of</strong> immanent temporal objects and our experience <strong>of</strong> thatflux reveals that we are conscious <strong>of</strong> a deeper level <strong>of</strong> time which accounts for our sense<strong>of</strong> the temporal flow <strong>of</strong> our intentional acts. We experience this primal flux as the basicform within which all experience occurs. This form is composed not <strong>of</strong> the basictemporal phases (past, present and future), but <strong>of</strong> the conditions for their possibility, i.e.,a primal impression, ‘retention’ <strong>of</strong> the just-past, and ‘protention’ <strong>of</strong> the just-about-to-be.Awareness <strong>of</strong> the concatenation <strong>of</strong> these components makes it possible for us toexperience our own intentional life as temporal, and to grasp intentional objects as thesame again throughout their successive presentations ([1.14], 378–82; [1.46], 298–326;[1.100], 138–68).


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 21ESSENCESHusserl claims that we are sometimes able to discern the essential structures <strong>of</strong> things. InExperience and Judgment, he distinguishes between the grasp <strong>of</strong> empirical universals andthe fully-fledged intuition <strong>of</strong> essences. A preliminary awareness <strong>of</strong> empirical universalsoccurs when we make the transition from merely associative judgments, which expressperceived likenesses among things, to those judgments which explicitly identifyparticulars as instances <strong>of</strong> some category. Once we have discerned what is the sameamong many individuals, we may then thematize the universal itself and begin to makescientific judgments about it. The goal <strong>of</strong> science is to specify ever more completely thecharacteristics <strong>of</strong> such empirical universals. According to Husserl, however, sciencenever fully realizes this ideal, for it is impossible to achieve a truly exhaustive anddefinitive determination <strong>of</strong> all <strong>of</strong> the features <strong>of</strong> any empirical universal. Thedetermination <strong>of</strong> every empirical concept is ‘always in progress, always being furtherfashioned, and also refashioned’ ([1.35], 116; [1.36], nos 80–98; [1.100], 58–62).We make the transition from the grasp <strong>of</strong> an empirical universal to the intuition <strong>of</strong> anessence when we move from the perceptual to the imaginary mode <strong>of</strong> consciousness bysubmitting the universal to a process <strong>of</strong> ‘free variation’ designed to reveal an invariantstructure. Husserl describes this technique as follows. We attempt to imaginesuccessively the subtraction <strong>of</strong> one after another <strong>of</strong> the various features <strong>of</strong> the objectunder consideration. In this way we eventually isolate those invariant features withoutwhich the object in question wouldcease to be what it is. We need not consider everyconceivable variation. Indeed, in most cases it would be impossible to carry out anexhaustive survey <strong>of</strong> every possibility. What matters is that the manner <strong>of</strong> variationshould be such that not only do we have the sense that the process could go onindefinitely, but also that it would in fact be fruitless to continue. As Husserl puts it, theprocess <strong>of</strong> variation should have a character <strong>of</strong> ‘exemplary arbitrariness’ ([1.36], no.87b). Eidetic intuition is therefore a product <strong>of</strong> method. As Husserl puts it: ‘The inwardevidence on which all knowledge ultimately reposes is no gift <strong>of</strong> nature, appearingtogether with the idea <strong>of</strong> states <strong>of</strong> affairs without any methodically artful set-up’ ([1.35],63; [1.110].Husserl does not, like some contemporary philosophers, extend the method <strong>of</strong> freevariation to the consideration <strong>of</strong> improbable scenarios imagined as taking place withinpossible worlds. His imaginative variations, like Aristotle’s, are generally guided andlimited by our ordinary intuitions <strong>of</strong> things in this world. Moreover, he never attempts toprovide anything like a clear-cut rule for deciding when the process <strong>of</strong> ‘free variation’ought to come to an end. He tells us only that there comes a point in any enquiry when itis reasonable to conclude that there are no further pertinent questions to be asked. It isthen imprudent or even pathological to consider additional alternative possibilities. Inshort, discernment <strong>of</strong> essences requires both method and judgment. A sense <strong>of</strong> the meanbetween extremes is as necessary in intellectual enquiry as it is in practical affairs.Husserl claims, moreover, that the kind <strong>of</strong> certainty that we should assign to the results<strong>of</strong> this procedure varies in proportion to the type <strong>of</strong> access that we have to the objects


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 22under investigation. Our apperceptive access to the basic structures <strong>of</strong> consciousnessyields a different son <strong>of</strong> evidence than is available in our perceptions <strong>of</strong> things in theworld. Ordinary perceptions are perspectival and therefore necessarily incomplete.However, the philosophic recognition that all such perceptions are perspectival is notitself perspectival or incomplete in the same fashion. Ordinary perceptions areperspectives in the sense that they present only one side <strong>of</strong> their objects at a time.Philosophic descriptions <strong>of</strong> the structure <strong>of</strong> perception are ‘perspectives’ in the sense thatthey are influenced by historically conditioned questions and methods. Husserl suggeststhat it is just as inappropriate to blur these differences by asserting that all forms <strong>of</strong>cognition are similarly perspectival, as it is to look for mathematical certitudes in theethical and political domains.Husserl at first held that the relative immediacy <strong>of</strong> access to the structures <strong>of</strong> cognitionprovided by our tacit awareness <strong>of</strong> intentional performances makes for apodicticcertainty. He eventually acknowledged, however, that even the privileged access <strong>of</strong>consciousness to its own structures does not guarantee the perfect accuracy <strong>of</strong> reflectivedescriptions <strong>of</strong> those structures. Given the oblique and unthematic character <strong>of</strong> our tacitawareness <strong>of</strong> intentional acts and attitudes, and given the distorting influence <strong>of</strong> prevalentphilosophic categories, our reflective descriptions are <strong>of</strong>ten vague and confused. Indeed,the history <strong>of</strong> philosophy testifies convincingly to the fact that no philosophic reflectioncan dissipate all vagueness. In any case, Husserl adds, philosophic differences are neversettled by sweeping refutations, but rather by the elaboration <strong>of</strong> strategic distinctions thatreveal the partial, vague or confused character <strong>of</strong> opposing positions. This is whyphilosophy must be a co-operative effort <strong>of</strong> a community <strong>of</strong> investigators.LIFE-WORLD AND HISTORYHusserl’s later works are largely devoted to the themes <strong>of</strong> life-world and history. Hehoped that his phenomenological analyses <strong>of</strong> these topics would serve as correctives tothe naturalism and historicism which he recognized as two <strong>of</strong> the most powerful themes<strong>of</strong> modernity. Naturalism is a philosophic position consequent upon the mathematization<strong>of</strong> nature achieved by the new scientific method at the beginning <strong>of</strong> the modern era. Itsthesis is that the entire realm <strong>of</strong> nature, including human nature, is comprised only <strong>of</strong>entities and processes susceptible <strong>of</strong> such quantitative analysis. Historicism may bedefined as the tendency to regard the conceptual systems <strong>of</strong> both the natural and thehuman sciences as world views whose presuppositions are determined by contingenthistorical transformations.Husserl traces the drift <strong>of</strong> modern science towards reductionism to Galileo’s failure torelate scientific truths adequately to their sources in the life-world, the pre-scientificworld in which we live. He calls attention, in particular, to the ambiguous implications <strong>of</strong>Galileo’s bold decision to overcome the obstacle which perceived qualities presented tocalculative rationality by treating them as subjective indices <strong>of</strong> objective quantities. Thisdecision had the effect <strong>of</strong> concealing the priority <strong>of</strong> perceived over mathematical objects.Husserl contends that two factors contributed to this concealment ([1.33], 21–60; [1.89],162–7).


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 23In the first place, he observes, we must not forget that Galileo was heir to a relativelyadvanced tradition <strong>of</strong> ‘pure geometry’, which by reason <strong>of</strong> its very advances had alreadylost contact with the fundamental insights on which it was first constructed. Geometrymost likely had its origins in the invention <strong>of</strong> practical techniques <strong>of</strong> surveying andmeasuring. Its ideal figures were thus first derived by abstraction and progressiveidealization from the perceived forms <strong>of</strong> things. Once having acquired the notion <strong>of</strong> afield <strong>of</strong> pure ‘limit-shapes’, mathematical praxis was able to achieve an exactness and afreedom that is denied to us in empirical praxis. This ideal geometry was subsequentlytranslated into applied geometry in the field <strong>of</strong> astronomy, where it became possible tocalculate ‘with compelling necessity’ the relative positions and even the existence <strong>of</strong>events that were never accessible to direct empirical measurement. This achievementconstituted a partial fulfillment <strong>of</strong> the dream <strong>of</strong> the ancient Pythagoreans who hadobserved the functional dependency <strong>of</strong> the pitch <strong>of</strong> a tone on the length <strong>of</strong> a vibratingstring which produced it, and had therefore evoked the possibility <strong>of</strong> a generalized theory<strong>of</strong> correlations between perceived properties and measurable changes in geometricalproperties. All <strong>of</strong> this, Husserl speculates, inclined Galileo to bracket the problem <strong>of</strong> theoriginal derivation <strong>of</strong> geometry from the perceived qualities <strong>of</strong> things, and to interpretsuch qualities as merely subjective indicators <strong>of</strong> the true quantitative being <strong>of</strong> the world([1.33], 29).In the second place, Husserl continues, we must take into account the ‘portentous’influence on Galileo’s thinking <strong>of</strong> the new algebraic formalization <strong>of</strong> geometry. Thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> algebra in effect liberated geometry from all intuited actuality and evenfrom the concept <strong>of</strong> number. Although it was only with Descartes’ invention <strong>of</strong> analyticgeometry that the full implications <strong>of</strong> this move would be realized, Galileo had alreadyclearly understood that Euclid’s geometry could now be interpreted as a general logic <strong>of</strong>discovery rather than as a theory limited to the realm <strong>of</strong> pure shapes ([1.33], 44–6).Husserl’s argument may be confirmed by considering the role <strong>of</strong> Galileo’s diagrams forhis theorems about uniformly accelerated bodies. It is clear that the lines and angles <strong>of</strong>these diagrams no longer refer literally to spatial shapes created by geometric relationsbetween linear magnitudes but rather to a sequence <strong>of</strong> ratios between time and velocity.Galileo therefore implicitly considered such ‘geometric’ diagrams as expressive <strong>of</strong>relationships among any magnitudes whatever. Although this realization contributedsignificantly to the advance <strong>of</strong> modern physics, it also initiated a process <strong>of</strong> furtheralienation <strong>of</strong> scientific method from its roots in the perceived world. Unlike traditionalgeometry, which requires insight into the reasons for every step in its demonstrations,algebra lends itself to the development <strong>of</strong> techniques <strong>of</strong> calculation which no longerdemand such comprehension but require instead only the blind implementation <strong>of</strong>procedural rules.Galileo himself continued to employ the more traditional geometrical style <strong>of</strong>demonstration, and hence demanded <strong>of</strong> his readers conscious insight into the point <strong>of</strong>each transition. Nevertheless, his method took modernity further along the road towardsthe reductionist interpretation <strong>of</strong> reason as an adaptive power whose operations aremechanistic processes devoid <strong>of</strong> intuitive insight. Husserl cites as an example <strong>of</strong> thisaccount <strong>of</strong> reason the tendency <strong>of</strong> some twentieth-century logicians to conflatecomputing procedures with authentic deductions, and even to interpret the rules


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 24governing such procedures as a genuine logic ([1.37], 117). He concludes that the greatdiscovery <strong>of</strong> modernity, i.e., the emancipation <strong>of</strong> mathematics from the constraintsimposed by the intuition <strong>of</strong> Euclidean shapes, was both an advance and a setback. On theone hand, freedom from servitude to intuited forms would give to the geometer a greaterpotential for mastery over nature. On the other hand, it also further promoted the modernforgetfulness <strong>of</strong> the priority <strong>of</strong> insight into perceived structures over technical virtuosity.This forgetfulness would eventually lead to a bracketing <strong>of</strong> those acts and attitudes <strong>of</strong> thehuman spirit that render scientific and other modes <strong>of</strong> cognition possible. Naturalismforgets the role <strong>of</strong> the inquiring subject whose intentional acts remain inaccessible toempirical observation.Husserl calls attention to the irony implicit in this history <strong>of</strong> modernity. He observesthat it is unlikely that Galileo was ever aware <strong>of</strong> the hidden ‘motivation’ <strong>of</strong> his project.The seeds <strong>of</strong> reductionism and even <strong>of</strong> scepticism were, <strong>of</strong> course, already present inHobbes’s rationalistic exaltation <strong>of</strong> the power <strong>of</strong> reckoning. Hobbes had dismissed thewhole sphere <strong>of</strong> pre-scientific experience and discourse. Whatever cannot be quantifiedhe assigned to the realm <strong>of</strong> illusion. Moreover, Hobbes clearly regarded reason’s calculusas an outgrowth <strong>of</strong> our biological drives and needs. For a long time, however, the success<strong>of</strong> the new sciences obscured the implications <strong>of</strong> this naturalism. Hobbes thought thatcalculative procedures could succeed where the ancient and medieval quest for essenceshad failed. Reckoning would reveal the hidden structures <strong>of</strong> reality. It required a geniussuch as Hume, says Husserl, to take the naturalism initiated by Hobbes to its logicalconclusions. Hume realized that if cognitive intuition cannot break out <strong>of</strong> the circle <strong>of</strong>impressions and ideas, there is no justification for supposing that reckoning can yield anyless fanciful results. The fundamental categories requisite for a mathematicized version <strong>of</strong>nature must somehow be derivable from information provided by the manifold <strong>of</strong>impressions. According to Hobbes, however, sensory impressions yield only illusions. Itfollows that scientific theories too are productions <strong>of</strong> fancy. This realization is the key toHume’s scepticism: ‘Hume goes on to the end. All categories <strong>of</strong> objectivity—thescientific ones through which an objective extra-psychic world is thought in scientificlife, and the pre-scientific ones through which it is thought in everyday life—arefictions’ ([1.33], no. 23). Scientific descriptions are useful fictions, but they neverthelessremain fictions. The high hopes <strong>of</strong> modernity thus culminated finally in a thoroughgoingpragmatism. It seems clear in retrospect that the hidden intent <strong>of</strong> Galileo’sfatefuldecision, and indeed <strong>of</strong> the entire project <strong>of</strong> modernity, was to give up on truth andsettle for power.Husserl therefore thought that the most urgent task <strong>of</strong> philosophy was to restoreconfidence in the rationality <strong>of</strong> our ordinary intuitions about the life-world. We mustdemonstrate how scientific accounts <strong>of</strong> nature are always dependent upon the evidences<strong>of</strong> ordinary experience, and show how the success <strong>of</strong> Galileo’s method in some areasdoes not justify an unlimited application in all fields <strong>of</strong> enquiry. Phenomenologicalanalysis reveals, for example, that human acts have a conscious dimension that cannot bereduced to quantifiable processes, or explained as a product <strong>of</strong> causal sequences. This isespecially true <strong>of</strong> the procedures <strong>of</strong> scientific discovery which require a disciplineddetachment from biological needs and environmental stimuli. In short, the actsprerequisite for the emergence <strong>of</strong> things as empirical objects cannot coherently be taken


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 25as exclusively empirical processes.Husserl also makes some interesting remarks on the implications <strong>of</strong> his own method <strong>of</strong>historical interpretation, as exemplified in the above analysis <strong>of</strong> the unintended projectconcealed by Galileo’s manifest intentions and accomplishments. He observes thatwhenever we engage in an historical analysis <strong>of</strong> this type we always find ourselves in asort <strong>of</strong> circle. We can only understand the past in the light <strong>of</strong> the present, and yet thepresent has meaning only in the light <strong>of</strong> the past. ‘Relative clarification’ in one directionbrings about ‘some elucidation’ in the other, and vice versa. There is no tone <strong>of</strong>pessimism in Husserl’s description <strong>of</strong> this methodological predicament ([1.33], 58). Hesuggests that his ‘zigzag’ method <strong>of</strong> historical interpretation makes it possible to achieveever more comprehensive historical understanding, but he never claims that it will yielddefinitive truths. He does not lament this situation. He simply calls attention to the kind<strong>of</strong> truth that is available to historical interpretation.These remarks suggest that, in his later works at least, Husserl was sensitive to thehermeneutic circle implicit in all human enquiry. His comments on the historicity <strong>of</strong> thelife-world confirm this impression. Although he sometimes describes the life-world as ahorizon <strong>of</strong> experience common to human beings in every historical epoch, at other timeshe speaks <strong>of</strong> multiple life-worlds and hints that every life-world is conditioned by layeredsedimentations <strong>of</strong> meaning produced by forgotten cultural achievements. He even goes s<strong>of</strong>ar as to say that we must look for truth ‘not as falsely absolutized, but rather, in eachcase, as within its horizons’ ([1.20], 279). This passage suggests that all evidence issubject to correction by further evidence. Husserl adds, moreover, that it is in accordancewith the nature <strong>of</strong> a horizon that ‘it leaves open the possibility that conflictingexperiences may supervene and lead to corrections in the form <strong>of</strong> a determining asotherwise or else in the form <strong>of</strong> a complete striking out (as illusion)’ ([1.20], 281;[1.110], 50).Husserl’s reflections on these issues did not cause him to repudiate the original project<strong>of</strong> phenomenology. Indeed, in the same passages which call attention to the role <strong>of</strong>intentional horizons he constantly reaffirms the phenomenological goal <strong>of</strong> uncoveringand ‘explicating’ the sedimented senses <strong>of</strong> these horizons. Husserl therefore apparentlysaw no conflict between this goal and his properly hermeneutic discovery that all inquirytakes place within an historical context. Jacques Derrida contends that this attitudeindicates that the entire enterprise <strong>of</strong> phenomenology was founded on an uncontrolledpresupposition. Husserl tacitly took for granted the trans-historical validity <strong>of</strong> the ideal <strong>of</strong>universal truth, even though his own historical interpretation established that commitmentto this ideal is an historically conditioned attitude. His description <strong>of</strong> this ideal as aregulative idea effectively exempted him from the task <strong>of</strong> justifying it ([1.51], 154). Itseems more likely, however, that Husserl always understood that the ideal <strong>of</strong> universaltruth functions more as a moral imperative than as a demonstrable or self-evidentprinciple. He was convinced that our experience <strong>of</strong> the world yields enough intelligibilityand direction to encourage the expectation that further investigation will yield furtherprogress in truth. However, his choice <strong>of</strong> the Kantian notion <strong>of</strong> a regulative idea todescribe the telos <strong>of</strong> philosophy suggests that he regarded the expectation <strong>of</strong> progress intruth as a postulate <strong>of</strong> rationality rather than as a metaphysical principle.


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 26SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHYPrimary textsWhere pertinent, references are to the more recent critical editions (the ‘Husserliana’series published by the Husserl Archives at Louvain) rather than to the original Germaneditions.1.1 ‘Besprechung: E.Schröder, Vorlesungen über die Algebra der Logik, I’, Göttingischegelehrte Anzeigen (1891):243–78.1.2 ‘Die Folgerungskalkül und die Inhaltslogik’, Vierteljahrsschrift für wissenschaftlichePhilosophie, 15 (1891):168–89, 351–6.1.3 ‘Psychologische Studien zur elementaren Logik’, Philosophische Monatshefte, 30(1894):159–91.1.4 Die Idee der Phänomenologie, ed. W.Biemel (Husserliana II), The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f,1950.1.5 Ideen zu einer reinen Phänomenologie und phänomenologischen Philosophie, BuchII, ed. M.Biemel (Husserliana IV), The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1952.1.6 Ideen zu einer reinen Phänomenologie und phänomenologischen Philosophie, BuchIII, ed. M.Biemel (Husserliana V), The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1952.1.7 Erfahrung und Urteil, ed. L.Landgrebe, Hamburg: Claassen, 1954.1.8 Die Krisis der europäischen Wissenschaften und die transzendentalePhänomenologie, ed. W.Biemel (Husserliana VI), The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1954.1.9 Erste Philosophie, Band I, Kritische Ideengeschichte, ed. R.Boehm (Husserliana VII),The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1956.1.10 Cartesianische Meditationen, ed. S.Strasser (Husserliana I), The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f,1959.1.11 Erste Philosophie, Band II, ed. R.Boehm (Husserliana <strong>VIII</strong>), The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f,1959.1.12 Phänomenologische Psychologie, ed. W.Biemel (Husserliana IX), The Hague:Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1962.1.13 Cartesianische Meditationen, 2nd edn. S.Strasser (Husserliana I), The Hague,Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1963.1.14 Analysen zur passiven Synthesis: Aus Vorlesungs und Forschungsmanuskripten(1918–1926), ed. M.Fleischer (Husserliana XI), The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1966.1.15 Phänomenologische Psychologie: Vorlesungen Sommersemester 1925, ed. W.Biemel (Husserliana IX), The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1968.1.16 Philosophie der Arithmetik, 2nd edn, ed. L.Eley (Husserliana XII), The Hague:Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1970.1.17 Erfahrung und Urteil: Untersuchungen zur Genealogie der Logik, ed. L. Landgrebe,Hamburg: Felix Meiner, 1972.1.18 Die Idee der Phänomenologie: Fünf Vorlesungen, ed. U.Melle (Husserliana II), TheHague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1973.1.19 Ding und Raum: Vorlesungen 1907, ed. U.Claesges (Husserliana XVI), The Hague:


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 27Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1973.1.20 Formale und transzendentale Logik, ed. P.Janssen (Husserliana XVII), The Hague:Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1974.1.21 Logische Untersuchungen, Band I, ed. E.Hollenstein (Husserliana X<strong>VIII</strong>), TheHague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1975.1.22 Ideen zu einer reinen Phänomenologie und phänomenologischen Philosophie, BuchI, ed. K.Schumann (Husserliana III/1 and III/2), The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1976.1.23 Aufsätze und Rezensionen (1890–1910), ed. B.Rang (Husserliana XXII), The Hague:Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1979.1.24 Studien zur Arithmetik und Geometrie: Texte aus dem Nachlass (1886–1901), ed.I.Strohmeyer (Husserliana XXI), The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1983.1.25 Einleitung in der Logik und Erkenntnistheorie: Vorlesungen 1906–7, ed. U. Melle(Husserliana XIV), Dordrecht: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1984.1.26 Logische Untersuchungen, Band II, ed. U.Panzer (Husserliana XIX/1), The Hague :Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1984.1.27 Logische Untersuchungen, Band III, ed. U.Panzer (Husserliana XIX/2), The Hague:Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1984.1.28 ‘Philosophie als strenge Wissenschaft, in Aufsätze und Vorträge (1911–21)’, ed.T.Nenon and H.R.Sepp (Husserliana XXV), Dordrecht: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1987.Translations1.29 On the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> the Consciousness <strong>of</strong> Internal Time (1893–1917), trans.J.B.Brough, Holland: Dordrecht Kluwer, 1990.1.30 ‘<strong>Philosophy</strong> as a Rigorous Science’, trans. Q.Lauer, in Phenomenology and theCrisis <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, New York: Harper & Row, 1965, pp. 71–147.1.31 Formal and Transcendental Logic, trans. D.Cairns, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1969.1.32 Cartesian Meditations, trans. D.Cairns, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1970.1.33 The Crisis <strong>of</strong> European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology, trans. D.Carr,Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1970.1.34 The Idea <strong>of</strong> Phenomenology, trans. W.Alston and G.Nakhnikian, The Hague:Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1970.1.35 Logical Investigations, 2 volumes, rev. edn, trans. J.N.Findlay, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>& Kegan Paul, 1970.1.36 Experience and Judgment, trans. J.Churchill and K.Americks, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1970.1.37 ‘A Review <strong>of</strong> <strong>Volume</strong> I <strong>of</strong> Ernst Schröder’s Vorlesungen über die Algebra derLogik’, trans. D.Willard, The Personalist, 59 (1978):115–43.1.38 ‘The Deductive Calculus and the Logic <strong>of</strong> Contents’, trans. D.Willard, ThePersonalist, 60 (1979):7–25.1.39 Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological <strong>Philosophy</strong>,Book III, trans. T.Klein and W.Pohl, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1980.1.40 ‘Psychological Studies for Elementary Logic’, in P.McCormick and F.Elliston (eds),Husserl: Shorter Works, South Bend: Notre Dame University Press, 1981, pp. 126–42.1.41 Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology and to a Phenomenological <strong>Philosophy</strong>,


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 28Book I, trans. F.Kersten, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1983.Other works and criticism1.42 Aristotle, Aristotelis Opera, ed. I.Bekker, Berlin: Reimer, 1860–70.1.43 Bell, D. Husserl, London and New York: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1990.1.44 Boehm, R. ‘Immanenz und Transzendenz’, in Vom Gesichtspunkt derPhänomenologie: Husserl-Studien, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1968.1.45 Brentano, F. Psychology from an Empirical Standpoint, trans. A.C.Rancurello,D.B.Terrell and L.L.McAlister, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1973.1.46 Brough, J. ‘The Emergence <strong>of</strong> an Absolute Consciousness in Husserl’s EarlyWritings on Time-Consciousness’, Man and World, 5 (1972):298–326.1.47 Carr, D. Interpreting Husserl: Critical and Comparative Studies, The Hague:Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1987.1.48 Cobb-Stevens, R. ‘Logical Analysis and Cognitive Intuition’, Etudesphénoménologiques, 7 (1988):3–32.1.49 Cobb-Stevens, R. Husserl and Analytic <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1990.1.50 de Boer, T. The Development <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s Thought, trans. T.Plantinga, The Hague:Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1978.1.51 Derrida, J. Speech and Phenomena, and Other Essays on Husserl’s Theory <strong>of</strong> Signs,trans. D.Allison, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1973.1.52 Derrida, J. Edmund Husserl’s Origin <strong>of</strong> Geometry: An Introduction, trans. J.Leavey,Stony Brook: Nicholas Hays, 1978.1.53 Dreyfus, H. ‘Husserl’s Perceptual Noema’, in H.Dreyfus and H.Hall (eds), Husserl:Intentionality and Cognitive Science, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1982.1.54 Drummond, J. Husserlian Intentionality and Non-Foundational Realism: Noemaand Object, Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1990.1.55 Dummett, M.A.E. Frege: <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Language, London: Duckworth, 1973.1.56 Dummett, M.A.E. The Interpretation <strong>of</strong>Frege’s <strong>Philosophy</strong>, London: Duckworth,1981.1.57 Elliston, F., and McCormick, P. (eds) Husserl: Expositions and Appraisals, SouthBend: Notre Dame University Press, 1977.1.58 Fink, E. ‘Operative Begriffe in Husserl’s Phänomenologie’, Zeitschrift fürphilosophische Forschung, 2 (1957):321–37.1.59 Fink, E. ‘The Phenomenological <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Edmund Husserl and ContemporaryCriticism’, in R.O.Elverton (ed.) The Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Edmund Husserl: SelectedCritical Readings, Chicago: Quadrangle Books, 1970, pp. 73–147.1.60 Føllesdal, D. Husserl and Frege, Oslo: Aschehoug Press, 1958.1.61 Føllesdal, D. ‘Husserl’s Notion <strong>of</strong> the Noema’, The journal <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, 66(1969):680–7.1.62 Føllesdal, D. ‘Brentano and Husserl on Intentional Objects <strong>of</strong> Perception’, GrazerPhilosophische Studien, 5 (1978):83–94.1.63 Frege, G. ‘Rezension von E.Husserl, Philosophie der Arithmetik’, Zeitschrift fürPhilosophie und philosophische Kritik, 103 (1894):313–32.1.64 Frege, G. The Foundations <strong>of</strong> Arithmetic: A Logico-Mathematical Enquiry into the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 29Concept <strong>of</strong> Number, trans. J.L.Austin, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1959.1.65 Frege, G. ‘Review <strong>of</strong> Dr. E.Husserl’s <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arithmetic’, trans. E.W.Kluge,in J.N.Mohanty (ed.) Readings on Husserl’s Logical Investigations, The Hague:Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1977.1.66 Frege, G. Posthumous Writings, trans. P.Lang and R.White, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong>Chicago Press, 1979.1.67 Frege, G. Collected Papers on Mathematics, Logic, and <strong>Philosophy</strong>, ed. B.McGuinness, trans. M.Black et al., Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1984.1.68 Gadamer, H.G. ‘The Science <strong>of</strong> the Life-World’, in Philosophical Hermeneutics,trans. D.Linge, Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong> California Press, 1972.1.69 Hall, H. ‘Was Husserl a Realist or an Idealist?’, in H.L.Dreyfus (ed.) Husserl,Intentionality and Cognitive Science, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1984.1.70 Heelan, P. ‘Natural Science and Being-in-the-World’, Man and World, 16(1983):207–19.1.71 Heelan, P. Space-Perception and the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong>California Press, 1983.1.72 Herbart, J.F. Sammtliche Werke, Leipzig: Leopold Voss, 1850.1.73 Hintikka, J. The Intentions <strong>of</strong> Intentionality and Other New Models for Modalities,Dordrecht: Reidel, 1975.1.74 Holmes, R. ‘An Explication <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s Theory <strong>of</strong> the Noema’, Research inPhenomenology, 5 (1975):143–53.1.75 Langsdorf, L. ‘The Noema as Intentional Entity: A Critique <strong>of</strong> Føllesdal’, Review <strong>of</strong>Metaphysics, 37 (1984):757–84.1.76 Levinas, E. The Theory <strong>of</strong> Intuition in Husserl’s Phenomenology, trans. A. Orianne,Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1973.1.77 Lotze, H. Logic, trans. B.Bosanquet, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1888.1.78 Lotze, H. Metaphysik, Leipzig: Hirzel, 1897.1.79 McKenna, W. ‘The “Inadequacy” <strong>of</strong> Perceptual Experience’, Journal <strong>of</strong> the BritishSociety for Phenomenology, 12 (1981):125–39.1.80 Mill, J.S. A System <strong>of</strong> Logic, London: Longmans, Green, 1843.1.81 Miller, J.P. Numbers in Presence and Absence: A Study <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong>Mathematics, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1982.1.82 Mohanty, J.N. ‘On Husserl’s Theory <strong>of</strong> Meaning’, The Southwestern Journal <strong>of</strong><strong>Philosophy</strong>, 5 (1974):240.1.83 Mohanty, J.N. ‘Husserl’s Theory <strong>of</strong> Meaning’, in F.Elliston and P.McCormick (eds)Husserl: Expositions and Appraisals, South Bend: Notre Dame University Press, 1977,pp. 18–37.1.84 Mohanty, J.N. Readings on E.Husserl’s Logical Investigations, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f,1977.1.85 Mohanty, J.N. ‘Intentionality and the Noema’, The Journal <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, 78(1981):706–17.1.86 Mohanty, J.N. Frege and Husserl, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1982.1.87 Mohanty, J.N. Transcendental Phenomenology, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1989.1.88 Natanson, M. Edmund Husserl: Philosopher <strong>of</strong> Infinite Tasks, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1966.


The beginnings <strong>of</strong> phenomenology 301.89 Ricoeur, P. Husserl: An Analysis <strong>of</strong> his Phenomenology, trans. G.Ballard andL.Embree: Evanston, Northwestern University Press, 1967.1.90 Rosen, S. ‘Thought and Touch: A Note on Aristotle’s De Anima’, Phronesis, 6(1961):127–37.1.91 Rosen, S. The Limits <strong>of</strong> Analysis, New York: Basic Books, 1984.1.92 Schröder, E. Vorlesungen über die Algebra der Logik, Leipzig: Teubner, 1890.1.93 Schutz, A. ‘Type and Eidos in Husserl’s Late <strong>Philosophy</strong>’, <strong>Philosophy</strong> andPhenomenological Research, 20 (1959):154.1.94 Smith, D.W. and McIntyre, R. ‘Intentionality via Intensions’, Journal <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>,68 (1971):541–61.1.95 Smith, D.W. and McIntyre, R. Husserl and Intentionality: A Study <strong>of</strong> Mind, Meaningand Language, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1983.1.96 Smith, Q. ‘On Husserl’s Theory <strong>of</strong> Consciousness in the Fifth LogicalInvestigation’, <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Phenomenological Research, 37 (1977):356–67.1.97 Sokolowski, R. ‘The Logic <strong>of</strong> Parts and Wholes in Husserl’s Investigations’,<strong>Philosophy</strong> and Phenomenological Research, 38 (1968):537–53.1.98 Sokolowski, R. The Formation <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s Concept <strong>of</strong> Constitution, The Hague:Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1970.1.99 Sokolowski, R. ‘The Structure and Content <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s Logical Investigations’,Inquiry, 14 (1971):318–47.1.100 Sokolowski, R. Husserlian Meditations: How Words Present Things, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1974.1.101 Sokolowski, R. Presence and Absence: A Philosophical Investigation <strong>of</strong> Languageand Being, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1978.1.102 Sokolowski, R. ‘Husserl’s Concept <strong>of</strong> Categorial Intuition’, Phenomenology andthe Human Sciences (formerly Philosophical Topics), 12 (1981): 127–41.1.103 Sokolowski, R. ‘Intentional Analysis and the Noema’, Dialectica, 38 (1984): 113–29.1.104 Sokolowski, R. ‘Quotation’, Review <strong>of</strong> Metaphysics, 37 (1984):699–723.1.105 Sokolowski, R. ‘Exorcising Concepts’, Review <strong>of</strong> Metaphysics, 60 (1987): 451–63.1.106 Sokolowski, R. ‘Husserl and Frege’, The Journal <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, 84 (1987): 521–8.1.107 Sokolowski, R. ‘Natural and Artificial Intelligence’, Daedalus, 142 (1988): 45–64.1.108 Sokolowski, R. ‘Referring’, Review <strong>of</strong> Metaphysics, 42 (1988):27–49.1.109 Spiegelberg, H. The Phenomenological Movement: A Historical Introduction, 2vols, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1971.1.110 Ströker, E. ‘Husserl’s Principle <strong>of</strong> Evidence’, in The Husserlian Foundations <strong>of</strong>Science, Washington, DC: University Press <strong>of</strong> America, 1987.1.111 Ströker, E. Husserls transzendentale Phänomenologie, Frankfurt am Main: VittorioKlostermann, 1987.1.112 Stumpf, K. Über den psychologischen Ursprung der Raumvorstellung, Leipzig:Hirzel, 1873.1.113 Taminiaux, J. Le Regard et l’excédent, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1977.1.114 Taminiaux, J. ‘Heidegger and Husserl’s Logical Investigations: In Remembrance<strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s Last Seminar (Zähringen, 1973)’, in Dialectic and Difference: Finitudein Modern Thought, trans. R.Crease and J. Decker, Atlantic Highlands: Humanities


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 31Press, 1985, pp. 91–114.1.115 Taminiaux, J. ‘Immanence, Transcendence, and Being in Husserl’s Idea <strong>of</strong>Phenomenology, in J.Sallis, G.Moneta and J.Taminiaux (eds), The CollegiumPhaenomenologicum: the First Ten Years, Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1989, pp. 47–75.1.116 Taminiaux, J. Heidegger and the Project <strong>of</strong> Fundamental Ontology, trans M.Gendre, Albany: SUNY Press, 1991.1.117 Tragesser, R. Husserl and Realism in Logic and Mathematics, Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, 1984.1.118 Welton, D. The Origins <strong>of</strong> Meaning: A Criticial Study <strong>of</strong> the Thresholds <strong>of</strong>Husserlian Phenomenology, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1983.1.119 Willard, D. ‘The Paradox <strong>of</strong> Logical Psychologism: Husserl’s Way Out’, AmericanPhilosophical Quarterly, (1972):94–100.1.120 Willard, D. ‘Concerning Husserl’s View <strong>of</strong> Number’, The Southwestern Journal <strong>of</strong><strong>Philosophy</strong>, 5 (1974):97–109.1.121 Willard, D. ‘Husserl’s Critique <strong>of</strong> Extensionalist Logic: A Logic that Does notUnderstand Itself, Idealistic Studies, 9 (1979):143–64.1.122 Willard, D. Logic and the Objectivity <strong>of</strong> Knowledge, Athens: Ohio UniversityPress, 1984.


CHAPTER 2<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 1HeideggerJacques TaminiauxAt the very outset and up to the end, the long philosophical journey <strong>of</strong> Martin Heidegger(1889–1976) remained oriented by a single question, the question <strong>of</strong> Being, theSeinsfrage. This does not mean, however, that the question preserved the same meaningor ruled an identical field <strong>of</strong> investigation throughout the whole journey. Indeed,Heidegger himself repeatedly claimed that at some point a turn (Kehre) occurred in histhought. Moreover, thanks to the current publication <strong>of</strong> his entire corpus(Gesamtausgabe), it is now possible to draw a fair picture <strong>of</strong> the vicissitudes <strong>of</strong> thejourney. For the purpose <strong>of</strong> this chapter, I propose to divide Heidegger’s work into twophases. The first covers publications and lecture courses devoted to setting out the project<strong>of</strong> what Heidegger, at that time, called ‘fundamental ontology’. The later phase coverswritings which are all characterized by a meditation on the history <strong>of</strong> Being. Whereas theproject <strong>of</strong> fundamental ontology aimed at completing metaphysics as the science <strong>of</strong>Being, the later meditation consistently aimed at overcoming metaphysics.FUNDAMENTAL ONTOLOGYAfter a few years <strong>of</strong> study in theology the young Heidegger, who first wanted to becomea Catholic priest, had decided for reasons both personal and theoretical to dedicate his lifeto philosophy.At the turn <strong>of</strong> the century, the burning area for philosophical research in Germany waslogic. Two major trends were in conflict as far as the approach to the basic problems <strong>of</strong>epistemology and the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is concerned. On the one hand under theinfluence <strong>of</strong> British empiricism, John Stuart Mill predominantly, many German scholarsin those fields were convinced that the foundations <strong>of</strong> knowledge in general were strictlyempirical. Accordingly they were looking for the roots <strong>of</strong> all cognitive principles inobservable facts such as those which are investigated by psychology taken as anempirical science. On the other hand, in a reaction against empiricism, several scholarswere attempting to revive in the disciplines at stake the transcendental orientation <strong>of</strong>Kant’s criticism. In the history <strong>of</strong> ideas this conflict is known as the quarrel aboutpsychologism between empiricism and transcendentalism. Whereas the former claims thatthinking and knowing are a matter <strong>of</strong> facts occuring in the mind, the latter claims thatthought and knowledge, however much they may depend on facts, could not exist withoutthe help <strong>of</strong> a transcendental cogito. In 1900–1 a book appeared which had a decisive


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 33influence in the quarrel: Edmund Husserl’s Logical Investigations. Like neo-Kantianism,the book was a refutation <strong>of</strong> all empiricist reductionism. But unlike neo-Kantianism itvindicated a new and original method which was altogether intuitive and a priori:phenomenology.Heidegger’s early writings were contributions to the new phenomenological trend. Hisdoctoral dissertation (1914) was entitled The Doctrine <strong>of</strong> Judgment in Psychologism. HisHabilitationsschrift (1916), The Theory <strong>of</strong> Categories and Meaning in Duns Scotus wasinspired by Husserl’s idea <strong>of</strong> a pure a priori grammar. Heidegger’s genuine projectemerged after these academic exercises, when he came to realize that he was lessinterested in logic for its own sake than in the link between logic and ontology or even inthe ontological foundation <strong>of</strong> the logical. Indeed he repeatedly claimed that the influenceon him <strong>of</strong> the Logical Investigations was at that time on a footing with the impact <strong>of</strong> abook by one <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s masters, Brentano’s dissertation On the Manifold Meaning <strong>of</strong>Being in Aristotle (1862). Brentano showed that in Aristotle the Being <strong>of</strong> beings isexpressed in at least four basic ways: as substance (ousia), as potentiality (dunamis) andactuality (energeia), as truth (alētheia), according to the categories such as quality,quantity, relation and so on. While meditating upon this manifoldness in the meanings <strong>of</strong>Being, Heidegger raised the following question: is there a unique focus <strong>of</strong> intelligibilitywhich illuminates these various meanings, a common source for understanding them, andhow and where is it to be found? Such is the Seinsfrage, the question <strong>of</strong> Being.The reappropriation <strong>of</strong> Husserl and AristotleOn the basis <strong>of</strong> his early dissertations, Heidegger was already convinced that thephenomenological method was to be his way to address the question. When he becameHusserl’s personal assistant at the University <strong>of</strong> Freiburg-im-Breisgau, thereby gainingthe opportunity to become familiar with all aspects <strong>of</strong> phenomenological research, hecame to realize that the work <strong>of</strong> his master provided him not only with a method but alsowith basic discoveries thanks to which he was able to transform his ontological questioninto a genuine field <strong>of</strong> investigation. On the basis <strong>of</strong> the posthumous publication <strong>of</strong>several drafts and lecture courses, it is now possible to draw a fair picture <strong>of</strong> Heidegger’searly attempts to articulate his own field <strong>of</strong> ontological investigations thanks to a peculiarretrieval or reappropriation <strong>of</strong> both Aristotle and Husserl. It could even be demonstratedthat Heidegger’s project <strong>of</strong> fundamental ontology is the outcome <strong>of</strong> an overlapping <strong>of</strong>what he considered to be the basic discoveries <strong>of</strong> Husserl with what he took to be thebasic discoveries <strong>of</strong> Aristotle. This means that, with the help <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s teaching,Heidegger was able to find in Aristotle’s teaching an authentic phenomenology while,with the help <strong>of</strong> Aristotle’s teaching, he discovered the possibility <strong>of</strong> transformingphenomenology into a field <strong>of</strong> ontological investigation. This ontological overlapping <strong>of</strong>Aristotle and Husserl is already noticeable in the short manuscript PhenomenologicalInterpretations <strong>of</strong> Aristotle [2.27] that Heidegger wrote in the autumn <strong>of</strong> 1922 at therequest <strong>of</strong> P.Natorp in order to support his application for a teaching position at theUniversity <strong>of</strong> Marburg. The overlapping pervades the teaching <strong>of</strong> Heidegger from thetime <strong>of</strong> his appointment at Marburg until the publication <strong>of</strong> Being and Time.Heidegger credited Husserl with three basic discoveries useful for articulating his own


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 34field <strong>of</strong> investigation. The first discovery is intentionality. According to Husserl,intentionality is the very structure <strong>of</strong> consciousness in all its modes (perception,imagination, conceptualization, judgment, reasoning and so on). In every form <strong>of</strong>consciousness there is a specific relatedness between a specific way <strong>of</strong> intending and aspecific correlate which has its way <strong>of</strong> appearing qua intended. Already in the 1922manuscript, Heidegger makes clear that for him this structural relatedness is much morethan a basic feature <strong>of</strong> consciousness. It is the fundamental character <strong>of</strong> the very life <strong>of</strong>each human being. De facto, or factically, the life <strong>of</strong> an existing human being isessentially related. In Heidegger’s language <strong>of</strong> that time, this means that such relatednessis an ontological character <strong>of</strong> ‘factical life’. This is why he writes:the complete intentionality (the relatedness to, that towards which there is arelation, the accomplishment <strong>of</strong> the self-relating, the temporalism <strong>of</strong> it, thepreservation <strong>of</strong> temporalisation) is nothing but the intentionality <strong>of</strong> the objectwhich has the ontological character <strong>of</strong> factical life. Intentionality, merely takenas relatedness to, is the first phenomenal character, proximally noticeable <strong>of</strong> thefundamental mobility <strong>of</strong> life, that is <strong>of</strong> care. ([2.27], 17)Whereas Husserl’s discovery <strong>of</strong> intentionality was confined within the limits <strong>of</strong> a theory<strong>of</strong> consciousness, i.e., within the framework <strong>of</strong> a theory <strong>of</strong> knowledge, Heidegger’speculiar retrieval <strong>of</strong> the discovery results very early in another philosophical projectaiming at an ontology <strong>of</strong> factical life, or <strong>of</strong> facticity. Along with this alteration, the newphilosophical project entails an alteration in the very notion <strong>of</strong> logic. In Husserl, logicwas another name for the theory <strong>of</strong> knowledge, i.e., <strong>of</strong> the basic categories makingcognition possible. As a result <strong>of</strong> the shift from consciousness to factical life, logicbecomes a name for the investigation <strong>of</strong> the ways in which factical life expresses andunderstands itself as a result <strong>of</strong> specific categories.This second shift is at the core <strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s reinterpretation <strong>of</strong> what he viewed as thesecond major discovery <strong>of</strong> Husserl, i.e., the doctrine <strong>of</strong> categorial intuition. According tothis doctrine, the meaning <strong>of</strong> human discourse (Rede) depends on a complex set <strong>of</strong>structures, forms and basic concepts which are all <strong>of</strong> an ideal nature. In spite <strong>of</strong> the factthat, precisely because they are ideal, these idealities are in a position <strong>of</strong> excess or surplusvis-à-vis any sensuous content given to sensible perception, they are none the less, claimsHusserl in the sixth Logical Investigation, <strong>of</strong>fered to an intuition or insight that is nolonger sensible, but ideal: the so-called categorial intuition.Among the categorial intuitions mentioned by Husserl, one stood out as having adecisive relevance for the project to which Heidegger had subscribed from the outset: theproblem <strong>of</strong> the meaning <strong>of</strong> Being. Indeed in the context <strong>of</strong> the sixth Logical InvestigationHusserl was developing a tw<strong>of</strong>old thesis about Being. First, he stated, in agreement withKant, that ‘Being is not a real predicate’. Second, he maintained, in contradistinction toKant, that ‘Being’ is given to categorial intuition. Heidegger took advantage <strong>of</strong> thisdouble thesis and transformed it for his own ontological purpose. ‘Being is not a realpredicate’ meant for both Kant and Husserl that it is not to be found among the predicateswhich define the quiddity or realitas <strong>of</strong> beings: what they are. This thesis turned out tomean for Heidegger that Being is not in any sense a being. In other words the thesis


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 35amounted to stating a difference between beings and Being, an ontico-ontologicaldifference. Likewise, the thesis according to which ‘Being’ is given to a categorialintuition, which in Husserl was an element <strong>of</strong> his transcendental logic, turned out to meanfor Heidegger that in its factical life the human being has an understanding <strong>of</strong> Being. Inother words, factical life interprets itself in terms <strong>of</strong> Being. This is to say that theontology <strong>of</strong> those factical beings who understand Being is an hermeneutics, or a theory <strong>of</strong>interpretation.But, by the same token, Husserl’s tw<strong>of</strong>old thesis about Being, thus reappropriated in anontological framework, induced Heidegger to search in the de facto life <strong>of</strong> the humanbeing for the unique ground for an intelligibility <strong>of</strong> the various meanings <strong>of</strong> Being. Itinduced him to search for the focus <strong>of</strong> intelligibility within what he was to call, a littlelater, the human Dasein.In this search, Heidegger availed himself <strong>of</strong> a third discovery made by Husserl: thediscovery <strong>of</strong> the a priori, a word with an obvious temporal connotation. Husserl <strong>of</strong>tenclaimed that time consciousness was the most fundamental consideration <strong>of</strong> hisphenomenology. In order for consciousness to be intentional at all, it has to be temporal.This means for Husserl that in order to be able to intend any intentional correlate,consciousness has to be a ‘living present’, a present which constantly articulates the‘retention’ <strong>of</strong> what is just past with the anticipation (or ‘protention’) <strong>of</strong> what is going tohappen. Heidegger, who was to edit in 1928 Husserl’s The Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> InternalTime-consciousness, took advantage <strong>of</strong> this third discovery. His ontology <strong>of</strong> humanDasein aims at demonstrating that temporality is the only horizon within which weunderstand the meanings <strong>of</strong> Being. This is condensed in the very title <strong>of</strong> his masterwork<strong>of</strong> 1927, Being and Time [2.2, 2.45], a book in which the three Husserlian discoveriesoperate in a peculiar way along with an Aristotelian inspiration. The link between thisinspiration and Husserl’s legacy is already noticeable in the fact that Heidegger, in hisIntroduction, characterizes the phenomenological method at work in the book by usingthe very language <strong>of</strong> Aristotle.What Heidegger discovered very early, as he puts it in a later survey <strong>of</strong> his ‘way tophenomenology’ is that ‘what occurs for the phenomenology <strong>of</strong> the acts <strong>of</strong> consciousnessis thought more originally by Aristotle and in all Greek thinking and existence asalētheia’ (On Time and Being [2.70], 78). In its traditional definition, truth is anadequation between the mind and the real, and it occurs in a specific place: thepredicative judgment. In one way, Husserl’s phenomenology contributed to overcomingthe classical notion <strong>of</strong> truth. For Husserl indeed, prior to the so-called adequatiointellectus ad rem (<strong>of</strong> the mind to the thing), the touchstone <strong>of</strong> truth is evidence, i.e., theself-manifestation <strong>of</strong> the object qua phenomenon to intentionality. Moreover, Husserlclaimed that the locus <strong>of</strong> truth is in no way restricted to the predicative judgment: it isintentionality itself, or consciousness in all its forms. Heidegger took advantage <strong>of</strong> thisbreakthrough in his phenomenological interpretation <strong>of</strong> Aristotle. As far as truth isconcerned, the Greek philosopher, he claims, is more original than Husserl on twoaccounts: first because he understands truth as the unconceal-ment <strong>of</strong> beings for anunconcealing being, the human being; second because this unconcealing, instead <strong>of</strong> beingrestricted to consciousness, is attributed by him to the human comportment as such, moreprecisely to the human way <strong>of</strong> being. In other words, for Aristotle, claims Heidegger,


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 36alētheia, or truth, is a matter <strong>of</strong> bios, <strong>of</strong> life or <strong>of</strong> existence. It is in the context <strong>of</strong> thisphenomenological reading <strong>of</strong> Aristotle that Heidegger was led to replace the words‘factical life’ by the key word Dasein in order to characterize the human way <strong>of</strong> being. InGerman the word is both a verb meaning ‘to be present’, or to exist, and a noun meaning‘presence’, or existence. Moreover, da the prefix <strong>of</strong> the word, means both there and then;it points to a place and time for something to happen. Heidegger’s use <strong>of</strong> the word tocharacterize the human way <strong>of</strong> being is an attempt to suggest that the concrete existence<strong>of</strong> a human being is a phenomenon which is there, thrown into a place and a time inwhich an unconcealment happens.But in addition to a concept <strong>of</strong> truth in terms <strong>of</strong> existence, Heidegger also discovered inAristotle a concrete analysis <strong>of</strong> human existence as an unconcealing way <strong>of</strong> being. Theontological reappropriation <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s discovery <strong>of</strong> intentionality taught him thathuman existence as such is a relatedness to. The reappropriation <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s discovery<strong>of</strong> categorial intuition taught him that human existence, in its relatedness to, understandsBeing. Likewise, the appropriation <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s discovery <strong>of</strong> the a priori taught him thattime is at the core <strong>of</strong> the understanding <strong>of</strong> Being. Since those three ontologicalreappropriations were oriented by a single question—where is the source for theunderstanding <strong>of</strong> Being to be found?—they all required an analysis <strong>of</strong> Dasein as thebeing who understands Being. In other words they required an analysis <strong>of</strong> Dasein’s way<strong>of</strong> being, i.e., for an ontology <strong>of</strong> Dasein. And here Heidegger discovered very early thatAristotle’s description <strong>of</strong> human comportment paved the way to the ontology <strong>of</strong> Daseinthat he was attempting to articulate. His lecture courses <strong>of</strong> the Marburg perioddemonstrate that, in his view, the Nicomachean Ethics was such an ontology. It is in suchterms that Heidegger deals with Aristotle’s Ethics in the introduction to his celebratedlecture course <strong>of</strong> 1924–5 on Plato’s Sophist [2.29], which had a deep influence on thosewho originally heard it, including Hannah Arendt, Hans-Georg Gadamer and Hans Jonas.The Nicomachean Ethics scrutinizes the dianoetic excellences or intellectual virtuesand establishes them in a hierarchy. According to Aristotle these virtues have two levels:the lower are the deliberative excellences, the higher are the epistemic excellences. At thelower level two deliberative virtues take place: technē and phronēsis. In Greek technēmeans art, in the sense <strong>of</strong> knowhow. Heidegger insists that in Aristotle technē is anintellectual excellence because it is a matter <strong>of</strong> truth, <strong>of</strong> alētheia as unconcealment. It is apeculiar way <strong>of</strong> disclosing, or discovering, what is required for a specific comportment:the productive comportment called poiēsis. In other words, it is a way <strong>of</strong> knowing truth,or even <strong>of</strong> being in truth, linked with a peculiar way <strong>of</strong> being: the production <strong>of</strong> such andsuch a work or result. However, claims Heidegger, the reason why Aristotle puts technēon the lowest rank among the deliberative excellences is to be understood in terms <strong>of</strong> anontology <strong>of</strong> Dasein. Indeed, in the productive way <strong>of</strong> being which is ruled by technē,Dasein is busy with, and concerned by, products or results out there. To that extent thepair technē-poiēsis suffers an ontological deficiency. To be sure, the principle for theproductive activity informed by an unconcealing knowhow is within the agent, hencewithin the Dasein and <strong>of</strong> the same nature as Dasein itself: it is the model conceived bythe agent and held in view by him. But the telos or end <strong>of</strong> productive activity is in no waywithin Dasein or <strong>of</strong> its nature: it occurs outside <strong>of</strong> Dasein.This ontological deficiency, claims Heidegger, is no longer the case in the second


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 37deliberative excellence, namely phronēsis, also conceived by Aristotle as a peculiar way<strong>of</strong> disclosing, or <strong>of</strong> being in truth, adjusted to a specific comportment or active way <strong>of</strong>being. This active way <strong>of</strong> being is no longer poiēsis but praxis, i.e., action in the sense <strong>of</strong>the conduct by an individual <strong>of</strong> his or her own life. Phronēsis discloses to Dasein thepotentiality <strong>of</strong> its own existence. Here again, according to Heidegger, the reason whyAristotle puts phronēsis on the highest level among the deliberative excellences is to beunderstood in terms <strong>of</strong> an ontology <strong>of</strong> Dasein. Indeed neither the principle <strong>of</strong> phronēsisnor its goal falls outside the human being. The principle here is a prior option <strong>of</strong> theDasein for well-doing, while the end is the very way <strong>of</strong> being <strong>of</strong> Dasein, its own praxis.Phronēsis is nothing but the resoluteness to exist in the highest possible manner.Thus understood in ontological terms, Aristotle’s distinction between the technēpoiēsisand the phronēsis-praxis distinctions allowed Heidegger to set up the framework<strong>of</strong> his own ontology <strong>of</strong> Dasein, as a being who understands Being. This ontology, whichwas to be developed in Being and Time, describes the existence <strong>of</strong> Dasein in terms <strong>of</strong> atension between an everyday way <strong>of</strong> Being in which the Dasein is not authentically whoit is, and an authentic way <strong>of</strong> Being in which Dasein is properly itself. The descriptionshows that in everydayness Dasein cannot be its ownmost Being, because it lives in acondition <strong>of</strong> preoccupation or concern for ends to be attained by a variety <strong>of</strong> means ortools, a condition which is enlightened by a specific circumspection about surroundings.To that extent everydayness is ruled by Das Man, the ‘They’. In it everybody is nobody,because such a condition never confronts Dasein’s own existence. This description is theoutcome <strong>of</strong> a peculiar reappropriation <strong>of</strong> Aristotle’s doctrine concerning technē andpoiēsis. On the other hand, the analytic <strong>of</strong> Dasein shows that Dasein authenticallybecomes a Self by confronting its ownmost potentiality for Being. It does so by acceptingexistence in its finitude, as a Being-unto-death. This description, with the exception <strong>of</strong> theemphasis put on anxiety, is again the result <strong>of</strong> a peculiar reappropriation <strong>of</strong> Aristotle’sanalysis <strong>of</strong> phronēsis and praxis. Aristotle indeed insists that phronēsis, as a dianoeticvirtue, has its proper realm in the perishable. On the other hand, Heidegger occasionallysuggested when he was teaching Aristotle that the latter’s concept <strong>of</strong> phronēsis somehowanticipates the notion <strong>of</strong> conscience (Gewissen). And conscience in Heidegger’s analytic<strong>of</strong> Dasein is the phenomenon in which Dasein listens to a call from it own depthssummoning it to confront its finitude.But the Aristotelian inspiration in Heidegger’s ontology <strong>of</strong> Dasein is not restricted totechnē and phronēsis. It also includes a peculiar reappropriation <strong>of</strong> Aristotle’s doctrine <strong>of</strong>the epistemic virtues. In the Nicomachean Ethics these virtues are epistēmē (science) andsophia (wisdom). Both are adjusted to theoria, i.e., to a purely contemplative attitude,which bears upon a realm which is no longer perishable, a realm which is forever what itis and how it is. For Aristotle that realm is higher than the realm <strong>of</strong> human affairsprecisely because it is not perishable as they are. And in his view it is at this level only,specifically at the level <strong>of</strong> sophia, that a true concern with Being can take place, as acontemplation <strong>of</strong> the ontological structure <strong>of</strong> the totality <strong>of</strong> beings and <strong>of</strong> the prime moverwhich is the principle for all movements <strong>of</strong> physis (nature). Heidegger insists, in hisMarburg lectures, that, according to Aristotle, the contemplation <strong>of</strong> that immutable realmis the most authentic way <strong>of</strong> being that a mortal can attain, because as long as suchcontemplation lasts, the mortal spectator lives in the proximity <strong>of</strong> the divine.


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 38According to Heidegger’s teaching in the Marburg period, there is in the Aristotelianconcept <strong>of</strong> sophia an equivocation between ontology as the science <strong>of</strong> the Being <strong>of</strong> beingsand theology as the science <strong>of</strong> the divine. There is also an indeterminacy, because forAristotle the only meaning <strong>of</strong> Being is limited to what he calls ousia, i.e., in Heidegger’sinterpretation, presence in the sense <strong>of</strong> presence-at-hand (Vorhandenheit). This meaning<strong>of</strong> Being, Heidegger says, is adjusted to nature, but it is not relevant as far as the Being <strong>of</strong>Dasein is concerned. Moreover, considering presence as the only meaning <strong>of</strong> Beingamounts to understanding Being in the light <strong>of</strong> a temporality in which only the present isimportant. This temporality, considered as a succession <strong>of</strong> present moments, is in fact theconcept <strong>of</strong> time that Aristotle develops in his Physics. Heidegger raised objections to thepredominance <strong>of</strong> this concept. In the case <strong>of</strong> the Being <strong>of</strong> Dasein, putting the emphasisonly on the present is one-sided and misleading. In order for Dasein to be authenticallypresent, it has to retrieve who it was as thrown in its own Being as well as to anticipate itsown end. Whereas the temporality <strong>of</strong> nature is ruled by the exclusive privilege <strong>of</strong> thepresent, the temporality <strong>of</strong> Dasein not only is determined by a triad, in which three ecstasis—past,present, and future—co-operate, but also is ruled by the privilege <strong>of</strong> thefuture.Accordingly, Heidegger, who agrees with Aristotle in considering the contemplation(theoria) <strong>of</strong> Being as the authentic accomplishment <strong>of</strong> Dasein, reorients thatcontemplation exclusively towards the finite being <strong>of</strong> Dasein and its finite temporality.As a result, fundamental ontology claims to be able to overcome both the ontotheologicalequivocation and the ontological indeterminacy which characterized theancient ontology and its legacy. The overcoming includes a deconstruction (Destruktion)<strong>of</strong> the ancient concepts along with a reversal <strong>of</strong> the old hierarchy between the perishableand the immutable. This deconstruction aims at demonstrating that for the most part thebasic concepts <strong>of</strong> ancient philosophy and consequently <strong>of</strong> the entire western tradition <strong>of</strong>metaphysics—concepts such as matter (hulē) and form (morphē), potentiality (dunamis)and actuality (energeia), idea (eidos), substance (hupokeimenon), and so on—find theirphenomenal origin in the activity <strong>of</strong> production, an activity which in order to be possibleat all presupposes the permanence <strong>of</strong> nature, and liberates its products from their link tothe producer to bestow on them a permanence similar to the natural one. Consequentlythese ontological concepts, instead <strong>of</strong> being coined after the authentic ontologicalexperience that Dasein has <strong>of</strong> its own Being, were coined in the inauthentic framework <strong>of</strong>everydayness. In such a framework Dasein, while coping with entities which are readyto-hand,pays attention to a meaning <strong>of</strong> Being—presence-at-hand (Vorhandenheit)—which is not adjusted to finite existence as its own way <strong>of</strong> Being. In other words, thegenealogy carried out by deconstruction aims at showing that Greek ontology, in itsconcern for the eternal features <strong>of</strong> nature, was mistaken in believing that thecontemplation <strong>of</strong> those features allowed the philosopher to go beyond the finitude andreach the proximity <strong>of</strong> the divine. Quite the contrary; it remained trapped withineverydayness. Here appears the reversal: the so-called overcoming <strong>of</strong> finitude was afalling away from it. The falling away from the authentic towards the inauthentic explainsthe predominance <strong>of</strong> the notion <strong>of</strong> presence-at-hand in traditional ontology.As a result <strong>of</strong> this reversal, the notion <strong>of</strong> transcendence, which traditionally defined theposition <strong>of</strong> the divine above the lower realm <strong>of</strong> immanence, was transformed by


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 39Heidegger to designate the process through which the Dasein goes beyond beingstowards Being: only the Dasein properly transcends, and it transcends beings towardsBeing.The articulation <strong>of</strong> the projectHeidegger’s project, inspired by a singular appropriation <strong>of</strong> Husserl and Aristotle, <strong>of</strong>fundamental ontology, designed as a reply to the question <strong>of</strong> the meaning <strong>of</strong> Being,included two tasks which provide the structure <strong>of</strong> Being and Time [2.2; 2.45].The first part <strong>of</strong> the treatise was supposed to be devoted to ‘the interpretation <strong>of</strong> Daseinin terms <strong>of</strong> temporality, and the explication <strong>of</strong> time as the transcendental horizon for thequestion <strong>of</strong> Being’ (pp. 39; 63). The book, which came out in 1927, announced threedivisions <strong>of</strong> Part One: (1) ‘the preparatory fundamental analysis <strong>of</strong> Dasein’; (2) ‘Daseinand temporality’ (Zeitlichkeit); (3) ‘time and Being’ (pp. 39; 64). The third division neverappeared.Part Two <strong>of</strong> the treatise was supposed to deal with the ‘basic features <strong>of</strong> aphenomenological destruction <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong> ontology, with the problematic <strong>of</strong>Temporality [Temporalität] as our clue’ (pp. 39; 63). This part, which also neverappeared, was designed to have three divisions: the first one dealing with Kant’s doctrine<strong>of</strong> schematism, the second with the ontological foundation <strong>of</strong> Descartes’ cogito sum, thethird with Aristotle’s essay on time.The published portion <strong>of</strong> Part One (which made Heidegger instantly famous)proceeded in two steps, corresponding to divisions one and two. If Part One starts with ananalysis <strong>of</strong> Dasein, it is because the leading question <strong>of</strong> the meaning <strong>of</strong> Being reboundsas it were on the one who poses it. Indeed Dasein is the only being for whom Being is aquestion or an issue. If such analysis has to be fundamental, it is because, instead <strong>of</strong>restricting itself to the teachings <strong>of</strong> disciplines such as anthropology, psychology orbiology, it must treat Dasein as a being for whom Being itself is the question, and not‘what is man?’, ‘what is mind?’ or ‘what is life?’ If such analysis is preparatory,however, it is because it is carried out not for its own sake but in order to provide ananswer to the question <strong>of</strong> the meaning <strong>of</strong> Being.But even leaving aside the problem <strong>of</strong> what is prepared by it, the analysis <strong>of</strong> Dasein isnot governed at all by the traditional question ‘what?’ Instead <strong>of</strong> addressing the question‘what is Dasein?’ the analysis has to address the question ‘who is Dasein?’ Indeed thequestion ‘what?’ is not adjusted to Dasein for the reason that, in its de facto existence,Dasein is such that its very essence lies in its ‘to be’ (Zusein), or in its ‘existence’, a wordwhich indicates an openness to a task, a possibility, and which is allotted by Heideggersolely to Dasein in order to avoid any confusion with the traditional use <strong>of</strong> existentia asequally valid for designating the Being <strong>of</strong> any entity whatsoever. In Heidegger’sterminology the meaning <strong>of</strong> the word existentia, in its traditional use, is ‘presence-athand’,and is appropriate only to entities which are precisely not <strong>of</strong> Dasein’s character.Dasein is thus the only entity in which existence has a priority over essence. Moreover ifthe question ‘what?’ has to be replaced by the question ‘who?’, it is because there is noDasein in general, because an individual Dasein is not a special instance <strong>of</strong> some genus.Dasein as an entity for which Being is an issue in its very Being, is ‘in each case


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 40mine’ (pp. 42; 67–8). As an entity which is its own possibility or existence and which isin each case mine, Dasein, in its very Being, can win or lose itself. ‘Mineness’ groundseither authenticity or inauthenticity. The German words, Eigentlichkeit andUneigentlichkeit, have no moral connotation. Eigentlichkeit designates a condition inwhich someone is its own Being; Uneigentlichkeit refers to a condition in which someoneis not properly its own Being.As a result <strong>of</strong> the priority <strong>of</strong> existence over essence, the fundamental analysis <strong>of</strong>Dasein has to treat it from the existentiality <strong>of</strong> its existence. The access to the basiccharacters <strong>of</strong> that existentiality is given in the condition in which Dasein is ‘proximallyand for the most part’—everydayness. These basic characters <strong>of</strong> existentiality are calledexistentialia.Because mineness grounds either authenticity or inauthenticity, all existentialia have anauthentic and inauthentic modality. They all have a transcendental status, which meansthat they are a priori conditions <strong>of</strong> possibility for Dasein’s existence. They are factors oritems <strong>of</strong> a constitutive state <strong>of</strong> Dasein that Heidegger calls ‘being-in-the-world’.Being-in-the-world is the primordial phenomenon which has to be analysed in order touncover the existentialia. Though the phenomenon is unitary, it is possible to look at it inthree ways, by putting the emphasis on the ‘world’ as such, or on the ‘being-in’ as such,or on the one ‘who’ is in the world.The world is neither the total amount <strong>of</strong> entities composing what is usually called theuniverse nor a framework for those entities. It is neither a global container nor an addition<strong>of</strong> contents. It is not nature. In order for nature to appear, a world is presupposed. Theworld must be understood a priori in terms <strong>of</strong> existentiality. Properly speaking, onlyDasein is in the world, and there would be no world without Dasein intimately open to it.And since Dasein is not present-at-hand but existing, the world is not a global presenceat-handthat constantly encircles Dasein. Because Dasein’s existence is its own ‘can be’or possibility, the world which is at issue in the phrase ‘being-in-the-world’ must bedescribed in terms <strong>of</strong> possibility, but a possibility which is already given. It is anexistentiale.If we take as clue our everyday way <strong>of</strong> Being, we must admit that our comportment ischaracterized as a concern with an environment. Within that concern we do not merelyobserve things present-at-hand. Instead we are constantly busy dealing with entities <strong>of</strong> apragmatic nature endowed with a pragmatic meaning that we understand. Each <strong>of</strong> theseentities is essentially ‘something in-order-to’, it is an instrument adjusted to this or thatpurpose. None <strong>of</strong> those entities is isolated. They are all interrelated, and in order for themto appear as ‘in-order-to’, they all presuppose as backdrop a context <strong>of</strong> involvement, withwhich we are familar. Such involvement is that ‘wherein’ we understand our ways andthat ‘for which’ we let entities be encountered and used. But the involvementpresupposed by our everyday concern itself refers to a deeper a priori which is the veryrelatedness <strong>of</strong> Dasein to its own potentiality for Being. This ultimate ‘for the sake <strong>of</strong>which’ is not a possibility within the world, it is the world itself as Dasein’s ownpotentiality. World is another name for Being as that for the sake <strong>of</strong> which Dasein istranscending.Similarly ‘Being-in’ has to be understood in terms <strong>of</strong> existentiality. And sinceexistence as such is a disclosing process, the ‘Being-in’ is better captured as a lighting or


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 41as an openness than as an insertion. Three existentialia constitute the ‘Being-in’:disposition, comprehension and discourse.Disposition (Befindlichkeit) is the state in which Dasein finds itself. That Daseinessentially finds itself in some state is revealed by the moods or humours makingmanifest how one is. In terms <strong>of</strong> existentiality, moods reveal that Dasein has beendelivered over to the Being is has to be. Heidegger calls ‘thrownness’ the facticity <strong>of</strong>being delivered over to Being. Hence disposition discloses Dasein in its thrownness.Comprehension (Verstehen) is also to be conceived in terms <strong>of</strong> existentiality. In orderto comprehend or understand the significance <strong>of</strong> the utensils it deals with ineverydayness, Dasein has to project itself upon this or that possibility. In any act <strong>of</strong>understanding, there is some projection. But the de facto projections pervading Dasein’sordinary comportment have their ontological foundation in Dasein’s projection upon itsown ‘can be’. As an existentiale, comprehension discloses Dasein itself in its ownpotentiality-for-Being.‘Discourse is existentially equiprimordial with disposition and comprehension’ (161).The German word for discourse is Rede, which is Heidegger’s translation <strong>of</strong> the Greeklogos. In terms <strong>of</strong> existentiality, discourse is the disclosing articulation <strong>of</strong> theintelligibility <strong>of</strong> Being-in-the-world.The reply to the question ‘“who” is in the world?’ shows that Dasein in its everydaymode <strong>of</strong> Being is not properly a Self. Most <strong>of</strong> the time it loses itself in what it is busywith. In other words it understands itself in terms <strong>of</strong> what is ready-to-hand within theworld. On the other hand it essentially belongs to Dasein to be with other Daseins. Buthere again the everyday mode <strong>of</strong> Being-with-one-another is such that Dasein is absorbedin the neutrality <strong>of</strong> the ‘They’ (das Man), instead <strong>of</strong> confronting its own Dasein. In bothcases the inauthentic prevails over the authentic. Heidegger calls ‘fallenness’ thetendency Dasein has to forget its own Self or to move away from it. Fallenness is anexistentiale. As a result <strong>of</strong> such a tendency, all the existentialia have two modalities: anauthentic and an inauthentic one. For example, discourse in its inauthentic form is idletalk. Likewise comprehension in its inauthentic form is curiosity.We can readily see that a temporal connotation is involved in the description <strong>of</strong> allthese items. Already pre-given as a ‘wherein’, the world is a past. But as constantlyanticipated as a ‘for which’, it is a future as well.A temporal dimension is also involved in the three interconnected modes <strong>of</strong> disclosurewhich constitute ‘Being-in’. Since disposition discloses the facticity <strong>of</strong> Dasein’sthrownness, it reveals that it belongs to existence to have already been. It is also obviousin the case <strong>of</strong> comprehension as a project: if Dasein itself is a project, this means thatstructurally it throws itself forwards in the direction <strong>of</strong> a future. Discourse as anexistentiale also shows a temporal dimension. By articulating ‘Being-in-the-world’ itexpresses both the thrownness and the self-projection <strong>of</strong> Dasein.Likewise, if the ontological answer to the question ‘who?’ has to be expressed in terms<strong>of</strong> a tension between authenticity and inauthenticity, the answer itself either emphasizes afuture or, concerning the rule <strong>of</strong> the ‘They’ and <strong>of</strong> the everyday equipment, thepredominance <strong>of</strong> what is currently the case.Once Being-in-the-world is analysed in its constitutive items, there must be a syntheticreturn to the unitary character <strong>of</strong> the phenomenon. Heidegger characterizes the


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 42ontological unity <strong>of</strong> Dasein’s Being-in-the-world with a single word, Sorge, usuallytranslated by the word ‘care’. Care is the transcendental structure at the root <strong>of</strong> all theexistential features mentioned so far. Care, as the ontological unifying structure <strong>of</strong>Dasein, is revealed in the fundamental disposition <strong>of</strong> anxiety, thanks to which Daseinrealizes that it is already thrown in the world, that it has to be its own Being, and that it isthus thrown and projecting itself in a condition <strong>of</strong> proximity to inner-worldly beingswhose Being is not its own Being. In the experience <strong>of</strong> anxiety the three intercon-necteddimensions <strong>of</strong> care are disclosed: facticity, possibility, fallenness among other beings.This is a turning point in the existential analytic: it opens the way to the seconddivision <strong>of</strong> Part One: Dasein and temporality.The phenomenon <strong>of</strong> care is now manifest in its unity. However, the question remains:what about its totality? A phenomenon appears as a whole when its limits are madevisible. Hence the problem is: what are the limits <strong>of</strong> care as the basic structure <strong>of</strong>existence? Clearly the limits <strong>of</strong> existence are birth and death. If we consider both limits asterms <strong>of</strong> a process which is not intrinsically determined by them, then we might say that,as soon as we exist, birth is over and that until we cease to exist, death is not there. Butthis view does not fit with Dasein’s mode <strong>of</strong> Being: a project which is thrown. Preciselybecause Dasein’s project is thrown, birth is not a mere moment which is over as soon asDasein exists. Dasein cannot be who it is without having been thrown in the world withthe limited possibilities which from the outset condition its Being. Likewise death is notthe other external limit <strong>of</strong> existence. Existence as a project includes in itself, i.e., in itspotentiality, its own end. This means that Dasein’s death is not restricted to its Being-atthe-end.It is rather a manner <strong>of</strong> Being that Dasein takes over as soon as it is. Itthoroughly permeates existence. It makes Dasein’s project essentially finite and turns itinto a Being-towards-the-end.Because <strong>of</strong> such finitude, a negative feature, a negativity determines care in relation toboth thrownness and project. What about the third dimension <strong>of</strong> care, i.e., the proximitywith other beings? Is it also determined by negativity? The answer is ambiguous. It canbe if and only if Dasein resolutely takes over its own mortality. But for the most part,because the proximity with other beings entails a predominance <strong>of</strong> pragmaticpreoccupation over care, Dasein covers up its own finitude and thinks <strong>of</strong> death as acontingent event occurring to everybody and to nobody. They die, I don’t.This description allows us to understand how temporality is the ground <strong>of</strong> theontological constitution <strong>of</strong> Dasein. According to ordinary views and a philosophicaltradition going back to Aristotle, time is an unlimited sequence <strong>of</strong> moments, including themoments which once were but no longer are, those which are not yet and the one which isnow. The sequence is considered to be irreversible and measurable. Heidegger claims thatsuch a concept <strong>of</strong> time was shaped not on the basis <strong>of</strong> a phenomenal analysis <strong>of</strong> Daseinbut on the basis <strong>of</strong> the experience <strong>of</strong> nature. Instead, the original concept <strong>of</strong> time has to bearticulated in conformity with the ontological constitution <strong>of</strong> Dasein. A clue for thearticulation is provided by the structure <strong>of</strong> care: Being-ahead-<strong>of</strong>-itself and already-beingin-a-worldas well as falling and Being-alongside entities within-the-world. This structurepoints to the originary time. The ‘Being-ahead-<strong>of</strong>-itself’ indicates an anticipatorydimension. Since such anticipation is already there, it includes a retrieval <strong>of</strong> what andwho the Dasein already is or has been. The anticipation is Dasein’s future. It is the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 43existential future, whereas the retrieval is Dasein’s existential past. Finally, the proximitywith other beings points towards Dasein’s present. Since that proximity is properly finiteif and only if Dasein resolutely takes over its own Being-towards-the-end, the existentialpresent can only be the instantaneous vision (Augenblick) by Dasein <strong>of</strong> the situation <strong>of</strong> itsfinite existence. Such vision includes a glimpse <strong>of</strong> the difference between the mode <strong>of</strong>Being called existence and modes <strong>of</strong> Being such as readiness-to-hand and presence-athand.Heidegger claims that the foundation <strong>of</strong> care on the triadic structure <strong>of</strong> existential timeis not at all a philosophical construct. It is ontically or pre-ontologically revealed to eachone in the phenomenon <strong>of</strong> conscience (Gewissen), a phenomenon which is not itselfmoral in the first place, and demands a description in terms <strong>of</strong> existentiality. A specificcall belongs to the phenomenon <strong>of</strong> conscience. The structure <strong>of</strong> such a call reveals atemporal foundation. The call is addressed to a fallen Dasein currently captivated byentities in-the-world. The call comes from Dasein itself in its facticity, a condition inwhich Dasein as thrown is in the mode <strong>of</strong> having been. And the message <strong>of</strong> the call isaddressed to Dasein again in its ownmost potentiality-for-Being, i.e., in the mode <strong>of</strong> afuture.Heidegger insists that ‘the primordial meaning <strong>of</strong> existentiality is the future’ (324).However, neither the existential future (anticipation) nor the existential past (retrieval)nor the existential present (instant <strong>of</strong> vision) has the traditional character <strong>of</strong> a discreteentity. Because the existential future is a coming-to-oneself, it is a dimension and not atall a not-yet-present moment nor a sequence <strong>of</strong> not-yet-present moments. In Heidegger’slanguage it is an ecstasis. Likewise the existential past and the existential present. Theword ecstasis, which in Greek means ‘standing outside’, is used by Heidegger in order toemphasize a connotation <strong>of</strong> stretching towards, or openness to. With this Heideggerassociates the notion <strong>of</strong> horizon. The horizon is that to which each ecstasis is open in aspecific way. Existential temporality is ecstatico-horizontal. Now, because the ecstasesare interconnected under the primacy <strong>of</strong> the future, because they belong togetherintrinsically, temporality is an ecstatic unity <strong>of</strong> future, past and present. Such unity hasitself a horizon which is the condition <strong>of</strong> possibility <strong>of</strong> the world as existential and <strong>of</strong>Dasein’s transcendence.Because <strong>of</strong> its existentiality, temporality is essentially finite, instead <strong>of</strong> being aninfinite sequence wherein existence would take place. It is the very process throughwhich an intrinsically finite mode <strong>of</strong> Being opens itself to its own potentiality for Beingand to other modes <strong>of</strong> Being. For the same reason, it is not enough to say that Dasein’sexistence is temporal. Rather, Dasein temporalizes. Genuine time is temporalization andeven self-temporalization. In its ownmost Being, Dasein exists in such a way that it runsahead towards its own end (Vorlaufen), retrieves its own thrownness (Wiederholung), andrenders present its own situation (Gegenwärtigung).In the light <strong>of</strong> all this, it turns out that common time, as an infinite sequence, is derivedfrom existential time. According to the common concept <strong>of</strong> it, time is a sequence <strong>of</strong> nowmomentsrevealing itself in counting, a counting done in reference to a motion (the sun orthe hands <strong>of</strong> a clock). In fact, Heidegger says, this reckoning <strong>of</strong> time is guided by andbased upon a reckoning with time: time is already disclosed to us before we use a clock.The disclosure occurs in our daily comportment. Hence our daily reckoning with time is


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 44what deserves analysis, if we want to define common time fully. As soon as we approachcommon time in these terms, we realize that the ‘now’ we check on the clock every day isnever a naked and discrete entity given as an object at hand (vorhanden). Now is always‘now that’ I am doing this or that. When I say now, in daily life, I am always expressingmyself as attending to something, as presentifying it. Likewise, when I say ‘at that time’,I display myself as retaining something bygone, either in the mode <strong>of</strong> recollecting it or inthe mode <strong>of</strong> forgetting it. Similarly, when I say ‘then’, I show that I am expectingsomething to happen, on its own or by reason <strong>of</strong> my own deeds. Hence counting timeleads back to a reckoning-with-time articulated according to presentification, retentionand expectation. But this triad presupposes the existential triad mentioned above. Whilepresupposing the original temporality, however, it also covers it up because <strong>of</strong> the fallingcharacter <strong>of</strong> everydayness, in which inner-worldly entities tend to prevail upon theexistential world. As a result <strong>of</strong> our fallenness, time becomes an infinite sequence,whereas the original temporality is essentially finite. For the same reason, time becomesirreversible whereas authentic temporality is an ever-renewed encroachment <strong>of</strong> the pastupon the future and vice versa. For the same reason, time gets bound to the motion <strong>of</strong>things whereas authentic temporality is the ownmost mobility <strong>of</strong> Dasein.The entire analysis involves an explicit criticism <strong>of</strong> Aristotle, whose concept <strong>of</strong> time isindeed a free-floating sequence <strong>of</strong> nows, and an implicit criticism <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s notion <strong>of</strong>time-consciousness which, as an articulation <strong>of</strong> retentions, living impressions andprotentions, does not go beyond the level <strong>of</strong> everyday preoccupation.The deconstructive reappropriation <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong> ontologyAs far as Greek philosophy is concerned, there are in fundamental ontology several traces<strong>of</strong> a ‘deconstructive’ retrieval <strong>of</strong> Plato. Heidegger agrees with Plato that human beingsare naturally philosophers although most <strong>of</strong> the time people do not care about philosophy.He also agrees with Plato’s characterization <strong>of</strong> philosophy as a way <strong>of</strong> Being, a form <strong>of</strong>existence: the bios theoretikos. The distinction between the ‘They’ (Das Man) and theauthentic Self owes much to Plato’s demarcation between the multitude (the polloi) andthe philosopher. The description <strong>of</strong> everydayness in terms <strong>of</strong> a productive preoccupationowes much to Plato’s condescending characterization <strong>of</strong> active life in terms <strong>of</strong> poiēsis.The description <strong>of</strong> everyday language as empty talk is obviously indebted to Plato’scontempt for doxa (opinion) and sophistry. Above all the Heideggerian hierarchybetween three levels <strong>of</strong> seeing—the immediate intuition (Anschauung) <strong>of</strong> entities merelypresent-at-hand; the awareness that the mere presence <strong>of</strong> those entities is an abstractionderiving from a loss and fall in relation to their readiness-to-hand (Zuhandenheit) open toa practical circumspection; and finally the awareness, reached in the silence <strong>of</strong>conscience, that the everyday surrounding world (Umwelt) is in a position <strong>of</strong> falling awayfrom one’s authentic world, a world transparent (durchsichtig) to conscience only—thathierarchy is obviously an echo to the levels <strong>of</strong> seeing mentioned by Plato in the parable <strong>of</strong>the cave.As far as medieval thought, with which Heidegger became acquainted during his earlytheological studies, is concerned, it is possible to recognize in his analytic <strong>of</strong> Dasein adiscreet reappropriation <strong>of</strong> the scholastic concept <strong>of</strong> analogia entis (analogy <strong>of</strong> being).


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 45Just as the medieval theologians determined what they called the degrees <strong>of</strong> Being interms <strong>of</strong> an analogy between the kinds <strong>of</strong> beings and the summum ens (highest being), adivine being whose actuality is devoid <strong>of</strong> any potentiality and whose essence is identicalwith its existence, Heidegger determines analogically an hierarchy <strong>of</strong> the ways <strong>of</strong> Being,in reference to the Dasein. Thus he characterizes the being <strong>of</strong> the stone as ‘worldless’ andthe being <strong>of</strong> the animal as ‘poor in world’ on the basis <strong>of</strong> a unique analogy with Dasein,whose essence, once it is thrown in its Being, is to exist, or to be in the world.Likewise the very distinction between an everyday world in which the Dasein feels athome, and an authentic world in which it is homeless is not without a secularizedreminiscence <strong>of</strong> Augustine’s notion that the world is an exile, and that the Christians donot belong to it.For modern philosophy, fundamental ontology includes a reappropriation anddeconstruction <strong>of</strong> several major authors, such as Leibniz, Kant and Hegel.In Leibniz the ‘principle <strong>of</strong> ground’ (Satz vom Grund), also for-mulated as theprinciple <strong>of</strong> Sufficient Reason which is supposed to provide an ultimate answer to thequestion ‘why?’, is based on the nature <strong>of</strong> truth. For Leibniz truth is to be found primarilyin judgment, and judgment ultimately consists in an identity between subject andpredicate, an identity such that it can be demonstrated that any P is analytically derivedfrom S. But for Leibniz this analytical concept <strong>of</strong> truth is not simply a matter <strong>of</strong> logic. Ithas an ontological basis. Ultimately all the logical propositions ‘S is P’ have theirontological foundation in the monads that harmoniously compose reality, each <strong>of</strong> themhaving in itself the reason or ground for what happens to it. At the time <strong>of</strong> fundamentalontology, Heidegger discussed Leibniz in the published essay The Essence <strong>of</strong> Reasons(Vom Wesen des Grundes [2.4]), but also in posthumously edited lecture courses such asThe Metaphysical Foundations <strong>of</strong> Logic [2.34, 2.48]. Though rejecting the traditionalprivilege <strong>of</strong> judgment shared by Leibniz, he agrees with him that the problem <strong>of</strong> groundhas to be dealt with in terms <strong>of</strong> the problem <strong>of</strong> truth. He also agrees that any ontic truthpresupposes an ontological foundation <strong>of</strong> a monadic nature. But whereas Leibniz insertssuch a foundation into an onto-theological framework, Heidegger attributes it to thetranscending process through which the Dasein, as a Self, overcomes beings towardsBeing. That process <strong>of</strong> transcendence which is the ontico-ontological difference itself isthe foundational coming-to-pass <strong>of</strong> truth as unconcealment.Kant’s philosophy was also the topic <strong>of</strong> a deconstructive appropriation. The majorpro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong> this is <strong>of</strong>fered by Heidegger’s book Kant and the Problem <strong>of</strong> Metaphysics [2.3,2.47]. The book is an attempt to demonstrate that the Critique <strong>of</strong> Pure Reason, at least inits first edition, somehow anticipates the project <strong>of</strong> fundamental ontology in its reply tothe question ‘How are synthetic judgments possible?’ Heidegger insists that according toKant the question makes sense only if it stems from a knowing being which is essentiallyfinite. Kant finds the sign <strong>of</strong> that finitude in the fundamental receptivity <strong>of</strong> sensibility.Sensible receptivity means that we, human beings, can know only beings that we do notcreate. However the ontic knowledge <strong>of</strong> those beings, which for Kant takes place in theexperience <strong>of</strong> natural entities, requires an a priori synthesis which has, Heidegger claims,the nature <strong>of</strong> an ontological knowledge, i.e., <strong>of</strong> an a priori comprehension <strong>of</strong> the Being <strong>of</strong>those beings. In Kant, that a priori synthesis is the union <strong>of</strong> pure intuition (the a prioriforms <strong>of</strong> space and time) with the pure categories <strong>of</strong> the understanding, a union carried


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 46out by transcendental imagination through the protection <strong>of</strong> transcendental schematacharacterized as transcendental determinations <strong>of</strong> time. By recognizing the decisive role<strong>of</strong> time—more precisely <strong>of</strong> a temporalizing process performed in the depths <strong>of</strong> theknowing subject, at the core <strong>of</strong> a synthetic or ontological knowledge enabling onticaccess to beings as objects—Kant would have anticipated Heidegger’s own attempt toshow that our openness to beings presupposes a comprehension <strong>of</strong> their Being, i.e., atranscendence happening in the horizon <strong>of</strong> temporality. However, in its deconstructiveaspect, this reappropriation <strong>of</strong> Kant also emphasizes the limitations <strong>of</strong> his endeavour: (1)a framework which is the legacy <strong>of</strong> Christian metaphysics with its distinction betweenmetaphysica generalis and metaphysica specialis (psychology, cosmology, theology); (2)a one-sided concept <strong>of</strong> Being as presence-at-hand, therefore a one-sided concept <strong>of</strong> time,as a sequence <strong>of</strong> present moments, although Kant’s notion <strong>of</strong> self-affection partiallyovercomes this one-sidedness; and (3) also the fact that Kant himself, as evinced by thesecond edition <strong>of</strong> the Critique <strong>of</strong> Pure Reason, seems to have withdrawn from his owndiscovery <strong>of</strong> finite transcendence in the operation <strong>of</strong> transcendental imagination.Heidegger in Being and Time is entirely critical <strong>of</strong> Hegel, and at several places in thebook he carefully discards any semblance <strong>of</strong> a proximity between the Hegelianconceptions and his own position. He claims, for example, that the Hegelian definition <strong>of</strong>time merely maintains traditional views leading back to Aristotle’s Physics, and is onesidedlyfocused on presence-at-hand. Moreover, he insists on the abstraction andformalism <strong>of</strong> Hegel, compared to the concreteness <strong>of</strong> his own fundamental ontology. Andagainst the Hegelian thesis according to which Spirit falls into time, he objects that thevery meaning <strong>of</strong> a ‘fall’ is left in the dark by Hegel. Instead <strong>of</strong> claiming that Spirit fallsinto time, the meaningful thesis about the fall should be expressed in this way: ‘facticalexistence “falls” as falling from primordial, authentic temporality’ ([2.2] 486; [2.45],435–6). In spite <strong>of</strong> this apparent discarding <strong>of</strong> Hegel, readers <strong>of</strong> Being and Time areallowed to suspect, in relation to the history <strong>of</strong> ideas, that Heidegger’s analysis <strong>of</strong> anxietyas a crucial experience which is not to be confused with ordinary fear, and thecharacterization <strong>of</strong> Being in terms <strong>of</strong> ‘no being’ or Nothingness, are not without somerelation to Hegelian topics. One is inclined to suspect that there is indeed somereappropriation <strong>of</strong> Hegel in fundamental ontology.Such a reappropriation comes to the fore in Heidegger’s essay <strong>of</strong> 1929, What isMetaphysics? [2.5, 2.50], the text <strong>of</strong> his inaugural lecture at the University <strong>of</strong> Freiburg onthe occasion <strong>of</strong> his accession to the Chair <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> left vacant by the retirement <strong>of</strong>Husserl. At the outset <strong>of</strong> this essay, Heidegger states that he is in accord with Hegel’scomment that ‘from the point <strong>of</strong> view <strong>of</strong> sound common sense, philosophy is the“inverted world”’ (p. 95). And further on, he reveals a second point <strong>of</strong> agreement. After adescription <strong>of</strong> anxiety as a meta-physical experience in which nothingness manifestsitself, he quotes Hegel’s Science <strong>of</strong> Logic: ‘Pure Being and pure Nothing are therefore thesame’ (Wissenschaft der logik, vol. 1, 111, p. 74). This proposition, Heidegger says, iscorrect, ‘Being and nothing do belong together’ (Basic Writings, p. 110). To be sure,these two points <strong>of</strong> agreement are rather formal and Heidegger adds that his ownemphasis on the finitude <strong>of</strong> Being revealing itself in the transcendence <strong>of</strong> Dasein marks afundamental divergence in spite <strong>of</strong> a formal proximity. But a lecture course <strong>of</strong> 1930–1devoted to an interpretation <strong>of</strong> Hegel’s Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Spirit shows that there was


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 47much more than a formal convergence, and that Heidegger’s fundamental ontology reallycrossed the Hegelian path. Focusing on the transition from consciousness to selfconsciousness,the lecture course claims that Hegel’s notion <strong>of</strong> ‘life’ in thePhenomenology <strong>of</strong> Spirit unfolds a concept <strong>of</strong> Being which is no longer caught in thetraditional notion <strong>of</strong> presence-at-hand. Moreover, Heidegger in the lecture courseexpresses admiration for the Hegelian description <strong>of</strong> the movement by which absoluteknowledge absolves itself from natural knowledge. That description, he suggests, has tobe considered as a transposition in an absolute framework <strong>of</strong> the very movement <strong>of</strong> finitetranscendence.Finally, fundamental ontology involves a reappropriation <strong>of</strong> Nietzsche on one point atleast: historicality. In Being and Time ([2.45], section 76), Heidegger attempts todemonstrate that historiology (Historie) has its existential source in Dasein’shistoricality. Dasein’s Being is essentially historical ‘in so far as by reason <strong>of</strong> itsecstatico-horizontal temporality it is open in its character <strong>of</strong> “having been”’ ([2.45], 445).In the context <strong>of</strong> the demonstration, Heidegger insists that ‘Nietzsche recognized whatwas essential as to the “use and abuse <strong>of</strong> historiology for life” in the second <strong>of</strong> his studies“out <strong>of</strong> season” (1874), and said it unequivocally and penetratingly’ ([2.45, 448]). Forboth Heidegger and Nietzsche the so-called objectivity <strong>of</strong> historical sciences, instead <strong>of</strong>being primordial, is a falling away from an active movement <strong>of</strong> uncovering directedtowards the future. For both, that active movement is essentially interpretative orhermeneutical. For both, it is also circular because it creates an overlapping <strong>of</strong> the futureand the past.In other words, Heidegger suggests that by saying that only master builders <strong>of</strong> thefuture who know the present will understand the past, Nietzsche anticipates theHeideggerian topic <strong>of</strong> the ‘hermeneutic circle’.THE HISTORY OF BEINGParoxysm and interruption <strong>of</strong> fundamental ontologyThe basic principle <strong>of</strong> the analytic <strong>of</strong> Dasein, worked out in Being and Time, was: DasDasein existiert umwillen seiner (‘Dasein exists for the sake <strong>of</strong> itself). In the light <strong>of</strong> thisprinciple, the project <strong>of</strong> fundamental ontology intended to demonstrate under the heading‘Time and Being’ how the various meanings <strong>of</strong> Being—such as life, actuality, reality,permanence and so on—had to be understood as deriving from the self-projectingexistence <strong>of</strong> Dasein. But the principle itself was restricted to the way <strong>of</strong> Being <strong>of</strong>individuals.That restriction vanished in 1933 when Heidegger decided to support Hitler andbecame the first National Socialist rector <strong>of</strong> the University <strong>of</strong> Freiburg. The focus <strong>of</strong> hisRectoral Address is no longer the individual Dasein but the Dasein <strong>of</strong> the Germanpeople. As a result <strong>of</strong> that shift many concepts <strong>of</strong> Dasein’s analytic undergo a significantmetamorphosis.The early version <strong>of</strong> fundamental ontology had reappropriated the Aristotelian praxisin the direction <strong>of</strong> Dasein’s solitary insight (theoria) into the finiteness <strong>of</strong> its own Being,


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 48therefore in the direction <strong>of</strong> Dasein’s bios theoretikos. Heidegger in 1933 once againclaims that the intention <strong>of</strong> the Greeks was to understand theoria, in its relation to Being,as the highest form <strong>of</strong> praxis. But he adds that theoria, thus understood as the science <strong>of</strong>the Being <strong>of</strong> beings, is ‘the very medium that determines, in its ownmost Being, theDasein <strong>of</strong> a people and <strong>of</strong> the State’ (The Self-assertion <strong>of</strong> the German University (DieSelbstbehauptung der deutschen Universität) [2.7], 12). Accordingly, no longer theindividual Dasein but the very existence <strong>of</strong> a people organized in a state seems to becomethe authentic location for the unconcealment <strong>of</strong> beings in their totality and in their Being.Now the organization <strong>of</strong> a people is obviously not a matter <strong>of</strong> pure theoria, but a matter<strong>of</strong> technē, <strong>of</strong> knowhow and <strong>of</strong> poiēsis. Consequently as a result <strong>of</strong> the shift fromindividual Dasein to the Dasein <strong>of</strong> a people-in-a-state, technē is no longer confinedwithin the inauthentic realm <strong>of</strong> everydayness. To be sure, there is an ordinary technēwhich is still restricted to those limits, but, in addition to it, there is now place for anauthentic technē, a knowhow which, instead <strong>of</strong> being fascinated by what is merelypresent-at-hand, is ontologically creative. In this context, Heidegger recalls an old Greeklegend according to which Prometheus would have been the first philosopher, and hequotes the words <strong>of</strong> Prometheus in Aeschylus’ tragedy: ‘technē however is much weakerthan necessity.’ Necessity is here interpreted by him as the ‘overpower’ <strong>of</strong> destiny. Insuch ‘overpower’ a concealment <strong>of</strong> being is involved which challenges knowledge anddemands a metaphysical reply, in terms <strong>of</strong> a creative technē.Along with the transposition <strong>of</strong> the notion <strong>of</strong> Dasein to a people, and the introduction<strong>of</strong> a creative technē, the Rectoral Address also introduces the idea that Being itself, andnot only Dasein, is intrinsically polemical and historical; and that Dasein—either as anindividual or as a people—is the ‘there’ <strong>of</strong> Being.But in spite <strong>of</strong> all these modifications, the Rectoral Address maintains the project <strong>of</strong> afundamental ontology, as a task including a metaphysics <strong>of</strong> Dasein articulated accordingto the opposition between a fallen everydayness, fascinated by presence-at-hand, and aresolute authenticity dedicated to unconcealing Being by transcending beings.The two lecture courses <strong>of</strong>fered by Heidegger after the rectorate period—a lecturecourse on Hölderlin [2.37] given in the winter term 1934–5, and a lecture course on theIntroduction to Metaphysics [2.8, 2.53] given in the summer term 1935—introducedevelopments <strong>of</strong> topics treated in the Rectoral Address, but they also maintain theframework <strong>of</strong> fundamental ontology.The lecture course on Hölderlin starts by discarding, in order to listen to the poet, allthe forms <strong>of</strong> fallen everydayness already described in Being and Time as obstructing thequestion: Who is Dasein? The Dasein at stake here, however, is no longer the individualbut ‘the authentic gathering <strong>of</strong> individuals in a community’ ([2.45], 8). Hölderlin’spoetry, in the poems ‘Germani a’ and ‘Am Rhein’, is supposed to raise the question: ‘Whoare we, the German people?’ The question demands a withdrawal from everydayness anda resolute attitude <strong>of</strong> racial questioning opposed to the ‘They’. In continuity with Beingand Time, Heidegger characterizes everydayness in terms <strong>of</strong> technē, i.e., circumspectiondedicated to the management <strong>of</strong> surroundings, to production, usefulness and the generalprogress <strong>of</strong> culture. That inauthentic comportment encompasses the everyday life <strong>of</strong> theNazi regime: cultural activism, subordination <strong>of</strong> thought and the fine arts to immediatepolitical needs, biologism, and the rule <strong>of</strong> bureaucrats. But on the level <strong>of</strong> authenticity


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 49there is a place for a quite different technē, adjusted to the historical Dasein <strong>of</strong> theGerman people. Only a few individuals are aware <strong>of</strong> the innermost historiality <strong>of</strong> thatpeople. These few are the creators: the poet, the thinker and the founder <strong>of</strong> the state. Theco-operation <strong>of</strong> these three creative types is described by Heidegger in his interpretation<strong>of</strong> what he calls the Grundstimmung, the basic mood <strong>of</strong> the two poems, i.e., Hölderlin’sholy mourning in the face <strong>of</strong> the flight <strong>of</strong> the gods. The poet institutes (stiftet) the truth <strong>of</strong>the Dasein <strong>of</strong> the people. The thinker elucidates and articulates the Being <strong>of</strong> beings thusdisclosed by the poet. But the co-operation <strong>of</strong> the two requires the people to be led toitself as a people. This can only occur through the creation by the state-creator <strong>of</strong> a stateadjusted to the essence <strong>of</strong> that people. That triad embodies the Promethean technēmentioned in the Rectoral Address. The three <strong>of</strong> them rise to the level <strong>of</strong> demigodspreparing the conditions for a return <strong>of</strong> the divine.The same Promethean trend is to be found in Heidegger’s dialogue with pre-Socraticthought in the Introduction to Metaphysics. As a result <strong>of</strong> the elevation <strong>of</strong> a creativetechnē to the highest ontological level, Heidegger now detects between Parmenides,Heraclitus and Sophocles convergences pointing to an ontological assignment to settinginto-workwhat the creative technē sees or knows. The assignment is required by thepolemical essence <strong>of</strong> what the early Greek thinkers called physis, an appellation which,like the word alētheia, is taken to be another name for Being. Being is polemical because,on the one hand, it is an unconcealment which retains itself in itself while disclosing itselfin beings; and because, on the other hand, it is again and again threatened, in its verydisclosure, by sheer semblance, deception, illusion. Therefore it is an ‘overpowering’calling for a creative self-assertion defined as a decision (Entscheidung) to provide a‘separation in the togetherness <strong>of</strong> Being, unconcealment; appearance, and Non-Being’ ([2.8], 84; [2.53], 92). And since there is a violence in the ‘overpowering’ <strong>of</strong>Being such decision has to be disrupting and violent. This violent response to the‘overpowering’ <strong>of</strong> Being is what characterizes technē in its essential meaning. Technēprovides the basic trait <strong>of</strong> the Greek deinon (uncanny) evoked in a famous chorus <strong>of</strong>Sophocles’ Antigone. So understood, technē is both a knowledge and a creative power.As a knowledge, it is a sight looking beyond what is present-at-hand; as a creative power,it is the capacity to set-into-work within being the historical unconcealment <strong>of</strong> Being. Inthis context, Heidegger claims that unconcealment takes place only when it is achievedby work: ‘the work <strong>of</strong> word in poetry, the work <strong>of</strong> stone in temple and statue, the work <strong>of</strong>the word in thought, the work <strong>of</strong> the polis as the historical place in which all this isgrounded and preserved’ (pp. 146; 160). In this context, Heidegger celebrates what hecalls ‘the inner truth and greatness’ <strong>of</strong> the National-Socialist movement versus theideology (racism) and everyday practice <strong>of</strong> the Nazi Party.In these two lecture courses the introduction <strong>of</strong> a distinction between a petty technētrapped in everydayness or presence-at-hand and a l<strong>of</strong>ty technē able to set-in-work Beingitself in its unconcealment not only leaves untouched but even reinforces the articulation<strong>of</strong> fundamental ontology—i.e., the opposition between ordinary time and authentictemporality. The fact that the Dasein at stake is now understood as the Dasein <strong>of</strong> apeople, either Greek or German, simply widens the basic principle <strong>of</strong> Being and Timeaccording to which the Dasein exists for its own sake and by willing itself. It could evenbe said that the Promethean connotation <strong>of</strong> these texts brings fundamental ontology to a


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 50sort <strong>of</strong> metaphysical climax. Heidegger suggests, indeed, that it is because <strong>of</strong> itsfoundational role towards his people that his own work deserved the heading <strong>of</strong>fundamental ontology (pp. 113; 146). And he quotes with admiration Hegel’s words inthe Logic <strong>of</strong> 1812: ‘A people without a metaphysics is like a temple without a Holy <strong>of</strong>Holies.’ Metaphysics is thus the privilege <strong>of</strong> Germany, whereas western democracies,particularly the United States, on the one hand, and the USSR on the other hand, are saidto be absorbed in the frenetic development <strong>of</strong> the petty technē.However, this paroxysm was soon going to bring fundamental ontology to an end, andto open the way to a ‘turn’ (Kehre) in Heidegger’s thought. A comparison between thesuccessive versions <strong>of</strong> his essay The Origin <strong>of</strong> the Work <strong>of</strong> Art bears witness to such aturn, or at least to a shift in Heidegger’s treatment <strong>of</strong> the question <strong>of</strong> Being. Indeed thetwo early versions <strong>of</strong> the essay preserve the Promethean tendency which characterizedthe Introduction to Metaphysics; whereas the third and final version is no longerPromethean at all. All the topics tackled by the Introduction to Metaphysics—the peopleand its gods, the greatness <strong>of</strong> a creative technē, decision, the ontological polemos(conflict)—are still mentioned in the final version, but they lose their previous hardnessthanks to an overall tonality which is more meditative and open to enigmas thanvoluntarist and proclamatory.In the three versions, Heidegger insists that there is a circle in the investigation into theorigin <strong>of</strong> the work <strong>of</strong> art. Indeed, if it is true that the artist is the origin <strong>of</strong> the work, it isalso true that the work is the origin <strong>of</strong> the artist since neither is without the other.However, both are what they are by virtue <strong>of</strong> art itself. But if it is true that the essence <strong>of</strong>art should be inferred from the work, it is no less true that we could not recognize a work<strong>of</strong> art as such without referring to the essence <strong>of</strong> art. Hence the interrogation into theorigin <strong>of</strong> the work <strong>of</strong> art moves in a circle. In the two early versions <strong>of</strong> the essay the topic<strong>of</strong> the circle operates as a device for signifying the circular character <strong>of</strong> Dasein as a beingwhich projects its own Self by retrieving its thrownness, in such a way that project is aretrieval, and retrieval is a project. But in the final version that emphasis on Dasein’sexistence for its own sake is replaced by an emphasis on Being itself inasmuch as Beingis neither limited to beings nor without them, and neither encapsulated in Dasein norwithout it.Moreover, whereas the early versions insisted on the contrast between everydaynessand creative self-assertion, the final version is almost without sign <strong>of</strong> a contempt foreverydayness and its pettiness. It is significant in this regard that the first section <strong>of</strong> thefinal version <strong>of</strong> the essay is entirely devoted to the question: what is a thing in its thinglycharacter? In the framework <strong>of</strong> fundamental ontology, as well as in the early versions <strong>of</strong>the essay, that question was clearly not an important issue for the task <strong>of</strong> thinking, andthere was nothing enigmatic in the question. Indeed, there was an easy answer to it, interms <strong>of</strong> everydayness: the Being <strong>of</strong> things is either presence-at-hand (natural things) orreadiness-to-hand (equipment). By contrast, the final version <strong>of</strong> the essay states thefollowing: ‘The unpretentious thing evades thought most stubbornly. Can it be that thisself-refusal <strong>of</strong> the mere thing, this self-contained independence, belongs precisely to thenature <strong>of</strong> the thing? Must not this strange feature <strong>of</strong> the nature <strong>of</strong> the thing become what athought that has to think the thing confides in? If so, then we should not force our way toits thingly character’ ([2.55], 32). In other words, everydayness, instead <strong>of</strong> being the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 51familiar realm that resoluteness has to overcome in order to face the homelessness <strong>of</strong>existence, now becomes strange and deserves meditation in its familiar outlook. Dwellingamong things no longer obstructs thought, quite the contrary. It is also significant that thereliability <strong>of</strong> equipment previously defined by its readiness-to-hand, hence in relation toDasein only, now turns out to bear testimony to an enigmatic interplay <strong>of</strong> unconcealmentand concealment in Being itself. This is what Heidegger tries to suggest in his meditationon one <strong>of</strong> Van Gogh’s paintings <strong>of</strong> a pair <strong>of</strong> shoes.The second section <strong>of</strong> the final version <strong>of</strong> the essay also marks a change regarding thenotion <strong>of</strong> truth. Heidegger’s point in the three versions is that in the work <strong>of</strong> art truth setsitself to work. Truth, here once again understood as alētheia or unconcealment, is <strong>of</strong> anessentially ambiguous and polemical nature, for it is a mixture <strong>of</strong> disclosedness andwithdrawal. This polemical nature <strong>of</strong> truth is revealed by the conflictual nature <strong>of</strong> thework <strong>of</strong> art. While setting up a world, the artwork sets forth the earth, but whereas theworld is an opening <strong>of</strong> paths, the earth is a self-seclusion. Hence there is in the work <strong>of</strong>art a strife between world and earth. Such strife characterizes truth itself asunconcealment. But whereas the early versions <strong>of</strong> the essay maintain the priority <strong>of</strong>Dasein regarding truth by making the Dasein <strong>of</strong> a people the locus <strong>of</strong> truth, the finalversion characterizes unconcealment as a clearing (Lichtung) to which human beingsbelong and are exposed. Consequently the meaning <strong>of</strong> resoluteness also changes: it is nolonger the project to be a Self but an exposure to the secret withdrawal at the core <strong>of</strong> theclearing.Finally, the last section <strong>of</strong> the final version is an attempt to define creation withoutreference to Promethean self-assertion. What is now considered to be fundamental in thework, inasmuch as it is created, is no longer its ability to anticipate in a leap what apeople decides to be. What is decisive in it, as created, is this: ‘that such work is at allrather than is not’ ([2.55], 65). In other words, the enigma <strong>of</strong> a coming-to-presence nowovercomes the previous privilege <strong>of</strong> future self-projection. The creator is no longer aviolent struggler but someone receptive to the clearing.The turn and the overcoming <strong>of</strong> metaphysicsWhy did Heidegger give up his project <strong>of</strong> fundamental ontology? The question raises anextremely complex issue and there are at least three ways <strong>of</strong> approaching it. From astrictly systematic point <strong>of</strong> view, it is possible to notice a paradox at the core <strong>of</strong> theproject. Indeed if fundamental ontology—the science <strong>of</strong> the meaning <strong>of</strong> Being—isidentified with the ontological analysis or metaphysics <strong>of</strong> Dasein (as seemed to be thecase up to the Introduction to Metaphysics), then, as Heidegger himself said at the time,‘ontology has an ontical foundation’ (Basic Problems, p. 26). But how is it possible toavoid then the reduction <strong>of</strong> Being to characteristics <strong>of</strong> a being, more precisely to Dasein’sway <strong>of</strong> Being? If, on the other hand, the metaphysics <strong>of</strong> Dasein is only the provisionalpreparation <strong>of</strong> a systematic ontology, then a distinction has to be made between thetemporality <strong>of</strong> Dasein and the temporality <strong>of</strong> Being itself; and, consequently, theprovisional character <strong>of</strong> the analytic <strong>of</strong> Dasein contradicts its allegedly fundamentalfunction. In both cases, the attempt made in Being and Time (and later extended tosurpass the limits <strong>of</strong> individual Dasein) turns out paradoxically to be itself a manner <strong>of</strong>


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 52oblivion <strong>of</strong> Being to the benefit <strong>of</strong> a being.A second way <strong>of</strong> approaching the issue would be a close chronological investigation <strong>of</strong>the variations, appearing during the 1930s and early 1940s, in Heidegger’s use <strong>of</strong> thenotions coined in Being and Time. Such investigation remains to be done on a tw<strong>of</strong>oldbasis: the lecture courses already published or in the process <strong>of</strong> being edited in theGesamtausgabe, particularly those on Nietzsche (1936–41), and the long text written byHeidegger for his own use under the heading Contributions to <strong>Philosophy</strong> (Beiträge zurPhilosophie 1936–8) [2.38].A third approach is <strong>of</strong>fered by Heidegger’s own explanations <strong>of</strong> what he called the‘turn’ which, at some point, occurred in his thought. The first among these selfinterpretationsis Heidegger’s Letter on Humanism, written in 1946 in reply to questionsraised by Jean Beaufret.It is not certain, however, that the results <strong>of</strong> the three approaches could ever coincide,mainly because <strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s tendency to justify retrospectively each step <strong>of</strong> hisphilosophical development. Despite these difficulties there is no doubt that several topicswhich had no place whatsoever in fundamental ontology came to the fore during thesecond half <strong>of</strong> the 1930s. The lecture courses on Nietzsche are extremely significant inthis regard.It has been noticed by several readers <strong>of</strong> the Nietzschebuch (Mehta; Arendt) that in thefirst lecture courses (1936–9) Heidegger interprets Nietzsche in terms <strong>of</strong> the analytic <strong>of</strong>Dasein and shows a basic agreement with Nietzsche, whereas the courses <strong>of</strong> 1939–41 arepolemical. This is why Hannah Arendt claimed that initially the ‘turn’ was a biographicalevent, by which she meant that, underneath a polemical debate with Nietzsche, it was anexplanation <strong>of</strong> Heidegger to himself, and an attempt to discard his own voluntaristinclinations during his activist period.At any rate, what comes to the fore in the polemic against Nietzsche is a new way <strong>of</strong>considering the history <strong>of</strong> metaphysics. In fundamental ontology, the point was todeconstruct the biases and confusions inherent in past philosophies in order to liberatemetaphysics and complete it as the science <strong>of</strong> the meaning <strong>of</strong> Being. Now, the point is toconsider its development as a fatal destiny and to prepare its overcoming. That destiny ischaracterized as an increasing oblivion <strong>of</strong> Being culminating in Nietzsche’s philosophy<strong>of</strong> the will-to-power and <strong>of</strong> the eternal return <strong>of</strong> the same, interpreted by Heidegger asnihilism.At the dawn <strong>of</strong> western thought, the key words <strong>of</strong> the pre-Socratic thinkers, above allthe word alētheia, all signalled the process through which beings are brought to the‘open’ in tension between a reserve and an appearing. This means that Being wasexperienced as fully differentiated in the manner <strong>of</strong> an <strong>of</strong>fering which withholds itself inwhat it gives. This differentiation indicates a finiteness <strong>of</strong> Being to which correspondsthinking as a receptivity to the secret <strong>of</strong> Being. The first erasing <strong>of</strong> this differentiatedcorrespondence and mutual belonging starts with Plato. Plato’s dialogues demonstrate atendency to transform a mere consequence <strong>of</strong> the ambiguous process <strong>of</strong> alētheia into theessence <strong>of</strong> truth. In Plato beings reveal their beingness through ideas. The word initiallymeant the outlook <strong>of</strong>fered by things as they emerge out <strong>of</strong> physis. Therefore it meant aconsequence <strong>of</strong> the process <strong>of</strong> unconcealment. But Plato’s ideas come to the forefront andget split <strong>of</strong>f from the unconcealing process. Moreover, they acquire a normative status in


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 53relation to physis. Unconcealment then becomes a result <strong>of</strong> the clarity <strong>of</strong> the ideas whichthemselves refract the clarity <strong>of</strong> a supreme idea, the Good. This is the birth <strong>of</strong>metaphysics as onto-theology. The task <strong>of</strong> metaphysics from now on is to develop atheory <strong>of</strong> the essence <strong>of</strong> beings, a logic <strong>of</strong> their beingness, i.e., an ontology, andsimultaneously to develop a theology by relating their beingness to a primordial being.Alētheia is thus obliterated by an ontical hierarchy, and truth becomes a matter <strong>of</strong>correctly seeing the ideas. Accordingly, the mutual belonging <strong>of</strong> Being in its ambiguityand <strong>of</strong> thinking in its receptivity to the same is levelled down to a contemplativeconformity <strong>of</strong> the mind to essences.A second stage in the metaphysical oblivion <strong>of</strong> Being took place in the Middle Ages.In medieval thought the Platonic concept <strong>of</strong> truth as conformity <strong>of</strong> the intellect to thebeingness <strong>of</strong> beings, coupled with the founding role <strong>of</strong> a supreme being, was retrievedwithin the Christian speculations about creation and the dependence <strong>of</strong> the created on thecreator. Truth in the scholastic sense <strong>of</strong> adaequatio intellects ad rem (adequacy <strong>of</strong> themind to the thing) is now grounded upon the deeper adaequatio rei Dei intellectus(adequacy <strong>of</strong> the thing to the mind <strong>of</strong> God).A third stage occurred at the beginning <strong>of</strong> the modern age with the invention <strong>of</strong>subjectivity. When Galileo Galilei introduces, in still approximate terms, the firstformulation <strong>of</strong> what Newton, a few decades later, was to call the principle <strong>of</strong> inertia, heuses the words ‘mente concipio’ (conceive in my mind). What is significant here, forHeidegger, is not the replacement <strong>of</strong> the sensible outlook <strong>of</strong> natural phenomena (thecornerstone <strong>of</strong> Aristotelian physics) by a purely intellectual approach <strong>of</strong> nature, but thefact that inertia, in order to appear at all, requires the human mind to give itself apreconception <strong>of</strong> what motion is and thus projects in advance the condition forphenomenality. In the conformity <strong>of</strong> adequation between intellect and thing, the stress isnow put on the intellect in such a way that the thing manifests its truth inasmuch as it fitswith a project emanating from the mens. Deeper than the modern use <strong>of</strong> mathematics inphysics, there is what Descartes called mathēsis—a project by which the cogito ascertainsitself on its own and acquires a position <strong>of</strong> mastery. In Descartes’ philosophy, with therestriction <strong>of</strong> the dependence <strong>of</strong> the finite human mind on the divine infinity, the cogitoposits itself as the unique basis upon which beings reveal their beingness. The word forbasis in Greek was hupokeimenon, in Latin subjectum. The cogito becomes the onlysubjectum. The rule <strong>of</strong> subjectivity begins. The modern object-subject correlation meansthat beings are what they are to the extent that they submit themselves to the rule <strong>of</strong> thehuman cogito.Such is the birth <strong>of</strong> the reckoning and evaluating reason which determines modernity.All its features appear at the outset. The mathēsis is universalis, which means that it isplanning for the totality <strong>of</strong> beings. It is both a subjectivation <strong>of</strong> all beings referring themto the cogito and an objectivation making them all equally calculable and controllable.Earlier than the current reign <strong>of</strong> technology, right at the beginning <strong>of</strong> the modern era,nature as a whole was conceived as one huge mechanism in relation to a technologicalway <strong>of</strong> looking.Between Descartes and Nietzsche, Heidegger does not notice a fundamentaldiscontinuity. Nietzsche’s notion <strong>of</strong> the will-to-power was in several ways anticipated byDescartes and subsequent thinkers: Leibniz’s notion <strong>of</strong> the monad as a conjunction <strong>of</strong>


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 54perception and appetite in addition to his principle <strong>of</strong> Sufficient Reason; Kant’s concept<strong>of</strong> reason as a condition <strong>of</strong> possibility; Fichte’s reinterpretation <strong>of</strong> Kant in terms <strong>of</strong>practical reason; Schelling’s conviction that there is no other Being than the Will;Hegel’s concept <strong>of</strong> the Absolute, willing its self-identity throughout differentiation. Sowhile claiming to be liberated from metaphysics, Nietzsche was merely bringing it to itsaccomplishment and carrying modern subjectivity to an onto-theological climax.Heidegger indeed interprets the will-to-power in ontological terms as the beingness <strong>of</strong> allbeings, and the eternal return <strong>of</strong> the same in theological terms as the ultimate ground <strong>of</strong>beingness and being. Defined as the beingness <strong>of</strong> all beings, the will-to-power pushes toan extreme limit the project <strong>of</strong> objectivation and subjectivation inherent in mathēsis.Objectivation is brought to an extreme because the will not only treats every being as anobject (Gegenstand) but also compels any object to become a storage (Bestand) availableto all kinds <strong>of</strong> assignment and manipulation. Subjectivation is brought to an extreme aswell, for all things are reduced to the values that the will bestows on them in order tointensify its power. On the other hand, the eternal return <strong>of</strong> the same, defined as theultimate form <strong>of</strong> being, signifies an endless, circular, repetitive machination which is themetaphysical essence <strong>of</strong> modern technology. The abyssal thought <strong>of</strong> the eternal returnmeans that the will aiming to intensify itself is itself willed and challenged to will itselfinfinitely. On both counts, Being has definitely lost the enigmatic ambiguity which wasexperienced by the early Greeks. Being is like nothing. Nihilism rules.It is significant <strong>of</strong> the ‘turn’ at work in this meditation on modernity that Heidegger’sdescription <strong>of</strong> what he calls ‘European nihilism’ in a 1940 lecture course on Nietzscheincludes the following remarks about Being and Time: ‘The path followed in it isinterrupted at a decisive place. The interruption is explainable by the fact that, all thesame, the attempt made on that path was running the risk, against its own intention, toreinforce furthermore subjectivity’ (Gesamtausgabe vol. 48, p. 261).The main result <strong>of</strong> the above description <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong> metaphysics is the claim thatmodern technology is the last accomplishment <strong>of</strong> a long process <strong>of</strong> oblivion <strong>of</strong> Beinginherent in metaphysics since Plato. Heidegger uses the word Gestell to characterize thenature <strong>of</strong> modern technology. Gestell is a global ‘enframing’ wherein beings are entirelyavailable to all sorts <strong>of</strong> arbitrary evaluations and manipulations, and in which Beingcounts for nothing. To that global enframing Heidegger opposes what he calls Ereignis,<strong>of</strong>ten translated as ‘event <strong>of</strong> appropriation’, a term already used in his Beiträge <strong>of</strong> 1936–8. Within the global enframing, thinking is replaced by calculation. It is only bymeditating Ereignis that thinking can remain alive. Thinking the Ereignis is a countercurrentto nihilism.That opposition pervades the writings <strong>of</strong> Heidegger after the Second World War. In all<strong>of</strong> them the voluntarist tonality <strong>of</strong> Being and Time and <strong>of</strong> the Introduction to Metaphysicshas vanished. Significantly the word Dasein is now spelled Da-sein: there-being. Themortals are the ‘there’ <strong>of</strong> Being. They are exposed to the secret granting <strong>of</strong> Being.Significantly, also, a topic such as the ‘call’, which was restricted in Being and Time toDasein’s listening to its ownmost potentiality, now emanates from Being itself. Whereasin fundamental ontology the human Dasein was the lieutenant <strong>of</strong> nothingness, it is nowthe shepherd <strong>of</strong> Being. Whereas fundamental ontology somehow conflated thinking andwilling, thinking is now a matter <strong>of</strong> not-willing, <strong>of</strong> letting-be (Gelassenheit), and even <strong>of</strong>


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 55thanking. Whereas fundamental ontology conceived <strong>of</strong> dwelling in terms <strong>of</strong> apreoccupation <strong>of</strong> inauthentic everydayness, dwelling now deserves pr<strong>of</strong>ound meditation.Likewise for the ‘thing’, a topic to which Heidegger devoted several essays in the lateperiod. Likewise for speech, formerly taken as a capacity <strong>of</strong> Dasein, and nowcharacterized in terms <strong>of</strong> a call emanating from Being, <strong>of</strong> a gathering <strong>of</strong> Being and <strong>of</strong> acorresponding to it. That shift from Dasein to Being explains why Heidegger criticizedhumanism as an aspect <strong>of</strong> metaphysics.The shift <strong>of</strong> emphasis also generates a change in Heidegger’s thought about time.While maintaining the notion <strong>of</strong> ecstasis, Heidegger no longer understands ecstaticaltemporalization in terms <strong>of</strong> an existential self-project, but in terms <strong>of</strong> a belonging <strong>of</strong>Dasein to the ambiguous unconcealing process <strong>of</strong> Being allegedly covered up by theentire tradition <strong>of</strong> metaphysics. This becomes apparent in a lecture given by Heideggermore than thirty years after Being and Time, under the significant title Time and Being(1962). This is the title which had been announced in 1927 as the heading <strong>of</strong> the thirddivision <strong>of</strong> the book, a division which never appeared. The lecture <strong>of</strong> 1962, however, isnot to be considered as the completion <strong>of</strong> the project <strong>of</strong> 1927.It is a significant feature <strong>of</strong> the ‘turn’ that the topic is presented in neutral terms, inwhich Dasein no longer plays a central role. Heidegger indeed announces that hismeditation is oriented by the sentence ‘Es gibt Sein, Es gibt Zeit’, which literally means:‘It gives Being, It gives time.’ This neutral phrasing clearly suggests that the issue is nolonger Dasein’s temporalization. In both sentences, the phrase ‘Es gibt’ invites theaudience to hear an <strong>of</strong>fering which is not itself reducible to what it is <strong>of</strong>fering. Hence thesentence ‘It gives time’ points to an<strong>of</strong>fering which keeps withdrawing itself within whatis <strong>of</strong>fered. Already in the word ‘present’ there is more than the now; what is also meantby the word is a gift bestowed upon man. Open to the presence <strong>of</strong> the present, mortalswelcome the granting. The emphasis is no longer on the project <strong>of</strong> the self but onreceptivity to the granting.In this context, the prior concept <strong>of</strong> ecstasis is modified. Each ecstasis, as well as theunity <strong>of</strong> the three ecstases, is now understood as a granting extended to human beings.Instead <strong>of</strong> saying that the past is what we retrieve in the light <strong>of</strong> our finite project,Heidegger now says that it happens to us, extending itself to us and soliciting us. The pastis an ecstasis in the sense <strong>of</strong> the coming towards ourselves <strong>of</strong> an absence which concernsus while it is granted to us. Absence is itself a mode <strong>of</strong> presence if we think <strong>of</strong> presencein the sense <strong>of</strong> a granting. But in each there is an interplay <strong>of</strong> granting and withholding.The same holds true for the unity <strong>of</strong> the ecstases. Heidegger now calls each ecstasis adimension, and he calls the unity <strong>of</strong> the ecstaseis the fourth dimension <strong>of</strong> time.About such unity, Heidegger no longer evokes a privilege <strong>of</strong> the future. The emphasisis now on the coming-to-presence. Moreover, instead <strong>of</strong> evoking Dasein’stemporalization, he suggests that time temporalizes from itself. The unifying fourthdimension <strong>of</strong> time is characterized as a disclosed interplay <strong>of</strong> the three ecstases, aclearing extension, an opening. However it is also characterized by a denial, awithholding. Time nears and holds back. It is radically ambiguous. The granting,effective in it, is also a denial.This new apprehension <strong>of</strong> time is at the core <strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s notion <strong>of</strong> Ereignis whichhe opposes to Gestell—the technological enframing for which there is no secret


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 56whatsoever. In German Ereignis means ‘event’. In Heidegger’s terminology it designatesthe co-belonging <strong>of</strong> Being and man. He insists on both etymological roots <strong>of</strong> the word.They are er-eignen, ‘appropriating’, and ‘er-äugen’, bringing to visibility. There is nodoubt that the use <strong>of</strong> the word in this tw<strong>of</strong>old meaning signifies a contrast with the use <strong>of</strong>words such as eigen (‘own’), and Eigentlichkeit (‘authentic selfhood’) in Being and Time.The Ereignis is not to be conceived <strong>of</strong> in terms <strong>of</strong> the Self at issue in the work <strong>of</strong> 1927.What is at stake in it is no longer a project but a Schicken, a sending or a destining. Theevent <strong>of</strong> co-belonging between Being and man is the manner in which Being destinesitself to us, by opening the playspace (Spielraum) <strong>of</strong> time wherein beings appear. Butdestiny withholds itself in order for its granting to occur. The history <strong>of</strong> Being is thatdestiny. In it each epoch is an epokhē, a withholding <strong>of</strong> Being within its donation. In eachcase the Ereignis witholds (enteignet) itself. Consequently the task <strong>of</strong> thinking is nolonger to be defined by the phrase ‘Being and time’ but by the phrase Lichtung undAnwesenheit, ‘clearing and coming-to-presence’, both understood in terms <strong>of</strong> a grantingand a denial.The trouble with this history <strong>of</strong> Being is that, in spite <strong>of</strong> the above signals <strong>of</strong> asignificant shift in Heidegger’s thought, it reproduces in a new way the previous contrastbetween the ‘They’ and the Self. Indeed only a few German poets (Hölderlin, Trakl,George) and Heidegger himself—but not the plurality <strong>of</strong> human beings interacting in acommon world <strong>of</strong> appearances and events—seem able to properly respond to theambiguity <strong>of</strong> the destiny <strong>of</strong> Being.Moreover, the previous privilege <strong>of</strong> Dasein’s bios theoretikos reapppears in a newmanner: thinking is the only activity able to prepare a new beginning in the history <strong>of</strong>Being.SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHYMajor books published by Heidegger himself2.1 Frühe Schriften (1912–16), ed. F.-W.von Hermann, Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1978.2.2 Sein und Zeit (1927), Tübingen: Niemeyer, 1953.2.3 Kant und das Problem der Metaphysik (1927), Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1951.2.4 Vom Wesen des Grundes, Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1928.2.5 Was ist Metaphysik? (1929), Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1955.2.6 Vom Wesen der Wahrheit (1930, 1943), Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1961.2.7 Die Selbstbehauptung der deutschen Universität, Breslau: Korn, 1933. Later reprintedin Das Rektorat 1933/34: Tatsachen und Gedanken, Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1983.2.8 Einführung in die Metaphysik (1935), Tübingen: Niemeyer, 1953.2.9 Erläuterungen zu Hölderlins Dichtung (1936, 1944), Frankfurt: Klostermann,2.10 Holzwege (1936–46). Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1950.2.11 Nietzsche (1936–46), 2 vols, Pfullingen: Neske, 1961.2.12 Vorträge und Aufsätze (1943–54). Pfullingen: Neske, 1961. Contains eleven essays,including ‘Die Frage nach der Technik’ and ‘Bauen, Wohnen, Denken’.2.13 Platons Lehre von der Wahrheit (1942). Mit einem Brief über den


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 57‘Humanismus’ (1946), Bern: Francke, 1947.2.14 Was heisst Denken? (1951–52), Tübingen: Niemeyer, 1954.2.15 Was ist das—die Philosophie? (1955), Pfullingen: Neske, 1956.2.16 Zur Seinsfrage (1955), Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1956.2.17 Der Satz vom Grund (1955–6), Pfullingen: Neske, 1957.2.18 Identität und Differenz, Pfullingen: Neske, 1957.2.19 Unterwegs zur Sprache (1950–9), Pfullingen: Neske, 1957.2.20 Gelassenheit, Pfullingen: Neske, 1959.2.21 Die Frage nach dem Ding (1936, 1962), Pfullingen: Neske, 1962.2.22 Die Technik and die Kehre, Pfullingen: Neske, 1962.2.23 Wegmarken (1967), Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1978.2.24 Zur Sache des Denkens, Tübingen: Niemeyer, 1969.2.25 Schellings Abhandlung über das Wesen der menschlichen Freiheit (1936), ed.H.Feieck, Tübingen: Niemeyer, 1971.2.26 Phänomenologie und Theologie (1927, 1954), Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1972.Major lecture courses and manuscriptsPublished in Heidegger’s Gesamtausgabe (Collected Edition), Frankfurt: Klostermann:2.27 Phänomenologische Interpretationen zu Aristoteles (1921–2), ed. W.Bröcker andK.Bröcker-Oltmanns, GA 61, 1985.2.28 Ontologie: Hermeneutik der Faktizität (1923), ed. K.Bröcker-Oltmanns, GA 63,1988.2.29 Platon: Sophistes (1924–5), ed. I.Schüssler, GA 19, 1992.2.30 Prolegomena zur Geschichte des Zeitbegriffs (1925), ed. P.Jaeger, GA 20, 1979.2.31 Logik: Die Frage nach der Wahrheit (1925–6), ed. W.Biemel, GA 21, 1976.2.32 Die Grundprobleme der Phänomenologie (1927), ed. F.W.von Hermann, GA 24,1975.2.33 Phänomenologische Interpretation von Kants Kritik der reinen Vernunft (1927–8),ed. I.Görland, GA 25, 1977.2.34 Metaphysische Anfangsgründe der Logik (1928), ed. K.Held, GA 26, 1978.2.35 Die Grundbegriffe der Metaphysik: Welt, Endlichkeit, Einsamkeit (1929–30), ed F.-W.von Hermann, GA 29/30, 1983.2.36 Vom Wesen der menschlichen Freiheit (1930), ed. H.Tietgen, GA 31, 1982.2.37 Hölderlins Hymnen ‘Germanien’ und ‘Der Rhein’ (1934–5), ed. S.Ziegler, GA 39,1980.2.38 Beiträge zur Philosophie: Vom Ereignis (1936–8), ed. F.-W.von Hermann, GA 65,1989.2.39 Grundfragen der Philosophie (1937–8), ed. F.-W.von Hermann, GA 45, 1984.2.40 Grundbegriffe (1941), ed. P.Jaeger, GA 51, 1981.2.41 Hölderlins Hymne ‘Andenken’ (1941–2), ed. C.Ochwaldt, GA 52, 1982.2.42 Hölderlins Hymne ‘Der Ister’ (1942), ed. W.Biemel, GA 53, 1984.2.43 Parmenides (1942–3), ed. M.S.Frings, GA 54, 1982.Translations


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 582.44 <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> the Concept <strong>of</strong> Time, trans. T.Kisiel, Bloomington: Indiana UniversityPress, 1985.2.45 Being and Time, trans. J.Macquarrie and E.Robinson, London: SCM Press, 1962.2.46 The Basic Problems <strong>of</strong> Phenomenology, trans. A.H<strong>of</strong>stadter, Bloomington: IndianaUniversity Press, 1982.2.47 Kant and the Problem <strong>of</strong> Metaphysics, trans. S.Churchill, Bloomington: IndianaUniversity Press, 1962.2.48 The Metaphysical Foundations <strong>of</strong> Logic, trans. M.Heim, Bloomington: IndianaUniversity Press, 1984.2.49 The Essence <strong>of</strong> Reasons, trans. T.Malich, Evanston: Northwestern University Press,1969.2.50 What is Metaphysics?, trans. D.F.Krell, in M.Heidegger, Basic Writings, ed.D.F.Krell, New York: Harper & Row, 1977, pp. 95–116.2.51 On the Essence <strong>of</strong> Truth, trans. J.Sallis, in Basic Writings, pp. 117–41.2.52 ‘The Rectorate 1933/34: Facts and Thoughts’, trans. K.Harries, Review <strong>of</strong>Metaphysics, 38 (March 1985):467–502.2.53 An Introduction to Metaphysics, trans. R.Manheim, New Haven: Yale UniversityPress, 1959.2.54 Nietzsche, trans, and ed. D.F.Krell in 4 vols, New York: Harper & Row, 1979.2.55 The Origin <strong>of</strong> the Work <strong>of</strong> Art’, third version, from Holzwege, trans. A. H<strong>of</strong>stadterin M.Heidegger, Poetry, Language, Thought, New York: Harper & Row, 1971, pp. 7–87.2.56 The Question Concerning Technology and Other Essays, trans. W.Lovitt, NewYork: Harper & Row, 1977, pp. 3–35.2.57 ‘Building, Dwelling, Thinking’, trans. A.H<strong>of</strong>stadter, in Basic Writings, pp. 323–39.2.58 Three essays on Heraclitus and Parmenides, trans. D.F.Krell and F.A. Capuzzi, inM.Heidegger, Early Greek Thinking, New York: Harper & Row, 1975.2.59 ‘Plato’s Doctrine <strong>of</strong> Truth’, trans. J.Barlow in W.Barrett et al. (eds), <strong>Philosophy</strong> inthe Twentieth Century II, New York: Random House, 1962, pp. 251–70.2.60 ‘Letter on Humanism’, trans. F.A.Capuzzi and J.G.Gray, in Basic Writings, pp. 193–242.2.61 What is Called Thinking?, trans. F.D.Wieck and J.G.Gray, New York: Harper &Row, 1968.2.62 What is <strong>Philosophy</strong>?, trans. J.R.Wilde and W.Klubach, New Haven: College andUniversity Press, 1968.2.63 The Question <strong>of</strong> Being, trans. W.Klubach and J.T.Wilde, New York: Twayne, 1958.2.64 The Principle <strong>of</strong> Reason, trans. R.Lilly, Bloomington and Indianapolis: IndianaUniversity Press, 1991.2.65 Identity and Difference, trans. J.Stambaugh, New York: Harper & Row, 1969.2.66 On the Way to Language, trans. P.D.Hertz and J.Stambaugh, New York: Harper &Row, 1966.2.67 Discourse on Thinking, trans. J.M.Anderson and E.H.Freund, New York: Harper &Row, 1966.2.68 What is a Thing?, trans. W.Barton and V.Deutsch, Chicago: Regnery, 1969.2.69 ‘The Turning’, trans. W.Lovitt in [2.56], 36–49.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 592.70 On Time and Being, trans. J.Stambaugh, New York: Harper & Row, 1972.2.71 The Piety <strong>of</strong> Thinking, trans. J.G.Hart and J.C.Maraldo, Bloomington: IndianaUniversity Press, 1976.Criticism2.72 Arendt, H. The Life <strong>of</strong> the Mind, 2 vols, New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,1977–8.2.73 Beaufret, J. Dialogue avec Heidegger, 3 vols, Paris: Minuit, 1973–4.2.74 Biemel, W. Le Concept de monde chez Heidegger, Louvain and Paris: Nauwelaerts,1950.2.75 Birault, H. Heidegger et l’expérience de la pensée, Paris: Gallimard, 1978.2.76 Dastur, F. Heidegger et la question du temps, Paris: Presses Universitaires deFrance, 1990.2.77 De Waelhens, A. La Philosophie de Martin Heidegger, Louvain and Paris:Nauwelaerts, 1942.2.78 Derrida, J. De l’esprit: Heidegger et la question, Paris: Galilée, 1987.2.79 Haar, M. (ed.) Martin Heidegger, Paris: Cahiers de l’Herne, 1983.2.80 Haar, M. Heidegger et l’essence de l’homme, Grenoble: Jérôme Millon, 1990.2.81 Hermann, F.-W.von, Die Selbstinterpretation Martin Heideggers, Meisenheim amGlan: A.Hain, 1964.2.82 Janicaud, D. L’Ombre de cette pensée: Heidegger et la question politique, Grenoble:Jérôme Millon, 1990.2.83 Kockelmans, J.J. On the Truth <strong>of</strong> Being: Reflections on Heidegger’s Later<strong>Philosophy</strong>, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1984.2.84 Lacoue-Labarthe, P. La Fiction du politique, Paris: Christian Bourgeois, 1987.2.85 Marx, W. Heidegger and the Tradition, trans. T.J.Kisiel and M.Greene, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1971.2.86 Mehta, J.L. The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Martin Heidegger, New York: Harper & Row, 1971.2.87 Ott, H. Martin Heidegger: Unterwegs zu seiner Biographie, Frankfurt: Campus,1988.2.88 Pöggeler, O. Martin Heidegger’s Path <strong>of</strong> Thinking (1963) trans. D.Magurshak andS.Barber, Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1987.2.89 Pöggeler, O. Philosophie und Politik bei Heidegger, Freiburg: Alber, 1972.2.90 Richardson W. Heidegger: Through Phenomenology to Thought, The Hague,Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1963.2.91 Rockmore, T. and Margolin, J. (eds), The Heidegger Case, Philadelphia: TempleUniversity Press, 1992.2.92 Sallis, J. (ed.), Reading Heidegger: Commemorations, Bloomington: IndianaUniversity Press, 1993.2.93 Schürmann R. Le Principe d’anarchie: Heidegger et la question de l’agir, Paris:Seuil, 1982.2.94 Sheehan, T. (ed.) Heidegger: The Man and the Thinker, Chicago: PrecedentPublishing, Inc., 1981.2.95 Taminiaux, J. Heidegger and the Project <strong>of</strong> Fundamental Ontology (1989), trans.


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 60M.Gendre, Albany: State University <strong>of</strong> New York Press, 1991.2.96 Taminiaux, J. La fille de Thrace et le penseur pr<strong>of</strong>essionnel: Arendt et Heideg ger,Paris: Payot, 1992.2.97 Zimmerman, M. Heidegger’s Confrontation with Modernity, Bloomington IndianaUniversity Press, 1990.


CHAPTER 3<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 2SartreThomas R.FlynnBorn 21 June 1905, in Thiviers (Dordogne), Jean-Paul Sartre was raised in the Parisianhome <strong>of</strong> his widowed mother’s parents. After his mother’s remarriage, he spent severalyears with her and his stepfather in La Rochelle but returned to the capital to continue hiseducation, first at the prestigious lycées Henri IV and Louis-le-Grand, and then at therenowned Ecole Normale Supérieure. After several years <strong>of</strong> teaching in various lycées,interspersed with a year <strong>of</strong> research at the French Institute in Berlin (1933–4),mobilization during the Phoney War (1939–40), and internment in a prisoner <strong>of</strong> warcamp (1940–1), Sartre abandoned teaching for a career as an author and critic. Hefounded the review Les Temps modernes with Merleau-Ponty, Simone de Beauvoir andothers (1944), refused the Legion <strong>of</strong> Honour (1945) and the Nobel Prize for Literature(1962), and became increasingly involved in the politics <strong>of</strong> the left in the second half <strong>of</strong>his life. Sartre adopted a former student, Arlette Elkaïm (1965), who had become hisliterary heir. He died in Paris on 15 April 1980.Perhaps no one in the twentieth century better exemplifies the union and creativetension among philosophy, literature and public life than Jean-Paul Sartre. His novelNausea and play No Exit emerged in the 1940s as paradigmatic ‘existentialist’ pieces, forwhich his masterwork, Being and Nothingness, served as the theoretical underpinning.This last, like Darwin’s Origin <strong>of</strong> Species, was more mentioned than read during thehalcyon days <strong>of</strong> café existentialism. But its basic insights and powerfulphenomenological descriptions have continued to attract a number <strong>of</strong> contemporaryphilosophers as well as the general reading public. Several <strong>of</strong> these themes and thesescontinued to direct Sartre’s philosophy throughout the shifts and adjustments <strong>of</strong> the nextthirty-seven years <strong>of</strong> his career. So we cannot refer to a rejection <strong>of</strong>, or a ‘turning’ from,his earlier thought in his later work as is <strong>of</strong>ten done in the cases <strong>of</strong> Wittgenstein andHeidegger respectively.The present chapter will survey Sartre’s philosophical development, analyse thefundamental concepts and principles that constitute his contribution to philosophy ineight standard fields <strong>of</strong> inquiry, and conclude with reflections on Sartre’s relationship t<strong>of</strong>our movements in the recent history <strong>of</strong> philosophy, namely, existential phenomenology,Marxism, structuralism and postmodernism.PHILOSOPHICAL DEVELOPMENT


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 62Sartre once admitted that his inspiration to write philosophy came from readingBergson’s Time and Free Will. The Bergsonian influence on his thought, both positiveand by way <strong>of</strong> reaction, has yet to be studied in depth. But the presence <strong>of</strong> this formidableFrench theorist is obvious from the centrality <strong>of</strong> time and temporalizing consciousness inSartre’s published philosophical writings from the very start. These works <strong>of</strong> the 1930s,culminating in Psychology <strong>of</strong> Imagination (1940), exhibit both a keen sensitivity to livedexperience as distinct from the mechanical or quantified phenomena <strong>of</strong> positive science(a well-known Bergsonian theme) as well as a pr<strong>of</strong>ound opposition to the philosophicalidealism <strong>of</strong> his neo-Kantian pr<strong>of</strong>essors at the Sorbonne. His early writings also tended totake imaging consciousness as paradigmatic <strong>of</strong> consciousness in general. In fact, if Sartreis known as the philosopher <strong>of</strong> freedom in our times, he could with equal justification beconsidered the philosopher <strong>of</strong> imagination. We shall observe various forms <strong>of</strong> imagingconsciousness emerge in the course <strong>of</strong> our essay.Sartre’s long-time companion, Simone de Beauvoir, relates the story <strong>of</strong> their meetingwith Raymond Aron after the latter’s return from a year in Berlin. At Aron’s account <strong>of</strong>the new philosophy <strong>of</strong> Edmund Husserl that could describe ‘phenomenologically’ anindividual object such as the cocktail glass before them, she recounts, Sartre ‘turned palewith emotion’. As they left the café, she recalls, Sartre had to find a bookstore open atnight in order to purchase a copy <strong>of</strong> Levinas’s The Theory <strong>of</strong> Intuition in Husserl’sPhenomenology.If phenomenology enabled Sartre to philosophize about concrete, individual reality, itscentral concept <strong>of</strong> intentionality allowed him to escape the ‘principle <strong>of</strong> immanence’ thatentangled idealist philosophers in a mind-referring world. Philosophical idealism claimsthat reality is essentially mental or mind-referring. Berkeley’s famous maxim ‘To be is toperceive or be perceived’ illustrates this view. Sartre published an essay in 1939 thatcountered this idealist claim with the principle <strong>of</strong> intentionality, namely, thatconsciousness is essentially other-referring: ‘All consciousness is consciousness <strong>of</strong>another.’ He applied this Husserlian principle with characteristic rigour, even directing itagainst Husserl himself, whom he accused <strong>of</strong> sliding into idealism by appeal to a‘transcendental’ ego.Sartre’s robust realism continued to shape his epistemological claims over the years.He always insisted that we can know the real world in itself, that historical facts are notthe result <strong>of</strong> our individual or collective creation, and that the harsh facticity <strong>of</strong> everysituation must be dealt with, indeed, that failure to do so is simply ‘bad faith’. It madehim an apt, if initially reluctant, convert to philosophical materialism in the 1950s. Ofcourse, mechanistic materialism was never a temptation. He had consistently opposed itsclaims from the start. But once he could separate the emergent features <strong>of</strong> dialecticalmaterialism from its quasi-mechanical use by Marxist ‘economism’, he appealed to the‘material conditions <strong>of</strong> history’ that Marxists <strong>of</strong> all shades respected and undertook toincorporate these socio-historical considerations into his philosophy <strong>of</strong> individualfreedom-responsibility.The Second World War was the dividing point between the phenomenologicalexistentialist Sartre and his Marxist existentialist avatar. As he said in one <strong>of</strong> his manyinterviews, his ‘experience <strong>of</strong> society’ during those years forced him to shift from aphilosophy <strong>of</strong> consciousness to one <strong>of</strong> praxis, understood roughly as human action in its


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 63material, socio-historical environment. If it is a mistake to see the early Sartre as anunqualified phenomenologist, witness his rejection <strong>of</strong> a basic Husserlian concept in TheTranscendence <strong>of</strong> the Ego (1937), it is equally erroneous to read him as a Marxist sansphrase. In fact, in his final decade he explicitly denied he was a Marxist, insisting that‘existentialist’ would be a more appropriate label if one had to make such designations.In Search for a Method (1958) and the Critique <strong>of</strong> Dialectical Reason, vol. 1 (1960), hemakes ample use <strong>of</strong> historical materialist categories and arguments. Even in his massiveFlaubert study, The Family Idiot (1971–2), where existentialist and Marxist terms areintertwined, he seems to regard physical labour and human need as the touchstones <strong>of</strong>reality. Still, his association with les maos (ultraleftists) after the student uprising <strong>of</strong>1968, and his unpublished collaborative effort with Benny Levy on yet another ethic,confirms the judgment that Sartre was and remained a moralist. For it was the desire toretain a place for moral assessment within social critique that attracted him to theseyoung radicals. As he noted, in obvious disgust, ‘The Communists don’t give a damnabout justice. All they want is power’ [3.28], 76. It is his moralist tendencies more thanhis so-called ‘Cartesianism’ that locate him squarely in the French philosophicaltradition.Sartre’s final interviews with Levy are much controverted. Simone de Beauvoir andRaymond Aron claim that the young man took advantage <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s age and ill health toproject a false image, a Sartre without critical bite, a domesticated warrior. Indeed, theseconversations do read like Platonic dialogues, with Levy assuming the controlling role <strong>of</strong>Socrates. Though it would be a mistake to read these pages without reference to thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s thought as a whole, comparison <strong>of</strong> several disputed passageswith claims made in posthumously published material from different stages <strong>of</strong> Sartre’scareer indicates that at least some <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s so-called revisions <strong>of</strong> his well-knownpositions were actually ideas he had defended in these other works quite independent <strong>of</strong>Lévy’s purported influence. Thus his remarks about love and ‘fraternity’ are anticipatedand developed at length in his Notebooks for an Ethics (written 1948–9), as we shall see.Again, this does not mean that Sartre ‘renounced’ his existentialist philosophy in his finalyears. Nothing could be farther from the truth. But it does reveal Sartre as a living,evolving thinker, responding to the everchanging challenges <strong>of</strong> his day. For Sartre, tophilosophize was his way <strong>of</strong> being-in-the-world.PHILOSOPHICAL CONTRIBUTIONSExistentialists have been portrayed as non- or even anti-systematic thinkers. No doubtthis stems from Kierkegaard’s notorious animus against Hegel’s ‘System’ andNietzsche’s strictures against academic philosophy in general. But, unless by ‘systematic’one means ‘axiomatic deductive’, classical existentialist thinkers like Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, Heidegger (who rejected the association) and others were rigorous and consistenttheorists, who applied fundamental principles and concepts according to a clear method.Given the interlinking and cumulative nature <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s thought, it is best to order ourexposition according to the standard philosophical sub-disciplines. Not only will thisfacilitate our consideration <strong>of</strong> his massive oeuvre, it will also exhibit the unity and


coherence <strong>of</strong> his theoretical work.<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 64Methodology and epistemologySartre had a remarkable talent for psychological description. His novels, plays and shortstories were replete with arresting, insightful accounts <strong>of</strong> both typical and dramaticmoments in the human condition. So it is small wonder that he was taken by Husserl’sphenomenological method <strong>of</strong> ‘eidetic reduction’. By a ‘free, imaginative variation <strong>of</strong>examples’, Husserl proposed to focus on the essence, eidos, or intelli-gible contour <strong>of</strong> any‘object’ whatsoever. Not only physical nature, mathematical abstractions or metaphysicalcategories but acts <strong>of</strong> ingratitude and artistic events were likely objects for thephenomenologist’s eye. Like the forensic artist’s composite photograph, these reductivedescriptions serve to reveal the form, figure or essence <strong>of</strong> an object, whether this be anabstract entity, like ‘material object’, an emotion, like ‘resentment’, or a particularphenomenon, like ‘this glass’. At its best, such descriptive analysis reveals the essentialfeatures <strong>of</strong> the object in question, that is, those that withstand the imaginative variationsto which they are subject by the describer. Descriptive phenomenology is a ‘science’ <strong>of</strong>what Aristotle called ‘formal’, not ‘efficient’ causes. As Husserl noted, ‘phenomenologydoes not try to explain…but simply to get us to see’. When it is unable to generate whatHusserl termed the ‘intuition <strong>of</strong> essences’ (Wesensschau), the phenomenological methodmust be satisfied with possible or probable opinions about the matter in question. So thefirst two parts <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s Psychology <strong>of</strong> Imagination are entitled the ‘certain’ and the‘probable’ respectively.What we may call an epistemology <strong>of</strong> ‘vision’, the Husserlian legacy, remains aconstant feature <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s method. It accounts for some <strong>of</strong> the most arresting passages inhis philosophical writings, and serves to ‘concretize’ some <strong>of</strong> the most abstract sections<strong>of</strong> his theoretical works. The presuppositions <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s method are Cartesian,however, and Sartre’s writings up to and including Being and Nothingness refer to a form<strong>of</strong> the cogito as essential to any method that would move beyond mere probability tocertainty in its basic claims. The insight <strong>of</strong> individual reflective consciousness in thisapproach is taken as the final court <strong>of</strong> appeal in philosophical argument. Although Sartreseemed to modify this view in his later years, he never abandoned it, as is clear from hisretention <strong>of</strong> the language <strong>of</strong> Being and Nothingness in his final work on Flaubert. Atension between this epistemology <strong>of</strong> vision and an overlapping epistemology <strong>of</strong> praxisrenders Sartre’s later philosophy problematic.After the war, Sartre adopted a form <strong>of</strong> the dialectical method, which he had beenstudying in the works <strong>of</strong> Hegel and Marx during that period. Central to this approach, ashe saw it, were the notions <strong>of</strong> ‘finality’, ‘negativity’ and ‘time’. It is a feature <strong>of</strong>dialectical reasoning, he insists, to acknowledge ‘a certain action <strong>of</strong> the future as such’.Explanation in terms <strong>of</strong> Aristotle’s ‘final’ causality had been philosophically unpopularsince Descartes. But Sartre argues that our comprehension <strong>of</strong> human activity (praxis) asdistinct from mechanical behaviour depends on the purposes that guided the agentsthemselves.He criticized philosophers since Descartes for ‘failing to conceive negativity asproductive’, an oversight that he certainly avoided in Being and Nothingness, where


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 65negativity assumes pride <strong>of</strong> place as an essential feature <strong>of</strong> consciousness as such.Sartre’s dialectic differs most from Hegel’s by its insistence on the primacy <strong>of</strong> individualactivity in dialectical advance and in its denial <strong>of</strong> any ‘end’ to the dialectical process solong as consciousness/praxis sustains it. A pivotal claim, and the undoing <strong>of</strong> anytotalitarian theory, is Sartre’s thesis that a ‘totalizing’ consciousness/praxis cannottotalize itself, that is, it cannot be completely absorbed in a social whole <strong>of</strong> which itstotalizing activity is a part. This ‘nihilating’ character <strong>of</strong> consciousness in the early Sartreremains in the praxis <strong>of</strong> the later one to preclude any ‘organicist’ or totalitariantendencies in his social thought.The later, dialectical thinker prefers ‘notions’ to ‘concepts’ as the vehicles forexpressing historical intelligibility. Sartre argues that developmental thinking alone canrender comprehensible a fluid reality and that notions as dynamic are superior to staticconcepts in performing this task. Like Aristotle’s and Kant’s categories, concepts as suchare atemporal whereas notions include an essential reference to temporality in their verymeaning. We should see ‘notion’ as a ‘dialectical concept’ and read Sartre’s writingsafter Being and Nothingness as abounding in them.Sartre’s discourse on method is the essay Search for a Method, published first as anarticle and later as a kind <strong>of</strong> preface to the Critique <strong>of</strong> Dialectical Reason. It combines thephenomenological and dialectical moments in an approach that develops the ‘method <strong>of</strong>understanding’ (Verstehen) <strong>of</strong> German social theory at the turn <strong>of</strong> the century. Themethod entails three stages or dimensions. The first is a phenomenological description <strong>of</strong>the subject matter to be studied. The terminus <strong>of</strong> eidetic reduction, it now forms thebeginning <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s approach. The second step is a ‘regressive’ move from the object <strong>of</strong>investigation to the conditions <strong>of</strong> its possibility. These may be purely ‘formal’, such asthe structures <strong>of</strong> social relations that Sartre uncovers in the Critique <strong>of</strong> DialecticalReason, vol. 1, or they may include a specific content, like the intrafamilial relations <strong>of</strong>the young Flaubert that conditioned his psychosocial development. The third move inwhat Sartre calls his ‘progressive-regressive’ method is the progressive spiral <strong>of</strong>interiorization/exteriorization <strong>of</strong> these material and formal conditions by the agent whosemeaning-direction (sens) we are attempting to uncover. If successful, the progressiveregressivemethod enables us to ‘understand’ (not ‘conceptualize’) an agent as well oreven better than he or she understood himself or herself, the ideal <strong>of</strong> hermeneuticalinvestigation since Kant.PsychologySartre’s first published philosophical books were in psychology: Imagination (1936),Sketch for a Theory <strong>of</strong> Emotions (1939), and The Psychology <strong>of</strong> Imagination (1940). Notcoincidentally, they emphasize the role <strong>of</strong> the imagination in our psychic life and pursuein depth Husserl’s thesis that intentionality is the defining characteristic <strong>of</strong> the mental.Both these remain influential in Sartre’s subsequent writings.His phenomenological analysis <strong>of</strong> the imagination reveals three characteristics <strong>of</strong> itsstructure: the imagination is a consciousness; like all consciousness, it is intentional; andit differs from perceptual consciousness in the way it ‘intends’ its object, namely, asabsent, non-existent or unreal.


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 66It is better, he argues, to speak <strong>of</strong> ‘imaging consciousness’ than <strong>of</strong> ‘imagination’ withits corresponding ‘images’. The latter form <strong>of</strong> expression tends to hypostatizeconsciousness and to turn images into simulacra, ‘inner’ icons <strong>of</strong> some ‘exterior’ object.Such discourse succumbs to what Sartre calls the ‘illusion <strong>of</strong> immanence’ shared byrealists and idealists alike. Rather, imaging consciousness should be conceived as amanner <strong>of</strong> being-in-the-world, a Heideggerian term that Sartre adopts. Intentionalityavoids the paradoxes <strong>of</strong> traditional inside-outside epistemology and accounts for therelational character <strong>of</strong> consciousness. Imaging consciousness ‘derealizes’ the perceptualor recollected object, relating to it in the properly imaginary mode. This derealizingactivity employs physical or psychic material (for example, painted surfaces orphosphenes in the case <strong>of</strong> aesthetic or oneiric objects respectively), to serve as ananalogue for the imagined object. Sartre’s concept <strong>of</strong> ‘representative analogue’ figures inmuch that is original and interesting in his aesthetic theory. It is integral to his existential‘biographies’ <strong>of</strong> such ‘lords <strong>of</strong> the imaginary’ as Baudelaire, Genet, Flaubert andMallarmé. For each in his own way will be portrayed as ‘derealizing’ the bourgeois world<strong>of</strong> his contemporaries and enticing others with his art to do likewise. A conceptual flawthat weakens Sartre’s usage is his failure to explain in detail what he means by thesecardinal terms, ‘analogy’ and ‘analogue’.These features <strong>of</strong> imaging consciousness are summarized in the following definition:‘The image is an act which intends [literally, “aims at” (vise)] an absent or non-existentobject in its corporality by means <strong>of</strong> a physical or psychical content which is given notfor its own sake but only as an “analogical representative” <strong>of</strong> the intended object’ ([3.30],25; in the French text, p. 45). It is remarkable that Sartre speaks <strong>of</strong> imaging consciousnessin this first period <strong>of</strong> his writings as the locus <strong>of</strong> possibility, negativity and lack, andinsists that only in the imagining act is the ‘nihilation’ <strong>of</strong> objects revealed (see [3.30],243–5; French, pp. 360–1), because, in Being and Nothingness and thereafter, theseemerge as the proper features <strong>of</strong> consciousness in general. To the extent that Sartre’searly philosophy by his own admission is a ‘philosophy <strong>of</strong> consciousness’, it is likewise aphilosophy <strong>of</strong> the imagination. Our survey <strong>of</strong> his thought and works will justifyconsidering him the philosopher <strong>of</strong> the imagination as much as the philosopher <strong>of</strong>freedom—the title by which he is commonly designated.His analysis <strong>of</strong> the emotions is in direct parallel with that <strong>of</strong> the image. Like images,emotions are not ‘inner states’ that somehow correspond to external stimuli. Neither arethey reducible to their physiological expression, as some have argued. Emotionalconsciousness is another way <strong>of</strong> being-in-the-world. In this case, it is one that entails aphysiological change as a means <strong>of</strong> relating to the world in a ‘magical’ manner.Emotional consciousness is ‘failure behaviour’ (la conduite d’échec), an expression thatwill play an important role in Sartre’s biography <strong>of</strong> Flaubert. The agent, unable to changethe world through rational activity, changes himself or herself in order to conjure up aworld that is no longer frustrating. Thus, the golfer gets red in the face before his/herfailure to escape a sand trap. Sartre reads this as conscious, that is, ‘intentional’,behaviour. Its purpose is to generate another world as if by magic via one’s bodilychanges: perspiration, increased blood pressure, agitated motions and the like—these are‘intended’ to help whisk the ball on to the green. Again, Sartre’s phenomenologicaldescriptions are aimed at escaping the ‘inner life’ and underscoring the correlativity <strong>of</strong>


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 67consciousness and world, psychology and ontology.OntologyIf Sartre is a moralist, he is likewise basically an ontologist. The close relation betweenethics and ontology in his thought lends it a ‘traditional’ flavour quite foreign to that <strong>of</strong>recent French intellectuals. His masterwork, Being and Nothingness, subtitled ‘An Essayin Phenomenological Ontology’, develops the basic categories <strong>of</strong> his theory <strong>of</strong> being(ontology) and concludes with the promise <strong>of</strong> an ethics, which never appeared in Sartre’slifetime.Inspired by the divisions <strong>of</strong> Hegel’s Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Spirit but always relying on the‘apodictic’ evidence <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s eidetic reduction, Sartre undertakes a description <strong>of</strong> thefundamental forms <strong>of</strong> being. He calls these ‘being-in-itself’ (l’être-en-soi), ‘being-foritself’(l’être-poursoi) and ‘being-for-others’ (l’être-pour-autrui). Each has distinctivecharacteristics and is irreducible to the others. Exploiting the proximity <strong>of</strong>phenomenology to psychology, ontology and literary ‘argument’, Sartre relies onpowerful examples and tropes to convey his insights. In fact, his first literary success,Nausea (1938), both anticipates and ‘works through’ imaginatively the themes and theses<strong>of</strong> Being and Nothingness, published five years later.Being-in-itself or the non-conscious is the inert plenum. It is self-identical and withoutthe features commonly ascribed to being in realist ontologies. For example, it is neitheractive nor passive, is beyond negation and affirmation (other than the judgment that it isand is self-identical), knows no otherness, is not subject to temporality and is neitherderived from the possible nor reduced to the necessary. ‘Uncreated, without reason forbeing, without any connection with another being, being-in-itself is de trop (superfluous)for eternity’ ([3.2] lxvi). Sartre derives these characteristics from an initialphenomenological investigation <strong>of</strong> the being <strong>of</strong> any phenomenon. He confirms them byappeal to certain experiences like nausea and boredom that he believes are revelatory <strong>of</strong>its ontological nature.Being-for-itself or consciousness is the counter-concept to being-in-itself and is itsinternal negation. It brings ‘otherness’ into play, is precisely non-self-identical, and ischaracterized as a ‘pure spontaneous upsurge’, a feature Sartre’s concept shares with theconcept <strong>of</strong> mind in classical German idealism. The for-itself ‘temporalizes’ the ‘world’that it constitutes by its intentional relations. As we noted above, consciousness is thelocus <strong>of</strong> possibility, negativity and lack. Early in Being and Nothingness, Sartreundertakes an analysis <strong>of</strong> our act <strong>of</strong> questioning, a tactic doubtless learned fromHeidegger’s Being and Time, with which his book has several affinities. His descriptiveanalysis concludes that the negativity which permeates our lives from the fragility <strong>of</strong>objects to the absence <strong>of</strong> friends is not dependent on the act <strong>of</strong> judging—the standardview—but conversely. We have ‘a certain prejudicative comprehension <strong>of</strong> nonbeing’([3.2], 7), and it is this that grounds the negative judgments and realities(négativités) that populate our world. Sartre proceeds to argue that this ‘nihilating’relation <strong>of</strong> consciousness to the world is possible only because consciousness (the foritself)is <strong>of</strong> its very nature a no-thingness (néant), an ‘othering’ relation that holds the initself(‘thingness’) at bay even as it conspires with being-in-itself to constitute the


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 68existential ‘situation’.The essence <strong>of</strong> consciousness as the internal negation or no-thingness <strong>of</strong> being-in-itselfaccounts for many <strong>of</strong> the paradoxes that abound in Sartre’s ontology. Chief among theseis the claim that ‘human reality’ (his translation <strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s Dasein), ‘is not what itis…and is what it is not’ ([3.2], 123). Human reality ‘is’ its ego, its past, its ‘facticity’, inthe manner <strong>of</strong> not-being these givens <strong>of</strong> its situation, that is, as the internal negation <strong>of</strong>being-in-itself. Metaphorically, the for-itself ‘secretes’ nothingness (le néant) orotherness between itself and whatever predicate one might wish to ascribe to it. Theseverbal twists are meant to capture the ephemerality <strong>of</strong> the for-itself, a transitivity whichechoes that <strong>of</strong> temporality, which the for-itself constitutes.Following Heidegger, Sartre distinguishes lived or ekstatic temporality from the‘universal time’ measured by chronometers. The latter is quantitative and homogeneous;the former, qualitative and heterogeneous. Being-for-itself is not ‘in’ time the way a handis in a glove, or even the way the glove is ‘in’ time. Rather, it ‘temporalizes’ the worldwhich it constitutes. The for-itself ‘exists’ in three temporal ekstases: the past as facticityor ‘already’, the future as possibility or ‘not yet’, and the present as ‘presence to’ or the‘othering’ relation that at once unites and distinguishes the for-itself from being. Theseare three structured moments <strong>of</strong> an original synthesis. Sartre insists that it is better toaccent the present ekstasis rather than the future as Heidegger does, because presence-tobest exemplifies the internal negation <strong>of</strong> being-in-itself, which is the total synthetic form<strong>of</strong> temporality ([3.2], 142).When one moves from the abstractions <strong>of</strong> the in-itself and the for-itself to the concreteindividual agent, these functional concepts, being-in-itself and being-for-itself, assumethe roles <strong>of</strong> ‘facticity’ and ‘transcendence’ respectively. Every individual is a being-insituationand ‘situation’ is a vague, indeterminate mix <strong>of</strong> the givens, including one’sphysical and cultural environment as well as one’s previous choices, on the one hand, andthe project that moves beyond them, on the other. These givens must be reckoned with,but, Sartre insists, they are not determining. ‘One can always make something out <strong>of</strong>what one has been made into’ is the maxim <strong>of</strong> Sartrean humanism. The first half <strong>of</strong> hiscareer was spent explaining the first portion <strong>of</strong> that remark; the remainder was devoted toarticulating how society and history have limited our choices without removing thementirely.Although Sartre insists that being-for-others is as fundamental as the in-itself and thefor-itself, it is clearly dependent on them ontologically. In one <strong>of</strong> the most famouspassages <strong>of</strong> Being and Nothingness, he <strong>of</strong>fers his ‘pro<strong>of</strong> for the existence <strong>of</strong> other mindsin the form <strong>of</strong> an eidetic reduction <strong>of</strong> shame-consciousness. After criticizing the adequacy<strong>of</strong> traditional arguments from analogy to account for the certainty with which we believein the existence <strong>of</strong> other minds, he performs an ‘imaginative reconstruction’ <strong>of</strong> anexample to reveal how such certainty figures essentially in our experience <strong>of</strong> shame.He imagines someone looking through a keyhole at a couple. Like all Sartreanconsciousness, the couple’s consciousnesses are objectifying one another in a reciprocalgaze. The voyeur is a ‘pure’ consciousness, seeing but unseen, objectifying butunobjectified, whereas they are in a mutual relation <strong>of</strong> looking/looked at, unaware <strong>of</strong> thethird party. Suddenly, the interloper hears a noise from behind. In one and the samereaction <strong>of</strong> shame, one experiences the other as subject and oneself objectified. In other


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 69words, one’s experience <strong>of</strong> shame is analysable into the condition <strong>of</strong> its possibility,namely, one’s embodiedness-as-perceived by another consciousness. One cannot beobjectified except by another subject, nor is it possible to feel shame except as anembodied being. Even if the noise turns out to have been a false alarm, the mere rustling<strong>of</strong> the curtains, for example, the agent has had an immediate experience <strong>of</strong> another assubject; it is written in the blush on his/her face. This ‘pro<strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong> other minds isexperiential. Rather than the probability <strong>of</strong> some weak analogy, it yields the certainty <strong>of</strong>the Wesensschau.After establishing the existence <strong>of</strong> other minds, albeit in a general, ‘pre-numerical’manner that renders my being for-others the precondition <strong>of</strong> my being objectified by anysubject in particular (see [3.2], 280–1), Sartre directs his ontological investigation to each<strong>of</strong> the conditions for that experience, namely, the body and the other subject.There are three dimensions to bodily being-in-the-world, namely, the body as for-itself,as for-others, and as what Sartre calls the way I ‘exist for myself as a body known by theOther’ ([3.2], 351). The absurdities <strong>of</strong> the mind-body problem, Sartre believes, stem fromfailure to respect these ontological levels regarding the body and in particular frombeginning our analysis with the body-for-others. The latter approach sees body as a thingamong things and hence as externally related to consciousness and to other bodies. Sartrebegins, on the contrary, with body as being-for-itself, that is, as my way <strong>of</strong> being-in-theworld.As such, body is ‘lived’ (pre-reflectively) and not ‘known’ (reflectively), it is theabsolute centre <strong>of</strong> instrumentality that I am, rather than an instrument that I employ, andit is at once my point <strong>of</strong> view and my point <strong>of</strong> departure for acting in the world. HenceSartre can claim that ‘being-for-itself must be wholly body and it must be whollyconsciousness; it can not be united with a body’ ([3.2], 305). Sartre’s peculiar kind <strong>of</strong>‘materialism’ depends on defending a body that is likewise wholly intentional, that is,that is not simply externally related to the projects by which an agent is individuated.Accordingly, body is integral to the existential ‘situation’ and is the vehicle by whichother ‘necessary contingencies’ <strong>of</strong> our situation such as our race, our class and our verypast figure in the mix. In other words, body as being-for-itself is the basic form <strong>of</strong> ourfacticity.Once we have phenomenologically described our way <strong>of</strong> ‘existing’ our body, there isno temptation to misread the body-for-others as a thing among things. The latter nowappears as the Other’s flesh, a term elaborated by Merleau-Ponty and designating forSartre ‘the pure contingency <strong>of</strong> [the Other’s] presence’ ([3.2], 343). What he calls ‘thepure intuition <strong>of</strong> the flesh’ is especially evident in the Other’s face (aclaim that invitescomparison with that <strong>of</strong> Levinas regarding the primacy <strong>of</strong> the Other and the ethicalsignificance <strong>of</strong> the face in this revelation). The body is thus revealed as a ‘synthetictotality <strong>of</strong> life and action’ ([3.2], 346, emphasis his).The third ontological dimension <strong>of</strong> the body, for Sartre, is ‘my body as known by theOther’. This denotes that real but uncontrollable aspect <strong>of</strong> our being-in-the-world beforeothers—the poet’s ‘as others see us’. If shame-consciousness reveals the existence <strong>of</strong>other subjects, affective structures such as shyness indicate a vivid awareness <strong>of</strong> my bodynot as it is for me but as it is ‘for the Other’. Significantly, Sartre insists that languageshows us abstractly the principal structures <strong>of</strong> our body-for-others. We shall observe himsubsequently locate language among the ‘practico-inert’. This relation between language


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 70and body-for-others is a suggestive dimension <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s ontology yet to be fullyexplored.The social dimension <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s vintage existentialism elaborates our being-for-othersas well as the facticity <strong>of</strong> our being-in-situation. His famous analysis <strong>of</strong> our basicrelations to each other as an attempt to ‘assimilate the Other’s freedom’ through sadisticor masochistic manoeuvres scandalized the public and contributed to his reputation forpessimism in the late 1940s. This was reinforced by the well-known line from his play NoExit (1944), that ‘Hell is other people’ (l’enfer, c’est les autres).Although he later contextualized these remarks, along with the passages in Being andNothingness on which they form a gloss, as referring to interpersonal relations ‘in analienated society’ such as ours, the source <strong>of</strong> the difficulty and the obstacle to a moresatisfactory social theory is ontological, not historical: his looking/looked-at model forinterpersonal relations. Until this is surpassed in the Critique <strong>of</strong> Dialectical Reason,Sartre can <strong>of</strong>fer us at best a theory <strong>of</strong> the other writ large, but not a social philosophyproperly speaking.EthicsIt is now common to divide Sartre’s ethical thought into three phases: the ethics <strong>of</strong>authenticity <strong>of</strong> his vintage existentialist years, the dialectical ethics that he began t<strong>of</strong>ormulate in the 1950s and 1960s, and the ‘ethic <strong>of</strong> the we’ that he was fashioning withBenny Levy toward the end <strong>of</strong> his life. Since the first is his best known and most fullyarticulated theory, we shall concentrate on the ethics <strong>of</strong> authenticity.If there is any existentialist ‘virtue’, it has been remarked, it is authenticity. The basisfor this concept is appropriately ontological: ‘man is free because he is not a self but apresence-to-self’ ([3.2], 440). In other words, human reality is a ‘being <strong>of</strong> distances’—whatever it is, it is in the manner <strong>of</strong> not-being that property, that is, as being otherthanthat.So the male homosexual’s friend who urges him to ‘come out’ and admit what he is,in Sartre’s example, is really asking him to be inauthentic, to be a homosexual ‘the way astone is a stone’, that is, in the manner <strong>of</strong> the self-identity <strong>of</strong> being-in-itself. But, <strong>of</strong>course, that is precisely what he cannot do—since, as conscious, he is ‘in situation’ as ahomosexual. He is homosexual, French, courageous, or whatever, in the manner <strong>of</strong>transcending that facticity. Still, it is that facticity which he transcends, ‘nihilates’,‘others’. The ‘moral’ challenge, if that word is appropriate, is to live that tension fromday to day. One can no more resign oneself to complete identity as a homosexual than thereformed gambler or alcoholic can rest secure in his or her ‘sobriety’ after years <strong>of</strong>success. What others see as pessimism Sartre proclaims as hope: we are not condemnedby our upbringing, our characters or our past behaviour; we are freed from determinisms<strong>of</strong> every kind; we can always make something out <strong>of</strong> what we have been made into.Perhaps Sartre’s best description <strong>of</strong> ‘authenticity’ published in his lifetime is found inAnti-Semite and Jew (1946): ‘Authenticity consists in having a true and lucidconsciousness <strong>of</strong> the situation, in assuming the responsibilities and risks it involves, inaccepting it in pride or humiliation, sometimes in horror and hate’ ([3.1], 90). Whatemerges from existentialism in general and from Sartre in particular is authenticity as anethical style. Its elements are: first, a heightened awareness <strong>of</strong> facticity and possibility,


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 71that is, <strong>of</strong> the existential situation; second, the exercise <strong>of</strong> creative choice <strong>of</strong> self withinthis situation; and finally, owning or appropriating the consequences <strong>of</strong> this choice, thatis, <strong>of</strong> the altered situation, the altered self. As he remarks in his posthumously publishedNotebooks for an Ethics (1992), ‘It is this double, simultaneous aspect <strong>of</strong> the humanproject, gratuitous at its core and consecrated by a reflective reprise, that makes it intoauthentic existence’ ([3.26], 481). This is not amor fati. Simply to resign oneself to one’sfacticity is a lie, for it denies that other dimension <strong>of</strong> the existential situation,transcendence or consciousness, which must sustain the resignation and thereby leaverebellion a constant possibility. Rather, authenticity is the challenge to ‘have the courageto go to the limits <strong>of</strong> ourselves in both directions at once’ ([3.32], 599). This is the moralSartre draws from the biography <strong>of</strong> his ‘hero’ <strong>of</strong> authenticity, Jean Genet.The ambiguity <strong>of</strong> ‘situation’, its indeterminate mélange <strong>of</strong> facticity and transcendence,reflects the now-self-coincidence <strong>of</strong> human reality. It makes ontologically possible ‘badfaith’, the best known <strong>of</strong> Sartrean moral categories. There are two basic forms <strong>of</strong> badfaith, depending on whether the individual flees the anguish <strong>of</strong> his or her freedompossibilityfor identification with facticity (for example, the alcoholic who is ‘cured’ onceand for all) or denies the force <strong>of</strong> circumstances to float in the realm <strong>of</strong> pure possibility(like James Thurber’s Walter Mitty). Each is a kind <strong>of</strong> ‘lie to oneself, which, <strong>of</strong> course, isimpossible unless one introduces another kind <strong>of</strong> otherness or inner distance into humanreality, namely, one that affects consciousness itself.Sartre discovers a tw<strong>of</strong>old duality in the human way <strong>of</strong> being: ontological (presence-toself)and psychological (levels <strong>of</strong> consciousness). The former accounts for the othernessthat infects our very being; the latter divides our awareness such that we can be consciouswithout ‘knowing’ it. The former constitutes the split; the latter renders possible the selfdeception.In Being and Nothingness, he speaks <strong>of</strong> ‘pre-reflective’ and ‘reflective’consciousness. The former is our immediate experience <strong>of</strong> the other, our being-in-theworld.It is ekstatic and pre-personal in the sense that it is not closed in on itself but is‘already in the world’ when reflection intervenes. With reflection comes the self (asquasi-object <strong>of</strong> reflection), the concepts <strong>of</strong> ‘knowledge’ as distinct from the notions <strong>of</strong>‘understanding’, which are rooted in the pre-reflective, and the objects <strong>of</strong> deliberation towhich one turns when ‘making up one’s mind’.Significantly, the pre-reflective enjoys both an epistemic and an ontological primacy. Itis the level <strong>of</strong> ‘fundamental project’ that orients our reflective moments as well as thelocus <strong>of</strong> that comprehension which accompanies every conscious act. In fact, prereflectivecomprehension functions in Sartre’s thought in a manner not unlike Freud’s‘unconscious’, to which Sartre was notoriously opposed. The chief and crucial differenceis that appeal to the pre-reflective enhances rather than diminishes responsibility forSartre. The extreme responsibility to which Sartre holds us in his polemical writings is anapplication <strong>of</strong> this far-reaching concept <strong>of</strong> pre-reflective comprehension: we allunderstand what we are about, even if we do not reflectively know it. Awareness andresponsibility are coextensive.This virtual identification <strong>of</strong> consciousness and responsibility will strike many ashyperbolic, given the traditional conditions for moral responsibility, namely, some degree<strong>of</strong> control in addition to an element <strong>of</strong> knowledge. In the brief compass <strong>of</strong> a sub-section,it is impossible to pursue this at length, but it should be noted that Sartre is concerned


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 72with ‘responsibility’ in the sense <strong>of</strong> being the ‘incontestable author <strong>of</strong> an event or <strong>of</strong> anobject’ ([3.2], 553). What we might call noetic responsibility, that is, our appropriation <strong>of</strong>the meanings that constitute ‘our world’, is the ground <strong>of</strong> the other forms <strong>of</strong> responsibilitythat Sartre acknowledges. And here it does not seem incredible to claim that awarenessand responsibility are extentionally equivalent. Sartre confirms this interpretation whenhe occasionally responds as a trump card: ‘Well, he or she could always commit suicide.’The point is that, if they did not do so, they have ‘chosen’ in the existential sense the‘world’ in which they live.Fundamental ‘choice’ or project is both the individuating feature <strong>of</strong> existentialontology, the factor that distinguishes consciousnesses among themselves, and thetotalizing aspect <strong>of</strong> human reality that renders it thoroughly responsible for its situation.Problematic as the concept is—Sartre once likened it to what psychologists mean by‘selective attention’ (see [3.2], 462)—it is consistent with his claim that being-in-itselfcannot act upon consciousness, that the for-itself is a ‘pure spontaneous upsurge’, andthat consciousness is what makes motives motivate. Some have compared basic choice toR.M.Hare’s ‘decisions <strong>of</strong> principle’ in that both are prior to the principles to which oneappeals in settling arguments. As Sartre puts it, when one pauses to decide, the ‘chips are[already] down’ ([3.2], 451). Fundamental choice is constitutive, not selective. It iscoterminous with pre-reflective consciousness. It is a ‘choice’ which we ‘are/were’, toparaphrase a barbarism that Sartre introduces to express the transitivity and harshfacticity <strong>of</strong> lived time.Because consciousness, choice, freedom, responsibility are roughly extentionallyequivalent terms in what Iris Murdoch called Sartre’s ‘great inexact equations’, thechallenge to authenticity and the consequences <strong>of</strong> inauthenticity are all-encompassing.There is a ‘Weltanschauung <strong>of</strong> bad faith’, for example; it constitutes a manner <strong>of</strong> beingin-the-world([3.2], 68).In a set <strong>of</strong> unpublished manuscripts for lectures in the 1960s, Sartre begins to elaborateanother, dialectical ethic. This is more socially minded than his characteristicallyindividualist stance <strong>of</strong> twenty years earlier. It builds on his concepts <strong>of</strong> situation and theexemplarity <strong>of</strong> moral choices as well as the thesis that no one can be free if anyone isenslaved—themes addressed briefly in his earlier works. His ontological categories arethose <strong>of</strong> the Critique <strong>of</strong> Dialectical Reason and his discussions, for the most part inchoateand sketchy, are phenomenological descriptions <strong>of</strong> moral experience, especially thefollowing <strong>of</strong> moral norms and their violation in moments <strong>of</strong> moral crisis and creativity.The ideal is no longer the ‘authentic’ individual but ‘integral man’, understood grossomodo as the person who has entered into relations <strong>of</strong> positive reciprocity with otherswhose basic animal and human needs have likewise been met such that they are liberatedfrom the alienating tyranny <strong>of</strong> material scarcity and the violence it engenders. These arenecessarily vague notions, Sartre admits, because they gain their precision from thatwhich they oppose, namely, what he calls ‘sub-man’ or the oppressed and oppressingindividuals <strong>of</strong> contemporary society.The most that can be said <strong>of</strong> integral man in thepresent state <strong>of</strong> our social existence is that he or she is made possible by the continuousrefusal to live as sub-man. Although Sartre cites the colonist-native relationship toexemplify the notion <strong>of</strong> sub-humanity, he has always considered this an instance <strong>of</strong> moregeneral relations <strong>of</strong> oppressive practice and structural exploitation that characterize


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 73bourgeois society.Clearly, Sartre was dissatisfied with this second attempt and so in his last yearsundertook a third ethic in discussion with Benny Levy. Characterized by Sartre as an‘ethics <strong>of</strong> the WE’, this third version remains buried in the tape-recordings in Lévy’spossession. From Sartre’s somewhat exaggerated accounts, we learn that this product <strong>of</strong> alivre à deux was to leave uncriticized not a single major thesis <strong>of</strong> his earlier philosophy.As we noted earlier, the published interviews indicate that this is not the case, thoughthey do reveal the revival <strong>of</strong> some more ‘positive’ theses from earlier works such asNotebooks for an Ethics. In any case, these tapes, if they are ever published, will almostcertainly be chiefly <strong>of</strong> biographical value and are not likely to warrant our rejecting thesystematic thought <strong>of</strong> Sartre at his prime.Existential psychoanalysisAlthough it has ‘not yet found its Freud’ ([3.2], 575), this approach to understanding thefundamental project <strong>of</strong> an agent is followed in increasing detail in Sartre’s ‘biographies’<strong>of</strong> Baudelaire, Genet and Flaubert as well as in his Nobel-Prize-winning autobiography,The Words.The method is an application <strong>of</strong> the ontology <strong>of</strong> Being and Nothingness, although itdoes not rely on the latter’s discredited social theory. It assumes that human reality is atotalization, not a totality, and that this ongoing unity is forged by the existential project.If human reality is the ‘useless passion’ to coincide consciously with itself, to be in-itselffor-itself,that is, if each <strong>of</strong> us exemplifies the famous futile desire to be God, thenpsychoanalysis exercises an hermeneutic on the signs <strong>of</strong> an individual’s life that indicateits distinctive manner <strong>of</strong> living this futile desire—whether authentically, for example, orinauthentically. Because pre-reflective consciousness has replaced the Freudianunconscious, Sartre considers it possible in principle to understand an individualcompletely, that is, to uncover his or her self-defining project in complete transparency.Like so many <strong>of</strong> the claims enunciated at the height <strong>of</strong> existentialist enthusiasm, the ideal<strong>of</strong> total transparency is qualified in Sartre’s later works, where force <strong>of</strong> circumstance(‘what we have been made into’) modifies absolute freedom and ideology cloudsindividual awareness. But he remained true to theRousseauian concept <strong>of</strong> personal andsocial transparency, at least as an ideal.The details <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s love-hate relationship with Freud have yet to be recounted. Onthe one hand, he rejected the Freudian concept <strong>of</strong> the unconscious as being deterministic,and criticized Freud’s ‘censor’ for being in bad faith (it both knows and does not knowwhat is acceptable to consciousness). And yet he employs the concept <strong>of</strong> pre-reflectiveconsciousness in a manner that imitates Freudian unconscious in important ways andallows the analyst to reveal to the analys-and meanings which he or she had hitherto notknown (in a reflective sense). Preparing the never-to-be-filmed script for a John Houstonmovie, later published as The Freud Scenario, forced Sartre to rethink his ideas about theunconscious. He acknowledged finding Lacan’s theory <strong>of</strong> the unconscious structured as alanguage less troublesome but did not go so far as to embrace the idea. As always, theconcept <strong>of</strong> individual freedom-responsibility remained a non-negotiable.Sartre’s most ambitious exercise in existential psychoanalysis and most thorough use


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 74<strong>of</strong> the progressive-regressive method is his massive study <strong>of</strong> the life and work <strong>of</strong> GustaveFlaubert, The Family Idiot (1971–2). Numbering over three thousand pages in theoriginal, it constitutes a kind <strong>of</strong> summa <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s intellectual endeavours, embracingeverything from ontology and psychoanalysis to literary and social criticism. It addressesthe question, ‘What at this point in time, can we know about a human being?’ ([3.15],French, vol. 1, p. ix). A synthesis <strong>of</strong> existential psychoanalysis and historical materialism,the progressive -regressive method seeks to uncover Flaubert’s basic project, namely, his‘choice’ <strong>of</strong> the unreal-imaginary through adopting the ‘neurotic’ lifestyle that bourgeoissociety thrust upon any would-be artist <strong>of</strong> Flaubert’s generation. As becomes usual in thesecond phase <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s career, biography has broadened into social critique. What isboth banal and pr<strong>of</strong>ound in Sartre’s undertaking is his attempt to comprehend Flaubert’slife and times through the dialectical relationship between his progressive‘personalization’ and the production and public reception <strong>of</strong> Madame Bovary. It is acommonplace to study the ‘life and times’ <strong>of</strong> a historical figure in mutual clarification.But there is something boldly ‘rationalistic’ about Sartre’s attempt to understand whyFlaubert had to write Bovary and how he could finally claim, ‘I am Madame Bovary.’<strong>Philosophy</strong> and literatureNo thinker in our century more adequately brokers the marriage <strong>of</strong> these two disciplinesthan Sartre. His novels, short stories and plays gave him an audience denied to mostphilosophers, and his criticism, gathered with occasional pieces in the ten volumes <strong>of</strong>Situations, established him as a major voice in that domain. This was furthered by thejournal <strong>of</strong> opinion and criticism, Les Temps modernes, which he founded at the end <strong>of</strong> thewar. In a collection <strong>of</strong> articles published first in that journal and later as a book, What isLiterature? (1947), Sartre defends his concept <strong>of</strong> ‘committed literature’ (littératureengagée). Given his ontological theses <strong>of</strong> the fundamental project and the possibility <strong>of</strong>bad faith, Sartre examines literary art in terms <strong>of</strong> the authenticity and inauthenticity, notmerely <strong>of</strong> its content (which would smell <strong>of</strong> socialist critiques) but <strong>of</strong> its very form.He distinguishes prose from what he calls generically ‘poetry’ and insists that the lattercannot be committed. Poetry employs its ‘analogues’ (words, musical sounds, paintedsurfaces and the like) as ends in themselves. They do not point beyond themselves to ourbeing-in-the-world but undertake to short-circuit that outward movement by rendering theaesthetic object present-absent, that is, imaginatively present, for its own sake. We mightsay that, for Sartre, where prose looks beyond the pointed finger to the object indicated,‘poetry’ focuses on the fingertip. If not precisely escapist, such art avoids the challenges<strong>of</strong> a period <strong>of</strong> crisis. Sartre believes that the postwar years form such a period. Hence hisrecommendation that artists should address social concerns and do so in a manner that‘gives the bourgeoisie a bad conscience’. Once he appropriates this advice himself,ironically about the time the Nobel Committee is preparing to award him the prize forliterature, he all but abandons imaginative literature except for an adaptation <strong>of</strong>Euripides’ The Trojan Women (1965) and his ‘novel that is true’ about Flaubert. And yetthis very move to committed literature reveals that the distinction between poetry andprose is functional rather than substantive in the final analysis and that imaginative‘derealization’ can constitute a form <strong>of</strong> social action even in genres that Sartre seemed to


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 75have dismissed as ‘poetic’. In fact his early (1948) praise <strong>of</strong> black poetry in French as‘the only great revolutionary poetry <strong>of</strong> our time’ ([3.36], vol. 3, p. 233) indicates that hehad understood his original distinction in a functional manner from the start.At this point we should summarize the elements <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s aesthetic theory. Itsfoundation is the theory <strong>of</strong> imaging consciousness developed in Psychology <strong>of</strong>Imagination. It applies intentionality to the constitution <strong>of</strong> an ‘aesthetic object’ for whichthe physical artefact serves as analogon. Both cognitive and affective ‘intentions’conspire to ‘presentify’, that is, to render imaginatively present-absent the object in anaesthetic mode. In the case <strong>of</strong> non-figurative art, the artefact serves as analogon for itself.Words or their grammatical and syntactical configuration form the analogue <strong>of</strong> theliterary object, a ‘world’ with its proper space and time that is a ‘derealization’ <strong>of</strong> our realworld <strong>of</strong> praxis. Given both the paradigmatic nature <strong>of</strong> imaging consciousness for Sartreand the extensional equivalence <strong>of</strong> ‘consciousness’ and ‘freedom’, it is not surprising t<strong>of</strong>ind him discussing the work <strong>of</strong> art as an ‘invitation from one freedom to another’ andinterpreting artistic creativity as an act <strong>of</strong> generosity. In fact, invitation-response replacescommand-obedience as the model for ideal social relations in Sartre’s ‘city <strong>of</strong> ends’, aswe shall now see.Social philosophyIn his ‘biography’ <strong>of</strong> Jean Genet, Sartre avows: ‘For a long time we believed in the socialatomism bequeathed to us by the eighteenth century…. The truth is that “human reality”“is-in-society” as it “is-in-the-world”; it is neither a nature nor a state; it is made’ ([3.32],590). As we noted earlier, the possibility <strong>of</strong> developing an adequate social theory washampered by Sartre’s looking/looked-at model <strong>of</strong> interpersonal relations. At best, thisontology warranted the methodological individualism that his erstwhile friend RaymondAron ascribed to him in the social realm. But by subsuming his philosophy <strong>of</strong>consciousness into one <strong>of</strong> praxis, Sartre increases qualitatively the social potential <strong>of</strong> histhought. Whereas there is no such thing as a plural look, except as a merely psychologicalexperience (a basic claim <strong>of</strong> methodological individualists), there is a ‘syntheticenrichment’ <strong>of</strong> my action when it is incorporated into that <strong>of</strong> a group. ‘We’ can do manythings that remain impossible for me alone.Sartre’s major contribution to social philosophy is made at the level <strong>of</strong> social ontology,the theory <strong>of</strong> individual and group identity and action. It takes the form <strong>of</strong> two concepts,the practico-inert and the mediating third. But to explain each we must first elucidate thenotion <strong>of</strong> praxis, which is the pivot on which his social theory turns.Praxis denotes purposive human activity in its cultural environment. It is distinct fromhuman action sans phrase in being historical; its ‘world’ is a horizon <strong>of</strong> meanings that arealready ‘there’, yet liable to interpretation in light <strong>of</strong> the ongoing project. But whereas theHusserlian discourse <strong>of</strong> intentions, meanings and noetic responsibility dominated thelandscape <strong>of</strong> Being and Nothingness, Sartre displays a marked preference for thelanguage <strong>of</strong> historical materialism in the Critique <strong>of</strong> Dialectical Reason. The basic form<strong>of</strong> praxis is labour as a response to material need. This original relationship overcomeswhatever lingering idealism Sartre’s theory may have been liable to and generates adialectic <strong>of</strong> negation, negation <strong>of</strong> negation, and transcendence (dépassement) adapted


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 76from the Hegelio-Marxist tradition. If the early Sartre left the impression that one couldsimply change oneself rather than change the world, since the terms were correlative inany case, such ‘Stoic’ freedom is strongly opposed by the later Sartre, and the facticalcomponent <strong>of</strong> one’s situation is finally given its due.Functional heir to being-in-itself, the ‘practico-inert’ refers to the facticity <strong>of</strong> our socialsituation in its otherness, especially the material dimension <strong>of</strong> our cultural environment,as well as to those sedimented past praxes that return to haunt us. If the act <strong>of</strong> speaking isan instance <strong>of</strong> praxis, language is a form <strong>of</strong> the practico-inert. This is the category <strong>of</strong>‘counterfinality’ whereby intended ends entail unintended consequences. Sartre’s classicexample is the deforestation by Chinese peasants that resulted in the very erosion fromfloods <strong>of</strong> the land they hoped to cultivate. Similarly, he employs this concept in hisaccount <strong>of</strong> the impoverishment <strong>of</strong> the Spanish state through inflation caused by itshoarding <strong>of</strong> gold from its newly exploited American mines. Practicoinert ‘mediation’ isalienating, it steals one’s activity the way the ‘look’ <strong>of</strong> the Other robs one <strong>of</strong> one’sfreedom in Being and Nothingness. And when qualified by material scarcity, practicoinertmediation renders human relations violent. Sartre describes violence as ‘interiorizedscarcity’. The fact that there is not enough <strong>of</strong> the goods <strong>of</strong> the world to go around colourshuman history as a tale <strong>of</strong> violence and terror. Towards the end <strong>of</strong> his life, Sartre admittedto Benny Levy that he had never reconciled these fundamental features <strong>of</strong> social life,fraternity and violence. Both are essential to his social thought.‘Fraternity’ is Sartre’s term for the mutuality and positive reciprocity that constitute hissocial ideal and which are achieved, albeit temporarily, in the spontaneously formedaction group. Most relations are ‘serial’ because they are mediated by the practico-inert.Most <strong>of</strong> the individuals who populate our world, from the television-viewing public to thepeople waiting for the same bus, are rendered serial by the ‘false’ or ‘external’ unityimposed on them by such collective objects as a television announcer or an expected bus.They are related among themselves as ‘other’ to ‘other’—as competitors for scarce space,for example, or as fashioning their opinions as the newscaster dictates. Sartre notes thatsuch ‘serial impotence’ is cultivated by dictators who wish to maintain an illusion <strong>of</strong>power on the part <strong>of</strong> their subjects in the midst <strong>of</strong> the latter’s pr<strong>of</strong>ound malleability.In the ‘apocalyptic’ moment when people realize in a practical manner through acommon project that they are ‘the same’, not ‘other’, and that each is performing the taskwhich the other would do were he or she required to do so at this point, the ‘We’ emergesin a fusing group. Sartre’s idealized example <strong>of</strong> such a genesis is the famous storming <strong>of</strong>the Bastille. Under threat from an external source, the crowd changes from serialdispersion to practical unity, from a mob to a group. By a performative utterance thateffects what it describes, the cry ‘We are a hundred strong!’ in Sartre’s imaginativereconstruction <strong>of</strong> the event creates a new entity: the fused group. The mediating Third isthe ontological vehicle for this transformation. Unlike the objectifying voyeur <strong>of</strong> Beingand Nothingness, the third party in group formation performs a mediating, not analienating function. By subordinating purely personal or divisive concerns to generalinterest, he or she emerges as the ‘common individual’. Mediation is exercised no longervia the practico-inert but by means <strong>of</strong> the praxes <strong>of</strong> ‘common’ individuals. Completeorganic integration is impossible, Sartre continues to insist; some otherness alwaysremains. But it is ‘discounted’, not fostered. He calls it ‘free alterity’ <strong>of</strong> the group in


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 77praxis as opposed to the serial otherness <strong>of</strong> the impotent collective.A threefold primacy <strong>of</strong> praxis emerges in Sartre’s later thought. At the ground is anontological primacy. Even at the highest moment <strong>of</strong> social integration, the group-infusion,it is organic praxes who create and sustain the group. The entire ‘inner life’ <strong>of</strong> thegroup is a revolving circle <strong>of</strong> practical relations whereby each praxis ‘interiorizes’ themultiplicity <strong>of</strong> the rest. (Any member could have cried ‘We are a hundred strong!’) Eventhe practico-inert is not an autonomous force that renders us powerless. It is, after all,practico-inert; the praxes that it absorbs or deflects are still operative, though in alienatedfashion. Sartre explicitly adopts the Marxist thesis that ‘there are only individuals andreal relations among them’ ([3.35], 76). If Sartre’s early work was a relentless rejection<strong>of</strong> idealism, his later, social theory is intent on avoiding organicism. The ontologicalprimacy <strong>of</strong> praxis is his chief weapon in that campaign.On this original primacy Sartre founds an epistemological and an ethical primacy aswell. The epistemological primacy <strong>of</strong> praxis stems from the fact that comprehension isthe consciousness <strong>of</strong> praxis and that we can comprehend the other’s comprehensionthrough the progressive-regressive method. This is an elaboration <strong>of</strong> the Verstehendesociology <strong>of</strong> Dilthey, Weber and others, placed in service <strong>of</strong> an historical materialistconception <strong>of</strong> social change. But unlike Marxist ‘economism’, the comprehension Sartreseeks comes to rest in the praxisproject <strong>of</strong> the organic individual. Sartre summarized thedifference in a memorable line: ‘Valéry is a petit bourgeois intellectual…. But not everypetit bourgeois intellectual is Valéry’ ([3.35], 56).Because individual praxis sustains the most impersonal economic laws, like the ‘ironlaw <strong>of</strong> wages’, and the most ‘necessary’ practicoinert processes, such as the colonialistsystem, one can ascribe existential-moral responsibility to the serialized ‘agents’ whosepassive activity carries them out. In other words, one cannot escape responsibility byappeal to facticity. For Sartre the moralist, the spark <strong>of</strong> human freedom-responsibility isunquenchable: you can always make something out <strong>of</strong> what you have been made into.<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> historyA glance at the posthumously published War Diaries which Sartre kept during thePhoney War <strong>of</strong> 1939–40 reveals that his interest in the topic was not the result <strong>of</strong> his socalledconversion to Marxism after the war. But he does set the matter aside in Being andNothingness, reserving a lengthy discussion <strong>of</strong> morality and history for his Notebooks foran Ethics, again not published in his lifetime. In the Diaries, his dialogue is primarilywith Raymond Aron, whose two volumes on the philosophy <strong>of</strong> history had just beenpublished. In criticism <strong>of</strong> Aron, Sartre enunciates a thesis that will be formative <strong>of</strong> hisexistential approach to history ever after: the only way to achieve historical unity is bystudying the lived appropriation <strong>of</strong> historical events by an individual agent. What is beingsketched at this early stage is the rationale <strong>of</strong> his existential psychoanalyses <strong>of</strong> the nextdecades. If history is to be more than the positivist concatenation <strong>of</strong> facts and dates, itmust come to life in the projects <strong>of</strong> the historical agent. This is more than psychohistory,to which it exhibits a marked resemblance, because <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s characteristic moralconcerns as well as the historical materialist dimension which he will introduce after thewar.


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 78In the Notebooks Sartre indicates that an existentialist theory <strong>of</strong> history will have torespect the paradox <strong>of</strong> moral responsibility. At this stage the dialogue is with Hegel andthe French Hegelians, Kojève and Hyppolite. The existentialist individual makes an ‘end’to history inconceivable: any totality <strong>of</strong> which consciousness is part will be a‘detotalized’ totality. Although he speaks <strong>of</strong> positive reciprocity, the generosity-giftrelationship and good faith in ways that correct the one-sided, pessimistic view <strong>of</strong>interpersonal relations conveyed in Being and Nothingness, these notes remain in thrall tothe looking/looked-at model <strong>of</strong> the social. Accordingly, the theory <strong>of</strong> history is faced withseemingly insurmountable difficulties as it attempts to interrelate the individual and thesocial, morality and history.It is in the two volumes <strong>of</strong> the Critique <strong>of</strong> Dialectical Reason, where the dialogue isnow with Merleau-Ponty’s criticism <strong>of</strong> his social thought in the latter’s The Adventures <strong>of</strong>Dialectic, that Sartre formulates the philosophy <strong>of</strong> praxis and its attendant socialontology that enable him to construct a theory <strong>of</strong> history that accounts for collectiveaction and counterfinalities, recognizes the specificity <strong>of</strong> the sociohistorical, and reservespride <strong>of</strong> place for existential-moral responsibility on the part <strong>of</strong> organic individuals. Sincehis War Diaries, it has been clear that the root problem for an existentialist theory is therelationship between biography and history. He treats this matter apropos <strong>of</strong> Joseph Stalinand the Soviet Union in the 1930s in his posthumously published notes for volume 2 <strong>of</strong>the Critique, but the relation <strong>of</strong> biography to history receives its most extendedconsideration in The Family Idiot (especially in volume 3 <strong>of</strong> the French edition).SARTRE AND TWENTIETH-CENTURY CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHYAlthough one <strong>of</strong> the few major twentieth-century philosophers not to be associated withacademe for most <strong>of</strong> his career, Sartre was pr<strong>of</strong>essionally trained and remained indialogue with academic philosophy all <strong>of</strong> his life. Any assessment <strong>of</strong> his thought shouldaddress his relationship to the leading philosophical movements <strong>of</strong> his time.Existential phenomenologyIt was Gabriel Marcel who first called Sartre an ‘existentialist’. By the time <strong>of</strong> his famouspublic lecture, Existentialism is a Humanism (1945), his name had become synonymouswith the movement. Indeed, it was in part to separate himself from association withSartrean existentialism that Heidegger denied he was an existentialist and wrote hisgroundbreaking Letter on Humanism (1947) to explain why. We have noted Sartre’s debtto Husserlian phenomenology throughout this chapter. In Being and Nothingness hecriticizes Hegel, Husserl and Heidegger at several junctures but clearly has adoptednumerous concepts from each. While it is a gross exaggeration to characterize Sartre’smasterwork as ‘Being and Time translated into French’, the similarities as well as thepr<strong>of</strong>ound differences between each thinker are underscored by comparing the two works.As soon as a French translation <strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s 1930 lecture The Essence <strong>of</strong> Truthappeared (1948), Sartre wrote a lengthy response. It was published posthumously asTruth and Existence (1989).


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 79Sartre was a close collaborator with Simone de Beauvoir in the sense that they readeach other’s work prior to publication, and she completed several <strong>of</strong> the lacunae in hissocial ethic in the mid-1940s with her The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Ambiguity. Despite its obviousoriginality, Merleau-Ponty’s The Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception shows numerous signs <strong>of</strong>Sartrean influence, even as it takes Sartre to task for his ‘Cartesianism’. But we noted thatthe Critique seems to be a response to the trenchant criticism levelled by Merleau-Pontyin his Adventures <strong>of</strong> the Dialectic against a Sartrean social philosophy. Sartre’sindebtedness both to Merleau-Ponty and to Kierkegaard is recounted in memorial essayshe penned in honour <strong>of</strong> each (‘Merleau-Ponty Alive’ (1961) and ‘Kierkegaard: TheSingular Universal’ (1966)).The ‘existential turn’ that Husserl’s phenomenological movement took, if initiated byHeidegger, was completed by Sartre. To the extent that such phenomenology grewincreasingly anthropological and ethical, it became associated with its Frenchpractitioners. The phenomenological method was enriched and its limitations as anapproach to history were compensated for by the progressive-regressive method. Thislast, as we noted, is a synthesis <strong>of</strong> existential psychoanalysis and historical materialism.The former places it in direct line with the hermeneutic tradition <strong>of</strong> interpreting symbolicaction; the latter relates Sartre’s method to more ‘scientific’ (in the Hegelian sense)approaches to historical intelligibility.MarxismSartre’s ‘Marxism’ was always adjectival to his existentialism. In the late 1940s, headvised the workers to support the Communist Party faute de mieux, while refusing tojoin it himself. In Search for a Method, he declares Marxism ‘the philosophy <strong>of</strong> ourtimes’ and even makes it synonymous with ‘knowledge’ (savoir). But he described theCritique <strong>of</strong> Dialectical Reason, to which Search served as a kind <strong>of</strong> preface, as an ‘anticommunistbook’ and in his last years explicitly denied he was a Marxist. Still, historicalmaterialism (the Marxist theory <strong>of</strong> history) is operative in The Family Idiot as well as inhis other writings after the late 1950s.Sartre joins that group <strong>of</strong> Marxists known as ‘revisionists’ in that they question orreject totally the Marxist dialectic <strong>of</strong> nature (DIAMAT) and emphasize the humanisticdimension <strong>of</strong> Marx’s writings. In Search for a Method, Sartre announces that his missionin this regard is ‘to conquer man within Marxism’ ([3.35], 83). It is because <strong>of</strong> theirfailure to respect the moral dimension <strong>of</strong> human action, that Sartre abandoned evenfellow-travelling in favour <strong>of</strong> les maos after the events in Paris <strong>of</strong> 1968. This odyssey isrecounted in his discussion with two members <strong>of</strong> that group, published as On a raison dese révolter (1974).StructuralismThe structuralist movement in France as exemplified by the work <strong>of</strong> Althusser, Lacan,Lévi-Strauss, Barthes and others in the 1960s is commonly credited with having replacedexistentialism as the reigning Parisian ‘philosophy’. This is true to a large extent, thoughthat school <strong>of</strong> thought was subsequently eclipsed by poststructuralist writers. Sartre


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 80occasionally criticized the structuralists for ignoring history in general and human agencyin particular—essential existentialist concerns. But even a cursory reading <strong>of</strong> the Critique<strong>of</strong> Dialectical Reason will reveal the important role that Sartre reserves for structuralfactors in his account. The ‘formal conditions’ revealed by the regressive movement <strong>of</strong>the progressive-regressive method are arguably structural. In fact, the major portion <strong>of</strong>volume 1 <strong>of</strong> the Critique is synchronic and structural. Whether it is thereby ‘structuralist’depends on the meaning <strong>of</strong> the term. Clearly, Sartre opposed it as a system because <strong>of</strong> itsinadequacy to existential experience. And its binary relations, he would accept only ascomplementing the dialectical, totalizing ‘Reason’ that he was elucidating in the Critique.The ontological locus <strong>of</strong> structural relations in his social ontology is the practico-inert.Recall that language as such, for him, is practicoinert. So too is analytical, as distinctfrom dialectical, reason. Sartre speaks <strong>of</strong> the practico-inert and hence <strong>of</strong> structure as nonhistoricaland even ‘anti-dialectical’. But this must be taken in the context <strong>of</strong> thetotalizing activity <strong>of</strong> praxis, which renders these structures historically relevant. The‘platonizing’ tendencies <strong>of</strong> structuralist thought are tempered by Sartre’s ‘dialecticalnominalism’, an approach to ontology and epistemology that respects the qualitativedifference between individual and collective phenomena as well as the irreducibility <strong>of</strong>the latter to the former, while insisting on the threefold primacy <strong>of</strong> free organic praxis.Dialectical nominalism is a middle ground between holism and individualism in themethodology <strong>of</strong> the social sciences.PostmodernismFoucault once referred to Sartre as the last <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth-century philosophers. It wasnot only his interest in <strong>History</strong> with a Hegelian ‘H’ and his seeming fixation on Flaubertthat generated this remark. It was equally Sartre’s philosophy <strong>of</strong> the subject, <strong>of</strong> freedomand <strong>of</strong> moral indignation that lay behind Foucault’s words. And yet one can find severalstrikingly ‘postmodern’ theses in Sartre’s work. These would make valuablecontributions to the current philosophical conversationand deserve closer scrutiny bycontemporary thinkers. By way <strong>of</strong> conclusion let us consider three.Postmodern thinking is noted for its ‘evacuation <strong>of</strong> the subject’ from current discourse.In so far as the ‘subject’ in question is the Cartesian res cogitans, Sartre never held thatposition. His concept <strong>of</strong> ‘presence to self instead <strong>of</strong> a substantial self or ego, with itsattendant ‘circuit <strong>of</strong> selfness’ rather than an outer spatio-temporal plane, leaves Sartrefree to consider the fluidity <strong>of</strong> subjectivist discourse and speak <strong>of</strong> the self as anachievement rather than an origin. The constitution <strong>of</strong> a moral ‘self, to which Foucaultdevoted his last years, could have been the topic <strong>of</strong> a Sartrean treatise.There is an aesthetic strain in Sartre’s thought, owing to the paradigmatic role that heaccords imaging consciousness. Postmodern critics from Lyotard to Foucault have showna marked preference for aesthetic categories as well, even to the point <strong>of</strong> advocating theNietzschean aestheticist injunction to ‘make one’s life a work <strong>of</strong> art’. Not that Sartreshould ever be accused <strong>of</strong> aestheticism. But his reading <strong>of</strong> history is certainly ‘poetic’,and his existential biographies as ‘novels that are true’ suggest a fruitful field <strong>of</strong> futureinquiry and dialogue with postmodern writers.The Nietzschean inspiration <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s thought has not received the attention it


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 81deserves, especially since the ‘postmodern’ Nietzsche has emerged. Sartre’s early essay‘The Legend <strong>of</strong> Truth’, written in 1929, is pr<strong>of</strong>oundly Nietzschean in content and tone.The general problem <strong>of</strong> contingency and chance, which Foucault wished to reintroduceinto postmodern historiography, was an abiding theme <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s existentialist thought. Itsurfaces again in the posthumous Notebooks for an Ethics. The career <strong>of</strong> Nietzscheaninterpretation forms another link between Sartre and postmodern thinkers.And yet it would be excessive to refer to Sartre as a ‘postmodern’. He was a thinker <strong>of</strong>unities, not <strong>of</strong> fragments. His emphasis on intentional consciousness and later ontotalizing praxis was meant to counter the historical pluralism <strong>of</strong> Raymond Aron as wellas the brute facts <strong>of</strong> the positivists. And his corresponding commitments aimed ateffecting socio-economic changes that would make it possible for ‘freedoms’ torecognize one another. He shared the neo-Stoic belief <strong>of</strong> postmoderns that one should tryto maximize freedom even though there is no hope <strong>of</strong> complete emancipation. But hepersevered in the hope that such a ‘city <strong>of</strong> ends’ might be possible and urged people towork to realize its advent. Again, we encounter the integral role <strong>of</strong> the imagination ineffecting a meaning-direction (sens) to history.If Sartre is to be remembered as an important and influential philosopher <strong>of</strong> thetwentieth century, it will be as much for the consistency <strong>of</strong> his commitment to individualfreedom as for the insights <strong>of</strong> his phenomenological descriptions and the force <strong>of</strong> hiscategories (bad faith, authenticity, practico-inert, and the like). When he died, the presslikened him to Voltaire and noted that we had lost the conscience <strong>of</strong> our age. It is asmoralist, philosopher <strong>of</strong> freedom and philosopher <strong>of</strong> the imagination that he made hismost memorable contributions. Despite the Teutonic length <strong>of</strong> his sentences, especially inthe later works, he was a quintessential Gallic philosopher.SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHYReferences to the original French texts are given below only in cases where thetranslations in the text <strong>of</strong> the chapter are by the author and not from the publishedversions.Translations3.1 Anti-Semite and Jew, trans. G.J.Becker, New York: Schocken, 1948.3.2 Being and Nothingness, trans. H.E.Barnes, New York: Philosophical Library, 1956.3.3 Between Existentialism and Marxism, trans. J.Mathews, New York: William Morrow,1974.3.4 ‘Cartesian Freedom’, in [3.18], 180–97.3.5 The Communists and Peace with A Reply to Claude Lefort, trans. M.H. Fletcher andP.R.Berk respectively, New York: Braziller, 1968.3.6 The Condemned <strong>of</strong> Altona, trans. S. and G.Leeson, New York: Random House,Vintage Books, 1961.3.7 ‘Consciousness <strong>of</strong> Self and Knowledge <strong>of</strong> Self’, in N.Lawrence and D. O’Connor(eds), Readings in Existential Phenomenology, Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall, 1967.


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 823.8 Critique <strong>of</strong> Dialectical Reason, 2 vols: vol. 1 Theory <strong>of</strong> Practical Ensembles, trans.A.Sheridan-Smith, London: NLB, 1976; vol 2, The Intelligibility <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong>, trans.Q.Hoare, London: Verso, 1991. An emended edition <strong>of</strong> vol.1 was produced byA.Elkam-Sartre, Critique de la raison dialectique précédé de Questions de méthode,vol. 1, Théorie des ensembles pratiques, Paris: Gallimard, 1985.3.9 The Devil and the Good Lord, trans. K.Black, New York: Random House, VintageBooks, 1960.3.10 Ecrits de Jeunesse, ed. M.Contat and M.Rybalka, Paris: Gallimard, 1990.3.11 The Emotions: Outline <strong>of</strong> a Theory, trans. B.Frechtman, New York: PhilosophicalLibrary, 1948.3.12 Entretiens sur la politique, with D.Rousset and G.Rosenthal, Paris: Gallimard, 1949.3.13 ‘Existentialism is a Humanism’, in Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre,selected and intro. W.Kaufmann, Cleveland: World Publishing, Meridian Books, 1956.3.14 ‘Hope, Now…Sartre’s Last Interview’, Dissent, 27 (1980):397–422.3.15 L’Idiot de la famille, 3 vols, Paris: Gallimard, 1971–2, vol. 3 revised edn, 1988; vols1 and 2 trans. C.Cosman as The Family Idiot, 4 vols, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> ChicagoPress, 1981–91.3.16 ‘Intentionality: A Fundamental Idea <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s Phenomenology’, Journal <strong>of</strong> theBritish Society for Phenomenology, 1:2 (1970):4–5.3.17 ‘Introducing Les Temps modernes, in [3.41], 247–67.3.18 Life/Situations: Essays Written and Spoken, trans. P.Auster and L.Davis, New York:Pantheon, 1977.3.19 Literary and Philosophical Essays, trans. A.Michelson, New York: Crowell-Collier,Collier Books, 1962.3.20 ‘A Long, Bitter, Sweet Madness’, Encounter, 22 (1964):61–3.3.21 Marxisme et existentialisme: Controverse sur la dialectique, with R.Garaudy,J.Hyppolite, J.P.Vigier, and J.Orcel, Paris: Plon, 1962.3.22 ‘Materialism and Revolution’, in [3.18], pp. 198–256.3.23 ‘Merleau-Ponty’, in [3.36], vol. 4, pp. 189–287.3.24 Nausea, trans. L.Alexander, New York: New Directions, 1959.3.25 ‘No Exit’ and Three Other Plays, trans. L.Abel, New York: Random House, VintageBooks, 1955.3.26 Notebooks for an Ethics, trans. D.Pellauer, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press,1992.3.27 Oeuvres Romanesques, ed. M.Contat and M.Rybalka with G.Idt and G. H.Bauer,Paris: Gallimard, 1981.3.28 On a raison de se révolter, with P.Gavi and P.Victor, Paris: Gallimard, 1974.3.29 On Genocide, intro. A.Elkaïm-Sartre, Boston: Beacon, 1968.3.30 The Psychology <strong>of</strong> Imagination, trans. B.Frechtman, New York: Washington SquarePress, 1966; L’Imaginaire, Paris: Gallimard, 1940.3.31 ‘The Responsibility <strong>of</strong> the Writer’, in Reflections on Our Age, intro. D. Hardiman,New York: Columbia University Press, 1949.3.32 Saint Genet, Actor and Martyr, trans. B.Frechtman, New York: Braziller, 1963.3.33 Sartre on Theater, ed. M.Contat and M.Rybalka, trans. F.Jellinek, New York:Pantheon, 1976.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 833.34 Sartre, un film, produced by A.Astruc and M.Contat, Paris: Gallimard, 1977.3.35 Search for a Method, trans. H.E.Barnes, New York: Random House, Vintage Books,1968.3.36 Situations, 10 vols, Paris: Gallimard, 1947–6.3.37 The Transcendence <strong>of</strong> the Ego, trans. F.Williams and R.Kirkpatrick, New York:Noonday Press, 1957.3.38 Truth and Existence, trans. A.van den Hoven, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press,1992.3.39 ‘L’Universel singulier’, in [3.36], vol. 9, pp. 152–90; ‘Kierkegaard: The SingularUniversal’, in [3.2], pp. 141–69.3.40 War Crimes in Vietnam, with V.Dedier, Nottingham: The Bertrand Russell PeaceFoundation, 1971.3.41 The War Diaries, trans Q.Hoare, New York: Pantheon, 1984.3.42 What is Literature? and Other Essays, trans. B.Frechtman et al., intro. S. Ungar,Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1988.3.43 The Words, trans. B.Frechtman, New York: Braziller, 1964.3.44 Preface to The Wretched <strong>of</strong> the Earth by F.Fanon, trans. C.Farrington, New York:Grove Press, 1968.Bibliographies3.45 Contat, M. and Rybalka, M. The Writings <strong>of</strong> Jean-Paul Sartre, 2 vols, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1974. Updated in Magazine littéraire, no. 103–4(1975):9–49; and in Obliques, 18–19 (1979):331–47.3.46 Contat, M. and Rybalka, M. Sartre: Bibliographie 1980–1992, Paris: CNRS, 1993.3.47 Lapoint, F. and C. Jean-Paul Sartre and His Critics: An International Bibliography(1938–1980), 2nd edn, rev., Bowling Green: <strong>Philosophy</strong> Documentation Center, 1981.3.48 Wilcocks, R. Jean-Paul Sartre: A Bibliography <strong>of</strong> International Criticism,Edmonton: University <strong>of</strong> Alberta Press, 1975.Criticism3.49 Anderson, T.C. The Foundation and Structure <strong>of</strong> Sartrean Ethics, Lawrence:Regents Press <strong>of</strong> Kansas, 1979.3.50 Aron, R. <strong>History</strong> and the Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Violence, trans. B.Cooper, Oxford: BasilBlackwell, 1975.3.51 Aronson, R. Jean-Paul Sartre, New York: New Left Books, 1980.3.52 Aronson, R. Sartre’s Second Critique, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1987.3.53 Aronson, R. and van den Hoven, A. (eds), Sartre Alive, Detroit: Wayne StateUniversity Press, 1991.3.54 Barnes, H.E. Sartre, New York: Lippincott, 1973.3.55 Barnes, H.E. Sartre and Flaubert, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1981.3.56 Bell, L.A. Sartre’s Ethics <strong>of</strong> Authenticity, Tuscaloosa: University <strong>of</strong> Alabama Press,1989.3.57 Burnier, M.A. Choice <strong>of</strong> Action, trans. B.Murchland, New York: Random House,


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 841968.3.58 Busch, T.W. The Power <strong>of</strong> Consciousness and the Force <strong>of</strong> Circumstances inSartre’s <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990.3.59 Cannon, B. Sartre and Psychoanalysis, Lawrence: University Press <strong>of</strong> Kansas, 1991.3.60 Catalano, J.S. A Commentary on Jean-Paul Sartre’s ‘Being and Nothingness’,Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1980.3.61 Catalano, J.S. A Commentary on Jean-Paul Sartre’s ‘Critique <strong>of</strong> DialecticalReason,’ <strong>Volume</strong> 1, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1986.3.62 Caws, P. Sartre, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1979.3.63 Collins, D. Sartre as Biographer, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,1980.3.64 Danto, A.C. Jean-Paul Sartre, New York: Viking Press, 1975.3.65 de Beauvoir, S. Adieux: A Farewell to Sartre, trans. P.O’Brian, New York:Pantheon, 1984.3.66 de Beauvoir, S. Letters to Sartre, trans. and ed. Q.Hoare, New York: Arcade, 1991.3.67 Desan, W. The Marxism <strong>of</strong> Jean-Paul Sartre, Garden City: Doubleday AnchorBooks, 1965.3.68 Detmer, D. Freedom as Value, La Salle: Open Court, 1986.3.69 Fell, J. Emotion in the Thought <strong>of</strong> Sartre, New York: Columbia University Press,1965.3.70 Fell, J. Heidegger and Sartre: An Essay on Being and Place, New York: ColumbiaUniversity Press, 1979.3.71 Flynn, T.R. L’Imagination au Pouvoir: The Evolution <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s Political andSocial Thought’, Political Theory, 7:2 (1979):175–80.3.72 Flynn, T.R. ‘Mediated Reciprocity and the Genius <strong>of</strong> the Third’, in [3.83], 345–70.3.73 Flynn, T.R., Sartre and Marxist Existentialism: The Test Case <strong>of</strong> CollectiveResponsibility, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1984.3.74 Hollier, D. The Politics <strong>of</strong> Prose, trans. J.Mehlman, Minneapolis: University <strong>of</strong>Minnesota Press, 1986.3.75 Howells, C. (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Sartre, Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press, 1992.3.76 Jameson, F. Marxism and Form, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1971.3.77 Jeanson, F. Sartre and the Problem <strong>of</strong> Morality, trans. and intro. R.V.Stone,Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1981.3.78 McBride, W.L. Fundamental Change in Law and Society: Hart and Sartre onRevolution , The Hague: Mouton, 1970.3.79 McBride, W.L. Sartre’s Political Theory, Bloomington: Indiana University Press,1991.3.80 Merleau-Ponty, M. Adventures <strong>of</strong> the Dialectic, trans J.Bien, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1973.3.81 Murdoch, I. Sartre, Romantic Rationalist, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1953.3.82 Poster, Mark, Sartre’s Marxism, London: Pluto Press, 1979.3.83 Schilpp, P.A. (ed.) The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Jean-Paul Sartre, La Salle: Open Court, 1981.3.84 Silverman, H.J. Inscriptions: Between Phenomenology and Structuralism, London:<strong>Routledge</strong>, 1987.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 853.85 Silverman, H.J. and Elliston, F.A. (eds) Jean-Paul Sartre: ContemporaryApproaches to his <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 1980.3.86 Verstraaten, P. et al. Sur les écrits posthumes de Sartre, Bruxelles: Editions del’université de Bruxelles, 1987.Journal issues devoted to Sartre3.87 L’Arc, 30 (1966).3.88 Journal <strong>of</strong> the British Society for Phenomenology, 12 (1970).3.89 Magazine Littéraire, 55–6 (1971) and 103–4 (1975).3.90 Obliques, 18–19 (1979) and 24–5 (1981).3.91 Les Temps modernes, 2 vols, nos 531–3 (1990).


CHAPTER 4<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 3Merleau-PontyBernard Cullenà Henri GodinLIFE AND WORKSMaurice Merleau-Ponty was born on 14 March 1908 into a petty bourgeois Catholicfamily in Rochefort-sur-Mer on the west coast <strong>of</strong> France. When he died suddenly, at hisdesk, on 3 May 1961, he was widely regarded as France’s most brilliant and mostpr<strong>of</strong>ound philosopher.After his father, an artillery <strong>of</strong>ficer, died in 1913, the young Maurice grew up in Paris,in the company <strong>of</strong> his mother, a brother and a sister. He told Jean-Paul Sartre, in 1947,that he had never recovered from an incomparably happy childhood ([4.99], 230).Schooled, as were all philosophy students <strong>of</strong> his generation, in a distinctively Frenchphilosophical tradition dominated by Cartesianism, he entered the most eliteestablishment for the study <strong>of</strong> philosophy in France, the Ecole Normale Supérieure inParis, in 1926. It was there he first made the acquaintance <strong>of</strong> Sartre, in circumstances hewas to recount twenty years later in the course <strong>of</strong> an affectionate defence <strong>of</strong> that‘scandalous author’ against his detractors on the right and on the left: ‘the Ecole Normaleunleashed its fury against one <strong>of</strong> my schoolmates and myself for having hissed thetraditional songs, too vulgar to suit us. He slipped between us and our persecutors andcontrived a way for us to get out <strong>of</strong> our heroic and ridiculous situation withoutconcessions or damages’ ([4.22], 41). Simone de Beauvoir describes in herautobiographical novel Memoirs <strong>of</strong> a Dutiful Daughter, under the fictitious namePradelle, her friend and fellow student Merleau-Ponty, a rather serious but optimisticyoung searcher after truth who still attended mass.At the Ecole Normale, Merleau-Ponty’s main teacher was the idealist LéonBrunschvicg. In the academic year 1928–9, he prepared a dissertation on Plotinus, underthe supervision <strong>of</strong> Emile Bréhier. Between 1928 and 1930, he attended a series <strong>of</strong> lecturesgiven at the Sorbonne by Georges Gurvitch on contemporary German phenomenology,especially the writings <strong>of</strong> Husserl, Scheler and Heidegger; and in February 1929, heattended the lectures given at the Sorbonne by Husserl himself, which were revised andpublished two years later as the Cartesian Meditations. One phrase from those lecturesrecurs as a leitmotiv throughout Merleau-Ponty’s work: ‘It is “pure and, in a way, stillmute experience which it is a question <strong>of</strong> bringing to the pure expression <strong>of</strong> its ownsignificance”’ ([4.18], 219; cf. [4.24], 129 and [4.21], 188). The growing interest inGerman philosophy within Parisian philosophical circles was not confined to


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 87phenomenology. The year 1929 also saw the publication <strong>of</strong> Jean Wahl’s pioneering bookLe Malheur de la conscience dans la philosophie de Hegel (The Unhappy Consciousnessin the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Hegel).After graduating in second place in the 1930 examinations for the agrégation enphilosophie (the qualification required to prepare candidates for the baccalauréat) andcarrying out a year’s compulsory military service, Merleau-Ponty taught philosophy inlycées in Beauvais and Chartres. He taught himself German. (For his own account <strong>of</strong> hisresearches at this time into the nature <strong>of</strong> perception, together with a list <strong>of</strong> the works heread in 1933–4, see [4.60], 188–99.) In 1935, he was appointed as a tutor at the EcoleNormale, where he remained until mobilization in 1939. His first two published works, inthe Catholic journal La Vie intellectuelle, were sympathetic critical notices <strong>of</strong> the Frenchtranslation <strong>of</strong> Max Scheler’s book on ‘ressentiment’ (1935) and Etre et avoir by GabrielMarcel (1936). (For a summary <strong>of</strong> these articles, see [4.60], 13–24.)In the mid-1930s, he began to deepen his study <strong>of</strong> Marx, especially the writings <strong>of</strong> theyoung Marx. From 1935, he attended the influential lectures by Alexandre Kojève at theEcole Pratique des Hautes Etudes on Hegel’s Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Spirit—a reading <strong>of</strong>Hegel deeply influenced by the writings <strong>of</strong> the young Marx, subsequently publishedunder the title Introduction à la lecture de Hegel. But around this time (and until the end<strong>of</strong> 1937), he was still closely associated with the left-leaning Catholic journals Esprit andSept. The closure <strong>of</strong> Sept, on instructions from the Vatican, was probably the final blowto his religious faith. In the same way, the publication in 1939 <strong>of</strong> the reports <strong>of</strong> theMoscow trials <strong>of</strong> Bukharin and twenty others the previous year must have influenced hisdecision not to commit himself to membership <strong>of</strong> the French Communist Party.His minor doctoral thesis, The Structure <strong>of</strong> Behavior, was completed in 1938 (thoughnot published in book form until 1942). In early 1939, Merleau-Ponty became acquaintedwith a special issue <strong>of</strong> the Revue internationale de philosophie devoted to Husserl (whohad died in April 1938). The references therein, especially by Eugen Fink, to Husserl’slast book, The Crisis <strong>of</strong> the European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology,whetted his appetite to learn more about this work, only the first part <strong>of</strong> which had beenpublished. At the beginning <strong>of</strong> April, he was the very first visitor to the Husserl Archiveat Louvain in Belgium (whence the Husserl papers had been hurriedly moved), where heread the entirety <strong>of</strong> The Crisis, Ideas II, and a number <strong>of</strong> other unpublished pieces. (See[4.110].) These brief encounters undoubtedly had a decisive influence on the way inwhich Merleau-Ponty appropriated the later thought <strong>of</strong> Husserl and incorporated it intothe heart <strong>of</strong> his own philosophy.The outbreak <strong>of</strong> war forced Merleau-Ponty to interrupt his research. After a year as asecond lieutenant, he was appointed to a post in the Lycée Carnot, where he remaineduntil 1944, when he took over from Sartre as senior philosophy teacher at the LycéeCondorcet. In the meantime, in 1941, he had encountered Sartre again, when he joinedSocialism and Liberty, one <strong>of</strong> the many groups, as Sartre put it, ‘which claimed to beresisting the conquering enemy’ ([4.99], 231). As Sartre tells it in his remarkably movingextended obituary, the two men immediately recognized their common interests: ‘Thekey words were spoken: phenomenology, existentialism. We discovered our real concern.Too individualist to ever pool our research, we became reciprocal while remainingseparate…. Husserl became our bond and our division, at one and the same time’ ([4.99],


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 88231).Throughout this period, Merleau-Ponty continued to work on his principal doctoralthesis and philosophical masterpiece, the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception, which wasaccepted and published in 1945. Appointed lecturer in philosophy at the University <strong>of</strong>Lyons, he was made pr<strong>of</strong>essor in 1948. He combined these duties with editing the leftwing,anti-colonialist journal Les Temps modernes, which with Sartre and Simone deBeauvoir he had founded shortly after the Liberation. (See [4.99], 247–53.) He was thejournal’s (anonymous) political editor and editor-in-chief, writing most <strong>of</strong> the editorials(unsigned) and many lengthy articles (signed), several <strong>of</strong> them later gathered in his bookHumanism and Terror: an Essay on the Communist Problem, published in 1947. Otherswere gathered in the collection Sense and Non-Sense, published in 1948. According toSartre’s reminiscences, ‘the review belonged to him. He had defined its politicalorientation, and I had followed him’ ([4.99], 283). From 1949 to 1952, he occupied thechair <strong>of</strong> child psychology and pedagogy at the Sorbonne; and in 1952, at the unusuallyearly age <strong>of</strong> 44, he was appointed to the most prestigious position for an academicphilosopher in France, the chair <strong>of</strong> philosophy at the Collège de France. He gave hisinaugural lecture, entitled In Praise <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, at the Collège on 15 January 1953.Relations with Sartre had been cooling for some time: they disagreed deeply over therole <strong>of</strong> the Communist Party and the actions <strong>of</strong> the Soviet Union before and during theKorean War, and Merleau-Ponty resigned as editor-in-chief <strong>of</strong> Les Temps modernes in1952. Almost half <strong>of</strong> the book in which, in 1955, Merleau-Ponty renounced his adherenceto Marxism, Adventures <strong>of</strong> the Dialectic, was devoted to a merciless critique <strong>of</strong> ‘Sartreand ultrabolshevism’. A further collection <strong>of</strong> essays was published under the title Signs in1960. His last published work, Eye and Mind, had just appeared in the journal Art deFrance when Merleau-Ponty died suddenly on 3 May 1961, from a stroke, aged 53. Thedivisions between him and Sartre had been gradually healing. Merleau-Ponty had takenthe opportunity <strong>of</strong> his Introduction to Signs to record in print his affectionate admirationfor Sartre. He counters Sartre’s harsh self-criticism (in his Preface to Aden Arabie, bytheir mutual friend Paul Nizan) with the observation that ‘his accursed lucidity, inlighting up the labyrinths <strong>of</strong> rebellion and revolution, has recorded in spite <strong>of</strong> himself allwe need to absolve him’ ([4.23], 24). Sartre, for his part, records his surprise and delightwhen Merleau-Ponty unexpectedly turned up, shortly before his death, at a lecture Sartregave at the Ecole Normale. Among his many posthumous publications, the two mostimportant are The Prose <strong>of</strong> the World (notes dating from 1950–2) and the unfinishedmanuscript <strong>of</strong> the book on which he was working at the time <strong>of</strong> his death, The Visible andthe Invisible.THE PRIMACY OF PERCEPTIONIn a paper he wrote in 1952 to support his candidacy for the chair <strong>of</strong> philosophy at theCollège de France, Merleau-Ponty <strong>of</strong>fers a brief summary <strong>of</strong> the themes <strong>of</strong> his work thusfar, before proceeding to outline his plans for future research. He begins by referring to‘the perceived world which is simply there before us, beneath the level <strong>of</strong> the verifiedtrue and the false’. His first two works, he goes on, ‘sought to restore the world <strong>of</strong>


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 89perception’ ([4.21], 3). Beginning with the insight that the mind that perceives is anincarnated mind, his writings have tried to establish and illustrate the inadequacy <strong>of</strong> bothbehaviourism and idealism and to overcome this dualism by recourse to the fundamentalreality <strong>of</strong> the perceiving body-subject.He had already announced this programme <strong>of</strong> work in the opening sentence <strong>of</strong> hisIntroduction to The Structure <strong>of</strong> Behavior: ‘Our goal is to understand the relationsbetween consciousness and nature.’ Rejecting philosophical approaches that emphasizeeither the ‘pure exteriority’ <strong>of</strong> the objects <strong>of</strong> perception or the ‘pure interiority’ <strong>of</strong> theperceiving subject, Merleau-Ponty insists that the world as perceived is not a sum <strong>of</strong>objects <strong>of</strong> our perception; and our relation to the world is not that <strong>of</strong> a disembodiedthinker to an object <strong>of</strong> thought. What must not be forgotten is ‘the insertion <strong>of</strong> the mind incorporeality, the ambiguous relation which we entertain with our body and, correlatively,with perceived things’ ([4.21], 4).This means that the classical Aristotelian/Kantian distinction between form and matteris misleading. We cannot conceptualize the world to be perceived as disordered ‘matter’on which the perceiving mind (or consciousness), through the use <strong>of</strong> reason, imposes‘form’ or in which it deciphers ‘meaning’. ‘Matter is “pregnant” with its form, which isto say that in the final analysis every perception takes place within a certain horizon andultimately in the “world”’([4.21], 12). Perception, for Merleau-Ponty, is not a consciousactivity <strong>of</strong> the mind: perception is the mode <strong>of</strong> existence <strong>of</strong> the body-subject at apreconscious level, the dialogue between the body-subject and its world at a level that ispresupposed by consciousness. At the same time, ‘the perceived world is the alwayspresupposed foundation <strong>of</strong> all rationality, all value and all existence’ ([4.21], 13).In The Structure <strong>of</strong> Behavior, his first published book, Merleau-Ponty considers thistheme <strong>of</strong> the relations between perceiving persons and the world in which they live andperceive through an examination <strong>of</strong> certain physiological and psychological theories,principally behaviourism and Gestalt psychology. He exposes the inadequacy <strong>of</strong>behaviourism by showing that we cannot explain the facts <strong>of</strong> perceptual life byconceptualizing the relation between the perceiving organism and its milieu in terms <strong>of</strong>an automatic machine whose pre-established mechanisms are brought to life by reactionto external stimuli. ‘The true stimulus is not the one defined by physics and chemistry;the reaction is not this or that particular series <strong>of</strong> movements; and the connection betweenthe two is not the simple coincidence <strong>of</strong> two successive events’ ([4.20], 99).Behaviourism, in other words, is false as a model <strong>of</strong> perceptual behaviour.So is idealism. It is not a question <strong>of</strong> superimposing a pure, thinking consciousness ona brute, thinglike body. Within the realms <strong>of</strong> physics or mechanics, a body canlegitimately be seen as a thing among things. But the scientific point <strong>of</strong> view is itself anabstraction. ‘In the conditions <strong>of</strong> life…the organism is less sensitive to certain isolatedphysical and chemical agents than to the constellation which they form and to the wholesituation which they define’ ([4.21], 4). Furthermore, the behaving organism displays akind <strong>of</strong> ‘prospective activity’, as if it were oriented towards the meaning <strong>of</strong> certainelemen-tary situations, ‘as if it entertained familiar relations with them, as if there were“an a, priori <strong>of</strong> the organism”, privileged conducts and laws <strong>of</strong> internal equilibriumwhich predisposed the organism to certain relations with its milieu’ ([4.21], 4). Higherorderbehaviours bring out new forms or shapes <strong>of</strong> the milieu, in correlation with the


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 90meaning-conferring activity <strong>of</strong> the behaving subject. Perceptual behaviour emerges fromthese relations to a situation and to an environment which are not the working <strong>of</strong> a pure,knowing subject.In the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception, his major published work, Merleau-Ponty takesfor granted the emergence <strong>of</strong> perceptual behaviour and installs himself in it ‘in order topursue the analysis <strong>of</strong> this exceptional relation between the subject and its body and itsworld’. The book seeks to illustrate how the body is not ‘an object in the world, under thepurview <strong>of</strong> a separated spirit…. It is our point <strong>of</strong> view on the world, the place where thespirit takes on a certain physical and historical situation’ ([4.21], 4–5). Although spacedoes not permit any more than a cursory glance at this long and densely textured treatise,it is worth lingering on its Preface, one <strong>of</strong> the classic texts in the history <strong>of</strong>phenomenology.This is Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenological manifesto, one that is clearly indebted tothe unpublished works <strong>of</strong> Husserl which he had first inspected in 1939 in Louvain. This isthe Husserl who emphasized the Lebenswelt, the life-world in which all thinking,perceiving and acting takes place. According to Merleau-Ponty, phenomenology isa philosophy which puts essences back into existence, and does not expect toarrive at an understanding <strong>of</strong> man and the world from any starting point otherthan that <strong>of</strong> their ‘facticity’…. It is also a philosophy for which the world isalways ‘already there’ before reflection begins—as an unalienable presence; andall its efforts are concentrated upon re-achieving a direct and primitive contactwith the world, and endowing that contact with a philosophical status.([4.18], vii)The first feature <strong>of</strong> this phenomenology is that it is a rejection <strong>of</strong> science: ‘I am not theoutcome or the meeting-point <strong>of</strong> numerous causal agencies which determine my bodily orpsychological make-up.’ I cannot conceive <strong>of</strong> myself as ‘a mere object <strong>of</strong> biological,psychological or sociological investigation…. The whole universe <strong>of</strong> science is builtupon the world as directly experienced, and if we want to subject science itself torigorous scrutiny and arrive at a precise assessment <strong>of</strong> its meaning and scope, we mustbegin by reawakening the basic experience <strong>of</strong> the world <strong>of</strong> which science is the secondorderexpression’ ([4.18], viii). If the world as understood by phenomenology is ‘alwaysalready there’, it is not the ‘objective’ world <strong>of</strong> zoology, social anatomy or inductivepsychology, since ‘I am the absolute source, my existence does not stem from myantecedents, from my physical and social environment; instead it moves out towardsthem and sustains them, for I alone bring into being for myself…the tradition which Ielect to carry on’ ([4.18], ix). To return ‘to the things themselves’ (an earlier rallying cry<strong>of</strong> Husserlian phenomenology) is to return to ‘the world that precedes knowledge’, theworld <strong>of</strong> which science always speaks. In relation to this primordial world, science is anabstract and derivative sign-language, as is geography in relation to the countryside inwhich we already recognize a forest, a meadow or a river. The purpose <strong>of</strong>phenomenology is to analyse these perceptual foundations which precede knowledge andupon which our knowledge is built ([4.18], ix).Also in the Preface to the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception, Merleau-Ponty <strong>of</strong>fers a


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 91revised version <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s ‘phenomenological reduction’, a way <strong>of</strong> looking at the worldwhich enables us to see just how embedded in it we actually are. ‘It is because we arethrough and through compounded <strong>of</strong> relationships with the world that for us the only wayto become aware <strong>of</strong> the fact is to suspend the resultant activity, to refuse it ourcomplicity.’ It is because the certainties <strong>of</strong> common sense and the ‘natural attitude’ tothings are the presupposed basis <strong>of</strong> any thought that they are taken for granted and gounnoticed. Only by applying the phenomenological reduction, by suspending for the timebeing our recognition <strong>of</strong> them, can we bring them into view. Reflection ‘steps back [fromthe world] to watch the forms <strong>of</strong> transcendence fly up like sparks from a fire; it slackensthe intentional threads which attach us to the world and thus brings them to our notice; italone is consciousness <strong>of</strong> the world because it reveals that world as strange andparadoxical’. Not only is the philosopher a perpetual beginner, but ‘philosophy consistswholly in the description <strong>of</strong> its own beginning’. It is in this sense that phenomenology‘belongs to existential philosophy’, the philosophy that interrogates Heidegger’s ‘beingin-the-world’([4.18], xiii).In the course <strong>of</strong> this personal restatement <strong>of</strong> phenomenological principles, Merleau-Ponty considers the notion <strong>of</strong> intentionality, at the same time sketching out his ownunderstanding <strong>of</strong> history. Unlike the Kantian relation to a possible object,phenomenological intentionality assumes that the unified world that is already there is theworld that is ‘lived’ by me. What Husserl calls ‘operative intentionality’ is the way inwhich consciousness knows itself to be a project <strong>of</strong> the world, ‘meant for a world whichit neither embraces nor possesses, but towards which it is perpetually directed’. Operativeintentionality ‘produces the natural and antepredicative unity <strong>of</strong> the world and <strong>of</strong> our life,being apparent in our desires, our evaluations, and in the landscape we see, more clearlythan in objective knowledge, and furnishing the text which our knowledge tries totranslate into precise language’ ([4.18], xviii).These are the dimensions <strong>of</strong> history, the events that are never without meaning. Inseeking to understand a doctrine, it must be examined from the point <strong>of</strong> view <strong>of</strong> ideology,politics, religion, economics and psychology—all at the same time! ‘All these views aretrue provided that they are not isolated, that we delve deeply into history and reach theunique core <strong>of</strong> existential meaning which emerges in each perspective. It is true, as Marxsays, that history does not walk on its head, but it is also true that it does not think withits feet.’ Neither head nor feet are paramount, <strong>of</strong> course: all aspects <strong>of</strong> a life are capturedin ‘the body’. In an obvious reference to Sartre’s famous claim that ‘we are condemned t<strong>of</strong>reedom’, Merleau-Ponty concludes this discussion <strong>of</strong> intentionality and history with thethought that ‘because we are in the world, we are condemned to meaning, and we cannotdo or say anything without its acquiring a name in history’ ([4.18], xix).The above discussion leads naturally into a discussion <strong>of</strong> the individual’s relations withother people. To the extent that phenomenology unites extreme subjectivism and extremeobjectivism in its notion <strong>of</strong> rationality, it discloses the way in which ‘perspectives blend,perceptions confirm each other, a meaning emerges’. Phenomenological rationality existsneither in an ideal world proper to absolute spirit nor in the real world <strong>of</strong> scientificinvestigation and knowledge. The phenomenological world is the sense or meaning (sens)revealed where the paths <strong>of</strong> the individual’s various experiences intersect; and also‘where my own and other people’s intersect and engage each other like gears’. With this


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 92image <strong>of</strong> the meshing <strong>of</strong> gears (l’engrenage), Merleau-Ponty seeks to capture bothsubjectivity and intersubjectivity, ‘which find their unity when I either take up my pastexperiences in those <strong>of</strong> the present, or other people’s in my own’ ([4.18], xx).THE PHENOMENOLOGY OF SPEECH, LANGUAGE AND ARTThe Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception largely consists <strong>of</strong> a series <strong>of</strong> studies on the role <strong>of</strong> thebody and perception in various aspects <strong>of</strong> social and cultural experience: speech andlanguage, expression, sexuality, art and literature, time, freedom and history. Spacelimitations preclude here more than a few cursory glances in this direction. When Iperceive in my world cultural artefacts as varied as roads and churches, or implementssuch as a bell, a spoon or a pipe, ‘I feel the close presence <strong>of</strong> others beneath a veil <strong>of</strong>anonymity’. The challenge is: how can the word ‘I’ be put into the plural? When it comesto ‘other selves’, contact is established through my perception <strong>of</strong> other bodies. ‘It isprecisely my body which perceives the body <strong>of</strong> another, and discovers in that other bodya miraculous prolongation <strong>of</strong> my own intentions, a familiar way <strong>of</strong> dealing with theworld. Henceforth, as the parts <strong>of</strong> my body together comprise a system, so my body andthe other’s are one whole, two sides <strong>of</strong> one and the same phenomenon’ ([4.18], 354).But bodies only establish initial (mostly visual) contacts. The most important culturalphenomenon in the perception <strong>of</strong> other people as people (as distinct from simply livingbeings) is language (le langage). In the experience <strong>of</strong> dialogue, a common ground isconstituted between the other person and myself. ‘My thought and the thought <strong>of</strong> theother are interwoven into a single fabric.’ Neither my interlocuter nor I invented thelanguage that enables us to communicate: ‘our words are inserted into a shared operation<strong>of</strong> which neither <strong>of</strong> us is the creator…. Our perspectives merge into each other, and wecoexist through a common world’ ([4.18], 354). Coexistence does not remove the fact <strong>of</strong>solitude, but solitude and communication are ‘two “moments” <strong>of</strong> one phenomenon, sincein fact other people do exist for me’ ([4.18], 359). Indeed, I would not even be in aposition to speak <strong>of</strong> solitude, much less declare others inaccessible to me, if I did nothave the experience <strong>of</strong> other people.Language, then, is discovered by me in my phenomenal field and used by me forexpression and communication with others in that shared antepredicative world. One <strong>of</strong>the uses to which language is put, <strong>of</strong> course, is literature; and literature, for Merleau-Ponty, is firmly embedded in the lived world <strong>of</strong> politics and economics. In a long note onthe existential interpretation <strong>of</strong> historical materialism, tagged on to the end <strong>of</strong> the chapter<strong>of</strong> the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception devoted to ‘the body in its sexual being’ ([4.18],171–3), Merleau-Ponty writes that ‘the existential conception <strong>of</strong> history’ rejects the ideathat our actions are determined by socio-economic factors in our situation. It does not,however, deny that our actions are motivated by such factors. ‘If existence is thepermanent act by which man takes up, for his own purposes, and makes his own a certainde facto situation, none <strong>of</strong> his thoughts will be able to be quite detached from thehistorical context in which he lives, and particularly from his economic situation.’This applies to the philosopher, to the revolutionary and to the artist. It would beridiculous, writes Merleau-Ponty, to see Paul Valéry’s poetry as simply the product <strong>of</strong> his


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 93economic circumstances. But it would not be absurd ‘to seek, in the social and economicdrama, in the world <strong>of</strong> our Mitsein, the motive <strong>of</strong> this coming to awareness’. The act <strong>of</strong>the artist (or the philosopher) is a free act, but it is not motiveless. The freedom <strong>of</strong> theartist is not exercised in a vacuum, completely divorced from the world <strong>of</strong> sharedexperience; ‘it consists in appropriating a de facto situation by endowing it with afigurative meaning beyond its real one’.Every aspect <strong>of</strong> our life ‘breathes a sexual atmosphere’ (as Freud showed), without ourever being able to identify a single content <strong>of</strong> consciousness that is either ‘purely sexual’or without any sexual content whatsoever. In the same way, all our lives are suffusedwith ‘the social and economic drama’ which provides each one <strong>of</strong> us (the artists as wellas everyone else) with an inescapable element <strong>of</strong> the stuff <strong>of</strong> our existence, which we setabout deciphering and reappropriating in our own distinctive way.Thus does Valéry transmute into pure poetry a disquiet and solitude <strong>of</strong> whichothers would have made nothing. Thought is the life <strong>of</strong> human relationships as itunderstands and interprets itself. In this voluntary act <strong>of</strong> carrying forward, thispassing from objective to subjective, it is impossible to say just where historicalforces end and ours begin, and strictly speaking the question is meaningless,since there is history only for a subject who lives through it, and there is asubject only in so far as he is historically situated.([4.18], 172–3)We have barely touched on Merleau-Ponty’s impressive, but scattered, phenomenology<strong>of</strong> expression. Most <strong>of</strong> his more important studies on language, literature, culture andart—which he defined as ‘the progressive awareness <strong>of</strong> our multiple relations with otherpeople and the world’ ([4.22], 152)—are gathered in the collections Sense and Non-Senseand (especially) Signs, which he prefaced with an Introduction (1960) that helps to situatethese studies within his evolving philosophical project. Eye and Mind ([4.21], 159–90) ishis important late essay on painting. The unfinished manuscript abandoned in 1952 andpublished posthumously as The Prose <strong>of</strong> the World was conceived, in inspiration at least,as a response to Sartre’s What is Literature? It could be said that the phenomenon <strong>of</strong>language became, in one way or another, the main focus for all <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’ssubsequent work. In this respect, he is at one with the other great philosophers <strong>of</strong> thetwentieth century, in both the continental and analytic traditions—one thinks <strong>of</strong> figuressuch as Heidegger and Wittgenstein, Gadamer, Ricoeur, Austin and Searle. In Merleau-Ponty’s case, language is the entry point for a more pr<strong>of</strong>ound understanding <strong>of</strong> humaninterrelations—which, he writes in 1952, ‘will be the major topic <strong>of</strong> my laterstudies’ ([4.21], 9). The meaning <strong>of</strong> language consists in ‘the common intention’ <strong>of</strong> itsconstituent elements; ‘and the spoken phrase is understood only if the hearer, followingthe “verbal chain”, goes beyond each <strong>of</strong> its links in the direction that they all designatetogether’ ([4.21], 8). In that direction (as we shall see below) lies Being. (For an excellentsummary <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’s views on these topics, see [4.74], 78–86. For a moreextended discussion <strong>of</strong> his theory <strong>of</strong> existential expression and communication, see[4.82].)


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 94EXISTENTIAL FREEDOM, HISTORY AND POLITICSIn the immediate aftermath <strong>of</strong> the Liberation, taking stock <strong>of</strong> what had been learned in theexperience <strong>of</strong> the war and the occupation, Merleau-Ponty declared that in the course <strong>of</strong>the war ‘we have learned history, and we claim that it must not be forgotten’ ([4.22],150). Not surprisingly, his conception <strong>of</strong> history, and the role <strong>of</strong> the individual in history,was forged in the crucible <strong>of</strong> his wartime experience. The final chapter <strong>of</strong> thePhenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception (written at this time) is devoted to a dialectical encounterwith Sartre’s notorious theory <strong>of</strong> ‘absolute freedom’ (with its obvious implications forour understanding <strong>of</strong> history and historical praxis), as presented to the world only a yearor two earlier in Being and Nothingness.The first three pages <strong>of</strong> this final chapter outline, roughly, the Sartrean position.However, Merleau-Ponty points out that the problem with Sartre’s radical oppositionbetween the determinism <strong>of</strong> the brute in-itself (‘scientism’s conception <strong>of</strong> causality’) andthe absolute freedom <strong>of</strong> the conscious for-itself (‘divorced from the outside’) is that itwould appear to rule out the possibility <strong>of</strong> freedom altogether. If it is true that ourfreedom is the same in everything we do, if the slave who continues to live in fear is asfree as the one who breaks his or her chains (or anyone else, indeed), then there can be n<strong>of</strong>ree action, since freedom obviously, as in this example, has nothing to do with actions.Furthermore, ‘free action, in order to be discernible, has to stand out against abackground <strong>of</strong> life from which it is entirely, or almost entirely, absent’ ([4.18], 437). Iffreedom is everywhere (since it is simply the mark <strong>of</strong> human being, or being for-itself),then, says Merleau-Ponty, it is nowhere. The very idea <strong>of</strong> action, the very idea <strong>of</strong> choice,disappears, ‘for to choose is to choose something in which freedom sees, at least for amoment, a symbol <strong>of</strong> itself. Freedom implies a struggle, freedom must be striven for;freedom must make a decision. If freedom is already achieved without free actions, as itwould be in a Sartrean world, then free actions become redundant (ibid.). What isrequired instead is a theory <strong>of</strong> freedom that ‘allows it something without giving iteverything’ ([4.22], 77).Merleau-Ponty works out what this ‘something’ is by resuming his analysis <strong>of</strong>Sinngebung: that is, interpretation, or, literally, the bestowal <strong>of</strong> significance on situations.If we accept that there is ‘no freedom without a field’, and if we reject as nonphenomenologicalthe Kantian idea (which Sartre <strong>of</strong>ten seems to adopt) <strong>of</strong> aconsciousness which ‘finds in things only what it has put into them’, then ourunderstanding <strong>of</strong> Sinngebung must involve the intermeshing <strong>of</strong> both the conditions <strong>of</strong>possibility <strong>of</strong> perception (the body-subject) and the conditions <strong>of</strong> reality <strong>of</strong> perception(the world <strong>of</strong> situations in which I find myself).To say that a particular rock is unclimbable makes sense only if I entertain the project<strong>of</strong> climbing it; the attribute ‘unclimbable’ (like all attributes) can be conferred upon therock only by ‘a human presence’. ‘It is therefore freedom which brings into being theobstacle to freedom, so that the latter can be set over against it as its bounds’ ([4.18],439). But given that I have the project to get from A to B, not every rock will appear tome as unclimbable. My freedom does not contrive it that this way there is an obstacle to


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 95my progress and that way there is a way through, but it does arrange it for there to beobstacles and ways through in general. Without my ‘human presence’ there would beneither obstacles nor ways through. But it is crucially important to distinguish: myfreedom ‘does not draw the particular outline <strong>of</strong> the world, but merely lays down itsgeneral structures’ (ibid.).The general structures <strong>of</strong> the world, which dictate that some mountains are climbablewhile others are not, are to be found not out there, in an in-itself, but within me.Irrespective <strong>of</strong> my ‘express intentions’ (for example, my plan to climb those mountainsnext week), my ‘general intentions’ evaluate the potentialities <strong>of</strong> my environment: forexample, the fact that they exceed my body’s power to take them in its stride. This bringsus back to Merleau-Ponty’s fundamental insight involving the body-subject’s ‘insertionin the world’: underlying myself as a thinking and deciding subject there is ‘as it were anatural self which does not budge from its terrestrial situation’ ([4.18], 440). All the‘free’ choices in the world will not obviate this fundamental relationship: ‘in so far as Ihave hands, feet, a body, I sustain around me intentions which are not dependent uponmy decisions and which affect my surroundings in a way which I do not choose’ (ibid.).To use Merleau-Ponty’s terminology (borrowed from the Gestalt psychologists), these‘general intentions’ are the ever-present ‘ground’ against which my decisions are‘figures’. This ground is ‘general’ in the sense that it constitutes a system in which allpossible objects are simultaneously included; and also in the sense that it is not simplymine but something I share with ‘all psycho-physical subjects organized as I am’. For weare all indeed ‘intermingled with things’. While it is true that none <strong>of</strong> those thingsconstitutes an obstacle unless we ordain it so,the self which qualifies them as such is not some acosmic subject…. There is anautochthonous significance <strong>of</strong> the world which is constituted in the dealingswhich our incarnate existence has with it, and which provides the ground <strong>of</strong>every deliberate Sinngebung.([4.18], 441)In the same way as the mountain that constitutes an obstacle is ‘my obstacle’, the painthat makes me ‘say what I ought to have kept to myself is ‘my pain’, and the fatigue thatmakes me break my journey is ‘my fatigue’. According to Sartre, I am always free totransform my being in the world, including my chosen tolerance <strong>of</strong> pain or fatigue. ButMerleau-Ponty draws attention to the fact that this transforming for-itself does notoperate as if I had no yesterdays. Rejecting Sartre’s famous contention that ‘existenceprecedes essence’, he insists that a theory <strong>of</strong> freedom must recognize ‘a sort <strong>of</strong>sedimentation <strong>of</strong> our life: an attitude towards the world, when it has received frequentconfirmation, acquires a favoured status for us’ (ibid.). While it’s all very well to claimthat the self is always free to change the habits <strong>of</strong> a lifetime, Merleau-Ponty insists that‘having built our life upon an inferiority complex which has been operative for twentyyears, it is not probable that we shall change’ ([4.18], 442).To the objection <strong>of</strong> the rationalist (such as Sartre) that my freedom to change is eithertotal or non-existent, that just as there are no degrees <strong>of</strong> possibility there are no degrees <strong>of</strong>freedom, Merleau-Ponty retorts that ‘generality and probability are not fictions, but


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 96phenomena; we must therefore find a phenomenological basis for statisticalthought’ (ibid.). Statistical thought simply addresses the fact that I have a past which,‘though not a fate’ (since my past does not totally determine my future), ‘has at least aspecific weight and is not a set <strong>of</strong> events over there, at a distance from me, but theatmosphere <strong>of</strong> my present’. Drawing once again on the image <strong>of</strong> l’engrenage, Merleau-Ponty concludes that ‘our freedom does not destroy our situation, but gears itself toit’ (ibid.). (Cf. Merleau-Ponty’s application <strong>of</strong> the Freudian concepts <strong>of</strong> repression andfixation to ‘personal time’ and ‘the ambiguity <strong>of</strong> being in the world’, [4.18], 83–5. For adiscussion, see [4.49].)The past, therefore, does not determine my future, but neither is my history irrelevant.<strong>History</strong>—my own personal history and the history <strong>of</strong> the wider community within whichI live—provides the context within which I make my choices. And Merleau-Pontyillustrates this conception <strong>of</strong> conditioned freedom by reference to the question <strong>of</strong> thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> class consciousness and the decision to be a revolutionary. He againseeks to discover a third way between the two traditional abstractions. Objective(Marxist) thought derives class consciousness from the objective material conditions; andidealist reflection reduces the condition <strong>of</strong> being a proletarian to the individual’sawareness <strong>of</strong> it. But ‘in each case we are in the realm <strong>of</strong> abstraction, because we remaintorn between the in itself and the for itself. What is necessary is a return to thephenomena, ‘to the things themselves’: instead <strong>of</strong> abstractions, we must apply ‘agenuinely existential method’.A person’s objective position in the production process will never in itself issue inclass consciousness; rather, it is the decision <strong>of</strong> individuals to become revolutionaries thatprompts them to see themselves as proletarians. ‘What makes me a proletarian is not theeconomic system or society considered as systems <strong>of</strong> impersonal forces, but theseinstitutions as I carry them within me and experience them; nor is it an intellectualoperation devoid <strong>of</strong> motive, but my way <strong>of</strong> being in the world within this institutionalframework’ ([4.18], 443). The transition from individual self-description to classsolidarity with others takes place through a growing awareness that ‘all share a commonlot’ ([4.18], 444). ‘Social space begins to acquire a magnetic field, and a region <strong>of</strong> theexploited is seen to appear’ ([4.18], 445). Neither the status quo nor the freerevolutionary action that might overturn it is an abstraction; ‘they are lived through inambiguity’ (ibid.). To be a member <strong>of</strong> a social class is not only to be intellectually aware<strong>of</strong> the fact; it is to identify oneself with a group ‘through an implicit or existentialistproject which merges into our way <strong>of</strong> patterning the world and coexisting with otherpeople’ ([4.18], 447).This is not to say that one cannot at any moment amend one’s existential project. Whatone cannot do is pretend to be a nothingness (néant) and choose oneself out <strong>of</strong> nothing.‘My actual freedom is not on the hither side <strong>of</strong> my being, but before me, in things.’ It ismisleading to say (as Sartre does) that I continually choose myself; and that to choose notto choose is still to choose. ‘Not to refuse is not the same thing as to choose’ ([4.18],452). In the lived world, there is never determinism and never absolute choice; I amnever either a ‘being’ or a ‘nothingness’. We are involved in the world and with others‘in an inextricable tangle’ ([4.18], 454). This significant life, this certain significance <strong>of</strong>nature and history that makes me what I am, far from cutting me <strong>of</strong>f from the rest <strong>of</strong> the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 97world, makes it possible for me to remain in communication with the rest <strong>of</strong> the world.<strong>Philosophy</strong>, which teaches us to see things in the world and in history in all their clarityand in all their ambiguity, best performs its role by ceasing to be (intellectualizing)philosophy. In the words <strong>of</strong> Saint-Exupéry with which Merleau-Ponty closes thePhenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception: ‘Man is but a network <strong>of</strong> relationships, and these alonematter to him’ ([4.18], 456).(Merleau-Ponty published a wide range <strong>of</strong> articles on the role <strong>of</strong> the individual inhistory and politics, varieties <strong>of</strong> Marxism, the role <strong>of</strong> the Communist Party, and theSoviet Union. Most <strong>of</strong> these were collected in Sense and Non-Sense, Signs, Humanismand Terror (a polemical riposte to Arthur Koestler’s Darkness at Noon), and Adventures<strong>of</strong> the Dialectic. For the best extended discussions <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’s philosophicalpolitics, see 4.119 and 4.130.)THE HYPERDIALECTIC OF THE FLESHIn the prospectus <strong>of</strong> his future work written in 1952, Merleau-Ponty writes: ‘my first twoworks sought to restore the world <strong>of</strong> perception.’ As we have seen, all aspects <strong>of</strong> our lifeare underpinned by antepredicative perception, the specifically human mode <strong>of</strong> inherencein the world in which we all live. Looking to the future, he goes on: ‘my works inpreparation aim to show how communication with others, and thought, take up and gobeyond the realm <strong>of</strong> perception which initiated us to the truth’ ([4.21], 3). He wishes togo beyond the ‘bad ambiguity’ <strong>of</strong> his works already published and articulate a ‘goodambiguity’, ‘a spontaneity which gathers together the plurality <strong>of</strong> monads, the past andthe present, nature and culture into a single whole. To establish this wonder would bemetaphysics itself ([4.21], 11). He himself saw the enormous philosophical achievementrepresented by the works we have been examining thus far in this chapter as furnishingonly the groundwork for the ontology that was to be the work <strong>of</strong> his mature years. Hiselaboration <strong>of</strong> this ontology <strong>of</strong> ‘the flesh’ is contained in a number <strong>of</strong> works publishedposthumously, but especially in the incomplete manuscript entitled The Visible and theInvisible.It is impossible to exaggerate just how ambitious Merleau-Ponty’s mature projectreally is. He proposed to go beyond (or below, for he frequently returns to the metaphor<strong>of</strong> archaeology) the traditional philosophical categories <strong>of</strong> realism and idealism, subjectand object, consciousness and world, in-itself and for-itself, being and nothingness, theknower and the known, and discover in that scarcely penetrable region what he called‘the flesh <strong>of</strong> the world’, the primordial stuff in which we all inhere and which is theultimate ground <strong>of</strong> all human experience. It is also impossible to give any more than aflavour <strong>of</strong> this dense and enigmatic text, available to us in the form <strong>of</strong> 160 pages <strong>of</strong> anapparently finished methodological introduction, followed by a remarkable chapterentitled ‘The intertwining—the chiasm’ (L’entrelacs—le chiasme) and about 110 pages<strong>of</strong> working notes. I shall do no more here than draw attention to a few key termsintroduced by Merleau-Ponty in these pages: the notion <strong>of</strong> ‘hyperdialectic’, and therelated concepts <strong>of</strong> ‘the flesh’ and ‘the chiasm’.When Merleau-Ponty addresses the theory <strong>of</strong> dialectic in The Visible and the Invisible,


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 98he has in his sights the dialectic <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s Being and Nothingness. Sartre’s dialectic is a‘bad dialectic’. It is a fixed opposition, presented in terms <strong>of</strong> theses, where reflectionimposes an external law and framework upon the content <strong>of</strong> experience.It is with this intuition <strong>of</strong> Being as absolute plenitude and absolute positivity,and with a view <strong>of</strong> nothingness purified <strong>of</strong> all the being we mix into it, thatSartre expects to account for our primordial access to the things…. From themoment that I conceive <strong>of</strong> myself as negativity and the world as positivity, thereis no longer any interaction…. We are and remain strictly opposed.([4.24], 52)The only ‘good dialectic’, on the other hand, is what he calls ‘the hyperdialectic’. A gooddialectic is a ‘dialectic without synthesis’ which must be constantly aware that everythesis is but an idealization, an abstraction from the lived world <strong>of</strong> experience. ‘What wecall hyperdialectic is a thought that…is capable <strong>of</strong> reaching truth because it envisageswithout restriction the plurality <strong>of</strong> the relationships and what has been calledambiguity’ ([4.24], 94). What Merleau-Ponty is working towards is ‘a dialecticaldefinition <strong>of</strong> being that can be neither the being for itself nor the being in itself…thatmust rediscover the being that lies before the cleavage operated by reflection, about it, onits horizon, not outside <strong>of</strong> us and not in us, but there where the two movements cross,there where “there is” something’ ([4.24], 95).Where the two movements cross, <strong>of</strong> course, is the body. The body is simultaneouslypart <strong>of</strong> the world <strong>of</strong> things and the thing that sees and feels things. The body (which isitself visible) can see things not because they are objects <strong>of</strong> consciousness, at a distancefrom it, but precisely because those things are the environment in which the seeing bodyexists. These two aspects <strong>of</strong> the body (seen and seer, visible and invisible) are inseparablyintertwined: ‘the experience <strong>of</strong> my body and the experience <strong>of</strong> the other are themselvesthe two sides <strong>of</strong> one same being’ ([4.24], 225). This intertwining at the most fundamentaland primordial level, this anonymous generality <strong>of</strong> the visible and myself, is whatMerleau-Ponty calls ‘the flesh’ (la chair).‘There is no name in traditional philosophy to designate it’ ([4.24], 139). The flesh isnot matter and it is not mind. It is not substance. In a manner that recalls Heidegger,Merleau-Ponty goes back to the pre-Socratic thinkers to try to express what he means:to designate it, we should need the old term ‘element’, in the sense it was usedto speak <strong>of</strong> water, air, earth, and fire, that is, in the sense <strong>of</strong> a general thing,midway between the spatio-temporal individual and the idea, a sort <strong>of</strong> incarnateprinciple that brings a style <strong>of</strong> being wherever there is a fragment <strong>of</strong> being. Theflesh is in this sense an ‘element’ <strong>of</strong> Being.(ibid.)To underline the oneness <strong>of</strong> this primordial element <strong>of</strong> Being, Merleau-Ponty names it the‘flesh <strong>of</strong> the world’: ‘My body is made <strong>of</strong> the same flesh as the world,…this flesh <strong>of</strong> mybody is shared by the world, the world reflects it, encroaches upon it and it encroachesupon the world,…they are in a relation <strong>of</strong> transgression or <strong>of</strong> overlapping’ ([4.24], 248).


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 99Merleau-Ponty’s overriding concern, as it has been throughout his philosophical career, isto <strong>of</strong>fer a phenomenological description <strong>of</strong> reality that gets beneath the spuriousdistinction between extension and thought, between the visible and the invisible. He isnot suggesting an identity <strong>of</strong> thought and extension; the key image is that ‘they are theobverse and the reverse <strong>of</strong> one another’ ([4.24], 152). But we are all part <strong>of</strong> the same‘flesh <strong>of</strong> the world’. We situate ourselves in ourselves and in the things, in ourselves andin the other, ‘at the point where, by a sort <strong>of</strong> chiasm, we become the others and webecome world’ ([4.24], 160). The word ‘chiasm’ (le chiasme) recalls the intersection <strong>of</strong>lines in the manner <strong>of</strong> the Greek letter chi (x), emphasizing the inextricable interlocking<strong>of</strong> the various aspects <strong>of</strong> Being, <strong>of</strong> the perceived and the perceiver, <strong>of</strong> the visible and theinvisible.One final theme must be mentioned in this brief examination <strong>of</strong> The Visible and theInvisible and that is the important strategic role <strong>of</strong> language. ‘Language is a life, is ourlife and the life <strong>of</strong> the things’ ([4.24], 125). Parallel to the reverse/obverse relation <strong>of</strong> thevisible and the invisible, language is always considered by Merleau-Ponty against thebackground <strong>of</strong> silence: ‘language lives only from silence; everything we cast to the othershas germinated in this great mute land which we never leave’ ([4.24], 126). Because theyhave experienced within themselves ‘the birth <strong>of</strong> speech [la parole] as bubbling up at thebottom <strong>of</strong> [their] mute experience’, no one knows better than philosophers ‘that what islived is lived-spoken (vécu-parlé)’.Language is ‘the most valuable witness to Being’ (ibid.). Furthermore, language is awitness to Being that does not disrupt the unity <strong>of</strong> Being, since ‘the vision itself, thethought itself, are, as has been said [by Lacan], “structured as a language”, arearticulation before the letter, apparition <strong>of</strong> something where there was nothing orsomething else’ (ibid.). The speaking word (la parole parlante), which brings to thesurface all the deep-rooted relations <strong>of</strong> the lived experience wherein it takes form, thelanguage <strong>of</strong> life and <strong>of</strong> action, and also the language <strong>of</strong> literature and <strong>of</strong> poetry, is thevery theme <strong>of</strong> philosophy. Of course, philosophy itself is ‘that language that can beknown only from within, through its exercise, is open upon the things, called forth by thevoices <strong>of</strong> silence, and continues an effort <strong>of</strong> articulation which is the Being <strong>of</strong> everybeing’ (ibid.).CONCLUDING REMARKSAs we come to the close <strong>of</strong> this brief survey <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’s œuvre, we must takestock. In my view, Merleau-Ponty is one <strong>of</strong> the great figures <strong>of</strong> twentieth-centuryphilosophy, a pivotal figure in mid-century: drawing deeply on and creativelyreappropriating earlier masters such as Saussure, Husserl and Heidegger, while hisformidable presence is evident (albeit indirectly) in the structuralist, poststructuralist anddeconstructionist thinkers in the generation that came immediately behind him.Merleau-Ponty himself always loudly proclaimed his allegiance to Husserl, especiallythe Husserl <strong>of</strong> the Crisis and the theme <strong>of</strong> the life-world. Now, Merleau-Ponty’sphenomenology was undoubtedly originally inspired by Husserl. And Husserl (asuniquely and creatively interpreted by Merleau-Ponty) remained a living presence


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 100throughout his work. But it is arguable that there is more Heidegger than Husserl inMerleau-Ponty’s philosophy. First, there is the centrality <strong>of</strong> time: for Merleau-Ponty asfor Heidegger, human existence is essentially temporal existence. Second, there is theprivileging <strong>of</strong> language in both cases, as was illustrated in the last section. In the famoussaying in The Letter on Humanism, Heidegger proclaims that ‘language is the house <strong>of</strong>Being’ (‘die Sprache ist das Haus des Seins’). In The Visible and the Invisible, Merleau-Ponty writes that language is ‘the most valuable witness to Being’ ([4.24], 126). Third,there is Merleau-Ponty’s intention—like Heidegger—to <strong>of</strong>fer a comprehensivedescription <strong>of</strong> Being. It has to be said, however, that while Heidegger’s Being (Sein) isontologically distinct from beings (Seiendes), Merleau-Ponty’s Being is inclusive <strong>of</strong> bothSein and Seiendes.Some <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’s recurring themes also prefigure subsequent dominant trendsin continental philosophy. It is not incidental that his first book was entitled The Structure<strong>of</strong> Behavior. He carried out a detailed study <strong>of</strong> both the Gestalt psychologists andSaussure’s structural linguistics and lectured on Saussure in 1949. To the last book hepublished he gave the title Signs. Merleau-Ponty was clearly at the centre <strong>of</strong> the emergingphilosophical schools known as structuralism and semiotics. His continual and deepeningpolemic against Sartre’s privileging <strong>of</strong> the choosing subject reflected the growingdecentring <strong>of</strong> the subject in his own work, a theme which in turn becomes central to thelater deconstructionist approach to philosophy. (For an interesting discussion <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’s move ‘from philosophy to non-philosophy’, see [4.103], 123–51).So what was Merleau-Ponty’s main contribution to the continental philosophy <strong>of</strong> thiscentury? Perhaps more than any other philosopher, Merleau-Ponty was determined toovercome the dualism between mind and matter, between subject and object, which haddominated European philosophy since Descartes. The contemporary representative parexcellence <strong>of</strong> the Cartesian tradition was, <strong>of</strong> course, Merleau-Ponty’s friend/ foe Sartre.We have seen above how Merleau-Ponty constantly pitched his own philosophicalapproach against Sartre’s radical dualism between the thinking and choosing for-itselfand the in-itself that is the object <strong>of</strong> thought. Merleau-Ponty was always aphenomenologist. His fundamental philosophical impulse was always to describe ‘thethings themselves’; and he opposed dualism simply because it did not <strong>of</strong>fer an adequatedescription <strong>of</strong> the phenomena.It has been suggested that Merleau-Ponty’s late philosophy represents a radical breakwith his earlier phenomenology <strong>of</strong> perception. I do not agree with this view. Despite thenew terminology he developed in the 1950s, his philosophical work is all <strong>of</strong> a piece; andhis later search for a new fundamental ontology can be seen in germ (and sometimes inmore than germ) in the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception, for example in the chapter on thecogito. While it is true that he was concerned in his final years that the basic terminology<strong>of</strong> the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception (perceiver and perceived) retained remnants <strong>of</strong> theold dualism, the fact that he was determined to go further and ground the phenomenology<strong>of</strong> perception in ‘the flesh <strong>of</strong> the world’ in no way implies a rejection <strong>of</strong> the basic thrustand the achievement (as far as it goes) <strong>of</strong> the earlier work.Rather, as he expressed it in a working note <strong>of</strong> January 1959, Merleau-Ponty’s concernwas to ‘deepen’ his first two books within the perspective <strong>of</strong> an ontology which wouldfinally dissolve the subject/ object polarity. This implies only that those first two books


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 101constitute the indispensable starting point <strong>of</strong> his philosophical project and not itsterminus. His abiding concern was to provide a full description <strong>of</strong> the world. His newontology would go beyond his earlier phenomenology and provide the radical newfoundations for such a description. He makes it clear in The Visible and the Invisible thatthe basic philosophical stance is one <strong>of</strong> ‘interrogation’. Merleau-Ponty’s pr<strong>of</strong>oundphilosophical questions have not yet received an adequate answer.SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHYPrimary texts4.1 La Structure du comportement, Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1942.4.2 Phénoménologie de la perception, Paris: Gallimard, 1945.4.3 Humanisme et terreur: Essai sur le problème communiste, Paris: Gallimard, 19474.4 ‘Le Primat de la perception et ses conséquences philosophiques’, Bulletin de laSociété Française de Philosophie, 41 (1947):119–135 and discussion 135–53.4.5 Sens et non-sens, Paris: Nagel, 1948.4.6 Eloge de la philosophie, Paris: Gallimard, 1953.4.7 Les Aventures de la dialectique, Paris: Gallimard, 1955.4.8 Signes, Paris: Gallimard, 1960.4.9 ‘Préface’ to A.Hesnard, L’Œuvre de Freud et son importance pour le mondemoderne, Paris: Payot, 1960, 5–10.4.10 ‘Un Inédit de Maurice Merleau-Ponty’ [1952], Revue de métaphysique et de morale,67 (1962):401–9.4.11 Le Visible et l’Invisible, suivi de notes de travail [1959–61], ed. C.Lefort, Paris,Gallimard, 1964.4.12 L’Œil et l’esprit [1961], Paris, Gallimard, 1964.4.13 ‘Pages d’ “Introduction à la prose du monde”’ [1950–1], ed. C.Lefort, Revue demétaphysique et de morale, 72 (1967):137–53.4.14 Résumés de cours, Collège de France, 1952–1960, ed. C.Lefort, Paris: Gallimard,1968.4.15 L’Union de l’âme et du corps chez Malebranche, Biran et Bergson: prises au coursà l’Ecole Normale Supérieure (1947–48), ed. J.Deprun, Paris: Vrin, 1968.4.16 La Prose du monde [1950–1], ed. C.Lefort, Paris: Gallimard, 1969.4.17 ‘Philosophie et non-philosophie depuis Hegel’ [spring 1961], ed. C.Lefort, Textures,8–9 (1974):83–129 and 10–11 (1975):145–73.Translations4.18 Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception, trans. C.Smith, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Pauland Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1962.4.19 In Praise <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, trans. J.Wild and J.M.Edie, Evanston: NorthwesternUniversity Press, 1963.4.20 The Structure <strong>of</strong> Behavior, trans. A.L.Fisher, Boston: Beacon Press, 1963.


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 1024.21 The Primacy <strong>of</strong> Perception and Other Essays on Phenomenological Psychology, the<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Art, <strong>History</strong> and Politics, ed. J.M.Edie, Evanston: NorthwesternUniversity Press, 1964. Includes (pp. 3–11) ‘An Unpublished Text by MauriceMerleau-Ponty: A Prospectus <strong>of</strong> his Work’, trans. A.B.Dallery, a translation <strong>of</strong> [4.10]above; and (pp. 159–90) ‘Eye and Mind’, trans. C.Dallery, a translation <strong>of</strong> [4.12]above.4.22 Sense and Non-Sense, trans. H.L.Dreyfus and P.Allen Dreyfus, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1964.4.23 Signs, trans. R.C.McCleary, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1964.4.24 The Visible and the Invisible, followed by Working Notes, ed. C.Lefort, trans.A.Lingis, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1968.4.25 ‘Phenomenology and Psychoanalysis: Preface to Hesnard’s L’Œuvre de Freud’,trans. A.L.Fisher, in A.L.Fisher (ed.), The Essential Writings <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty, NewYork: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1969, pp. 81–7.4.26 Humanism and Terror: An Essay on the Communist Problem, trans. with notes byJ.O’Neill, Boston: Beacon Press, 1969.4.27 Themes from the Lectures at the Collège de France 1952–1960, trans. J. O’Neill,Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1970.4.28 The Prose <strong>of</strong> the World, trans. J.O’Neill, Evanston: Northwestern University Press,1973.4.29 Adventures <strong>of</strong> the Dialectic, trans. J.Bien, Evanston: Northwestern University Press,1973.4.30 Consciousness and the Acquisition <strong>of</strong> Language, trans. H.J.Silverman, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1973.4.31 Phenomenology, Language and Sociology: Selected essays <strong>of</strong> Maurice Merleau-Ponty, ed. J.O’Neill, London: Heinemann, 1974. (Contains articles already availableelsewhere.)4.32 ‘<strong>Philosophy</strong> and Non-<strong>Philosophy</strong> since Hegel’, trans. H.J.Silverman, Telos, 29(1976):39–105; reprinted in H.J.Silverman (ed.), <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Non-<strong>Philosophy</strong> sinceMerleau-Ponty, New York and London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1988, pp. 9–83.Bibliographies4.33 Lanigan, R.L. ‘Maurice Merleau-Ponty Bibliography’, Man and World, 3(1970):289–319.4.34 Métraux, A. ‘Bibliographie de Maurice Merleau-Ponty’, in X.Tilliette [4.109below], 173–86.4.35 Geraets, T.F. [4.60 below], 200–9.4.36 Lanigan, R.L. ‘Bibliography’ [annotated], in [4.82 below], 210–43.4.37 Lapointe, F.H. ‘The Phenomenological Psychology <strong>of</strong> Sartre and Merleau-Ponty: ABibliographical Essay’, Dialogos, 8 (1972):161–82.4.38 Lapointe, F. and Lapointe, C.C. Maurice Merleau-Ponty and his Critics: AnInternational Bibliography (1942–1976), New York: Garland, 1976.4.39 Whiteside, K. ‘The Merleau-Ponty Bibliography: Additions and Corrections’,Journal <strong>of</strong> the <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, 21 (1983):195–201.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 103Criticism: General studies4.40 Alquié, F. ‘Une philosophie de l’ambiguïté: L’existentialisme de Maurice Merleau-Ponty’, Fontaine, 59 (1947):47–70.4.41 Ballard, E.G. ‘The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’, Tulane Studies in <strong>Philosophy</strong>, 9(1960):165–87.4.42 Bannan, J.F. ‘The “Later” Thought <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’, Dialogue, 5 (1966): 383–403.4.43 Bannan, J.F. ‘Merleau-Ponty on God’, International Philosophical Quarterly, 6(1966):341–65.4.44 Bannan, J.F. The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty, New York: Harcourt, Brace &World, 1967.4.45 Barral, M.R. Merleau-Ponty: The Role <strong>of</strong> the Body-Subject in InterpersonalRelations, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 1965.4.46 Bayer, R. Merleau-Ponty’s Existentialism, Buffalo: University <strong>of</strong> Buffalo Press,1951.4.47 Caillois, R. ‘De la perception à l’histoire: la philosophie de Maurice MerleauPonty’,Deucalion, 2 (1947):57–85.4.48 Carr, D. ‘Maurice Merleau-Ponty: Incarnate Consciousness’, in G.A.Schrader, Jr(ed.) Existential Philosophers: Kierkegaard to Merleau-Ponty, New York: McGraw-Hill, 1967, pp. 369–429.4.49 Cullen, B. ‘“Repression” and “Fixation” in Merleau-Ponty’s Account <strong>of</strong> Time’,Journal <strong>of</strong> the British Society for Phenomenology, forthcoming.4.50 Daly, J. ‘Merleau-Ponty’s Concept <strong>of</strong> Phenomenology’, Philosophical Studies(Ireland), 16 (1967):137–64.4.51 Daly, J. ‘Merleau-Ponty: A Bridge between Phenomenology and Structuralism’,Journal <strong>of</strong> the British Society for Phenomenology, 2 (1971):53–8.4.52 de Waehlens, A. Une philosophie de l’ambiguïté: L’existentialisme de MauriceMerleau-Ponty, Louvain: Publications Universitaires de Louvain, 1951.4.53 Dillon, M.C. Merleau-Ponty’s Ontology, Bloomington: Indiana University Press,1988.4.54 Dufrenne, M. ‘Maurice Merleau-Ponty’, Les études philosophiques, 36 (1962): 81–92.4.55 Edie, J.M. Merleau-Ponty’s <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Language: Structuralism and Dialectics,Lanham: University Press <strong>of</strong> America, 1987.4.56 Fressin, A. La Perception chez Bergson et chez Merleau-Ponty, Paris: Sociétéd’éditions d’enseignement supérieur, 1967.4.57 Friedman, R.M. ‘The Formation <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’s <strong>Philosophy</strong>’, <strong>Philosophy</strong>Today, 17 (1973):272–8.4.58 Friedman, R.M. ‘Merleau-Ponty’s Theory <strong>of</strong> Intersubjectivity’, <strong>Philosophy</strong> Today,19 (1975):228–42.4.59 Gans, S. ‘Schematism and Embodiment’, Journal <strong>of</strong> the British Society forPhenomenology, 13 (1982):237–45.4.60 Geraets, T.F. Vers une nouvelle philosophie transcendantale: La Genèse de la


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 104philosophie de Maurice Merleau-Ponty jusqu’à la Phénoménologie de la perception, TheHague: Martinus Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1971.4.61 Gerber, R.J. ‘Merleau-Ponty: The Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Consciousness and World’, Man andWorld, 2 (1969):83–107.4.62 Gill, J.H. Merleau-Ponty and Metaphor, Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press,1991.4.63 Gillan, G. (ed.) The Horizons <strong>of</strong> the Flesh: Critical Perspectives on the Thought <strong>of</strong>Merleau-Ponty, Carbondale and Edwardsville: Southern Illinois University Press,1973.4.64 Grene, M. ‘Merleau-Ponty and the Renewal <strong>of</strong> Ontology’, Review <strong>of</strong> Metaphysics,29 (1976):605–25.4.65 Hadreas, P.J. In Place <strong>of</strong> the Flawed Diamond: An Investigation <strong>of</strong> MerleauPonty’s<strong>Philosophy</strong>, New York: Lang, 1986.4.66 Halda, B. Merleau-Ponty ou la philosophie de l’ambiguïté, Paris: Les LettresModernes, 1966.4.67 Hall, H. ‘The Continuity <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’s <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Perception’, Man andWorld, 10 (1977):435–47.4.68 Heidsieck, F. L’Ontologie de Merleau-Ponty, Paris: Presses Universitaires deFrance, 1971.4.69 Hyppolite, J. Sens et existence dans la philosophie de Maurice Merleau-Ponty,Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1963.4.70 Johnson, G.A. (ed.) Ontology and Alterity in Merleau-Ponty, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1991.4.71 Jolivet, R. ‘The Problem <strong>of</strong> God in the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’, <strong>Philosophy</strong>Today, 7 (1963):150–64.4.72 Kaelin, E.F. An Existential Aesthetic: The Theories <strong>of</strong> Sartre and MerleauPonty,Madison: The University <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin Press, 1962.4.73 Kaelin, E.F. ‘Merleau-Ponty, Fundamental Ontologist’, Man and World, 3(1970):102–15.4.74 Kearney, R. ‘Maurice Merleau-Ponty’, in Modern Movements in European<strong>Philosophy</strong>, Manchester and Dover, NH: Manchester University Press, 1986, pp. 73–90.4.75 Kockelmans, J.J. ‘Merleau-Ponty on Sexuality’, Journal <strong>of</strong> Existentialism, 6(1965):9–30.4.76 Krell, D.F. ‘Merleau-Ponty on “eros” and “logos”’, Man and World, 7 (1974):37–51.4.77 Kwant, R.C. The Phenomenological <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty, Pittsburgh:Duquesne University Press, 1963.4.78 Kwant, R.C. From Phenomenology to Metaphysics: An Inquiry into the Last Period<strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’s Philosophical Life, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 1966.4.79 Lacan, J. ‘Maurice Merleau-Ponty’, Les Temps modernes, 184–85 (October1961):245–54.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 1054.80 Langan, T. Merleau-Ponty’s Critique <strong>of</strong> Reason, New Haven and London: YaleUniversity Press, 1966.4.81 Langer, M.M. Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception: A Guide andCommentary, Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1989.4.82 Lanigan, R.L. Speaking and Semiology: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’sPhenomenological Theory <strong>of</strong> Existential Communication, The Hague and Paris:Mouton, 1972.4.83 Lefort, C. ‘Maurice Merleau-Ponty’, in R.Klibansky (ed.), Contemporary<strong>Philosophy</strong>: A Survey, vol. 3, Metaphysics, Phenomenology, Language and Structure,Firenze: La Nuova Italia Editrice, 1969, pp. 206–14.4.84 Levine, S.K. ‘Merleau-Ponty’s <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Art’, Man and World, 2 (1969): 438–52.4.85 Lévi-Strauss, C. ‘On Merleau-Ponty’, trans. C.Gross, Graduate Faculty <strong>Philosophy</strong>Journal , 7 (1978):179–88.4.86 Madison, G.B. The Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty: A Search for the Limits <strong>of</strong>Consciousness, Athens: Ohio University Press, 1981.4.87 Mallin, S.B. Merleau-Ponty’s <strong>Philosophy</strong>, New Haven and London: Yale UniversityPress, 1979.4.88 Natanson, M. ‘The Fabric <strong>of</strong> Expression’, Review <strong>of</strong> Metaphysics, 21 (1968): 491–505.4.89 O’Neill, J. The Communicative Body: Studies in Communicative <strong>Philosophy</strong>,Politics, and Sociology, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1989.4.90 Rabil, A. Merleau-Ponty: Existentialist <strong>of</strong> the Social World, New York: ColumbiaUniversity Press, 1967.4.91 Rauch, L. ‘Sartre, Merleau-Ponty and the Hole in Being’, Philosophical Studies(Ireland), 18 (1969):119–32.4.92 Review <strong>of</strong> Existential Psychology and Psychiatry, 18 (1982–3), a special issuedevoted to Merleau-Ponty, including translations <strong>of</strong> several short pieces by Merleau-Ponty on phenomenological psychology, sexuality and the relations betweenphenomenology and psychoanalysis .4.93 Ricoeur, P. ‘Hommage à Merleau-Ponty’, Esprit, 29 (1961):1115–20.4.94 Robinet, A. Merleau-Ponty, sa vie, son œuvre, avec un exposé de sa philosophie,Paris: Presses Universitaires de France, 1963.4.95 Roman, J. ‘Une amitié existentialiste: Sartre et Merleau-Ponty’, Revueinternationale de philosophie, 39 (1985):30–55.4.96 Sallis, J. ‘Time, Subjectivity, and The Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception’, ModernSchoolman, 48 (1971):343–58.4.97 Sallis, J. Phenomenology and the Return to Beginnings, Pittsburgh: DuquesneUniversity Press, 1973.4.98 Sallis, J. (ed.) Merleau-Ponty: Perception, Structure, Language, Atlantic Highlands:Humanities Press, 1981.4.99 Sartre, J.-P. ‘Merleau-Ponty vivant’, Les Temps modernes, 184–5 (1961): 304–76;translated as ‘Merleau-Ponty’, in J.-P.Sartre, Situations, trans. B.Eisler, London:Hamish Hamilton, 1965, pp. 225–326.4.100 Sartre, J.-P. ‘Merleau-Ponty [1]’, trans. W.Hamrick, Journal <strong>of</strong> the British Society


<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence 106for Phenomenology, 15 (1984):128–54. [An earlier version <strong>of</strong> the previous entry.]4.101 Schmidt, J. Maurice Merleau-Ponty: Between Phenomenology and Structuralism,New York: St Martin’s Press, 1985.4.102 Silverman, H.J. ‘Re-reading Merleau-Ponty’, Telos, 29 (1976):106–29; reprinted,with several other chapters on the philosophy <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty, in [4.103].4.103 Silverman, H.J. Inscriptions: Between Phenomenology and Structuralism, NewYork and London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1987.4.104 Silverman, H.J. et al. (eds) The Horizons <strong>of</strong> Continental <strong>Philosophy</strong>: Essays onHusserl, Heidegger, and Merleau-Ponty, Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1988.4.105 Smith, C. ‘Sartre and Merleau-Ponty: The Case for a Modified Essentialism’,Journal <strong>of</strong> the British Society for Phenomenology, 1 (1970):73–9.4.106 Smyth, D.P. ‘Merleau-Ponty’s Late Ontology: New Nature and theHyperdialectic’, unpublished Ph.D. thesis, The Queen’s University <strong>of</strong> Belfast, 1988.4.107 Taminiaux, J. ‘Merleau-Ponty: de la dialectique à l’hyperdialectique’, Tijdschriftvoor Filos<strong>of</strong>ie, 40 (1978):34–55.4.108 Tilliette, X. Merleau-Ponty ou la mesure de l’homme, Paris: Seghers, 1970.4.109 Thévenaz, P. De Husserl à Merleau-Ponty: Qu’est-ce que la phénoménologie,Neuchâtel: Editions de la Baconnière, 1966.4.110 Van Breda, H.L. ‘Maurice Merleau-Ponty et les Archives-Husserl à Louvain’,Revue de métaphysique et de morale, 67 (1962):410–30.4.111 Waldenfels, B. ‘Das Problem der Leiblichkeit bei Merleau-Ponty’, PhilosophischesJahrbuch, 75 (1967–8):345–65.Criticism: Freedom, history and politics4.112 Archard, D. Marxism and Existentialism: The Political <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Sartre andMerleau-Ponty, Belfast: Blackstaff Press, 1980.4.113 Aron, R. Marxism and the Existentialists, New York: Harper & Row, 1969.4.114 Bien, J. ‘Man and the Economic: Merleau-Ponty’s Interpretation <strong>of</strong> HistoricalMaterialism’, Southwestern Journal <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, 3 (1972):121–7.4.115 Borg, J.L. ‘Le Marxisme dans la philosophie socio-politique de Merleau-Ponty’,Revue philosophique de Louvain, 73 (1975):481–510.4.116 Capalbo, C. ‘L’historicité chez Merleau-Ponty’, Revue philosophique de Louvain,73 (1975):511–35.4.117 Compton, J. ‘Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, and Human Freedom’, Journal <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>,79 (1982):577–88.4.118 Coole, D. ‘Phenomenology and Ideology in the Work <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’, inN.O’Sullivan (ed.), The Structure <strong>of</strong> Modern Ideology, Cheltenham: Elgar, 1989, 122–50.4.119 Cooper, B. Merleau-Ponty and Marxism: From Terror to Reform, Toronto:University <strong>of</strong> Toronto Press, 1979.4.120 Dauenhauer, B.P. The Politics <strong>of</strong> Hope, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1986.4.121 de Beauvoir, S. ‘Merleau-Ponty et le pseudo-Sartrisme’, Les Temps modernes, 10(1955):2072–122.4.122 de Beauvoir, S.J.-P. Sartre versus Merleau-Ponty (Merleau-Ponty ou


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 107l’antisartrisme), trans. A.Leal, Buenos Aires: Siglo Veints, 1963.4.123 Kruks, S. The Political <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty, Brighton: Harvester andAtlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1981.4.124 Miller, J. ‘Merleau-Ponty’s Marxism: Between Phenomenology and the HegelianAbsolute’, <strong>History</strong> and Theory, 15 (1976):109–32.4.125 O’Neill, J. Perception, Expression, and <strong>History</strong>: The Social Phenomenology <strong>of</strong>Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1970.4.126 Pax, C. ‘Merleau-Ponty and the Truth <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong>’, Man and World, 6 (1973): 270–9.4.127 Ricoeur, P. ‘La Pensée engagée: Merleau-Ponty’, Esprit, 16 (1948):911–16.4.128 Schmidt, J. ‘Maurice Merleau-Ponty: Politics, Phenomenology, and Ontology’,Human Studies, 6 (1983):295–308.4.129 Spurling, L. Phenomenology and the Social World: The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty and its Relation to the Social Sciences, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1972.4.130 Whiteside, K.H. Merleau-Ponty and the Foundation <strong>of</strong> an Existential Politics,Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1988.4.131 Whiteside, K.H. ‘Universality and Violence: Merleau-Ponty, Malraux, and theMoral Logic <strong>of</strong> Liberalism’, <strong>Philosophy</strong> Today, 35 (1991):372–389.4.132 Wiggins, O.P. ‘Political Responsibility in Merleau-Ponty’s Humanism and Terror’,Man and World, 19 (1986):275–91.4.133 Wolin, R. ‘Merleau-Ponty and the Birth <strong>of</strong> Weberian Marxism’, PraxisInternational, 5 (1985):115–30.


CHAPTER 5Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religionMarcel, Jaspers, LevinasWilliam DesmondGabriel Marcel (1889–1973), Karl Jaspers (1883–1969) and Emmanuel Levinas (1906–)seem like a mere aggregate <strong>of</strong> thinkers. Jaspers, a German thinker who coined the phraseExistenz Philosophie, was influential in making known Kierkegaard’s importance.Marcel was a French dramatist with a love <strong>of</strong> music who came to philosophy from abackground in idealism, against which he struggled. Yet the influence, for instance, <strong>of</strong>Royce, the first person on whom he wrote, was strong. Bergson, now a too neglectedthinker, was always in the background. Marcel’s Catholicism was extremely significant,yet he bridled at the label ‘Christian Existentialist’. He was a philosopher who happenedto be a Catholic. Levinas was instrumental in introducing phenomenology to France. In1930 he published a book on Husserl’s theory <strong>of</strong> intuition that was to excite Sartre to say:That is the way I want to philosophize! Yet Levinas always thought in tension with thisphenomenological heritage, and most especially its transformation in Heidegger’sfundamental ontology.These three thinkers have received mixed attention. Jaspers laboured in Heidegger’sshadow, as he himself seemed to recognize. Heidegger and he were once friends andHeidegger alone he recognized as being on a par with him. Still Heidegger’s enormousinfluence has tended to eclipse a proper appreciation <strong>of</strong> Jaspers’ achievement. Jasperswas opposed to Nazism, as Heidegger was not. This did not prevent him fromacknowledging Heidegger’s stature. Indeed Jaspers was more concerned with Heideggerthan Heidegger was with Jaspers. Also Jaspers respected the tradition <strong>of</strong> philosophy, aswell as the achievements <strong>of</strong> science. He did not set himself in contestation with themillennia to hoist himself to unprecedented originality. This, coupled with his restorativeefforts vis-à-vis perennial philosophy, meant that no cultformed around his thought. Thisis not to deny that he was and is deeply admired.Marcel is an insightful existential thinker, but existentialism has been identified widelywith its atheistic brands, especially that <strong>of</strong> Sartre. Because <strong>of</strong> Marcel’s unashamed refusalto silence his own search for God, there has been a failure to listen properly to him bypr<strong>of</strong>essional philosophers who too easily become embarrassed with the religious. Theyfail to listen attentively enough to his sometimes elusive themes—the body, the family,the sense <strong>of</strong> mystery as eluding all objectifications, meditations on what I would call theintimacy <strong>of</strong> being.Marcel is difficult to package, though there are recurrent themes which have beenpackaged as identifiably Marcellian: being and having, problem and mystery,intersubjectivity and embodiment. His style <strong>of</strong> philosophizing, out <strong>of</strong> respect for the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 109subject matter itself, refuses to be packaged, even systematically stated in any simplesurvey. Though he sometimes has a diffuse style <strong>of</strong> writing, in the very peregrinations <strong>of</strong>his thinking he hits on some absolutely essential insights. Thus the intimacy <strong>of</strong> being isalways other to technical thinking, eludes complete systematic ordering, is on the edge <strong>of</strong>completely transparent conceptualization. <strong>Philosophy</strong> tends to home in on themes that aremanageable in a more neutral, public, generalized language. We need that language, butit must be counteracted and complemented with modes <strong>of</strong> thinking that learn from art,and indeed that allow themselves to be shaped by a certain music <strong>of</strong> being.Levinas was not widely known in English-speaking philosophy until recently. Hiswork presupposes familiarity with phenomenology, both Husserlian and Heideggerian,and also the currents <strong>of</strong> intellectual debates that have swept France from the 1930sonwards, over which the shadow <strong>of</strong> Hegel has hovered in various interpretations andappropriations. Levinas himself distinguishes his own more strictly philosophicalwritings from his religious studies, but there is little doubt that religion and philosophycannot be finally insulated from each other. Many <strong>of</strong> the themes <strong>of</strong> his major work,Totality and Infinity, are incomprehensible without the sense <strong>of</strong> the presence/absence <strong>of</strong>God. Levinas’s stature is now being more widely recognized outside France, partly owingto the impact <strong>of</strong> deconstruction, and its high priest Derrida, who learned a thing or tw<strong>of</strong>rom Levinas. The service to Levinas is ambiguous. Levinas has always exhibited aspiritual seriousness that is ill repaid by the postmodern frivolity to which deconstructionis frequently prone.Each thinker is deserving <strong>of</strong> an entire study. Each has been prolific, Levinas less so,but Marcel and Jaspers have been voluminous. To bring some manageable order to thematter, I will concentrate on three major themes, and as the matter dictates I will mentionrelated ideas, without dwelling on them in the detail they might deserve in another study.These three themes will be: the nature <strong>of</strong> philosophy; the question <strong>of</strong> the other; thequestion <strong>of</strong> transcendence or God.GABRIEL MARCELMarcel’s understanding <strong>of</strong> philosophical thought is determined by a reaction to theidealism <strong>of</strong> the late nineteenth century. He did some early work on Royce and Schelling.Their themes were to influence him throughout his writing. Thus the theme <strong>of</strong> loyalty inRoyce is transformed into an ontology <strong>of</strong> intersubjectivity with distinctive emphasis onthe notion <strong>of</strong> what Marcel calls creative fidelity. I mention the struggle <strong>of</strong> Schelling tobreak free <strong>of</strong> the logicism <strong>of</strong> his own early thought and Hegel’s idealism. The struggle ledto Schelling’s positive philosophy that is the progenitor <strong>of</strong> all existential thought,including that <strong>of</strong> Kierkegaard. Schelling tried to think evil as radically other to reason.Marcel has later occasion to mention Schelling and Kant on this score, but the point ismore generally relevant to the conception <strong>of</strong> philosophy at issue. Evil as a philosophicalperplexity takes idealistic reason to its limit where the philosopher has to think otherwise<strong>of</strong> what lies on the other side <strong>of</strong> reason, as idealistically conceived.The desideratum <strong>of</strong> philosophy as system was bequeathed through Kant, Fichte, Hegelto the whole subsequent history <strong>of</strong> idealistic and post-idealistic philosophizing. Marcel


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 110did intend at an early point to couch his thoughts in a systematic form. He discovered hecould not bring it <strong>of</strong>f without forcing his thoughts into a form that went against theirgrain. Eventually he published his Metaphysical Journal (1927), breaking ground herenot only in terms <strong>of</strong> content but in terms <strong>of</strong> a different sense <strong>of</strong> literary form.Marcel’s commitment to what is other to system is forged in deep tension with thesense that thought ought to have some systematic character, certainly an appropriateorder in its development and presentation. His Gifford lectures, published as The Mystery<strong>of</strong> Being (1950), are presented as his most systematic work, but there he disclaimsanything like a system. Primarily philosophy is a matter <strong>of</strong> venture and exploration.System, such as it is, comes after; it ought not to dictate to the matter what it should be.Thinking is open to the matter at issue, even when the matter <strong>of</strong>fers insurmountableresistance to the encroachments <strong>of</strong> our categories. The drift <strong>of</strong> his thinking is not forcedinto a form that betrays, so to say, its improvisatory nature. This sense <strong>of</strong> philosophyshares a lot with Kierkegaard and Nietzsche, though Marcel does not list these as earlyinfluences. One thinks too <strong>of</strong> the plurality <strong>of</strong> literary forms used by Kierkegaard andNietzsche, though one could also mention the non-systematic forms developed byShestov and the later Wittgenstein.Marcel’s philosophy has a phenomenological as well as an existential side. In no sensewas he a disciple <strong>of</strong> Husserl. But his philosophizing is phenomenological in holding thatthinking ought to start by an act <strong>of</strong> attention to what appears to us. As best as possible weallow the matter to make its appearance, according to its own form and requirements. Thefirst act <strong>of</strong> philosophical intelligence demands a kind <strong>of</strong> mindful attention to phenomena,appearing, happenings, in all their nuance and surprise. This requirement is continuouswith his rejection <strong>of</strong> idealism. The stress in idealism on purely autonomous thoughttempts the philosopher to impose his categories on being as appearing, hence to see thereonly what thought has itself put there. Kant himself talked about the mind as only seeingin nature what it has itself put there. Kant was no absolute idealist but the equivocities <strong>of</strong>some <strong>of</strong> his pronouncements, like the one just cited, led to the more uncompromising,hence more coherent, idealism <strong>of</strong> his successors.But the full coherence <strong>of</strong> idealism is also its undoing in that what is other to thoughtalways gets finally reduced to the construction <strong>of</strong> a category. Marcel rejects this, for at acritical point the emptiness <strong>of</strong> the categorial construction makes itself felt. HenceMarcel’s desire for phenomenological fidelity entails the reassertion <strong>of</strong> a realism whichasks the thinker to let things take their own shape without interference from the dictatingintellect. Marcel does not deny a critical dimension to philosophy. On the contrary, theappearing <strong>of</strong> things is shot through with ambiguities that have to be interpreted andevaluated. Letting ambiguity come to appearance is part <strong>of</strong> the phenomenologicalrequirement <strong>of</strong> philosophy. Mindless surrender to ambiguity is not. The ambiguities <strong>of</strong>being have to be sifted.This is especially relevant to the existential side <strong>of</strong> his thinking. Marcel is anexistentialist to the extent that he lays a primary focus on human being and theperplexities that burden it about being and most especially its own being. He used theterm ‘existential’ before it became fashionable through Sartre. As finding itself in theambiguous middle <strong>of</strong> things, the human being is in quest <strong>of</strong> the truth <strong>of</strong> things and mostespecially its own truth. It is tempted by possibilities that veil or distort or destroy its own


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 111truth and the truth <strong>of</strong> things. Hence the existential philosopher is again involved in a questor journey. Not surprisingly, Marcel lays great emphasis on homo viator, man thewayfarer, (the title <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> his books).We are on the way, to where we do not exactly know, from where we know not, in amiddle <strong>of</strong>ten clouded with uncertainty and sorrow. Marcel does not have quite the intenseconcentrated passion <strong>of</strong> Pascal, but they share a similar sense <strong>of</strong> the enigma <strong>of</strong> existentialcontingency. Nor can we stand outside the middle and survey our way <strong>of</strong> passage as awhole. The deficiency <strong>of</strong> systematic idealism is the false imputation that we have such anArchimedean point whence we can construct the system <strong>of</strong> categories to make all beingtransparently intelligible. Such a system is false to our participation in being, and notleast to the singularity <strong>of</strong> the journeying philosopher. We need a different kind <strong>of</strong>thinking, which acknowledges our intimacy with being, even in our sense <strong>of</strong>metaphysical homelessness. The great struggle <strong>of</strong> philosophy is to get some reflectivedistance on our being thus in the middle, a distance that does not distort our intimacywith being in the middle. Thinking must be shown in its genesis and process, with all itsfalterings and flights, its matured fruits and undelivered suggestions.Here Marcel makes a distinction between what he calls primary and secondaryreflection. Primary reflection shows a tendency to objectify being and the human being. Ittries to survey the object from outside, or penetrate it as if it were an alien thing to bemastered or overcome. Such a thinking has one <strong>of</strong> its major sources in Cartesian dualismwhere knower and known, mind and nature, self and other are posited as antitheticalopposites. It is a mode <strong>of</strong> thinking that attenuates the thinker’s participation in being. Thiskind <strong>of</strong> thinking corresponds to treating being as a problem.Secondary reflection is such that the matter being thought unavoidably encroaches onthe one doing the thinking. The thinker cannot escape involvement with the matter that isbeing thought. A thinking that objectifies and fosters the self-forgetfulness <strong>of</strong> the thinkerwill not do. It is not that the thinker now collapses into a mushy subjectivism, s<strong>of</strong>tlysurrendering to the inarticulate, having given up the stiff precisions <strong>of</strong> articulateobjectivism. Secondary reflection, Marcel says, is a recuperative thinking. Once havinglived or been caught up or carried along by a process <strong>of</strong> living, one struggles to get athoughtful distance on one’s course, all the more to interiorize mindfully its possiblesignificance.In human existence secondary reflection in some form goes on always, but notnecessarily in the accentuated form the existential philosopher cultivates. As Kierkegaardsays: life has to be lived forward, but thought backward. Secondary reflection is thusrecollective. As such it is not a nostalgic thinking; for to gain a mindful sense <strong>of</strong> one’spresent and past may open a truer orientation to what is to come. Secondary reflection isbound up with the possibility <strong>of</strong> hope. Hope is a major theme for Marcel. Indeed one cansay that Marcel takes very seriously Kant’s question: For what may we hope?The difference <strong>of</strong> primary and secondary reflection is relevant to Marcel’s treatment <strong>of</strong>the notions <strong>of</strong> problem and mystery, and thesein turn influence his critique <strong>of</strong> the spiritualdevastations wrought by the modern hegemony <strong>of</strong> unrestrained technicism, indeed theidolatry <strong>of</strong> technique. Like many other thinkers, Marcel recognizes the moderndominance <strong>of</strong> scientific method and its way <strong>of</strong> conceiving the world. He does not denythe benefits that come from this way, but is disturbed at the accompanying neglect <strong>of</strong>


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 112issues that fall outside its purview. Scientific method treats <strong>of</strong> all questions asproblematic matters: difficulties that can be solved by means <strong>of</strong> techniques <strong>of</strong> objectiveexperimentation and calculation. The hegemony <strong>of</strong> this approach can lead to the atrophy<strong>of</strong> human perplexity before the metaphysical enigmas <strong>of</strong> existence.Consider questions <strong>of</strong> despair and salvation. These become a matter <strong>of</strong> psychologicaladaptation as the singular self becomes a case <strong>of</strong> maladjustment. The promise <strong>of</strong> ourdespair is betrayed, not even guessed. With issues like suffering, the pervasiveness <strong>of</strong> eviland the inevitability <strong>of</strong> death we deal with mysteries or meta-problematic themes. Theseare perplexities that involve us and shake us and make us sleepless. We are threatenedand challenged and put on trial. They never yield a univocal answer; indeed they cannotproperly be formulated as univocal problems. A constitutive openness and ambiguityremains. We have to return to such perplexities again and again. We never conclusivelymaster them.Marcel does not advocate the abandonment <strong>of</strong> reason, as if these mysteries wereabsurdities. They do demand a thoughtfulness not reducible to scientific knowledge,moving the philosopher closer to the poet and the religious. The hegemony <strong>of</strong> theproblem makes us take for granted the existence <strong>of</strong> things and our own. By contrast, thephilosopher for Marcel is stunned into thought by just that fact <strong>of</strong> existence, astonished atthe marvel that things are. That the world is at all is the wonder. This mystery is allaround and within us, though to it we are heedless. We look but overlook; we hear buthave not listened or heard.The neglect <strong>of</strong> mystery and the hegemony <strong>of</strong> problem leads to a world whereintechnique reigns with only sporadically disputed sway. There is an anonymity totechnique that is antithetical to the singularity <strong>of</strong> existing. Technique involves a set <strong>of</strong>directives that can be used by all; the directives <strong>of</strong> a technique do not originate with theuser but, if we desire success in the outcome, to these directives we must submit. Thustechnique can breed a conformism, a certain standardization <strong>of</strong> the human being, anaveraging. Uniqueness and recalcitrant singularity are levelled down.This is a theme sounded loudly by Kierkegaard and Nietzsche. We have heard it so<strong>of</strong>ten that perhaps we are jaded. But weariness with a question does not mean it is solved.Technique shows the calculative mind in action. But there is no technique <strong>of</strong> humanwholeness or integrity; there is no technique <strong>of</strong> ethical responsibility; there is notechnique <strong>of</strong> honesty and truthfulness. Technicism is in flight from the unexpected andthe uncontrollable. The idolatry <strong>of</strong> technique is really a metaphysical hostility to ourvulnerability before the incalculable chance <strong>of</strong> being. The tyranny <strong>of</strong> technique drownsthe deeper human in a conspiracy <strong>of</strong> efficiency and a frenzy <strong>of</strong> industry. It may erect ahouse but cannot make us a home.Marcel’s philosophizing takes shape at the opposite extreme to this technicism. It isappropriate to mention that this philosophizing owes much to his twin loves: music anddrama. He repeatedly resorts to musical images, and was a composer and performer <strong>of</strong> nolittle talent. The image <strong>of</strong> improvisation is important. As applied to philosophy and life itmeans: the score is not settled before playing; the players are invited to create freely. Thisis not incidental to the pervasive post-Hegelian concern with the limits <strong>of</strong> systematicphilosophy. Schopenhauer and Nietzsche are the major figures in the nineteenth centurywho believed that music was the metaphysical art. There are others in the twentieth


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 113century, Adorno most notably, who give some privilege to music. <strong>Philosophy</strong>,particularly in its logicist forms, can run roughshod over the subtleties, intimacies <strong>of</strong>being. Music may sing these, as it were, in a manner that forces philosophy to raise thequestion <strong>of</strong> the unsayable—the unsayable that yet is sung and so somehow said.If music as metaphysically significant raises questions about the limits <strong>of</strong> philosophy,Marcel has no desire to yield to a dark romanticism. Nor does he thematically focus onthe metaphysics <strong>of</strong> music, but uses musical images and metaphors again and again toillustrate some <strong>of</strong> his more elusive ideas. One has to conclude that there is an implicitcommunity <strong>of</strong> meaning between his thought and music. Again consider the improvisatorystyle <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> his philosophizing: a theme is stated, developed, dropped; then resumed,restated; there come to be echoes back and forth; nor does Marcel <strong>of</strong>fer any simpleresolution, though there are moments <strong>of</strong> revelation. Does his thought then sing? Does hisphilosophy approach the condition <strong>of</strong> music? The analytical philosopher will squirm. Butthere is a rigour and discipline in this thinking that the analytical philosopher hardlysuspects; there is a rigour and discipline in music too. Even Rudolp Carnap, one <strong>of</strong> theavatars <strong>of</strong> analytical philosophy, sensed a connection between metaphysics and music,though not surprisingly his judgment was topsy-turvy: metaphysics is just poor music.The influence <strong>of</strong> drama is related to Marcel’s preoccupation with the question <strong>of</strong> theother. Marcel was himself a successful playwright, with a lifelong interest in the theatre.Drama presents the concrete dilemmas <strong>of</strong> humans in their otherness and estrangementsand solidarities. It imaginatively enacts the resistance and reciprocity <strong>of</strong> the self and theother. It returns us to a point <strong>of</strong> emergent significance that is prior to abstract thought.Marcel said that he had interest not in the solitary ‘I am’ but in the concrete ‘We are’. Toexist is to be shaped in this solidarity <strong>of</strong> selves. Drama, <strong>of</strong> course, is enacted in andthrough language where again we face the other. Seemingly inconspicuous words may<strong>of</strong>fer the revelation <strong>of</strong> the significant world <strong>of</strong> the other, its wounds, its conceit, itshospitality. Words are pregnant with more than can be rendered in the languages <strong>of</strong>function. <strong>Philosophy</strong>, like drama, should awaken vigilance for this ‘more’.One senses sometimes that his own plays were more important to Marcel than hisphilosophy. His preoccupations emerged in pristine form in his plays which were notmeant as mere illustration <strong>of</strong> philosophical theories. What drama brings to birth,philosophy later may take hold <strong>of</strong> in reflection. It is as if the dramas were closer to thephenomenological matrix <strong>of</strong> being, wherein the basic perplexities appeared in statunascendi, in a form more concrete than later conceptualizations could capture.Some readers may find it tedious for Marcel to quote his own plays. I see it as astrategy <strong>of</strong> saying. In philosophy we always have a problem <strong>of</strong> writing about mattersclosest to the personal, to the intimacy <strong>of</strong> being. We refuse to be confessional. And yetwe have to find strategies <strong>of</strong> confession, <strong>of</strong> saying the ‘I’ with a kind <strong>of</strong> elementalhonesty. In quoting his plays, Marcel can confess without embarrassment. The citation<strong>of</strong>fers not only a theme closer to the phenomenological matrix but also one with a space<strong>of</strong> possible distance. We do not have to collapse into the theme; it can become the basisfor a secondary reflection. There is then a rhetorical complicity between his dramatic andphilosophical writing.In that sense Marcel might be called a plurivocal philosopher. He does not dramatizehis philosophizing in the same way as Nietzsche does, who is poet and philosopher in


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 114one; or as Plato does in that great achievement <strong>of</strong> philosophical writing, the Platonicdialogue. Instead he creates a dialogue between his dramas and his philosophizing, in thephilosophizing itself. There are times when he should have let the barrier between thembreak down, as do Plato and Nietzsche. Perhaps he did not, less for the sake <strong>of</strong>philosophy as out <strong>of</strong> respect for his dramatic art which one senses he wanted to preservefrom the devitalizing encroachments <strong>of</strong> abstract philosophical categories.To break down the barrier need not encourage this devitalization but rather promote amore radical vitalization <strong>of</strong> philosophical thinking. Admittedly the bureaucraticseparation <strong>of</strong> philosophy and poetry is hard to get beyond. We should get beyond it, onMarcel’s own terms, since the functionalizing mind, the bureaucratic mind, is anessentially technical mind. If Marcel too strongly insists on separating the function <strong>of</strong>drama and philosophy, he will show himself captive to the same narrow mind hedenounces otherwise so rightly. He does not, to his credit. Beyond the functionalization<strong>of</strong> poetry and philosophy and religion, the one thing necessary is honesty nourished byspiritual seriousness. It does not matter whether we label it artistic, philosophic orreligious. The dialogue <strong>of</strong> drama and philosophy points to modes <strong>of</strong> philosophizingoutside system, entirely incomprehensible for an analytical philosopher in thrall to theplain prose <strong>of</strong> univocal writing.The theme <strong>of</strong> the other is connected with Marcel’s reflection on the body. Hisemphasis is on the incarnate person. The flesh is where we are in a primary contact withall otherness, both natural and human. The affirmation <strong>of</strong> being that arises therearticulates a sense <strong>of</strong> the togetherness <strong>of</strong> the existing self and the rest <strong>of</strong> being in itsotherness. It is as if the incarnate self is initially an inarticulate ‘We are’. Marcelobviously sets himself against any form <strong>of</strong> Cartesianism and dualism here. There is someaffinity with empiricism, stemming from his desire for phenomenological fidelity. Thedifference is in his interpretation <strong>of</strong> experience. Empiricist experience is an abstractionfrom the fullness <strong>of</strong> original fleshed incarnation. It is as alienated from concrete existenceas is Cartesian dualism, from the side <strong>of</strong> the body in this case, rather than the reflectivereason.The subject is an incarnate self defined intersubjectively. The inter, the between <strong>of</strong>intersubjectivity, does not deny the flesh. The between is stressed by the concretization <strong>of</strong>spirit in the flesh <strong>of</strong> the human being. Again the intimacy <strong>of</strong> our involvement with theother matches the intimacy <strong>of</strong> our being our own bodies. Marcel is given to criticize theview that we have bodies; the connection <strong>of</strong> self with flesh is not thus external. Marcelwants to say: we are our body.Here arises his concern with being and having. Like Marx and many other modernthinkers Marcel was concerned with the question <strong>of</strong> property, <strong>of</strong> possession, the nature <strong>of</strong>having. He denies that a person is what a person has. My property is something overwhich I have power; I can dispose <strong>of</strong> it as I please; we cannot so dispose <strong>of</strong> our ownbodies, nor <strong>of</strong> our fellow human beings without a fundamental violation <strong>of</strong> our ownnature and theirs. It is not that we ought not to take care <strong>of</strong> things. Marcel is quite awarethat our care for things can draw them into the orbit <strong>of</strong> human attachment in a mannerwhich transforms them, releases in them their promise. Our belongings too can have amore intimate relation to our selfhood. But this more authentic belonging is not simply arelation <strong>of</strong> dominating power. This applies even more radically to our belonging together


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 115in human community.The theme <strong>of</strong> possession <strong>of</strong> the other has also been a major concern in contemporaryEuropean philosophy, especially in the light <strong>of</strong> different interpretations <strong>of</strong> Hegel’sdialectic <strong>of</strong> master and slave. Power and domination have been held to define the essence<strong>of</strong> human relations. This is currently a much debated issue, but Marcel has things to saythat have not been surpassed. I mention here Marcel’s fascination with Sartre’sessentially degraded view <strong>of</strong> the other where the master/ slave dialectic is concretized asa dialectic <strong>of</strong> sadist and masochist: either dominate or be dominated is the either/or thatruns through all <strong>of</strong> Sartre. While fascinated with Sartre’s view that hell is the other,Marcel is unrelentingly hostile to it. The Sartrean look is the look <strong>of</strong> the Gorgon thatwould reduce the other to stone. This look wants to have the other, wants to objectify theother and disarm by pre-emptive violence the suspected threat to the self’s freedom.Sartre’s sense <strong>of</strong> the human body is tied to his understanding <strong>of</strong> our openness to theother. Sartre’s body is the place <strong>of</strong> negativity, the nothingness that shapes our freedom inits power <strong>of</strong> refusal, like that <strong>of</strong> the child that asserts its own difference by repeating its‘No’. If the body incarnates a ‘We are’ and, in a manner that affirms a solidarity withwhat is other to self, then we are outside this Sartrean sense <strong>of</strong> the body, this sense <strong>of</strong> theother, and this apotheosis <strong>of</strong> negation as freedom. Against the Sartrean degradation,Marcel recommends the possibility <strong>of</strong> disponabilité. This availability to the other is notthreatened by the other, nor concerned to threaten. It signals a reversal <strong>of</strong> the normal forself<strong>of</strong>, say, the Spinozistic conatus essendi. It is the promise <strong>of</strong> an agape, rather than thedrive <strong>of</strong> eros to possess the other.In opposition to having, our relativity to the other is marked by the gift. The bestowal<strong>of</strong> a gift is never neutral, never just a transfer <strong>of</strong> a possession from one to the other. Thegift given is the bearer <strong>of</strong> generosity towards the other and for the other. If human beingwere exhausted by will to power or conatus as self-insistence, giving would be a mereruse to use the other for the self again. There would be no true giving as a movement <strong>of</strong>self towards the other but not for the sake <strong>of</strong> the self, but simply for the other as beloved.Without this giving over <strong>of</strong> the giver, a gift is not a genuine gift.Similarly the receiving <strong>of</strong> the gift is not an indifferent addition to the receiver’sinventory <strong>of</strong> possessions. The communication <strong>of</strong> self on one side, <strong>of</strong> course, can be metby refusal on the other. One might distrust the bestower’s goodness and turn away, ortake and suspect and wait for the appearance <strong>of</strong> the ulterior motive. The Sartrean selflives this suspicion <strong>of</strong> the goodness <strong>of</strong> the other. A thing given is received as a genuinegift in being hospitably welcomed. What touches one in the gift is not the thing or thepossession. It is the generous freedom <strong>of</strong> the other that has made itself available withoutcare for itself. The thanks that then may be voiced has nothing to do with abjectnessbefore an other who has one in his or her debt. Thanks is simple, elemental appreciation<strong>of</strong> the transcendence <strong>of</strong> self-insistence by the goodness <strong>of</strong> the giver.Marcel <strong>of</strong>fers some important meditations on the family and on paternity in HomoViator. He calls attention to a community <strong>of</strong> spirit beyond all objectification. There areontological issues at stake in the shaping <strong>of</strong> a singular destiny by relation to the family.One might here compare Marcel’s respect for paternity and the family to Sartre’scontempt <strong>of</strong> the father in The Words, and his juvenile baiting <strong>of</strong> the bourgeois family. Ofcourse, it is not only Sartre who displays this puerile disdain. Marcel distances himself


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 116from the pervasive attitude in post-romantic modernity that the father is always thetyrannical lord. Levinas’s remarks on the family also escape the closed dialectic <strong>of</strong> masterand slave.Generosity is a condition <strong>of</strong> being beyond having which testifies to the human power<strong>of</strong> sacrifice. Sacrifice literally means to make sacred (sacer facere). Here Marcel’sconcern with generosity relative to the human other shades into his meditations on thedivine other. For instance, Marcel draws attention to the difference <strong>of</strong> the martyr and thesuicide. Suicides claim that their bodies are their own property and that they can do withthem what they will. They claim the freedom to visit the ultimate violence on it. Martyrslook like suicides but are entirely different. They give up their bodies, their lives becauseneither belong to them. They belong to something higher than themselves and to this theirdeath witnesses. Suicides attest to nothing but their own despair. Martyrs are centredbeyond themselves; suicides find a centre in nothing, not even in themselves. The death<strong>of</strong> a true martyr is living testimony to a higher order <strong>of</strong> being and worth. Our existence isnot our property but a gift <strong>of</strong> this order. The sacrifice makes sacred; even in this death themartyr gives himself or herself over to this order, gives thanks for its gift.Marcel as philosopher was not primarily or directly interested in the traditional issues<strong>of</strong> natural theology. He was concerned with an existential phenomenology <strong>of</strong> significantoccasions in human experience where the sense <strong>of</strong> the divine breaks through or is <strong>of</strong>feredto us. While his conversion to Catholicism was pr<strong>of</strong>oundly influential, he tried to stay onthe philosophical side <strong>of</strong> specifically theological reflections. He was reticent aboutmaking full-blown theological statements. He expressed some satisfaction when hisreflections spoke to individuals outside Catholicism. His philosophical meditations weresuggestive <strong>of</strong> theological possibilities, without determinately articulating anything evenapproaching a systematic idea <strong>of</strong> God.Marcel’s greatest fear, I suspect, and precisely out <strong>of</strong> religious reverence, was thereduction <strong>of</strong> God to our concepts. Yet clearly his religious faith provided a matrix thatnurtured the characteristic ideas <strong>of</strong> his philosophical reflection. Reflections on themystery <strong>of</strong> suffering and evil, and on the love that seeks to outlive death, take his thoughtagain and again to the borders <strong>of</strong> religious faith.He set himself against the traditional pro<strong>of</strong>s <strong>of</strong> God as objectifying what ought never tobe objectified. The very idea <strong>of</strong> proving God is a misconception, a misconception thatmight border on a kind <strong>of</strong> rationalistic sacrilege, if the living God is reduced to a mere toyin a parlour game <strong>of</strong> conceptual virtuosity. God is never an object, always a Thou thatresists reification. Yet Marcel was pr<strong>of</strong>oundly disturbed at the godlessness <strong>of</strong> westernmodernity. There is in his writings a growing sense <strong>of</strong> the spiritual waste produced bygodless modernity when coupled with the unbridled hubris <strong>of</strong> a Promethean technicism.He has much in common with Heidegger’s later meditations on the absence <strong>of</strong> the holy inmodernity.Marcel does not fit a common view <strong>of</strong> existentialism as probing a world from whichGod has been barred. The atheistic existentialist, reduced to caricature by Sartre, sternlygirds his or her loins before this Godforsaken world, and dismisses as a sentimentalcoward anyone seeking hope and ultimate sense. The stratagem began by beingdisturbing but ended in a different conformism. Its revolt against the old became its newdogma. To Marcel’s credit he was not consoled by this comfort <strong>of</strong> negation. He willingly


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 117made love, fidelity, hope, transcendence his themes—against the grain <strong>of</strong> the times.His suspicion <strong>of</strong> traditional philosophical concepts <strong>of</strong> God make him the heir <strong>of</strong> Pascaland his opting for the God <strong>of</strong> Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. Not that he accepted a fideisticrejection <strong>of</strong> reason, a fideism sometimes imputed to Pascal and Kierkegaard, both <strong>of</strong>whom are more sophisticated as thinkers than can be captured by a dualism <strong>of</strong> faith/reason. Faith and the spirit <strong>of</strong> truth are bound together, and reason too is bound by thespirit <strong>of</strong> truth.Marcel’s reflections on human fidelity take us to the border <strong>of</strong> religious faith. Thus hisdiscussions <strong>of</strong> death and immortality have little to do with proving the immortality <strong>of</strong> thesoul. They are meditations on a fidelity between the living and the dead others, a fidelitythat transcends the divide between the living and the dead. Nor is the issue <strong>of</strong> deathsimply a question <strong>of</strong> my death; it is much more a matter <strong>of</strong> the death <strong>of</strong> the other arousingin the still living the promise <strong>of</strong> a fidelity beyond death. There is no objective certaintywith respect to this fidelity. Nor is there with respect to faith in God. It is always on trialin its sojourn in the world. Fidelity is tied to hope, with the promise <strong>of</strong> being that cannotnow be secured with complete certainty. Fidelity itself may flower into witnessing andtestimony. Such existential realities—suffering, fidelity, hope, generosity, love,testimony—are the mysteries in which our sense <strong>of</strong> the sacred is shaped and on which thephilosopher must reflect. The kinship with Kierkegaard is noticeable: the impossibility <strong>of</strong>objective certainty with respect to faith and fidelity. We are dealing with a trans-objectiveorder, which for Marcel is not merely subjective.Like Nietzsche he acknowledged the godless condition <strong>of</strong> modern man. But unlikeNietzsche, he did not see this condition as a gain for human freedom but as the sign <strong>of</strong> acatastrophic loss or refusal. Marcel admired Nietzsche’s honest diagnosis about ourgodlessness but not his proposed solution in the Overman. Nietzsche <strong>of</strong>fered a version <strong>of</strong>heroic sacrifice when he says: I love the man who creates beyond himself and thusperishes. But in the end there is no genuine beyond for Nietzsche, since all transcendencedissolves into human self-transcendence. Without transcendence beyond human selftranscendence,our sacrifice witnesses to nothing, except perhaps ourselves. Thewasteland still grows.Promethean humans may steal divine fire, but in absolutizing their own power theybetray their community with the power <strong>of</strong> transcendence beyond them. The aspiration totranscendence is deformed. Its root is the divine ground; out <strong>of</strong> this ground, it grows;outside <strong>of</strong> it, the aspiration to transcendence withers. The howl <strong>of</strong> Nietzsche’s Madmanwas heard by Marcel, but he also heard a different music. With neither Marcel norNietzsche had the horror <strong>of</strong> this howl been cheapened into the postmodern kitsch it hasnow become, with the chirpy nihilists who blithely claim to be at home in the wasteland.KARL JASPERSKarl Jaspers is <strong>of</strong>ten identified with German existentialism in that he speaks <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> thetasks <strong>of</strong> philosophy as the clarification <strong>of</strong> Existenz. He distinguished empirical being(Dasein) from Existenz which is peculiar to the human being. Some commentators haveseen a desire to mark his own thought <strong>of</strong>f from Heidegger’s Dasein, used in the special


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 118Heideggerian sense to refer to human existence. The relationship between Jaspers andHeidegger would command a study in itself, yet both helped to mediate Kierkegaard’sphilosophy <strong>of</strong> existence in the twentieth century. <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> existence emphasizes thesingularity <strong>of</strong> the human being, and <strong>of</strong>ten in a manner that stresses the recalcitrance <strong>of</strong>that singularity to inclusion in any system <strong>of</strong> concepts. Jaspers shares this view butqualifies it with a different respect for the systematic impulse, and indeed a less closedsense <strong>of</strong> system than had been dominant since German idealism. The tension <strong>of</strong> Existenzand system, the necessity and the limits <strong>of</strong> system, the relation <strong>of</strong> Existenz andtranscendence at the limit <strong>of</strong> all systems, constitute some <strong>of</strong> his major concerns.Jaspers suffered from ill health since his youth, which he turned to good use byhusbanding his strengths for thinking. His sense <strong>of</strong> philosophy was never that <strong>of</strong> anacademic discipline but that <strong>of</strong> a noble calling. He was under threat during the Naziregime, but he re-emerged into public prominence after the war with widespread respectfor his ethical integrity. He willingly undertook the public task <strong>of</strong> raising the question <strong>of</strong>German guilt, and was always concerned with the spiritual condition <strong>of</strong> the time, the state<strong>of</strong> the university, the issues <strong>of</strong> politics, national and international, especially in a nuclearage, the questions <strong>of</strong> world religions in an age <strong>of</strong> mass communication.Jaspers did not publicly commit himself to philosophy until around the age <strong>of</strong> 40. Hisbackground prior to that was in medicine and psychology. His first published work wasGeneral Psychopathology (1913), followed by Psychology <strong>of</strong> Weltanschauungen (1919).He was later to say that these were really philosophy all along, though not as overtly so ashis subsequent work. His reverence for philosophy made him reluctant to claim itsmantle, especially when pr<strong>of</strong>essional philosophers frequently fell short <strong>of</strong> the nobility <strong>of</strong>its calling. His first major work, Philosophie, was published in 1931 and established himas a major voice. The point has been made that the publication <strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s Being andTime in 1927 stole his existential thunder and dimmed somewhat the lustre <strong>of</strong> hisachievement.Existenz is Jaspers’s counterpart to Heidegger’s Dasein. For both, only the humanbeing exists in this unique sense: only the human being is questionable to itself. Existenzis marked by this relatedness to self that is unique to human being; we are a being for selfwhich is the possibility <strong>of</strong> free self-determination. Though Kierkegaard’s influence marksboth Heidegger and Jaspers, in Jaspers we find a strong respect for science grounded inhis early training. This respect never wavered. Jaspers departs from the standard picture<strong>of</strong> existentialism as virulently anti-scientific. He never tires <strong>of</strong> insisting that science is one<strong>of</strong> the great works <strong>of</strong> the human mind. Moreover, any serious contemporaryphilosophizing worth the name must take due cognizance <strong>of</strong> its pervasive role in themodern world.That said, the philosopher’s task is not simply to be a methodologist <strong>of</strong> science. Inreflecting on the meaning <strong>of</strong> science one inevitably inquires as to the precise status <strong>of</strong>scientific truth and science’s role within the full economy <strong>of</strong> human life. One might evencall Jaspers a philosopher <strong>of</strong> science in this generous sense that up to quite recently wasalmost unknown in Anglo-American analyses <strong>of</strong> science: science understood as a humanachievement, and hence placed within a larger historical and cultural, indeed spiritual,milieu. To reflect on science is then not to abstract its methodological essence in apseudo-ahistorical analysis; it is to meditate on the ideal <strong>of</strong> truth, and in Jaspers’s case to


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 119open up a more fundamental sense <strong>of</strong> truth, which is constitutive <strong>of</strong> the milieu <strong>of</strong>scientific truth.Jaspers’s ideal <strong>of</strong> philosophy here is reminiscent <strong>of</strong> a certain reading andreconstruction <strong>of</strong> Kant’s project. Many commentators have remarked on his debt to Kant,and Jaspers always acknowledged the depth <strong>of</strong> this debt. In Anglo-American philosophyKant has been primarily read through the Critique <strong>of</strong> Pure Reason, interpreted as an antimetaphysicaltract, interspersed with some epistemological insights. Outside <strong>of</strong> Anglo-American analysis, Kant’s more comprehensive ambitions are more willingly and widelyrecognized. Kant spoke <strong>of</strong> these ambitions in terms <strong>of</strong> the architectonic impulse. Thismeans that reflection on science is certainly with a view to plotting the limits <strong>of</strong> validcognition within a precisely delimited sphere. But—and this is where the morecomprehensive sense <strong>of</strong> philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is relevant—to plot that limit is notnecessarily to impute a merely negative judgment about other modes <strong>of</strong> meaning thatmay be other to science. One thinks the limits <strong>of</strong> science to know its strength but also itsweakness in addressing no less pressing perplexities that transcend science. To assert thatthere are such perplexities that transcend science is not at all to depreciate science. It is tosay that science is not the totality. The philosopher thinks what is other to science inthinking the greatness <strong>of</strong> science.A careful reading <strong>of</strong> the Kantian enterprise will show that the heart <strong>of</strong> Kant’sphilosophy is not in the First Critique but in the Second Critique, and perhaps to anambiguous extent (which has proved powerfully suggestive to Kant’s Germansuccessors) in the Third Critique. German thinkers have this notable ability to hear voicesin Kant’s writing that to the outsider seem mere silences. In the scholastic twists andturns <strong>of</strong> the Kantian architectonic they sense that Kant was a tortured thinker. A torturedperplexity <strong>of</strong> thought is incessantly at work behind or beneath the scholastic encasing <strong>of</strong>concepts wherein Kant sheaths his explorations. Jaspers singles out many great thinkersfor mention—Plato, Plotinus, Cusa, Spinoza, Hegel—but it is clear that his heart hearssomething in Kant that he hears nowhere else. Kant is <strong>of</strong>ten taken as a destroyer <strong>of</strong>Transcendence. Jaspers’s reverence for Kant, I suspect, is as a thinker who tries to plot awinding way from finitude to Transcendence.This sense <strong>of</strong> philosophy with a kind <strong>of</strong> Kantian architectonic is in tension with thesingularity <strong>of</strong> human being as Existenz. Granting too the great power <strong>of</strong> science, there arequestions that still exceed its proper competence. I underline the fact that the emphasismust first fall on questioning. We are here not talking about academic textbook puzzles.We are talking about the thinking human being as struck into questioning at the edge <strong>of</strong>all scientific rationalizing. There can be nothing anonymous or neutral about being struckinto such questioning, and this is why the very unique selfhood <strong>of</strong> the philosopher is atstake in a way that is never quite the case in science. The stakes <strong>of</strong> perplexity aredifferent in philosophy, for the mode <strong>of</strong> questioning that erupts is not one that can becompletely objectified.In scientific questioning the point is to detach oneself from oneself in the idiosyncrasy<strong>of</strong> selfhood, and to pose as univocal and determinate a question as possible. The singularI <strong>of</strong> Existenz becomes the anonymous one <strong>of</strong> univocal mind, consciousness in general.One represents univocal mind, anonymously the same for every rational consciousness,in search <strong>of</strong> a univocal answer to a univocal curiosity. This is related to Marcel’s notion


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 120<strong>of</strong> the problem. But in philosophy a transformation <strong>of</strong> selfhood is called for which isenergized in a new mode <strong>of</strong> perplexity which cannot be terminated by information aboutthis object or that object. This perplexity is not a univocal curiosity about this thing orthat thing. It is a kind <strong>of</strong> indeterminate wondering that may extend to the whole <strong>of</strong> whatis, and indeed to the possibility <strong>of</strong> nothing. The ‘objects’ <strong>of</strong> philosophical perplexity arenot univocal, determinate objectifiable themes. Nor can the ‘results’ <strong>of</strong> philosophicalthinking be treated thus, be packaged thus. To do this would be to distort the true energy<strong>of</strong> living philosophical thinking. This indeterminate perplexity is the very selftranscendingenergy <strong>of</strong> human thinking. It was the ceaselessness <strong>of</strong> this that torturedKant, even when he thought he had finally laid it to rest in the system and its categories.I am putting the matter in terms Jaspers does not use but that do not betray his intent.Thus this perplexity is called forth when philosophy deals with what Jaspers calls‘boundary situations’ (Grenzsituationen). Questions at the boundary are not justquestions about the limits <strong>of</strong> science, though they are that too. They are questions on thelimit, on the edge, simpliciter. The most obvious boundary situation is death. There is noanswer to the meaning <strong>of</strong> death, because there is no determinate univocal concept thatwould put this event within an objective rational whole. Rather this event puts allobjective rational wholes into question, and yet the genuine philosopher has to continueto think despite the severe strain put on the ideal <strong>of</strong> rational completeness. These are theboundary situations Jaspers considers in Philosophie: that I must die, that I cannot livewithout conflict and suffering, that I cannot escape guilt.Boundary situations are not unrelated to Marcel’s notion <strong>of</strong> the meta-problematic ormystery. They burst out <strong>of</strong> the system <strong>of</strong> scientific rationality. Yet philosophy does notend at this bursting. A more authentic philosophizing can then begin. Put in terms <strong>of</strong>Kant: Kant was obsessed with the desire to make metaphysics into a secure science, andto put behind him all the ‘random gropings’ <strong>of</strong> the past. Did Kant secure metaphysics as ascience? The answer must be no. It will always be no. Metaphysics is not exhausted bythe rationalistic scholasticism <strong>of</strong> the Wolffian school. Jaspers is critical <strong>of</strong> metaphysics ina vein reminiscent <strong>of</strong> Kant’s attack on rationalistic science <strong>of</strong> being. But metaphysicalthinking feeds on the indeterminate perplexity that takes us to the boundary and that ismore radically energized in encounter with the boundary. There is a sense in whichmetaphysics really only begins at the limits <strong>of</strong> science. Despite his Kantian critique <strong>of</strong>‘metaphysics’, I think Jaspers also hears this in Kant: the old rationalistic metaphysicsmay perhaps be put in its place; but at the limit, the old and ever fresh wonder is recalledinto new life. A different kind <strong>of</strong> thinking has to take place at the boundary. This thinkingJaspers performs under the rubric <strong>of</strong> what he calls ‘periechontology’ as distinct from theold ‘ontology’.Consider here Jaspers’s claim that truth cannot be reduced to correctness. Scientifictruth does operate with some notion <strong>of</strong> correctness, Jaspers implies. Putting aside thecomplex disagreements in current philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, the ideal <strong>of</strong> correctness is basedupon the presupposition that the ideal <strong>of</strong> determinate intelligibility is fundamental. Ascientific proposition or theory or hypothesis is correct if it somehow ‘corresponds’ to thedeterminate state <strong>of</strong> affairs that it purports to report. The scientific proposition or theoryor hypothesis must be stated with as much determinate precision as possible. The limit <strong>of</strong>this precision would be a mathematical univocity, a completely determinate formulation


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 121<strong>of</strong> a matter without any shade <strong>of</strong> equivocity or ambiguity or indefiniteness. Moreover, thereality thus propositionally determined is itself taken to be a more or less determinatemanifestation <strong>of</strong> being. To be scientifically objective is thus to epitomize an objectivemode <strong>of</strong> thinking relative to a reality that is objectified in just that sense <strong>of</strong> beingappropriated as completely determinate. Scientific correctness objectively dispels theambiguities <strong>of</strong> being. There is no objective mathesis <strong>of</strong> ambiguity, only a mathesis thatdissolves ambiguity.Within its sphere this is to the point, as Jaspers acknowledges. But philosophicalthinking is already outside this sphere as reflecting upon this ideal <strong>of</strong> truth as correctnessand the will to objective knowing inherent in it. <strong>Philosophy</strong> is thus already a nonobjectifyingthought. Jaspers pursues the question relative to truth as correctness bysuggesting that determinate objects could not appear as determinable and hence asscientifically intelligible did they not appear out <strong>of</strong> or against a background that is notitself an object. This is the horizon <strong>of</strong> intelligibility that makes possible the appearance <strong>of</strong>determinate objects as determinate. The background horizon relative to which scientifictruthdeterminately appears is not itself a determinate truth. There is no truth ascorrectness possible about this horizon. The horizon is truth in a sense that is notdeterminable or objectifiable.Again one is hard put to forget Heidegger’s analysis <strong>of</strong> the primordiality <strong>of</strong> alētheiarelative to truth as orthotes or adaequatio. We might say that this indeterminable truth isthe non-objective other to the indeterminate perplexity that drives the self-transcendingthinking <strong>of</strong> philosophy. One wonders if in his own way Kant was aware <strong>of</strong> this finallyindeterminable sense <strong>of</strong> truth. One <strong>of</strong> his most suggestive phrases in the Third Critiquewas ‘purposiveness without purpose’, (Zweckmässigkeit ohne Zweck). Kant does notextend the meaning <strong>of</strong> this phrase beyond the aesthetic, yet it has implications for thevery self-transcending orientation <strong>of</strong> the human being towards truth as beyond everydeterminate truth. This is truth as the ultimate horizon <strong>of</strong> the truths <strong>of</strong> science and thedeterminate intelligibilities it discloses. There is, <strong>of</strong> course, a deep equivocity in Kant intending to restrict truth to what is scientifically validated, and Jaspers shares in thisequivocation, even while in practice extending the notion <strong>of</strong> truth well beyond scientificcorrectness. Jaspers’s name for this horizon <strong>of</strong> truth is ‘the Encompassing’ (DasUmgreifende), one <strong>of</strong> the major ideas in his philosophy as a whole.Das Umgreifende—the word carries the suggestion <strong>of</strong> being englobed by somethingthat cannot be reduced to any definite object within the globe, the circle. Is this avariation <strong>of</strong> Parmenides’ well-rounded truth? Yes. But any implication <strong>of</strong> a closed totalityis something against which Jaspers will fight. The very language seems almostunavoidably to connote the closed circle. But if so, this is not something Jaspers intends.To close the circle would be to determine the indeterminable and so to objectify its nonobjectifiabletranscendence. Jaspers also claims that there is a plurality <strong>of</strong> modes <strong>of</strong> theEncompassing, and hence a Parmenidean monism will never do. This plurality <strong>of</strong> modesincludes: Being in itself that surrounds us—this is further specified in terms <strong>of</strong> world andTranscendence; the Being that we are, further specified as empirical existence (Dasein),consciousness as such and spirit (Geist); finally the Encompassing as Existenz and reason(Vernunft).Jaspers’s philosophy is here a post-Kantian Kantianism <strong>of</strong> finitude in which the


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 122singularity <strong>of</strong> Existenz is thrust into the ambiguities <strong>of</strong> the Kantian architectonic.Jaspers’s Kantianism appears again in that the ultimate indeterminability <strong>of</strong> theEncompassing makes it impossible to capture as a totality. Hegelian idealism makes whatfor Jaspers is the false claim to totality. To claim totality would be to imply a standpointexternal to the Encompassing and this is impossible. Every determinate standpoint isrelative to a determinate, objectified other, and hence is itself only possible on the basis<strong>of</strong> its englobement by the Encompassing.We humans are not the encompassing <strong>of</strong> Encompassing. Still there is a sense in whichfor Jaspers we humans are the Encompassing; somehow our self-transcending thinkingparticipates in the Encompassing; we are not determinate things but as Existenzparticipants in the truth in this more ultimate sense. We ourselves are a certain horizon <strong>of</strong>truth in a sense that cannot be reduced to objective correctness. The ‘Kantianism’ in thisagain brings us back to a certain finitude <strong>of</strong> thought, even in the indeterminate selftranscending<strong>of</strong> thought. The rejection <strong>of</strong> totality makes Jaspers join hands with Marcel inrejection <strong>of</strong> the speculative whole <strong>of</strong> Hegelian idealism. Marcel is very explicit in sayingthat the concept <strong>of</strong> totality is completely inappropriate to the idea <strong>of</strong> the spirit.Jaspers, in my view, learned more from Hegel than he always explicitly acknowledged.His willingness to acknowledge the debt was spoken more clearly in his later life, but atthe time <strong>of</strong> his earlier writing Hegel was not seen as an interlocutor that one could berespectably associated with, except to try to thrash. Nevertheless, Jaspers is very much apost-Hegelian philosopher in his refusal <strong>of</strong> totality, something he shares also withHeidegger. We will see in Levinas a divergence <strong>of</strong> totality and infinity, where the infiniteruptures every totality, beyond recuperation in any higher totality.Our failure to determine the indeterminability <strong>of</strong> the Encompassing does not mean asurrender to the merely indefinite. The other thinking at the boundary <strong>of</strong> objectivethought must be complemented by the project <strong>of</strong> Existenz clarification. Jaspers has somevery important reflections on what he calls ‘foundering’ (Scheitern) and‘shipwreck’ (Schiffbruch). <strong>Philosophy</strong> too founders, but in its foundering the possibility<strong>of</strong> breaking through to something other cannot be closed <strong>of</strong>f. I cannot dwell onfoundering here, but we can appropriately situate Jaspers relative to two exceptionalpredecessors he singles out for special mention: Nietzsche and Kierkegaard. These twocould be said to live a sense <strong>of</strong> philosophical foundering that is deeply significant for allsubsequent philosophizing.Jaspers’s writing shows a clear awareness that these two figures signal the end <strong>of</strong> aepoch, the end <strong>of</strong> modernity. Without exaggeration one can say that, to the extent that heappropriated their significance, Jaspers himself was a postmodern philosopher. I use thephrase with hesitation, since now postmodernism wastes itself with an academic antiacademicfrivolity, the hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> suspicion gone chic, a scholastic scepticismwithout spiritual substance. A postmodern philosopher in any genuine sense is one whorecognizes the spiritual sickness <strong>of</strong> modernity. Of course, a sick being is not a dead being,and a sick being continues to live, hence it must be in some other respects healthy.Modernity is sick in this ambiguous sense. Kierkegaard and Nietzsche not only diagnosedthis sickness, they lived this sickness within themselves. Both were experimentalthinkers, both experienced the illness they tried to cure in themselves, the illness <strong>of</strong>nihilism.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 123Kierkegaard’s Christian cure, Nietzsche’s Dionysian pharmakon, diverge. Jaspersthinks that philosophy can never be the same after them. They represent the radicalrupture with idealistic totality. They stand before our future as exceptional thinkers whohave lived through the spiritual sickness <strong>of</strong> modernity. Both founder for Jaspers. But thisliving through and foundering is informed by its own spiritual greatness. This greatnessmakes one reluctant to ally them completely with ‘postmodernism’, where the desire forspiritual seriousness or greatness seems feeble, if not terminal. Nietzsche andKierkegaard would shudder at what passes for their current postmodern appropriations.Nietzsche would see the last men mouthing his songs, and sounding cacophonous.Kierkegaard would be dismayed at the aestheticization <strong>of</strong> his work, as if he did not call usto God—God, God and nothing but God. Let readers ask themselves if my reiteration <strong>of</strong>the word ‘God’ has not sent a shudder <strong>of</strong> uneasy embarrassment up their spines.Understand Nietzsche and Kierkegaard well. They are embarrassing thinkers; they shameus.They call into question the traditional pretensions <strong>of</strong> reason. Jaspers is quite clear aboutthis. Do they bring philosophy to an end? Perhaps philosophy <strong>of</strong> totality, but philosophy:no. Jaspers is himself a thinker <strong>of</strong> the end <strong>of</strong> philosophy, but he has a more nuancedhistorical sense than the fashionable proclaimers <strong>of</strong> the end <strong>of</strong> philosophy. There is anhistorical fairness. He does not totalize the tradition <strong>of</strong> philosophy in order to denounce itfor totalizing thought—a blatant equivocation not avoided by anti-totalizing totalizerslike Adorno, Derrida, Heidegger, Nietzsche himself. Though Jaspers is no Hegelian, thereis much about him not entirely antipathetic to Hegel. He acknowledges that for a longtime he got great sustenance for his own lectures from Hegel. Granting his greatness,eventually the totalizing Hegel became ‘grotesque’ for him. I mention his relation toHegel again in that both have a much more generous attitude to the tradition <strong>of</strong>philosophy than almost all other post-Hegelian philosophers.Hegel, Jaspers and Heidegger are perhaps the three greatest thinkers <strong>of</strong> the last 150years who have tried to embrace, albeit very diversely, the heritage <strong>of</strong> millennia in theirthinking. Jaspers’s generosity to the tradition makes him finally distance himself from theexceptionality <strong>of</strong> Kierkegaard and Nietzsche. Their provocation <strong>of</strong> reason has to bebalanced by the greatness <strong>of</strong> reason, as seen from a proper appropriation <strong>of</strong> the greatthinkers <strong>of</strong> the past. Against the modern will to unprecedented originality—infectingNietzsche and Heidegger—Jaspers wants to reaffirm the idea <strong>of</strong> philosophia perennis.A major undertaking <strong>of</strong> Jaspers was to write a universal history <strong>of</strong> philosophy. Thiswas never completed. Jaspers was interested not in a history <strong>of</strong> ideas but in a dialoguewith the great thinkers by a genuine philosopher. The truth persists across time, thoughmediated through time. Nor is this truth identifiable with Heidegger’s historicity <strong>of</strong> being,since Jaspers is not unwilling to invoke eternity, granting, <strong>of</strong> course, all the cautions andqualifications necessary in any such invocation. The tradition <strong>of</strong> philosophy is theprivileged conversation <strong>of</strong> great thinkers. He includes himself in that conversation.Across the centuries a great thinker still calls to other thinkers. We later thinkers have toresurrect the greatness <strong>of</strong> the past thinker, not merely debunk them in the interests <strong>of</strong>spuriously elevating ourselves into a position <strong>of</strong> false originality. It is the spiritual truth <strong>of</strong>philosophical honesty that the great thinkers share. Each concretizes the self-surpassingtranscendence <strong>of</strong> thinking, a personification <strong>of</strong> the extremity <strong>of</strong> honest perplexity before


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 124ultimacy.Jaspers has not been as fashionable as Nietzsche and Heidegger precisely because <strong>of</strong>the generosity <strong>of</strong> his respect for tradition. In modernity we have been so infatuated withfuturity that we have shortchanged the spiritual greatness <strong>of</strong> the past. In the future it willbe great, it will be new, it will be unprecedented. A rhetoric <strong>of</strong> originality masks a lot <strong>of</strong>intellectual conceit. Nietzsche and Heidegger were not immune from thus puffingthemselves up. As if a philosopher must strut and preen and crow: How different I am,how new! Cockcrow: and no, not dawn, as Nietzsche said; but flourish, flourish <strong>of</strong> thepostmodern cock.Jaspers addresses the theme <strong>of</strong> the other, especially in that philosophy for him isinseparable from communication. The dialogue with the tradition is one instance <strong>of</strong>communication. Communicative reason opens beyond monadic thinking at both ends:towards the past, towards the future. Nor did Jaspers deny the responsibility <strong>of</strong> thecommunicative reason <strong>of</strong> philosophy to shape the spiritual present. Again the other has tobe accorded a different place in thought from that allowed for in idealistic totality.Reason in Existenz is always marked by a boundless will to communication. One seessome harbingers <strong>of</strong> Habermas. The communicative relation to the other is constitutive <strong>of</strong>the activity <strong>of</strong> reason. Indeed Existenz is not itself at all apart from the relation <strong>of</strong> the selfto the other. The demand <strong>of</strong> communication with the other must be met for Existenz to beitself. Likewise we must be awakened to ourselves as Existenz if we are to do justice tothe demand <strong>of</strong> communication.Jaspers confessed to loneliness and incapacity to communicate inhis youth. This wasexacerbated by the isolating effects <strong>of</strong> his illness. Just as Existenz cannot be objectified,so our relatedness to the other can never be reduced to an objective relation such as mighthold between things. Jaspers’ primary emphasis is on the mutual reciprocity <strong>of</strong>communication between humans. He is a severe critic <strong>of</strong> the substitution in modernity <strong>of</strong>mass society for genuine community. The flattening <strong>of</strong> human beings into averageness,and hence the impoverishment <strong>of</strong> singularity, diminish, if not deform, what is essential toreal community. In the singularity <strong>of</strong> Existenz there is always an opening to what is otherthan closed subjectivity.As with Kierkegaard and Marcel, Jaspers <strong>of</strong>fers a critique <strong>of</strong> the functionalization <strong>of</strong>man and the massification <strong>of</strong> societies. The sacrifice <strong>of</strong> singularity as Existenz is thedefect <strong>of</strong> totalitarianism. But this defect also marks the competitive individualism <strong>of</strong>capitalism, for here singularity is merely atomized, and between atoms there is no deepbond <strong>of</strong> community. He does not display Nietzsche’s elitist disdain for the many. He wasdeeply and ineradicably influenced by Weber. In many respects he also shares the sense<strong>of</strong> community at work in Kierkegaard’s neglected social critique: each <strong>of</strong> us is anabsolute singularity; this singularity is preserved in community, but genuine communityis ultimately a community <strong>of</strong> spirit under God. The will <strong>of</strong> Existenz to communicate withthe other stands under Transcendence as the absolute other.Nor does Jaspers deny conflict in a mushy communitarianism. As already indicated,guilt and conflict are discussed as boundary situations in Philosophie. His sufferingthrough Nazism was itself exposure to the violence <strong>of</strong> evil. He does underscore thepossibility <strong>of</strong> a loving struggle. Love is not devoid <strong>of</strong> conflict, but the conflict is acreative war, polemos, as it were. Communication can be a contestation which is a mutual


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 125challenge to more authentic Existenz. His love for his wife, Gertrude, seem to haveepitomized for him this creative contestation. This is close to Marcel’s creative fidelity,and certainly beyond sadism and masochism, the degraded form <strong>of</strong> erotic struggle givenso much attention by Sartre.Communication is also central in Jaspers’s ideas <strong>of</strong> reason and truth. Reason is anopening to the universal, but the true universal is not an anonymous generality in whichsingularity is submerged. So also for Jaspers truth is incomplete if it does not embodyitself in a will to total communication. Truth is not closed on itself, timeless andunaffected by historicity. Jaspers even implies that truth actualizes itself in the movement<strong>of</strong> communication itself. Truth comes to completion in the process <strong>of</strong> communication.One senses the shadow <strong>of</strong> Kant again. One is reminded <strong>of</strong> the Kantian progressus, theinfinite task <strong>of</strong> the regulative ideal. WhenJaspers indicates a call on self-transformation incommunication, to my mind he is talking about truthfulness, both singular andcommunal. Obviously this is constituted in the coming to truthfulness by the self and thecommunity. This is a becoming truthful which would not be possible in the solitude <strong>of</strong> theself-communing thought, self-thinking thought. What about a sense <strong>of</strong> truth that is notconstituted by what comes to be in a process <strong>of</strong> communication, but that makes possiblethat process <strong>of</strong> coming to be <strong>of</strong> social truthfulness? This sense <strong>of</strong> truth makes possible theconstitution <strong>of</strong> truthfulness but is not itself constituted by truthfulness. This is truth that aprocess <strong>of</strong> communication unfolds or reveals, rather than creates or constitutes.Residues <strong>of</strong> the constitutive language <strong>of</strong> Kantian idealism are here evident in Jaspers.The otherness <strong>of</strong> truth as for itself is compromised by this constitutive language. Jaspersdoes not want to deny this otherness but his submission to Kantian ways <strong>of</strong> thinkingconditions a certain emphasis in his efforts to speak <strong>of</strong> Transcendence. This is applicablewith respect to metaphysical transcendence, but also with respect to the possibility <strong>of</strong>divine revelation. The movement <strong>of</strong> our transcending, even in the communication <strong>of</strong>truthfulness, mingles with Transcendence as communicating with us out <strong>of</strong> its ownintegral otherness, such that we do not really know if there is this other otherness. Whatwe do, our becoming truthful, seems hard to distinguish from what is done to us, ourpatience to truth. Does what is done to us collapse into what we do? How then are we toavoid a wrong appropriation <strong>of</strong> the other?There is a principle <strong>of</strong> tolerance in Jaspers’s sense <strong>of</strong> communicative reason. He knowsthat vis-à-vis Existenz we cannot just say there is one univocal truth. The truth is refractedsingularly in the specific truthfulness <strong>of</strong> every singular Existenz. Reason must be honestlyvigilant to the particularities <strong>of</strong> just that singular refraction. Communication is thisvigilance, and this vigilance is respect for the other as other. I use the term ‘refraction’,which is not the language <strong>of</strong> constitutive idealism. And even though there is a quasiconstitutivelanguage in Jaspers, his language <strong>of</strong> foundering must be seen to plot the limit<strong>of</strong> this, and indirectly to open a moment <strong>of</strong> radical receptivity in which we do notcommunicate but in which the other is communicating with us. Jaspers does not explicitlyaddress the question <strong>of</strong> symmetrical and asymmetrical relativity in a manner that Levinasdoes.Throughout I have referred to Transcendence. Here we approach the question <strong>of</strong> God.Transcendence for Jaspers is the ground <strong>of</strong> human Existenz and freedom. Jaspers treats <strong>of</strong>transcendence in volume III <strong>of</strong> Philosophie under the heading Metaphysics. The heading


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 126is not insignificant in the light <strong>of</strong> his critique <strong>of</strong> ontology from the standpoint <strong>of</strong>periechontology. The sense <strong>of</strong> metaphysical transcendence returns,proves unavoidable,even when all the Kantian strictures about metaphysics have been taken to heart.Transcendence is the absolute other. Again the Kantian modulation for Jaspers is thatTranscendence is not to be known cognitively but to be reached existentially. There is nopositive knowledge <strong>of</strong> Transcendence. Moreover, Transcendence grants itselfgratuitously. Of course, if this is true the autonomy <strong>of</strong> reason is breached, and every trace<strong>of</strong> idealism, even Kantian idealism, will have to been reinspected.Jaspers speaks <strong>of</strong> Transcendence as the absolute Encompassing, the Encompassing <strong>of</strong>all the encompassings. Transcendence is not the world, nor is it empty possibility, thoughJaspers says that it shows itself only to Existenz. Transcendence is the absolute other inwhich Existenz is grounded. Wherever Existenz is authentically existing, it is notcompletely through itself. The human existent does not create itself. Relative toTranscendence I know that I have been given to myself. The more decisively Existenz isaware <strong>of</strong> its freedom the more it is aware <strong>of</strong> its relation to Transcendence.I am tempted to think <strong>of</strong> both Augustine and Kierkegaard. Augustine speaks <strong>of</strong> beingconcerned with the soul and God and nothing more. This Augustinian theme is soundedin the correlation <strong>of</strong> Existenz and Transcendence. Moreover, Augustine speaks <strong>of</strong> God asintimior intimo meo: God is more intimate to me than I am to myself. The intimacy <strong>of</strong>this relation is beyond the world <strong>of</strong> objectivity; it happens in the deepest interiority <strong>of</strong>non-objectifiable Existenz, selfhood. Truth is subjectivity in Kierkegaard’s sense: thetruth <strong>of</strong> Transcendence will never be reduced to a set <strong>of</strong> general, public concepts. Perhapsthis is why Jaspers insists, in Kantian manner, on our relation to Transcendence as noncognitive.Why not speak <strong>of</strong> knowing in a different, non-objectifiable sense, a wisdom <strong>of</strong>idiocy, idiot wisdom <strong>of</strong> the intimacy <strong>of</strong> being? Why the obsessive insistence thatvalidated cognition be confined to objective science?Surely we can expand the notion <strong>of</strong> cognition without having to give ourselves over t<strong>of</strong>ull-blown Hegelian reason? For that matter, without this expansion does not Jaspers’sway <strong>of</strong> talking fall foul <strong>of</strong> Hegel’s critique <strong>of</strong> Kant’s unknowable: If it is unknowable,you can say nothing; you cannot even know that it is unknowable; but you are sayingsomething, then it must not be unknowable. I am enjoining the Hegelian question, notendorsing Hegel’s answer to Kant in terms <strong>of</strong> a dialectical knowing <strong>of</strong> Transcendence.Hegel’s answer sins in the opposite direction <strong>of</strong> cognitively subordinating Transcendenceto immanence. We need a knowing other than Hegelian knowing and a non-knowingother than Kantian agnosticism.Transcendence is, but is never adequately manifest in appearance. It eludes all thinkingif we mean to think it as a determinate object. Itseems easier to name it negatively than tosay what it is positively. There is a sense in which we can find no final firm place intrying to say it, whether positively or negatively. Jaspers allows that there are manynames for it. We can call it Being, Actuality, Divinity, God. Relative to thinking, he sayswe can call it Being; relative to life, it can be called Authentic Actuality; as demandingand governing, it can be called Divinity; relative to our encounter with it in our singularpersonhood, it can be called God.Again we find a denial <strong>of</strong> cognitive content in favour <strong>of</strong> the naming <strong>of</strong> an existentialexperience. Self-transformation can occur in encounter with Transcendence; it can


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 127become a source out <strong>of</strong> which I live and towards which I die. Amor Dei can lead to atransformation <strong>of</strong> how we love and hate the world. Jaspers mentions the magnificent love<strong>of</strong> the world in Chinese life and the hatred <strong>of</strong> life in gnostic thought. This latter is finallya nihilism and despair: the godless creation <strong>of</strong> the world is brought forth by Lucifer. Thisdiabolical creation is counter to God. When the world is God’s creation the world isloved and God is loved in God’s creation; the promise <strong>of</strong> human existence is affirmed.We are always within the world and hence our relation to Transcendence is marked byfinitude and foundering. We need the symbol and the cipher to articulate what in the endis beyond all articulation. In his later life Jaspers undertook a major dialogue withreligious faith. He himself claimed the standpoint <strong>of</strong> what he called philosophical faith.<strong>Philosophy</strong> is <strong>of</strong>ten in tension with religion but their quests <strong>of</strong> ultimacy are akin. LikeHegel, Jaspers insists on the autonomy <strong>of</strong> philosophy, sometimes to the point <strong>of</strong> showingtraces <strong>of</strong> a residual Enlightenment hostility to the claims <strong>of</strong> revealed religion. The samequestion can be put to both Hegel and Jaspers: To what extent are philosophical ideasrational transformations <strong>of</strong> religious themes, and hence not autonomous butheteronomous? Is philosophical faith religious faith rationalized?For Hegel, <strong>of</strong> course, there is no philosophical faith; philosophy is knowing. Jaspersagain stands closer to Kant. His philosophical faith attempts, among other things, torender articulate the ‘faith’ in favour <strong>of</strong> which Kant is willing to deny knowledge. Thisphilosophical faith cannot be assimilated to poetry or science or religion. If philosophy isother to religion, it is with respect to critical self-consciousness, not with respect to anyHegelian speculative knowing wherein religion is dialectically aufgehoben. This criticalself-awareness <strong>of</strong> limits nurtures a vigilance to the idolatry, whether fideistic orrationalistic, which mistakes the cipher <strong>of</strong> Transcendence for Transcendence itself.Religion and philosophy are different, not as opposites but as polar approaches toTranscendence. In this polarity they comprise a community <strong>of</strong> ultimates that areperennially a contestation and a challenge to each other.EMMANUEL LEVINASEmmanuel Levinas was born in Lithuania into an orthodox Jewish family but has spentmost <strong>of</strong> his life in France. His experience <strong>of</strong> the Second World War was to shape histhought deeply. He has written Talmudic studies, though he claims that his philosophybelongs in another category. Husserl’s phenomenology and Heidegger’s fundamentalontology influenced his first philosophical studies, influenced in the double sense <strong>of</strong>supporting his thinking and yet provoking him into struggle against that very support. Hismature thought is expressed in Totality and Infinity (1961). Subsequently he haspublished collections <strong>of</strong> essays leading to Otherwise than Being or Beyond Essence(1973). He has also continued to write Talmudic studies <strong>of</strong> a more strictly religiouscharacter. Starting from phenomenology he has moved towards a recovery <strong>of</strong>metaphysical transcendence and an affirmation <strong>of</strong> what he calls ‘ethics’ as firstphilosophy.Levinas became better known in English-speaking philosophy in the 1980s, partlymediated through the impact <strong>of</strong> deconstruction. English-speaking readers will find


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 128Levinas difficult without some sense <strong>of</strong> the context out <strong>of</strong> which he writes. Manyconsider Totality and Infinity to be his masterwork. It is a difficult book, for manyphilosophers as well as non-philosophers. Levinas’s thinking is haunted by a whole host<strong>of</strong> philosophical ghosts. To get some sense <strong>of</strong> the peculiarities <strong>of</strong> his philosophizing,relative to his influences and claims, I name some <strong>of</strong> the ghosts.There is the Cartesian heritage that seeks cognitive certainty in the foundation <strong>of</strong> thecogito, the ‘I think’. Levinas evinces high respect for Descartes, surprising respect in thatDescartes is <strong>of</strong>ten criticized as the originator <strong>of</strong> an understanding <strong>of</strong> mind that locksthought within itself, within its own immanence. Levinas wants to break out <strong>of</strong> thatclosed circle <strong>of</strong> immanence, without denying a certain inner integrity to the subject.There is the phenomenological tradition, which can be interpreted as an ambiguouscontinuation <strong>of</strong> the Cartesian heritage. Levinas’s first work was on the theory <strong>of</strong> intuitionin Husserl, and his practice <strong>of</strong> phenomenology is not without debt to Husserl. He came toquestion the phenomenological doctrine <strong>of</strong> the intentionality <strong>of</strong> consciousness. He pointsto modes <strong>of</strong> consciousness where intentionality as a directedness on an object is not thefinal story. His discussion <strong>of</strong> enjoyment, for instance, reveals an engagement <strong>of</strong>consciousness, which cannot be reduced to the intention <strong>of</strong> an object. The structure <strong>of</strong>intentionality seems to point to a certain mastery <strong>of</strong> the object; but if there are modes <strong>of</strong>the subject beyond intentionality, then objectifying, hence dominating, consciousnessdoes not have the last word.The presence <strong>of</strong> Heidegger shadowed Levinas. Heidegger’s stature is not denied. Yetthe accusation against him is that his Being is an anonymous power that ultimately leadsto an account <strong>of</strong> history as impersonal destiny. The person in its singularity is sacrificedto an ontology <strong>of</strong> anonymous powers. Heidegger’s thought epitomizes ontology as aphilosophy <strong>of</strong> power. Levinas opposes this with a metaphysics <strong>of</strong> the good wherein anameless universal Being does not have final sway. Heidegger produces an ontology <strong>of</strong>the neuter; there is no basis for an ethics.Levinas speaks against the neutering <strong>of</strong> being which he tends to identify with thehorror and anonymity <strong>of</strong> what he calls the element. A different view <strong>of</strong> the elemental ispossible, but for Levinas it is the faceless indefinite <strong>of</strong> the prima materia (sometimeswrongly identified with to apeiron). His account <strong>of</strong> the impersonality <strong>of</strong> the ‘There is’, ashe calls it, reminds one <strong>of</strong> Sartre’s account <strong>of</strong> being-in-itself, for instance in hisphenomenology <strong>of</strong> the viscous: always threatening the integrity <strong>of</strong> the personal, the selfas an integrity <strong>of</strong> innerness for itself. Levinas rejected the view <strong>of</strong> human being asderelict, as well as Sartre’s alienated vision <strong>of</strong> man as nothingness. Heideggerianthrownness is counteracted by a phenomenology <strong>of</strong> enjoyment. Happiness, a prioragreement with being, is a more primordial condition <strong>of</strong> elemental being.The question as to why Heidegger was an ardent Nazi is as important to Levinas as itwas to Jaspers. Levinas spent time in a prisoner-<strong>of</strong>-war camp. Nazi philosophy wasarticulated in terms <strong>of</strong> a world-historical destiny as expressed in the German people. Theothers do not finally count; will to power subordinates all ethical concern to the victory <strong>of</strong>the mighty.This relates to the influence in French philosophy <strong>of</strong> Kojève’s reading <strong>of</strong> Hegelthrough the eyes <strong>of</strong> the master/slave dialectic in the Phenomenology. Hegelianism herebecomes reduced to an all-devouring logic <strong>of</strong> domination and servitude. Sartre takes up a


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 129related interpretation in his infamous identification: hell is the other. Against the violence<strong>of</strong> the Sartrean look, Levinas sees the defencelessness <strong>of</strong> the other in the unguarded eyes,a powerlessness that nevertheless commands in the ethical injunction: Thou shall not kill.Levinas rejects the identification <strong>of</strong> death as the master in Kojève’s Heideggerian-Marxist Hegelianism. Contrary to the dialectic <strong>of</strong> master and slave and its violence, thereis a pacific relation to the other that Levinas stresses as underlying the entire economy <strong>of</strong>labour and dwelling. This relates to the feminine. The grace <strong>of</strong> the feminine founds thehome and the dwelling, out <strong>of</strong> which the labouring self is articulated, and with this theentire realm <strong>of</strong> economical, political and historical being. Things are conceiveddifferently at the origins. These origins are not identicalwith the fullness <strong>of</strong> the ethicalrelation but they are consistent with it in a way that the dialectic <strong>of</strong> master and slave isnot.Kojève’s Marxist Hegelianism also expresses a philosophy <strong>of</strong> history which culminatesin the modern state as the earthly embodiment <strong>of</strong> the absolute. The world-historicaluniversal sacrifices the intimate singularity <strong>of</strong> the self as person to the Moloch <strong>of</strong> thestate. As worldhistorical universals, the state and history are ultimately idolatrousabsolutes. Hegelian philosophy, like Heideggerian ontology, is seen by Levinas as anontology <strong>of</strong> power which always is tempted to relate to the other by murder. The classstruggle historically concretizes the master/slave dialectic. The course <strong>of</strong> history is war,the goal <strong>of</strong> history a homogeneous state in which otherness, the dissident other issuppressed in a universal sameness. Though this is abhorrent to Levinas, he is stillconcerned with labour, property, possession, reminding us <strong>of</strong> Marcel’s concerns withbeing and having.Levinas’s repeated references to the philosophies <strong>of</strong> existence are guarded. He sharesmuch with some existentialists, Kierkegaard for instance, in defending the singularity, theipseity <strong>of</strong> the human self. Levinas’s phenomenological background and its pretence thatphilosophy must be rigorous, indeed scientific, makes him uneasy with the so-called‘irrationalism’ <strong>of</strong> the existentialists. He distances himself from a philosophy that ismerely a protestation against the impersonal reason <strong>of</strong> the idealists and rationalists. Hewants to defend a different sense <strong>of</strong> reason against individualistic irrationalism. Thissense <strong>of</strong> reason will defend the ethical community <strong>of</strong> the same and the other. ThoughLevinas shuns the way <strong>of</strong> solitary genius, his sense <strong>of</strong> singularity aligns him with what isbest in the philosophies <strong>of</strong> existence. This is an emphasis on what I called the intimacy <strong>of</strong>being with respect to Marcel. I find strong echoes <strong>of</strong> Marcel in some <strong>of</strong> the themesLevinas dwells on: the family, paternity, filiality, the home, enjoyment.There is a groundswell <strong>of</strong> influence from Levinas’s Jewishness. It is indicated veryexplicitly in his admiring reference to Rosenzweig’s The Star <strong>of</strong> Redemption.Rosenzweig was initially a Hegelian who had written on Hegel’s doctrine <strong>of</strong> the state.Then he had an astonishing quick conversion—reversion really—to Judaism, out <strong>of</strong>which The Star <strong>of</strong> Redemption sprung. This book is considered one <strong>of</strong> the landmarks <strong>of</strong>modern Jewish thought. Against the lure <strong>of</strong> Hegelian totality, a metaphysics <strong>of</strong> creation,as well as an affirmation <strong>of</strong> singularity as recalcitrant to inclusion in totality, is pursued.Though in Totality and Infinity Levinas says he is working in a purely philosophical vein,the distinctiveness <strong>of</strong> his philosophical voice owes much to the subterranean fermenting<strong>of</strong> the Jewish heritage.


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 130In contrast to not a few poststructuralist thinkers, Levinas’s philosophy has alwaysexhibited a spiritual seriousness that refuses to playact with the matter itself. The return<strong>of</strong> sacred otherness in Levinas reminds us <strong>of</strong> Shestov’s contrast <strong>of</strong> Athens and Jerusalem.Shestov is unjustly neglected today but he is a pr<strong>of</strong>ound, radical thinker <strong>of</strong> the limits <strong>of</strong>philosophy in relation to religion as an other, and with a sense <strong>of</strong> the tradition <strong>of</strong>speculative metaphysics in some ways more pr<strong>of</strong>ound than Levinas’s.With Heidegger and many post-structuralists, Levinas tends to totalize the tradition <strong>of</strong>philosophy. All philosophy is said to be only an imperialism <strong>of</strong> identity or the same.Levinas speaks <strong>of</strong> philosophy as allergic to otherness, an allergy that reaches itsculmination in Hegel. This is surely not true <strong>of</strong> the philosophical tradition as a whole.This fact is revealed by Levinas’s retraction: there is some philosophicalacknowledgement <strong>of</strong> the other, as in Plato’s doctrine <strong>of</strong> the Good beyond being.The strategy is: totalize the tradition as imperialism <strong>of</strong> the same; suggest a differentthinking <strong>of</strong> the other that is without precedent; then smuggle back ideas that in some formare found in the tradition; finally, acknowledge instances <strong>of</strong> such ideas in the tradition. Ofcourse, most readers will have forgotten the first step by the time they reach the last. Infact, the total claim made in the first step is now effectively abolished. Why notacknowledge the last step at the start? But one cannot if one wants to claim to ‘overcomethe tradition’. That claim would be dissolved; suspicion would be cast on thehermeneutics <strong>of</strong> suspicion. To take the last step first would require a hermeneutics <strong>of</strong>generosity and perhaps also a different interpretation <strong>of</strong> the philosophical tradition.Levinas is not to be confused with Derrida and Heidegger. He is very critical <strong>of</strong>Heidegger, and his writings evidence a spiritual seriousness that is lacking in Derrida. Hemixes suspicion and generosity towards the philosophical tradition in his distinctionbetween what he calls ‘ontology’ and ‘metaphysics’. Ontology marks a philosophy <strong>of</strong>being that always ends up reducing the other to the same. Ontology is a philosophy <strong>of</strong> theneuter which cannot do justice to the other, and especially the other as ethical. It is builtupon the logic <strong>of</strong> a movement from the same to the other which is always for the same,and always returning to the same. One is reminded <strong>of</strong> that strand <strong>of</strong> the tradition thatprivileges the movement <strong>of</strong> thought thinking itself.By metaphysics Levinas implies a movement <strong>of</strong> thought that exceeds totality, mostespecially in the surplus to thought <strong>of</strong> the idea <strong>of</strong> infinity and the face-to-face relation <strong>of</strong>the ethical. Metaphysical thought goes from the same to the other, but not in order toreturn to the self. This metaphysical movement <strong>of</strong> mind has always been a philosophicalpossibility, evidenced in Levinas’s own citation <strong>of</strong> Plato’sGood. Beyond thought thinkingitself, thought thinks what is other to thought.Levinas shows a tendency to identify the assumptions and analyses <strong>of</strong> Cartesian andtranscendental idealism with the essential possibilities <strong>of</strong> philosophy. Relative to theCartesian heritage, the cogito is privileged as the origin <strong>of</strong> all rigorously groundedphilosophizing. Even Sartre’s Cartesianism shows this: the availability <strong>of</strong> consciousnessto itself seems to augur for a mode <strong>of</strong> philosophizing that is rigorously in possession <strong>of</strong>its own procedures and contents, for none <strong>of</strong> its thoughts escape its own immanence, andhence its own certainty and certification. Levinas differently underscores the Cartesiannotion <strong>of</strong> infinitude to find a renewed pathway to the other beyond all mastering thought.Obviously phenomenology <strong>of</strong>fers a more embracing sense <strong>of</strong> philosophizing than


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 131classical Cartesianism, but their basic presuppositions overlap significantly: immanenceto consciousness is fundamental to phenomenology. This is just how the ‘phenomenon’<strong>of</strong> phenomenology is defined: not as the Sache as given in itself, but as given to and forconsciousness. Nevertheless, starting with many <strong>of</strong> phenomenology’s presuppositionsand methodical strategies, Levinas ends up with conclusions that produce the subversion<strong>of</strong> phenomenological immanence, as well as classical versions <strong>of</strong> idealism.Consider an important example: the discussion <strong>of</strong> representation in Totality andInfinity. Long passages are expository <strong>of</strong> an essentially Husserlian version <strong>of</strong>representation: representation is representability to consciousness; the immanence <strong>of</strong> theother is objectified as a representation for the same. This notion <strong>of</strong> representation has alsobeen attacked by Heidegger, Derrida, Foucault and others. But to take this as the analysis<strong>of</strong> representation is questionable. We are <strong>of</strong>fered analyses <strong>of</strong> representation andintelligibility which seem to cover the whole field, but do not at all. An account could begiven which does not coincide with Husserl’s view. Levinas himself goes on to do this,by claiming that there is an uprooted quality to the Husserlian analysis which privilegesthe theoretical consciousness. Turning to the phenomenon <strong>of</strong> enjoyment, Levinas finds amore primordial stratum in the genesis <strong>of</strong> representation that undercuts the analysis <strong>of</strong> theuprooted version. The ‘intentionality’ <strong>of</strong> enjoyment does not privilege self-constituting,or the primacy <strong>of</strong> the same over the other, as representation allegedly does.One need not quarrel with this second aim. But Levinas sets up his account asundercutting the philosophical primacy <strong>of</strong> representation and intelligibility. In fact he isessentially criticizing representation and intelligibility as defined by Husserl’stranscendental method. One could give an account <strong>of</strong> representation in which theprivilege <strong>of</strong> the other over the self is primarily stressed. Instead <strong>of</strong> representation simplybeing a commandeering <strong>of</strong> the other to appear before the self as the self would dictate foritself, it might be an openness to the other in which the truth <strong>of</strong> the representation is asubmission to heterogeneity, a humility before the other which the representation tries toapproximate and respect.Consider: if you ask me to represent you at a meeting, and if I truly want to representyou, I must subordinate my views to you and yours; I as representative must speak foryou, the other; I cannot make you, the other, speak for me and yet honestly claim that Iam representing you, the other. I am for you, as your representative. Representing ishence being-for-the-other in which the self subordinates the for-self <strong>of</strong> its own egoism tothe truth <strong>of</strong> the other as it is for the other. This is exactly the opposite <strong>of</strong> the ‘essence’ towhich Levinas reduces representation. Husserlian phenomenology is one philosophy; it isnot philosophy, not the essence <strong>of</strong> philosophy. Nor is it the touchstone <strong>of</strong> allcomparisons. Indeed its account is not true to the truth <strong>of</strong> representation as just indicated:a standing for the truth <strong>of</strong> the other as other.I dwell on this example, for the standard moves <strong>of</strong> many poststructuralist thinkers,Derrida included, are already contained in Levinas’s account <strong>of</strong> representation. But allphilosophical discourse becomes skewed if Husserlian transcendentalism becomes thestandard <strong>of</strong> philosophy against which other views are to be pitted. There is a certainhistorical, hermeneutical myopia here. When Marcel or Jaspers criticizes idealism, we donot find any tendency to hermeneutical special pleading. They do not totalize philosophyand its traditions. They are more judicious. Yet they too want to get beyond thought


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 132thinking itself to thought thinking what is other to thought.It is impossible to separate Levinas’s philosophy <strong>of</strong> the other from his sense <strong>of</strong> infinityand hence the idea <strong>of</strong> the divine other. Instead <strong>of</strong> conceiving the world as a fall or anemanation from the One, or a projection <strong>of</strong> constitutive subjectivity, Levinas’s rethinking<strong>of</strong> the idea <strong>of</strong> infinity points towards a renewal <strong>of</strong> the metaphysics <strong>of</strong> creation.Metaphysics here again means a mode <strong>of</strong> thinking that is for the other as other, notsimply for the same. Creation names the radically originative act by which the singularcreature comes into being for itself, and is given its finite being for itself. The Creatorabsolves His creation from the Creator to let be the other as finite in its given freedom. Inthat sense, God is the ultimate other that is the giver <strong>of</strong> all otherness, including the radicalotherness that is let be for itself, and in no way coerced into a return that wouldsubordinate a part to an engulfing whole.The strategic ambiguity here is that Levinas describes the for-self as atheist. On initialreading one might be inclined to think that Levinas espouses atheism. As I understandhim, he is saying that the being <strong>of</strong> finitude as given in creation is atheist; it is a-theist inthe most literal sense that it is not-God. God does not create Himself in creating theworld, as Hegel and Spinoza might claim. God’s creation is the giving <strong>of</strong> what isradically other to God, radically not-God; and this ‘not’ is the measure <strong>of</strong> anincommensurability between the Creator and the created being. This incommensurabilityis not a merely negative or lamentable disproportion; the ‘not’ <strong>of</strong> a-theism is the veryspace <strong>of</strong> transcendence in which the freedom <strong>of</strong> the creature can be enacted and calledforth. The atheism <strong>of</strong> the self is the promise <strong>of</strong> its possible being-for-itself, and in itsbeing-for-self its possible free relation across an irreducible difference to the divinesource itself. Atheist being is then the product <strong>of</strong> divine generosity; atheism is theprecondition <strong>of</strong> a different relativity between the human and divine which absolves therelata <strong>of</strong> complicity in relations <strong>of</strong> domination and violation.Is there a little disingenuousness here? Totality and Infinity was written at a time whenatheistic existentialism and Marxism were in their heyday. For well over a century and ahalf, the spiritual ethos <strong>of</strong> Europe has been dominated by a de rigueur atheism, as isnowhere more evident than in the popularizing <strong>of</strong> Sartrean existentialism. Levinas is acrafty writer in that he incorporates the truth <strong>of</strong> atheism within a project that aims torenew the metaphysical affirmation <strong>of</strong> God as transcendent. In the ambiguous creation,the human being as for-itself is atheist being; but atheist being can know its real othernessto ultimate transcendence and hence out <strong>of</strong> its atheist being turn towards the other, not asa part returns to its whole, not as an instance subordinates itself to its general, but as afree centre <strong>of</strong> ethical existence wills to enact the good <strong>of</strong> the Creator, the good <strong>of</strong> thecreature and neighbour. This ethical affirmation stands sentinel against descent into theanonymous powers <strong>of</strong> demonic universality, the world-historical universal, whetheridolized in Marxist or in Nazi form. In the latter we become agents, instruments <strong>of</strong> theanonymous universal, and all the more vile when we become judges and executioners <strong>of</strong>those who will not bow the knee before our murderously exacting idol. This is the malice<strong>of</strong> atheist being, which does not receive the expression or consideration in Totality andInfinity that it should.Levinas’s emphasis on infinity invokes a tale that spans the history <strong>of</strong> speculativemetaphysics, from the pre-Socratics to our own time. Levinas exploits the Cartesian idea


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 133<strong>of</strong> infinity in a direction that I suspect would have astonished Descartes himself. Pascalwas correct and saw right through Descartes when he said: ‘I cannot forgive Descartes; inhis whole philosophy he would like to do without God; but he could not help allowinghim a flick <strong>of</strong> his fingers to set the world in motion; after that he had no more use forGod.’ Levinas, who <strong>of</strong>ten cites Pascal with approval, seems hardly to suspect the possiblegodlessness <strong>of</strong> Cartesianism.There is also a strange approval <strong>of</strong> Cartesian doctrines <strong>of</strong> sensibility, praised becausesensibility is held to be essentially other to thought and the concept. Kant is here praisedon the same score for insisting on a heterogeneity between sensibility and understanding.One sees the point. The continuity <strong>of</strong> sensibility and thought, whether in Leibniz or inHegel, is to be ruptured in defence <strong>of</strong> a heterogeneity not subsumable under the rationalconcept. But there is a sense in which such a thing as Cartesian sensibility hardly exists.There is a sensible body in Descartes but it is not the body <strong>of</strong> flesh; it is not the bodiedself; it is the shape <strong>of</strong> the res extensa that in itself is lifeless. How can this lifeless resextensa enjoy life, since it is already a dead body? And from where could a Cartesian resextensa get a face? The res extensa has no face. The Cartesian body is like the featurelesswax <strong>of</strong> Descartes’ own example, entirely faceless, except for its automated mechanicalmovements. But human flesh has a face—just what Levinas wants to uphold.In another place the Cartesian order is said to be prior to the Socratic order relative toteaching. But again what can the res cogitans teach to an other, or be taught itself? Whatis it taught by the idea <strong>of</strong> infinity? That God exists. But this is about all that is taught.Descartes is entirely lacking in the passion <strong>of</strong> religious inwardness that we find, forinstance, in Augustine, Pascal and Kierkegaard. In fact, for Descartes the self and Godare the two things most easily known, and once Descartes has placed them asfoundational concepts to certify rational knowing methodologically, he gets down to thereal business at hand: mathematicized science <strong>of</strong> nature. This Cartesian order <strong>of</strong> objectivemathesis proves all but oblivious <strong>of</strong> the inward otherness <strong>of</strong> the self and the superiorotherness <strong>of</strong> the divine transcendence. These become methodological means to an end,not enigmatic, mysterious realities that tax all thinking to the utmost, indeed defeat all itsclaims to the conceptual mastery, such as Descartes ardently pursued.How superior here is the Socratic dialogue wherein the promise <strong>of</strong> openness to theother is inscribed from the outset. Levinas has nothing to say about dialogue as alreadyarticulating a concept <strong>of</strong> the soul that in its being is essentially relational; thought is neverkath’ auto in a manner that excludes relativity; for such a kath’ auto would exclude thepossibility <strong>of</strong> the face-to-face. Socratic dialogue is philosophical speech face-to-face.There is an implied Socratic sense <strong>of</strong> bodied speech—speech in the sight and in thehearing, and indeed within the touch <strong>of</strong> the other. Speech in a Socratic dialogue is asmuch a self saying as a something said.Levinas’s theme <strong>of</strong> the face-to-face must be noted here. This is his distinctivecontribution to the discussion <strong>of</strong> ‘intersubjectivity’. German idealism andphenomenology bequeathed the problem <strong>of</strong> the other: starting with subjectivity how dowe genuinely constitute relatedness to the other as other? Is the other merely the meansby which I recognize myself and return to myself? Is the other, seen from the primacy <strong>of</strong>the subject, just the mirror in which the self sees essentially itself, hence no radicalotherness can ever be defended? As an heir <strong>of</strong> phenomenology and not German idealism,


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 134Levinas confronts phenomenology’s same starting point in the subject. Levinas too startswith the self, in that earlier parts <strong>of</strong> Totality and Infinity are predominantly devoted toshowing us a sufficiently strong sense <strong>of</strong> the separation <strong>of</strong> the self for itself. The self foritself is an irreducible ipseity that cannot be subsumed into an impersonal reason, ormade the instance <strong>of</strong> an abstract universal. And yet this for-self in its radical separatenessis not a transcendental ego. It is invested with the concreteness <strong>of</strong> the existing I in itsprimordial enjoyment <strong>of</strong> being.How then is the problem <strong>of</strong> the inter, the ‘between’, tackled? The self expresses itselfand enters into discourse and language. Expression for Levinas is such that the speakingsubject always attends his or her expression. He or she does not abandon expression butattends it as willing to justify it, or indeed justify himself or herself, that is to say,apologize. To apologize does not here mean to ask pardon simply; it implies one standingthere for oneself and owning up in expression to what one is or does. An apology, likeSocrates’, is a self-justification; the justice <strong>of</strong> the self in its personal particularity is atstake. But one apologizes always before the other. One attends one’s expression in thesight <strong>of</strong> an other. Hence expression and the apologetic attending <strong>of</strong> expression by the selfis an entry into social relatedness, is the social relation.This entry <strong>of</strong> justification, justice, apology, attention <strong>of</strong> self before the sight <strong>of</strong> theother, comes to expression in the face-to-face. I encounter the face <strong>of</strong> the other and theother looks on me, not like Sartre’s other that would petrify me and reduce the freedom<strong>of</strong> interiority to an objectified thing. The face <strong>of</strong> the other calls me to justification, tojustice. The face presents itself with a nudity and destitution that is beyond allconceptualization. The face cannot be totalized, for the infinite comes to epiphany there. Icannot conceptually determine the face <strong>of</strong> the other; the eyes <strong>of</strong> the other look at me withan unguarded vulnerability, and call me to a response that is beyond power. Thisunguarded vulnerability <strong>of</strong> the eye <strong>of</strong> the other is radically opposite to Sartre’s look. Iflooks could kill, Sartre’s subject would be a mass murderer. In Levinas’s case, the look<strong>of</strong>fers itself as the other <strong>of</strong>fering itself in unguarded frankness; in that look there appearsthe command ‘Thou shalt not kill’.The ethical is not an instrumental contract that the self <strong>of</strong> will to power, be itNietzschean or Sartrean or Hobbesian, makes to defend itself against the other and tolaunch its self-aggrandizing onslaught on the freedom <strong>of</strong> the other. The unguarded face isbeyond all instrumentality and beyond all finality in the sense that it does not constitute adeterminate purpose or telos that could be conclusively comprehended and mastered orencompassed. Something overflows in the face <strong>of</strong> the other that is infinite, and thisinfinite is the command <strong>of</strong> goodness. The overflow <strong>of</strong> infinity into the between, the inter,calls the subject in its separateness to a relatedness with the other that does notcompromise separateness, since the very between is an ethical respect <strong>of</strong> justice betweenthe self and other.Levinas finds the face absolutely irreducible, primordial. One cannot break it downinto more basic constituents; it is elemental, though not in Levinas’s sense. It cannot becontained within the economy <strong>of</strong> classical subjectivity, whether idealistic ortranscendental/ phenomenological. These latter finally give hegemony to the same overthe other. While Levinas defends the separateness <strong>of</strong> the subject, the face-to-face and theoverflowing <strong>of</strong> the other’s infinitude reverse the hegemony <strong>of</strong> autonomy. There is a


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 135heteronomy more ultimate than autonomy. The self is for the other; and the other comesfrom a dimension <strong>of</strong> height, even when the other is the abject self, the poor, the widow,the orphan.Levinas intends to transcend the master/slave dialectic, but there are occasions wherethe other is referred to as the master, and where the asymmetry between the same and theother seems to skirt dangerously another form <strong>of</strong> the master/slave relation. We find apeculiar mixture <strong>of</strong> elements: the radical separateness <strong>of</strong> the subject, who is not reallyseparate, since he or she puts himself or herself in the between by his or her expression;the subject who in the between encounters the face <strong>of</strong> the other who commands againstmurder in the nakedness <strong>of</strong> the vulnerable eye; the separate self whose ineluctable destinyseems social. How then is the other radically other and the self still irreducibly separate?For it is their co-implication and infinite responsibility that seem the most importantthings. Is this no more than a verbal problem? Levinas defends the irreducibility <strong>of</strong> theself in its personal singularity, and yet against Enlightenment modernity he reinstates aheteronomous ethics, where the justice <strong>of</strong> the other, assumed in infinite responsibility, isabsolutely central.Eros is important for Levinas in breaking out <strong>of</strong> monadism and the ‘egocentricpredicament’. This is linked with his stress on fecundity. One is reminded <strong>of</strong> the speech<strong>of</strong> Socrates/Diotima concerning eros as generating on the good/beautiful. Eros generatesbeyond itself on the beautiful/good. This is a somewhat strange saying. I take it to meanthat the highest point <strong>of</strong> eros is not, in fact, erotic in the sense <strong>of</strong> yielding just acompletion <strong>of</strong> a lack in the self, and hence a culminating self-satisfaction in a final selfrelatedness.Eros seems to start in lack and in final satisfaction makes the erotic beingself-sufficient again by overcoming the lack. But this is not enough. Rather, the selfgenerates beyond itself on the good. There is a transcendence <strong>of</strong> self that goes beyond themost embracing self-sufficiency and self-relativity.Fecundity is the self generating beyond itself. I would prefer to call it the promise <strong>of</strong>agape rather than eros, in that it does not fill a lack <strong>of</strong> satisfaction but goes beyond self inan overflowing <strong>of</strong> being that is already full, overfull. As already full in itself the selfagapeically goes towards the other as other; in this case goes towards the child as an otherwho is not yet known as a this, and who is the promise <strong>of</strong> the future, a continuation and arupture, a relativity and a radical separateness at once.It is noticeable here that Levinas emphasizes the father/son relation, rather than therelation <strong>of</strong> father/daughter, or mother/son. Paternity and filiality become the means <strong>of</strong>expressing the fecundity, the infinitude <strong>of</strong> time in its generative power. The femininereduces to a certain equivocal form <strong>of</strong> being. There is ambiguity in the relation <strong>of</strong> thefather and son: I the father am the son; I the father am not at all the son.Levinas makes much <strong>of</strong> the infinity <strong>of</strong> time against what he seems to see as the jealousself-enclosure <strong>of</strong> eternity. It seems as if the fecundity <strong>of</strong> infinite time will pardon all. Ithink this will not do relative to the singularity and sociality Levinas wants to emphasize.Time, even infinite time, will not radically pardon radical evil. Later generations cannotprovide justification for the radical evils visited upon present generations. Levinas doesnot want to instrumentalize present evil. But is infinite time enough to prevent time frombeing swept up into the instrumental justification <strong>of</strong> world history? It can only be from anentirely different dimension that the pardon for radical evil can come. This would be


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 136eternity in another sense to the one that Levinas plays with, namely, the catatonicabsolute identity that knows no relativity to otherness. Levinas’s reference to messianictime at the end <strong>of</strong> Totality and Infinity indicates that the work is a truncated book; its realimport lies elsewhere.For all the talk about the frankness <strong>of</strong> the face, and the person attending his expression,Levinas is perhaps a dissimulating writer. The entirety <strong>of</strong> Totality and Infinity pointsbeyond itself to God, but God is foxily talked about throughout the entire book. One isreminded <strong>of</strong> the equivocation <strong>of</strong> discourse imputed to some Jewish thinkers, Spinoza forinstance, or Derrida for that matter. In the present case, one speaks the language <strong>of</strong>atheism, while being a theist behind it all. Today the metaphysicians and theologianshave to hide themselves from the inquisition <strong>of</strong> the atheist, while for the main part <strong>of</strong>recorded intellectual history it was the atheist who had to go in hiding in fear <strong>of</strong> theinquisition <strong>of</strong> the believer.In Levinas’s later work the sense <strong>of</strong> responsibility for the other is accentuated further.The claim that ethics is first philosophy is developed more fully. The central essay <strong>of</strong>Otherwise than Being or Beyond Essence is titled ‘Substitution’. Here Levinas developsthe idea <strong>of</strong> an anarchic subjectivity that is prior to all thematization. One is reminded <strong>of</strong>Sartre’s non-positional consciousness, except that in Levinas’s case the sense <strong>of</strong> beingsummoned by the other is to the fore; the self prior to the ego is marked by an obsessionwith the other. Levinas ties this with being a creature in which the trace <strong>of</strong> the absoluteother is in passage.‘Substitution’ is a bold and provocative meditation, brilliant and pr<strong>of</strong>ound in manyrespects. I cannot do justice here either to its claims or to the questions it provokes.Levinas does claim that prior even to the absolute priority claimed for the transcendentalego, the call <strong>of</strong> the other in an infinite responsibility is at work. The concept <strong>of</strong>‘substitution’ refers to the manner in which this anarchic self is a hostage for the other. Itis in the place <strong>of</strong> the other; this power to be in the place <strong>of</strong> the other is the ground <strong>of</strong> allother acts <strong>of</strong> solidarity or sociality. The self is a subject in being subject to the other ininfinite responsibility.Levinas likes to quote Dostoevsky’s Alyosha Karamazov: ‘We are all responsible foreveryone else—but I am more responsible than all the others.’ This is a claim <strong>of</strong>hyperbolic responsibility, and some would criticize it as such. It may even ironicallysuggest an ethical hubris in which I place myself in the role <strong>of</strong> the absolute, substitutemyself for God. Only God could be responsible thus, no mortal creature could. YetLevinas wants to insist, and insist is the word, that human creatures are disturbed by thiscall <strong>of</strong> infinite responsibility. There are ambiguities here too complex to unravel in thespace allotted. For substitution is a divine responsibility, substitution even to the point <strong>of</strong>death and sacrifice. Levinas is <strong>of</strong>ten presented as without precedents, and his singularstyle helps to foster this impression. But I cannot but remind the reader <strong>of</strong> the emphasison testimony, witness and sacrifice in Marcel. Read in a certain way, Marcel’sCatholicism and Levinas’s Judaism generate some very deep affinities.Levinas sets himself against transcendental phenomenology here and its regress togrounding in originary selfhood. He emphasizes the passivity, the patience to the other <strong>of</strong>the pre-synthetic self. Yet his mode <strong>of</strong> thinking, like transcendental philosophy generally,is regressive, a matter <strong>of</strong> what both call ‘reduction’. Is there not after all a strange


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 137‘transcendentalism’ in this? A transcendentalism <strong>of</strong> passivity rather than activity, orrather <strong>of</strong> patience to the other prior to both activity and passivity? This would be prior tothe a priori <strong>of</strong> transcendental idealism. Substitution would be the condition <strong>of</strong> thepossibility <strong>of</strong> all meaning, linguistic, cognitive, pragmatic as well as ethical. Ethics asfirst philosophy would then be a transcendental philosophy, though since it does not dealwith the transcendental ego as the ultimate originary presence, it might be called anatranscendental ethics or a negative transcendentalism, on the analogy <strong>of</strong> negativetheology.Many <strong>of</strong> Levinas’s ways <strong>of</strong> saying are strongly reminiscent <strong>of</strong> negative theology: It isnot this, not that…; it is as if it were, as though…it is neither this, nor that…. There is asense in which we here have to make a leap beyond phenomenology. There are timeswhen that leap could be made more intelligible for the reader if Levinas provided somephenomenological examples from human relations, for instance in the telling way Marcelappeals to the examples from his own dramatic works to suggest imaginatively the nonobjectifiable.There is generally a tendency to dualistic thinking in Levinas, for example, ontologyversus metaphysics, being versus the good. This tendency can lead to significantequivocity. I will conclude with a relevant example and question. In ‘Substitution’Levinas unrelentingly stresses the irreplaceability <strong>of</strong> the self that is summoned in ethicalresponsibility. But how can the irreplaceable be substituted? There cannot be areplacement for the non-substitutable, nor a substitute for the irreplaceable. The concept<strong>of</strong> hostage carried the idea <strong>of</strong> equivalence: one for the other, a tooth for a tooth. But theconcept <strong>of</strong> equivalence is impossible without the idea <strong>of</strong> identity, and Levinas’s wholediscourse <strong>of</strong> the irreplaceable claims to be prior to the idea <strong>of</strong> identity and its cognateconcepts like equivalence.This is a logical problem with substitution, but it points to a tension that is not merelylogical. If we privilege the irreplaceable, there must be a limit to human substitution; bycontrast, if we privilege substitution, we compromise the absolute singularity <strong>of</strong> theirreplaceable. How then can we affirm substitution and the irreplaceable both together?Put this way: Job’s second set <strong>of</strong> children seem to be replacements for the first deadchildren, they seem to be substitutes. But the whole thrust <strong>of</strong> Levinas’s thought must bethat there can be no replacement for the first irreplaceable children; there are no humansubstitutes.Do we reach the limit <strong>of</strong> human substitution? And a limit <strong>of</strong> the fecundity <strong>of</strong> infinitetime? Is there such a thing as divine substitution which would radically transfigure thenotion <strong>of</strong> selfhood as irreplaceable? Do we need the idea <strong>of</strong> re-creation, the idea <strong>of</strong> a newcreation to deal with the irreplaceability <strong>of</strong> the first creation, relative to the horrors wehave heaped on it and its seemingly senseless death?SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHYMarcel


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 138Primary texts5.1 ‘La Métaphysique de Josiah Royce’, Revue de métaphysique et de morale, January-April 1919. Reprint: La Métaphysique de Royce, Paris: Aubier, 1945.5.2 Journal Métaphysique, Paris: Gallimard, 1927. Reprint: 1935.5.3 Etre et avoir, Paris: Aubier, 1935.5.4 Du refus à l’invocation, Paris: Gallimard, 1940. Reprint: Paris: Aubier, 1945.5.5 Homo Viator: Prolégomènes à une métaphysique de l’espérance, Paris: Aubier,Editions Montaigne, 1944.5.6 Les Hommes contre l’humain, Paris: La Colombe, 1951. Reprint: Paris: Fayard, 1968.5.7 Le Mysterè de l’être, vol. 1, Réflexion et mystère, Paris: Aubier, 1951. Contains theGifford Lectures <strong>of</strong> 1949.5.8 Le Mysterè de l’être, vol. 2, Foi et réalité, Paris: Aubier, 1951.5.9 Le Déclin de la sagesse, Paris: Plon, 1954.5.10 Fragments philosophiques, 1909–1914, Philosophes contemporains: Textes etétudes 11, Louvain: Nauwelaerts, 1962.5.11 La Dignité humaine et ses assises existentialles, Collections Présence et pensée,Paris: Aubier, Editions Montaigne, 1964.5.12 Pour une sagesse tragique et son au-delà, Paris: Plon, 1968.5.13 Coleridge et Schelling, Paris: Aubier-Montaigne, 1971.Translations5.14 Royce’s Metaphysics, trans. V. and G.Ringer, Chicago: Henry Regnery Co., 1956.5.15 Metaphysical Journal, trans. B.Wall, Chicago: Henry Regnery Co., 1950. Reprints:1952, 1967. London: Barrie & Rockliff, 1952.5.16 Being and Having, trans. K.Farrer, Westminster: Dacre Press; Glasgow: UniversityPress, 1949; Boston: Beacon Press, 1951. Reprinted under the expanded title Beingand Having: An Existentialist Diary, London: Fontana Library and New York: Harper& Row, Harper Torchbooks, 1965.5.17 Creative Fidelity, trans. R.Rosthal, New York: Farrar, Strauss, Cudahy, NoondayPress, 1964.5.18 Homo Viator: Introduction to a Metaphysic <strong>of</strong> Hope, trans. E.Crauford, London:Victor Gollancz and Chicago: Henry Regnery Co., 1951. New York: Harper and Row,Harper Torchbooks, 1962.5.19 Men Against Humanity, trans. G.S.Fraser, London: Harvill Press, 1952.5.20 Man Against Mass Society, trans. G.S.Fraser, foreword by D.MacKinnon. Chicago:Henry Regnery Co., 1952. Reprint: Chicago: Henry Regnery Co., Gateway, 1962.5.21 The Mystery <strong>of</strong> Being, vol. 1, Reflection and Mystery, trans. G.S.Fraser, London:Harvill Press and Chicago: Henry Regnery Co., 1950. Reprint: Chicago: HenryRegnery Co., Gateway, 1960.5.22 The Mystery <strong>of</strong> Being, vol. 2, Faith and Reality, trans. R.Hague, London: HarvillPress and Chicago: Henry Regnery Co., 1951. Reprint: Chicago: Henry Regnery Co.,Gateway, 1960.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 1395.23 The Decline <strong>of</strong> Wisdom, trans. M.Harari, London: Harvill Press and Toronto:Collins, 1954. New York: Philosophical Library, 1955.5.24 The Influence <strong>of</strong> Psychic Phenomena on My <strong>Philosophy</strong>, London: London Societyfor Psychical Research, 1956. The Frederic W.H.Myers Memorial Lecture, December1955.5.25 Philosophical Fragments, 1909–1914, trans. L.A.Blain, published together with ThePhilosopher and Peace, trans. V.H.Drath, Notre Dame: University <strong>of</strong> Notre DamePress, 1965.5.26 The Existential Background <strong>of</strong> Human Dignity, Harvard University: The WilliamJames Lectures, 1961–2, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1963.5.27 Philosophical Fragments 1909–1914, trans. L.A.Blain. Notre Dame: University <strong>of</strong>Notre Dame Press, 1965.5.28 Tragic Wisdom and Beyond, trans. S.Jolin and P.McCormick, NorthwesternUniversity Studies in Phenomenology and Existential <strong>Philosophy</strong> , Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1973.Criticism5.29 Appelbaum, D. Contact and Attention: The Anatomy <strong>of</strong> Gabriel Marcel’sMetaphysical Method, Lanham: University Press <strong>of</strong> America, 1986.5.30 Davy, M.M. Un Philosophe itinérant: Gabriel Marcel, Paris: Flammarion, 1959.5.31 Gallagher, K.T. The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Gabriel Marcel, New York: Fordham UniversityPress, 1962.5.32 Hocking, W.E. ‘Marcel and the Ground Issues <strong>of</strong> Metaphysics’, <strong>Philosophy</strong> andPhenomenological Research 14:4 (June 1954):439–69.5.33 O’Malley, J.B. The Fellowship <strong>of</strong> Being, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1966.5.34 Peccorini, F. Selfhood as Thinking in the Work <strong>of</strong> Gabriel Marcel, Lewiston: MellenPress, 1987.5.35 Prini, P. Gabriel Marcel et la méthodologie de l’invérifiable, Paris: Desclée deBrouwer, 1953.5.36 Ricoeur, P. Gabriel Marcel et Karl Jaspers: Philosophie du mystère et philosophiedu paradoxe, Paris: Editions du temps présent, 1948.5.37 Schilpp, P. and Hahn, L. (eds) The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Gabriel Marcel, The Library <strong>of</strong>Living Philosophers, vol. XVII, La Salle: Open Court, 1983.JaspersPrimary texts5.38 Allgemeine Psychopathologie, Berlin: Springer Verlag, 1913; 4th completely rev.edn, Berlin, Göttingen and Heidelberg: Springer Verlag, 1946; 8th edn, 1965.5.39 Psychologie der Weltanschauungen, Berlin: Springer Verlag, 1919:5th edn, Berlin,Göttingen, Heidelberg: Springer Verlag, 1960.5.40 Philosophie, 3 vols, Berlin: Springer Verlag, 1932.5.41 Vernunft und Existenz: Fünf Vorlesungen. Gröningen: J.B.Welters, 1935; 4th edn,


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 140München: R.Piper, 1960.5.42 Die Schuldfrage, Heidelberg: L.Schneider Verlag, and Zürich: Artemis Verlag,1946.5.43 Von der Wahrheit: Philosophische Logik, Enter Band. München: R.Piper, 1947; 3rdedn, 1980.5.44 Der philosophische Glaube: Gastvorlesungen, Zürich: Artemis Verlag andMünchen: R.Piper & Co., 1948; 7th edn, München: R.Piper, 1981.5.45 Vom Ursprung und Ziel der Geschichte, Zürich: Artemis Verlag and München:R.Piper, 1949; 4th edn, München: 1963.5.46 Die grossen Philosophen: Enter Band, München: R.Piper, 1957; 3rd edn, 1981.5.47 Die grossen Philosophen, Nachlass 1, ed. H.Saner, München and Zurich: R. Piper,1981.5.48 Die grossen Philosophen, Nachlass 2, ed. H.Saner, München and Zürich: R. Piper,1981.5.49 Der philosophische Glaube angesichts der Offenbarung, München: R.Piper, 1962;3rd edn, 1980.5.50 Weltgeschichte der Philosophie: Einleitung, ed. H.Saner, München and Zürich:R.Piper, 1982.Translations5.51 General Psychopathology, trans. J.Hoening and M.W.Hamilton, Chicago:University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1963.5.52 <strong>Philosophy</strong>, 3 vols, trans. E.B.Ashton, Chicago and London: University <strong>of</strong> ChicagoPress, 1969–71.5.53 Reason and Existenz, trans. W.Earle, London, Toronto and New York, 1955.5.54 The Question <strong>of</strong> German Guilt, trans. E.B.Ashton, New York: Dial Press, 1947.5.55 Tragedy is not Enough, (excerpt from Von der Wahrheit), trans. H.A.T. Reiche,H.T.Moore and K.W.Deutsch, Boston: Beacon Press, 1952 and London: V.Gollancz,1953.5.56 Truth and Symbol (excerpt from Von der Wahrheit), trans. J.T.Wilde, W. Klubackand W.Kimmel, New York: Twayne Publishers and London: Vision Press, 1959.5.57 The Perennial Scope <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, trans. R.Manheim, New York: PhilosophicalLibrary, 1949 and London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1950.5.58 The Origin and Goal <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong>, trans. M.Bullock, New Haven: Yale UniversityPress and London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1953.5.59 Philosophical Faith and Revelation, trans. E.B.Ashton, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong>Chicago Press, 1967.5.60 Anaximander, Heraclitus, Parmenides, Plotinus, Lao-tzu, Nagarjuna, New York:Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, n.d. (excerpt from The Great Philosophers: The OriginalThinkers).5.61 Anselm and Nicholas <strong>of</strong> Cusa, New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, n.d. (excerptfrom The Great Philosophers: The Original Thinkers).5.62 The Great Philosophers: The Foundations, The Paradigmatic Individuals: Socrates,Buddha, Confucius, Jesus; The Seminal Founders <strong>of</strong> Philosophical Thought: Plato,


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 141Augustine, Kant, ed. H.Arendt, trans. R. Manheim, New York: Harcourt, Brace & World,1962.5.63 The Great Philosophers: The Original Thinkers: Anaximander, Heraclitus,Parmenides, Plotinus, Anselm, Nicholas <strong>of</strong> Cusa, Spinoza, Lao-Tzu, Nagarjuna, ed.H.Arendt, trans. R.Manheim, New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, 1966.5.64 Kant, New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, n.d. (excerpt from The GreatPhilosophers: The Foundations).5.65 Plato and Augustine, New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, n.d. (excerpt from TheGreat Philosophers: The Foundations).5.66 Socrates, Buddha, Confucius, Jesus, New York: Harcourt, Brace & World, n.d.(excerpt from The Great Philosophers: The Foundations).5.67 Spinoza, New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, n.d. (excerpt from The GreatPhilosophers: The Original Thinkers).Criticism5.68 Allen, E.L. The Self and Its Hazards: A Guide to the Thought <strong>of</strong> Karl Jaspers, NewYork: Philosophical Library, 1951.5.69 Ehrlich, L.H. Karl Jaspers: <strong>Philosophy</strong> as Faith, Amherst: University <strong>of</strong>Massachusetts Press, 1975.5.70 Kane, J.F. Pluralism and Truth in Religion: Karl Jaspers on Existentialist Truth,Chico: Scholars Press, 1981.5.71 Lichtigfeld, A. Jaspers’ Metaphysics, London: Colibri Press, 1954.5.72 Olson, A.M. Transcendence and Hermeneutics: An Interpretation <strong>of</strong> Karl Jaspers,The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1979.5.73 Ricoeur, P. Gabriel Marcel et Karl Jaspers, Paris: Editions du Temps Présent, 1948.5.74 Samay, S. Reason Revisited, Notre Dame: University <strong>of</strong> Notre Dame Press, 1971.5.75 Schilpp, P. (ed.) The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Karl Jaspers, 2nd edn, Lasalle: Open Court,1981. Contains Jaspers’s ‘Philosophical Autobiography’ (including chapter:‘Heidegger’), critical contributions by twenty-four authors, and Jaspers’s ‘Reply to HisCritics’.5.76 Schrag, O.O. Existence, Existenz, and Transcendence, Pittsburgh: DuquesneUniversity Press, 1971.5.77 Wallraff, C.F. Karl Jaspers: An Introduction to His <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Princeton:Princeton University Press, 1970.5.78 Young-Bruehl, E. Freedom and Karl Jaspers’s <strong>Philosophy</strong>, New Haven: YaleUniversity Press, 1971.LevinasPrimary texts5.79 La théorie de l’intuition dans la phénoménologie de Husserl, Paris: Alcan, 1930(Vrin, 1963).5.80 De l’existence à l’existant, Paris: Fontaine, 1947 (Vrin, 1973).


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> religion 1425.81 En découvrant l’existence avec Husserl et Heidegger, Paris: Vrin, 1967.5.82 Totalité et infiní: Essai sur l’extériorité, The Hague: Martinus Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1961.5.83 Difficile liberté, Paris: Albin Michel, 1963 (2nd edn, 1976).5.84 Quatre lectures talmudiques, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1968.5.85 Humanisme de l-autre homme, Montpellier: Fata Morgana, 1972.5.86 Autrement qu’être, ou au-delà de l’essence, The Hague: Martinus Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1974.5.87 Sur Maurice Blanchot, Montpellier: Fata Morgana, 1975.5.88 Noms propres, Montpellier: Fata Morgana, 1976.5.89 Du sacré au saint, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1977.5.90 Le Temps et l’autre, Montpellier: Fata Morgana, 1947 (Paris: Presses Universitairesde France, 1983).5.91 L’Au-delà du verset, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1982.5.92 De Dieu qui vient a l’idée, Paris: Vrin, 1982.5.93 De l’evasion, Paris: Fata Morgana, 1982.5.94 Ethique et infini, Paris: Fayard, 1982.5.95 Transcendance et intelligibilité, Genève: Labor et Fides, 1984.Translations5.96 The Theory <strong>of</strong> Intuition in Husserl’s Phenomenology, trans. A.Orianne, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1973.5.97 Existence and Existents, trans. A.Lingis, The Hague: Martinus Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1978.5.98 Difficult Freedom, trans. S.Hand, London: Athlone, forthcoming.5.99 Otherwise than Being or Beyond Essence, trans. A.Lingis, The Hague, MartinusNijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1981.5.100 Time and the Other, trans. R.Cohen, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 1987.5.101 Ethics and Infinity, trans. R.Cohen, Pittsburgh: Duquesne University Press, 1985.5.102 Collected Philosophical Papers, trans. A.Lingis, Dordrecht: Martinus Nijh<strong>of</strong>f,1987.Criticism5.103 Bernasconi, R., and Wood, D. (eds) The Provocation <strong>of</strong> Levinas: Rethinking theOther, London and New York: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1988.5.104 Burggraeve, R. From Self-Development to Solidarity: An Ethical Reading <strong>of</strong>Human Desire in its Socio-Political Relevance according to Emmanuel Levinas, trans.C.Vanhove-Romanik, Leuven: The Centre for Metaphysics and <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> God,1985.5.105 Cohen, R. (ed.) Face to Face with Levinas, Albany: State University <strong>of</strong> New YorkPress, 1986.5.106 Derrida, J. ‘Violence and Metaphysics’, in Writing and Difference, trans. A. Bass,London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul and Chicago: Chicago University Press, 1978, pp.79–153.5.107 Libertson, J. Proximity, Levinas, Blanchot, Bataille and Communication,Phaenomenologica 87, The Hague: Martinus Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1982.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 1435.108 Lingis, A. Libido: The French Existential Theories, Bloomington: IndianaUniversity Press, 1985.


CHAPTER 6Philosophies <strong>of</strong> scienceMach, Duhem, BachelardBabette E.BabichTHE TRADITION OF CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCEIf the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is not typically represented as a ‘continental’ discipline it isnevertheless historically rooted in the tradition <strong>of</strong> continental thought. The differentapproaches to the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science apparent in the writings <strong>of</strong> Ernst Mach, PierreDuhem and Gaston Bachelard suggest the range <strong>of</strong> these roots. But for a discussion <strong>of</strong> thetradition <strong>of</strong> continental philosophy <strong>of</strong> science—as the term ‘continental’ characterizes acontemporary style <strong>of</strong> philosophic thinking—it is important to emphasize that whileMach, Duhem and Bachelard may be said to be historically continental, a properlycontinental-style philosophy <strong>of</strong> science should not be ascribed to any one <strong>of</strong> them.Contemporary philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is pursued in what is largely an analytic or Anglo-American-style philosophic tradition. And Mach, Duhem and Bachelard made theformative contributions for which they are known in the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science within thissame almost quintessentially analytic framework. 1Nevertheless, this very necessary historical precision is itself witness to a changingcircumstance in mainline philosophy <strong>of</strong> science. Although continental philosophy hasbeen marginalized in pr<strong>of</strong>essional philosophy in general, and where this marginalizationhas perhaps been greatest within the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, the very centre would seem tohave shifted. In past years, traditional philosophers <strong>of</strong> science have begun to broadentheir analytic conception <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science to include approaches compatiblewith or even drawn from continental styles <strong>of</strong> philosophy. Such approaches reflect thephilosophical reflections on science expressed from the tradition <strong>of</strong> important individualcontinental thinkers such as Edmund Husserl (Gethmann, Heelan, Orth, Rang, Seebohm,etc.) and Martin Heidegger (Gadamer, Heelan, Kisiel, Kockelmans), Habermas andFoucault (Radder, Rouse, Gutting), and even Friedrich Nietzsche (Babich, Maurer,Spiekermann). In this context, the philosophical reflections on science to be found inMach, Duhem and Bachelard may be mined for what should prove to be a productivehistorical foundation between these two traditions addressed to a common focus.Exemplifying such a common focus, the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is not inherently oressentially analytic if it is also not obviously continental.The question <strong>of</strong> stylistic conjunction between continental and analytic philosophicperspectives is complicated and, before it can be addressed, one further preliminaryclarification is necessary. Because <strong>of</strong> the possibility <strong>of</strong> geographic confusion, it must beemphasized that the rubric ‘continental’ in the context <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science does


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 145not pertain to the geographic locus <strong>of</strong> the European continent except historically andcircumstantially. Despite German and French scholars interested in specificallycontinental approaches to the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science in contemporary Europeanphilosophy, the character <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is decidedly analytic. It is tellingand to the point in this last connection that Wolfgang Stegmüller, familiar as he was withtraditional philosophy including phenomenological approaches, could find the appeal <strong>of</strong>analytic philosophy for a formalist and foundationalist interest in scientific theories soinspiring that he devoted his own life to its dissemination and through his influenceanalytic styles <strong>of</strong> philosophic thought consequently assumed their current leading role inGerman philosophy <strong>of</strong> science. In turn, this means that continental philosophy (andphilosophy <strong>of</strong> science) remains as pr<strong>of</strong>essionally marginal on the ‘continent’ as inEnglish-speaking scholarly domains.But if not defined as the dominant tradition in philosophy and if not a matter <strong>of</strong>geographic reference, continental philosophy (especially with respect to philosophicreflection on science) is also a multifarious tradition and not a single style or school. Justas Rom Harré could speak <strong>of</strong> ‘philosophies’ <strong>of</strong> science, 2 it is best to speak <strong>of</strong> ‘continentalphilosophies’ and hence <strong>of</strong> ‘continental philosophies <strong>of</strong> science’. Not necessarily linkedby ‘family resemblances’—for example, Husserlian-influenced thinking bears almost noresemblance to Habermasian or Foucauldian social, critical theory—what is called‘continental philosophy’ comprises several conceptual traditions and reflects a manifold<strong>of</strong> differing styles <strong>of</strong> philosophy with cross-disciplinary influences and applications. Butone general characteristic might be said to be a strong historical sensibility. Thissensibility distinguishes continental philosophic styles from analytic (progress-orientedand <strong>of</strong>ten expressly ahistoricist and sometimes expressly anti-historical) styles <strong>of</strong>philosophy. A critically reflective historical sensibility in addition to an explicit referenceto lived experience—the life-world <strong>of</strong> Husserlian and Diltheyan usage—indicates some<strong>of</strong> the major advantages to be brought by continental styles <strong>of</strong> philosophy to the broaderand general philosophic project <strong>of</strong> reflection on science.It is this historical dimension and reference to life (practice, experience, etc.) thatmakes continental styles <strong>of</strong> philosophy so important for the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science today.Since the radical critique <strong>of</strong> the received, analytic style <strong>of</strong> modern philosophy <strong>of</strong> sciencethrough the writings <strong>of</strong> N.R.Hanson and the work <strong>of</strong> Thomas Kuhn and Paul Feyerabend,contemporary philosophy <strong>of</strong> science has been increasingly transformed by an intensifiedand today decisive sensitivity to the importance <strong>of</strong> historical and sociological studies <strong>of</strong>actual scientific practice. The turn to history so characteristic <strong>of</strong> Mach’s as <strong>of</strong> Duhem’sphilosophic writing on science, witnessed by their valuable contributions to the history <strong>of</strong>science, and implicit in Bachelard’s reading <strong>of</strong> the culture <strong>of</strong> science, has come to berecognized as an irreducible component <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science. In the same way,the resources <strong>of</strong> continental philosophy with a tradition <strong>of</strong> reflection on history seemincreasingly essential to the practice <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science beyond stylisticdifferences.As fons et origo, the shared destiny and origin <strong>of</strong> continental philosophy and analyticphilosophy is evident in a recent trend reviewing the connection between Husserl andFrege (Hill, Wiener, Cobb-Stevens, Dummett), suggesting that Husserlian-stylephilosophies <strong>of</strong> science may go furthest towards bridging the stylistic gap between


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 146analytic and continental philosophy. Likewise it is significant that the philosophy <strong>of</strong>technology, related to the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science because <strong>of</strong> its importance for reflectionon experimental science, not only features continental practioners (Ellul, Ihde, Jonas,Schirmacher, Winner, Zimmerman) but is in its rigorously philosophic aspect a directresultant <strong>of</strong> this same tradition (drawing as it does on the work <strong>of</strong> Heidegger but alsoRicoeur and Gadamer).Although Mach’s (as indeed Duhem’s) positivist successors were ultimately todisregard his concern with history in their focus on the formal analysis and logicalreconstruction which characterizes the hypothetico-deductive account <strong>of</strong> theory formationand justification and which in its most developed form came to be known as the ‘receivedview’, recent reviews <strong>of</strong> Mach seek to examine his philosophy <strong>of</strong> science in termsgermane to its own reflective scientific constellation and philosophical project(Feyerabend, Haller) rather than merely in terms <strong>of</strong> its influence on the logical empiricisttradition <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science (beginning with Frank). Thus a reassessment <strong>of</strong>Mach’s philosophy <strong>of</strong> science stresses his historical interests, while Feyerabendemphasizes aspects in his work which anticipate the insights <strong>of</strong> Hanson and Kuhn (aswell as Michael Polanyi who is, according to Alasdair MacIntyre, significantlyunderacknowledged in this connection) 3 in Mach’s sensitivity to the element <strong>of</strong> finesse(or in Polanyi’s language: ‘tacit knowledge’). Discussion <strong>of</strong> the role <strong>of</strong> tacit knowledge orfinesse represents the researcher’s ‘art’, an an which, if we follow Mach’s words, isunteachable in the sense <strong>of</strong> being inherently unamenable to the programmatic Baconianproject and which project, conversely for its part, was held by Bacon to have its singularadvantage in being manageable by underlabourers—that is, by technicians literally, asBacon has it: without ‘wit’. For Mach, precisely such a programmatization(automatization, industrialization) is not desirable even if it were possible. We may notethat the actuality <strong>of</strong> what Derek de Solla Price called ‘big science’ has long demonstratedthat such ‘programmatization’ is possible and Hugh Redner details the same in his study<strong>of</strong> giant, industrial-sized science. 4 Against the artless routinization <strong>of</strong> science, Mach heldthat an unteachable ‘art’ must be indispensable for the practice <strong>of</strong> experimental sciencebecause, in Mach’s conception <strong>of</strong> scientific inquiry, it is the sine qua non <strong>of</strong> inventionand discovery.A turn to history and the role <strong>of</strong> the experimenter’s art is not the only parallelresonance between continental philosophies <strong>of</strong> science and traditional analyticapproaches: there are others. Despite stylistic differences, analytic and continental styles<strong>of</strong> philosophy share a common future as complementary approaches to the philosophy <strong>of</strong>science where both disciplinary styles can enhance one another. But what is inevitablymore important than the prospects <strong>of</strong> such stylistic reconciliation on a scholarly level, itnow seems eminently clear that the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science cannot be conducted from ananalytic perspective uninformed by the hermeneutic turn or, as analysts prefer to speak <strong>of</strong>it: the interpretive turn (Hiley et al). In concert with the phenomenological turn (to thethings themselves), the interpretive, hermeneutic turn represents the foundation <strong>of</strong>continental thought. And it goes without saying, or calling it hermeneutics, that theinterpretive turn is a turn <strong>of</strong> thought in which, like the historical turn, the reflectiveadvantage <strong>of</strong> continental philosophy comes to the fore.In both existing and possible expressions, continental philosophy <strong>of</strong> science includes


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 147approaches drawn from the larger tradition <strong>of</strong> phenomenology (as found in the worksexpressed by Hegel, Husserl, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty) as well as hermeneutics(beginning with some say Vico, but certainly with Schleiermacher and Dilthey, and alsoHeidegger, Gadamer, Betti, Gramsci, Ricoeur). Continental philosophy also reflects theinfluence <strong>of</strong> structuralism in linguistics, semiotics, and literary criticism and psychology,as well as the Heidegger-inspired Daseinsanalyse and existential psychoanalysis (Piaget,Binswanger, Boss, Fromm, Merleau-Ponty, Sartre and Lacan). Related philosophic styles<strong>of</strong> deconstruction and recent postmodern conceptions <strong>of</strong> philosophy (Foucault, Derrida,Lyotard, Baudrillard) have had a decisive influence on late twentieth-century philosophicreflection on science in line with the hermeneutic perspective (Heelan, Kockelmans,Kisiel, Hacking, Böhme, Gadamer, Bubner). With specific reference to the philosophy <strong>of</strong>the social sciences, particularly representing the Frankfurt school, which <strong>of</strong>tenincorporates analytic-style distinctions in its focus on language and discourse (Habermas,Apel, Tugendhat), characteristically ‘continental’ influences are traced in a variety <strong>of</strong>lineages to Hegel or Schleiermacher, Marx or Feuerbach (Althusser, Bhaskar, LeCourt)and Kierkegaard or Dilthey, Heidegger, Weber, Simmel.As representatives <strong>of</strong> nineteenth- and early twentieth-century empiricism andpositivism, the particular names Ernst Mach (1838–1916), Pierre Duhem (1861–1916)and Gaston Bachelard (1884–1962) have <strong>of</strong> course and as already noted much more thana merely historical significance. In analytic philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, an ongoing tradition <strong>of</strong>reinterpretations <strong>of</strong> their work continues to influence the current linguistic or theoreticalcrisis in analytic philosophy and semiotics/semantics <strong>of</strong> scientific theory (Duhem notonly as represented by W.V.O.Quine but also Stanley Jaki) as well as, on the other hand,the current emphasis on experiment representing the counter-absolutist turn to the history(and historiography) and practice <strong>of</strong> science in the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science (specificallyMach, as represented by Feyerabend and others, and Bachelard—and in routineconjunction with analyses <strong>of</strong> Michel Foucault—for Bruno Latour, Ian Hacking, MaryTiles, Gary Gutting).MACH AND THE POSITIVIST CONNECTION: FROM ELEMENTS TOPHENOMENOLOGYErnst Mach was born in 1838 at Turas, formerly in Moravia—a region to be found inBohemia, Silesia, and lower Austria which later was to become part <strong>of</strong> the modernrepublic <strong>of</strong> Czechoslovakia and is now part <strong>of</strong> the Czech republic. He studied in Vienna,teaching physics there in 1861, becoming pr<strong>of</strong>essor at Graz in 1864, then at Prague in1867, finally at Vienna in 1895. In 1901, upon his appointment to the upper house <strong>of</strong> theAustrian Parliament, Mach gave up his Vienna chair in the history and theory <strong>of</strong>inductive science. He spent the last three years <strong>of</strong> his life living with his son, LudwigMach and died in 1916 at Haar, near Munich.At the risk <strong>of</strong> inviting distracting historical confusion, the above listing <strong>of</strong> the details <strong>of</strong>the historical name-changes concerning Mach’s original nationality and the proper nameor country <strong>of</strong> his birthplace—where names such as Moravia, Bohemia, Silesia, LowerAustria or, indeed, Czechoslovakia do not currently denominate legitimate nations within


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 148today’s Europe—dramatizes the fortunes <strong>of</strong> the Austro-Hungarian empire and easternEurope as well as the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science conceived within the broad Europeantradition <strong>of</strong> natural philosophy. Although this is also given as Galileo’s achievement inhistorical accounts <strong>of</strong> science, it is usually claimed that the tradition <strong>of</strong> natural philosophywas transformed by Newton himself into modern physical science. But this is only to saythat the practice <strong>of</strong> science (natural science) came to be regarded as identical to thepractice <strong>of</strong> the more speculative and <strong>of</strong>ten explicitly metaphysical tradition known asnatural philosophy, and, conversely, that the practice <strong>of</strong> natural science was identifiedwith natural philosophy. By the turn <strong>of</strong> the century, the project <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong>nature was identified with the project <strong>of</strong> natural science. In Mach’s day and well before,then, philosophy (including the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science or natural philosophy) was notthought to be necessarily separate and distinct from (understood as a business <strong>of</strong>reflection, interpretive or speculative, either subsequent to or independent <strong>of</strong>) the physicalor natural sciences in both theoretical and experimental manifestations as Duhem andmore recently Jardine and Crombie have shown. As Kurt Hübner has it, ‘theory <strong>of</strong>science coming into prominence at the turn <strong>of</strong> the century was still closely tied to thestudy <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong> science. Names like Mach, Poincaré, La Roy and especiallyDuhem clearly bear witness to this. However this development ceased to follow the pathopened up for it by these men.’ 5 Here we may add that the divisions between philosophyand science and between philosophy <strong>of</strong> science and other kinds <strong>of</strong> philosophy were notalways the same. Thus the debate between Hobbes (a speculative philosopher not merelya theoretician) and Boyle (an experimentalist not merely a physical scientist) or Berkeleyand Newton were not regarded by either the participants or their contemporaries as takingplace across, let alone mixing, categories (<strong>of</strong> philosophical speculation or hypothesis andscientific experiment and theory). For Mach and Duhem, the importance <strong>of</strong> philosophicreflection was to be evaluated with respect to its contribution to the progress <strong>of</strong> science.Thus retaining a defining reference to and even identification with natural science (as)natural philosophy, philosophia naturalis acquired the methodological, historical andepistemological pr<strong>of</strong>ile <strong>of</strong> what would later become modern philosophy <strong>of</strong> science.Around the turn <strong>of</strong> the century, as practised by Henri Poincaré and by Duhem, philosophy<strong>of</strong> science bore the name critique des sciences and this same science-critical emphasis(that is, philosophical critique expressed for the sake <strong>of</strong> scientific advance or progress) isechoed in Mach’s empirio-criticism. Under the influence <strong>of</strong> Wittgenstein, Carnap andSchlick, Hempel’s mature expression <strong>of</strong> the ‘received view’ <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> scienceor the hypothetico-deductive expression <strong>of</strong> pr<strong>of</strong>essional analytic-style philosophy <strong>of</strong>science represents a decisive and increasingly bankrupt departure from this latenineteenth-century tradition <strong>of</strong> critique des sciences with its particular and explicitreference to science in practice.Almost from its inception then, the analytic tradition <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> sciencelacked any reference to the historical ‘fortunes’ or ‘scenes’ <strong>of</strong> actual scientific inquiry(Jardine). If the ‘new science’ <strong>of</strong> the seventeenth century had involved a transformativeturn (whether revolutionary and world-shattering as Koyré maintains or evolutionary andtherefore less radical a transformation as Duhem and Crombie would argue) toexperiment, analytic philosophy <strong>of</strong> science has so far found itself less able to completethe same turn. If the difference is between, as the Galileo experts have it, Platonic


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 149(formal) speculation and Aristotelian mathematical (functional) science, philosophers <strong>of</strong>science have tended towards Platonism. The turn away from history characteristic <strong>of</strong>logical positivism was only an expression <strong>of</strong> this idealizing, analytic tendency.Although Mach in particular was especially devoted to experiment and its context inthe history <strong>of</strong> science, many analytic authors nevertheless hold Mach to have beenresponsible for the divorce <strong>of</strong> traditional philosophical (metaphysical) concerns from thehistorical sensibility <strong>of</strong> the application <strong>of</strong> philosophic reflection to scientific practice.This is a misprision <strong>of</strong> a devastating kind but it was a constitutive one: seminal for thepr<strong>of</strong>essional development <strong>of</strong> analytic-style philosophy <strong>of</strong> science. 6 The separationbetween philosophic expression and the lived world characteristic not only <strong>of</strong> logicalpositivism but <strong>of</strong> the division between continental and analytic styles <strong>of</strong> philosophy is noaccident <strong>of</strong> location or tastes, as the talk <strong>of</strong> ‘styles’ may suggest. Rather, a necessaryconsequence, it might be argued, <strong>of</strong> the self-definition <strong>of</strong> modern science (as distinctfrom medieval and ancient science), the gap between theory and practice has shaped theanalytic tradition <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, while at the same time leaving thephilosophy <strong>of</strong> science as a theoretical discipline (qua, philosophy) addressed to aparticular theoretic practice (science) singularly unable to support the disjointconsequences <strong>of</strong> a separation between theory and historical practice.Despite Mach’s ‘physicalism’ or ‘phenomenalism’, the members <strong>of</strong> the Vienna circle,in the telling words <strong>of</strong> one commentator, ‘wrote as though they believed science to beessentially a linguistic phenomenon’. 7 Hence this disposition to analyse ‘language’—be itordinary or logical language—together with a naive (non-historical, non-hermeneutic orideal) view <strong>of</strong> direct observation (i.e., observation sentences) effectively limited theanalytic concern <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science to the analysis <strong>of</strong> theory, which last is theproject <strong>of</strong> the received view or hypothetico-deductive nomological ideal <strong>of</strong> science(theory).Such a focus on the elements <strong>of</strong> language—and not on the elements construedaccording to Mach’s conception as physical-physiological-psychological—separateslanguage and world. One obvious advantage <strong>of</strong> such a focus is the advantage <strong>of</strong> certainty.But this, its strength, to paraphrase Mach, and as is so <strong>of</strong>ten the case, is also its weakness.Philipp Frank, one <strong>of</strong> the founding members <strong>of</strong> the Vienna circle, who expressed thevirtue <strong>of</strong> scientific analyticity, combining the essence <strong>of</strong> Mach’s insights with Duhem’sKantian conventions, explains, ‘the principles <strong>of</strong> pure science, <strong>of</strong> which the mostimportant is the law <strong>of</strong> causality, are certain because they are only disguised definitions.’ 8If the essence <strong>of</strong> tautology or logical linguistic self-reference is not problematic whenwhat is analysed is language use (the game or its rules), this same tautological expressionbecomes problematic when what is analysed must correspond to scientific facts orempirical matters. As Harré has observed, ‘the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science must be related towhat scientists actually do, and how they actually think’. 9 The imperative for such acorrelative project between the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science and scientific practice,corresponding to the force <strong>of</strong> the socio-historical turn that comes after the linguistic turn,represents a much-needed philosophic mandate for the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science.The revolutionary shifts, reversals and paradigmatic conflicts within the analytictradition <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science also correspond to the revolutionary shifts,reversals and paradigmatic conflicts in physical science. These witness to the need to


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 150develop a ‘new’ philosophy <strong>of</strong> science appropriate to the ‘new science’. But the history<strong>of</strong> science tells us that novelty is itself relative, for the history <strong>of</strong> science is just such arecord <strong>of</strong> ‘new’ sciences. One <strong>of</strong> the first ‘new sciences’, that <strong>of</strong> Galileo and Newton (andHooke and Boyle), inaugurated a tradition that has since developed beyond its initialprogramme. That tradition was the tradition <strong>of</strong> modernity (as the cult <strong>of</strong> the new), and ifone can speak <strong>of</strong> postmodern science today that is just because the programme <strong>of</strong>modernity can no longer be viewed unproblematically. The fortunes <strong>of</strong> the ‘new’ scienceand enlightenment thought mirror the problem <strong>of</strong> modernity and postmodernity, theproblem <strong>of</strong> the conflict between the grand narratives <strong>of</strong> science and society and thedistintegration <strong>of</strong> the promise <strong>of</strong> those same narratives throughout the modern era. This isnot unconnected to the new historical and social turns in philosophic thinking about thesciences. These turns are not a sign <strong>of</strong> the times so much as they reflect a tension interiorto post-Galilean science. As Mary Tiles explains the dynamics <strong>of</strong> this internal tension inpost-Galilean (or ‘new’) science: ‘The new science was to be abstract and mathematical,but also experimental; it was to yield both enlightenment and mastery <strong>of</strong> nature. It was tostrive for an objective, purely intellectual, value-free view <strong>of</strong> the world in order toimprove the lot <strong>of</strong> mankind by rendering technological innovations possible.’ 10 There isan inherent conflict in this juxtaposition <strong>of</strong> material, practical progress and ideal orobjective knowledge. Today’s post-analytic or ‘new’ philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is manifestlydirected to an expression <strong>of</strong> the consequences <strong>of</strong> this conflict.Here, with reference to Mach’s own particular historical context, it must be observedthat Mach’s declared opposition to philosophy—even where such an opposition may berendered on Pascal’s account as the best affective precondition for the best kind <strong>of</strong>philosophy—is, if taken literally as applying to philosophy today, anachronistic. Machwished to avoid identification with the more metaphysical fashions <strong>of</strong>ten associated withor characteristic <strong>of</strong> philosophy. But his reflection on science was nothing other than aphilosophy (albeit a philosophy <strong>of</strong> nature). This point highlights the value <strong>of</strong> a return tohistory for the sake <strong>of</strong> the broadening illumination <strong>of</strong> context. And where the return tohistory represents Mach’s own phenomenalist version <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s phenomenologicalcall to return ‘To the things themselves!’, it cannot truly be Mach who is to be blamed forthe logicization <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science.In all, the history <strong>of</strong> modern philosophy <strong>of</strong> science may be said to begin at the junctureepitomized by Mach’s biography; but the rupture between theory and experiment thatfollowed from the increasing logicization <strong>of</strong> empiriocriticism or critical positivism relatedto the rise <strong>of</strong> analytic-style philosophy <strong>of</strong> science has no precedent in Mach. This point isessential if one is to understand the growing attention paid to Mach’s historical emphasisalong with his very prescient sense <strong>of</strong> the importance <strong>of</strong> the art <strong>of</strong> the researcher, <strong>of</strong> thetechnical and social flair essential for the practice <strong>of</strong> the experimental life <strong>of</strong> the sciences.Mach was greatly influenced by Berkeley and Fechner as well as by Kant and Hume.His thinking on the logical ‘economy’ <strong>of</strong> thought was shared by Richard Avenarius andhis views on the nature <strong>of</strong> science engaged not only the scientists Helmholtz, Kirchh<strong>of</strong>f,Boltzmann, Einstein and Schroedinger but also the American pragmatist philosophersJames and Pierce. It has been suggested that Mach’s concern was to understandexperience. But this concern with experience was not the same as the anglophonepreoccupation with sensation. It has already been noted that many authors also tend to


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 151associate positivism’s characteristic distance or alienation from the world with Mach’sscepticism. Given Mach’s sympathy with Berkeley and Hume, such an identification isnot surprising. Mach’s philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is commonly described as a‘sensationalism’ or ‘phenomenalism’, expressed as an ‘idealism’, or by the catchwordspositivist, empiricist, and anti-metaphysical. Endowed with the radical scepticism <strong>of</strong> aworking scientist, as Mach was and because his sensationalism does not express anontology as such, it is best to understand his perspective as fundamentally or evenpropaedeutically heuristic. Hence whatever metaphysical interests Mach may have had,they are not propositional but rather reflect his project <strong>of</strong> articulating what PaulFeyerabend describes as a non-foundational epistemology, and such an epistemology isnot only essentially scientific but also represents the philosophic spirit <strong>of</strong> epistemology assuch. In the same way, reference to a simplistic notion <strong>of</strong> parsimony, or Denkökonomie,linking that principle to an ontology, is misguided. And without emphasizing the extremeand today uncommon philosophical breadth <strong>of</strong> Mach’s interests, the claim made in hisAnalysis <strong>of</strong> Sensations (1886) that ‘the world consists only <strong>of</strong> our sensations’ must beconfusing. Again, Mach does not reduce the world to sensation so much as he finds theworld given in and, as both Duhem and Bachelard would also stress, knowable onlythrough sensation: ‘Science does not create facts from facts, but simply orders knownfacts’ (Popular Scientific Lectures). It is this connection that suggests a natural affinitybetween Mach’s elemental phenomenalism and Husserlian phenomenology borne out byMach’s initial (and then specifically continental) reception (Brentano, Musil, Dingler)and which has more than once been reviewed in its connections not only with Husserl buteven with Nietzsche (Sommer, Gebhard).Mach deliberately sought to distance himself from the metaphysical pretensions <strong>of</strong>traditional philosophy as well as those assumed (sometimes by scientists) in the name <strong>of</strong>science. Like Duhem, Mach eschews the claims to certainty which have come tocharacterize traditional scientific expression and serve as an identifying feature <strong>of</strong> today’sanalytic heirs to the logical positivist tradition <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science. For Mach, asfor Duhem and Bachelard, enquiry, conceived via experiment, was the benchmark <strong>of</strong> thescientific enterprise and a classical but not necessarily pyrrhonian scepticism was the bestguarantee <strong>of</strong> such an enquiring or open attitude. But this scepticism did not mean thatMach gave up any claim to <strong>of</strong>fer an account <strong>of</strong> the scientific knowing enterprise, withrespect to either practice or progress. Hence William James upon meeting Mach in 1882could write not only that he had ‘read everything’ but that he ‘knew everything’. Jameswas not merely impressed with Mach, polymath extraordinaire, but by Mach’spragmaticist turn, which is one way to understand the very practical but not ontologicalimperative guiding Mach’s endorsement <strong>of</strong> a logical economy. In this way, Mach’sthinking illustrates the continental spirit <strong>of</strong> philosophy as questioning conceived in thatauthentic sense charac-terizing what Martin Heidegger calls thinking and whichNietzsche critically pronounces as the highest scientific virtue: intellectual probity orRedlichkeit. In Mach’s Popular Scientific Lectures (1882), starting from the axiom that‘Physics is experience, arranged in economical order’, such a questioning or open-endedreflection means that a philosophic consideration <strong>of</strong> the goals <strong>of</strong> science following theordering value <strong>of</strong> economy as a thought principle is not proposed as or purported to yielda finished system: ‘In the economical schematism <strong>of</strong> science lie both its strength and its


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 152weakness. Facts are always represented at a sacrifice <strong>of</strong> completeness and never with agreater precision than fits the needs <strong>of</strong> the moment.’ This very Aristotelian practicality,which Gadamer has expressed in another context as the prudential core <strong>of</strong> hermeneuticjudgment, works on Mach’s account to exclude anything like ‘absolute forecasts’.Considered on its own terms, Mach’s view is an elemental sensationalism, a factual,specifically non-factitious or empiri[ocriti]cism. Mach’s thinking is radically sceptical.And it is a kind <strong>of</strong> conventionalism, like that <strong>of</strong> Duhem and Poincaré, which influencedthe positivist protophysics <strong>of</strong> Dingler and the Erlangen school <strong>of</strong> Lorenzen’sconstructivism and its related development in evolutionary epistemology (Wuketis). Butso far from the flat positivism <strong>of</strong> a reduction <strong>of</strong> the world to fact, Mach’s ‘mental mastery<strong>of</strong> facts’ <strong>of</strong>fers the only understanding to be had from or about those same ‘facts’, wherethe question <strong>of</strong> order or mastery in each case is hypothetical and ever subject to revision.This perspective in its historicist extension explains Mach’s positivist appeal but anattention to the elemental mentality <strong>of</strong> this ‘mastery <strong>of</strong> facts’ shows its fruitfulness forcurrent issues. This is evident in contemporary analytic philosophy <strong>of</strong> science after Kuhnand Feyerabend.Thus Mach proposes that if the future <strong>of</strong> science may not be forecast as such (on pain<strong>of</strong> abandoning the open enterprise <strong>of</strong> science itself), its non-absoluteness maynevertheless be surmised and he suggests, in a fashion that is as Nietzschean as it isradically, elementally pluralistic, reflecting the spirit <strong>of</strong> what today has come to be calledthe ‘new physics’—and what might likewise be named the ‘new biology’ and the ‘newecology’—that ‘the rigid walls which now divide man from the world will graduallydisappear; that human beings will not only confront each other, but also the entire organicand so-called lifeless world, with less selfishness and with livelier sympathy’ (PopularScientific Lectures). 11It has been noted that Mach sought to articulate the project <strong>of</strong> science in terms <strong>of</strong> itshistory and its practical or working functionality. But Mach’s particular historicism wasthat <strong>of</strong> a philosopher—in spite <strong>of</strong> his protests against such an identification, where, aswas also noted in a preliminary way, these protests themselves must be interpreted withreference to Mach’s own, historical, circumstantial context. As a philosopher, Mach’shistorical focus shows him as a positivist, in the original, pristine Comtean sense <strong>of</strong> theword. 12 Ian Hacking, in a timely effort to broaden the current flattened and negativereading <strong>of</strong> ‘positivism’ with reference to August Comte’s original use <strong>of</strong> the term, definespositivity as ‘ways to have a positive truth value, to be up for grabs as true or false’. 13Positivistic to this extent then, not only was Mach a philosopher, but he was a quasianalytic—ifalso as we have seen a proto-phenomenological and even hermeneutic—kind<strong>of</strong> philosopher. Moreover, Mach remained as consistently committed to expressing thelogical and philosophical foundations <strong>of</strong> science as any member <strong>of</strong> the Verein ErnstMach (which was in fact and significantly the original name for the Vienna circle) or themodern heirs <strong>of</strong> the logical empiricist tradition in analytic philosophy <strong>of</strong> science.Yet it must be emphasized that Mach was committed to the positivist ideal <strong>of</strong> science,that is, in Hacking’s Comtean sense, to its ‘positivity’ but not its sheer logical expression.Thus, and, as we shall see, like Duhem, Mach’s critical analytic turn far exceeds anythinglike an exclusive commitment to the expression or clarification <strong>of</strong> scientific method ortheory as an end in itself where he criticizes the working functionality <strong>of</strong> the latter. More


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 153critical than Kant, Mach believes that there is no possibility <strong>of</strong> a priori knowledge assuch: the basis <strong>of</strong> all knowledge is sense experience. Mach’s elementalism—as his‘sensationalism’ is best described as outlined above and following the letter <strong>of</strong> Mach’sown account—repudiates the ‘arbitrary, one-sided theory’ which is implied in talk <strong>of</strong>‘sensations’ or ‘phenomena’. This is important, for what Mach repudiates as ‘arbitrary,one-sided theory’ focusing upon ‘sensations’ or ‘facts’ represents the idea <strong>of</strong> the self orsubject apart from or as substrate underlying or undergoing such ‘sensations’. In thisway, Mach’s elementalism mirrors the critique <strong>of</strong> the subject familiar to continentalscholars and others acquainted with the works <strong>of</strong> Nietzsche and Freud, as well asHeidegger, Lacan and Wittgenstein. As the central tenet <strong>of</strong> Mach’s psychology, the self isa bundle <strong>of</strong> elements, an expression which must be understood not as Locke or Berkeleywould understand it but rather as signifying a fundamental continuity between the unit <strong>of</strong>the perceiving self, or the physiological (elemental) subject, and the mental matter <strong>of</strong>psychological (elemental) knowing and the physical (elemental) world. Physical,physiological and psychological, Mach’s convertible elements comprise hiselementalism. This continuity suggests the intentional commonality requisite fordeveloping a phenomenological reading <strong>of</strong> Mach’s ‘sensationalism’ in the line <strong>of</strong>Husserl. This same connection also suggests the relevance <strong>of</strong> Mach’s thought forinterpretations <strong>of</strong> quantum physics. Mach’s principle, so important on Einstein’s ownaccount for Einstein’s theory <strong>of</strong> relativity, implies the interdependence <strong>of</strong> all things—thatis: relativity (Mach’s own views concerning relativity are no matter in this context).Hence there is no need for an absolute frame <strong>of</strong> reference (whether Newtonian space ortime) but only for a relative frame <strong>of</strong> reference. The law <strong>of</strong> inertia stated by Newton canbe understood either from the perspective <strong>of</strong> the body at rest or motion or from the relatedperspective <strong>of</strong> external impingent forces.Scientific laws for Mach are abstract, general, and in all we might say: abbreviateddescriptions <strong>of</strong> phenomena. The value <strong>of</strong> such laws, the ‘meaning’ <strong>of</strong> such laws forMach, as for Nietzsche and Wittgenstein, lies in their use: their value for prediction. Thistoo is not an ontological statement. Since Mach is not concerned with absolute truth as isthe more metaphysically inclined philosopher <strong>of</strong> science, he is free to share the physicalscientist’s focus on working utility. It was this dedication which led to Mach’s notoriousrepudiation <strong>of</strong> unobservables (unusable—untestable) as explanatory components in theatomic theory <strong>of</strong> physics and chemistry. Needless to say this prejudice, like his emphasisupon the researcher’s ‘unteachable’ art (Knowledge and Error), has acquired thetriumphant patina <strong>of</strong> prescience which is the fruit <strong>of</strong> a convergence with contemporaryscience, for today’s atomic theorists have since discarded the nineteenth-centurymechanistical vision <strong>of</strong> the atom.PIERRE DUHEM AND THE DAMNATION OF RELIGION: THE LIMITSOF ANALYTIC REHABILITATIONPierre Maurice Marie Duhem was born in Paris in 1861, a son <strong>of</strong> a businessman <strong>of</strong>Flemish descent. Duhem’s mother could trace her origins to the south <strong>of</strong> France and thevillage <strong>of</strong> Cabrespine, near Carcassonne, to the very house where Duhem himself was to


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 154die at the age <strong>of</strong> 54. In 1882, Duhem entered the Ecole Normale Supérieure at the head <strong>of</strong>the yearly competition. Proving his initial promise, Duhem completed a dissertation inthermodynamic physics in only three years. But through no evident fault <strong>of</strong> the workitself, Duhem’s dissertation was none the less rejected by a jury headed by GabrielLippman. Two years after this first academic frustration, Duhem would successfullysubmit another thesis in thermodynamics, to earn his doctorate (in mathematics).Duhem’s rejected first thesis was not only subsequently published but published to abroad and approbative scholarly reception. We shall have cause to note below that thecomplicated circumstances <strong>of</strong> this rejection are important for understanding Duhem’sintellectual and academic career. In 1887, Duhem became maître de conférences at Lille,where he taught physical mechanics. Following a pedagogic dispute at Lille, Duhemmoved to Rennes in 1893, but soon afterwards took a chair at Bordeaux in 1895, whichhe occupied until his death in 1916.Duhem’s philosophic interest in scientific theories is seen in his still-influential 1906book, La Théorie physique: son objet, sa structure (The Aim and Structure <strong>of</strong> PhysicalTheory). Duhem, who shared Mach’s belief in the vital importance <strong>of</strong> history forscientific progress, also made significant and substantial contributions to the history <strong>of</strong>science with his Les Origines de la statique (1905–6) and his voluminous study <strong>of</strong>medieval cosmology, Le Système du monde (1913–58), for the most part publishedposthumously and which has recently appeared in highly truncated form in Englishtranslation as the one-volume Medieval Cosmology.If a discussion <strong>of</strong> place names can illuminate the changes necessary for anunderstanding <strong>of</strong> the transformation <strong>of</strong> natural philosophy into the kind <strong>of</strong> philosophy <strong>of</strong>science familiar today, the absent name <strong>of</strong> Paris is significant for understanding Duhem’sintellectual position in that same tradition <strong>of</strong> the critique des sciences. For Duhem to allappearances had, with the submission <strong>of</strong> his first dissertation, opposed a then leadingscholar, Marcellin Berthelot. 14 Duhem’s biographers are largely agreed in reporting thatthe reasons for the jury’s refusal <strong>of</strong> the thesis stem from the <strong>of</strong>fence given to Berthelot inDuhem’s theoretical repudiation <strong>of</strong> Berthelot’s thermodynamical views on minimal work.And, indeed, more than a motive indicating a subjective and not an objective reason onBerthelot’s part, we also have a tacit confession. In a 1936 biography written to securesupport for the posthumous project <strong>of</strong> editing and publishing the remaining volumes(ultimately to number ten in all) <strong>of</strong> Duhem’s Système du Monde, Duhem’s daughter,Hélène, reported Berthelot’s <strong>of</strong>t-cited pr<strong>of</strong>essional edict which consigned (or better said,effectively damned) the Parisian-born Duhem to the provinces: ‘This young man willnever teach in Paris.’ 15But to leave the question <strong>of</strong> the merits <strong>of</strong> Duhem’s first dissertation to one side, andlikewise to reserve the related question <strong>of</strong> the tactical wisdom <strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong>fending the leadingscholar <strong>of</strong> one’s day (for, as a recent biographer <strong>of</strong> Duhem’s life and work,R.N.D.Martin, has observed, both are more properly questions to be directed to Duhem’steachers at the Ecole Normale than against Duhem himself), I would note that Berthelot’spersonal antagonism towards Duhem nevertheless retains resonant dimensions whichexceed the indignant prejudice <strong>of</strong> the <strong>of</strong>fended vanity <strong>of</strong> a leading Parisian scientist. For,betraying something more than a personal idiosyncrasy, Berthelot’s views echo thegeneral tenor <strong>of</strong> Duhem’s philosophical reception, both then and now, where at least for


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 155our times it may be assumed that questions <strong>of</strong> pr<strong>of</strong>essional conviction and ego are notsimilarly relevant. Nevertheless, questions <strong>of</strong> personality, understood in the broad,psychological and, in Duhem’s particular case, confessional sense, play an essential role.Hence it is not insignificant that we are informed again and again that Duhem was aCatholic. Thus the newly published contribution to Duhem scholarship by Duhem’sforemost English-language commentator, Stanley L.Jaki, bears the title Scientist andCatholic. Jaki, himself a priest, certainly does not mean to underline this conjunctionunsympathetically. But Duhem’s religious faith is common stock in reviews <strong>of</strong> hisphilosophical merit. And an evaluation <strong>of</strong> the objective significance <strong>of</strong> Duhem’s faithwith respect to Duhem’s historical circumstance is not easy. And Martin’s study <strong>of</strong>Duhem’s intellectual biography, appropriately subtitled <strong>Philosophy</strong> and <strong>History</strong> in theWork <strong>of</strong> a Believing Physicist, begins by adverting to the significance <strong>of</strong> the specificfortunes <strong>of</strong> Duhem’s intellectual reception. Martin notes that Duhem’s work is from thestart clouded by a number <strong>of</strong> persistent critical reservations. Thus it is essential tounderline the fact that a French scholar <strong>of</strong> importance as, beyond all dispute, Duhem mustbe accounted, should none the less be denied, as Duhem was denied, a Paris chair.Whereas Bachelard, born in the provinces, and mentioned here for the sake <strong>of</strong> contrast,would not be similarly denied this same token <strong>of</strong> recognition. The difficulty here in thecase <strong>of</strong> Duhem, arguably the superior philosopher, surely the superior scientist, is to tracethe proximate cause.In the conflict with Berthelot, reservations concerning Duhem’s achievementspreceded Duhem’s scientific and academic career. Martin sums up the general scholarlyjudgment with respect to Duhem’s historical stature with the resounding ambiguity <strong>of</strong> anunderstated reservation as, in a word, ‘problematic’. For many, Martin writes, Duhemwas ‘a brilliant maverick who continually got things frustratingly wrong: producingbrilliant arguments against atomic explanations in physics and chemistry, a muddledinstrumentalism in the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, and a voluminous collection <strong>of</strong> misreadings<strong>of</strong> mediaeval Scholastics’ ([6.50], p. 194). In general, for Duhem’s biographicalcommentators and interpreters, that is for Martin, for Jaki, Roberto Maiocchi, etc.,Duhem’s problem was fundamentally and in its essence a religious one, and, like mostconfessional affiliations, this was one that cut two ways. Not only was Duhem’s Catholicfaith an obstacle to the largely Protestant ideals <strong>of</strong> modern science but Catholics wereuneasy with his totally modern (and in the Catholic view ‘modernist’) opposition to neoscholasticism.Duhem for his part was an iconoclast, and his position in the provinceswas not such as to inspire him to restraint (Duhem, let it be remembered, despite his lack<strong>of</strong> a Paris chair, was a native Parisian). 16 He was particularly impatient with the neo-Thomism <strong>of</strong> the day, evident in the works <strong>of</strong> Jacques Maritain with his quasi-Aristotelianclassification <strong>of</strong> the sciences. In the long run, what this meant was that Duhem could bedismissed as a Catholic apologist by non-Catholics while simultaneously beingcondemned as ‘modernist’ by the French Catholic intellectual elite. 17 And thesereservations made on two sides were not the result <strong>of</strong> unthinking prejudice on one side orthe other, but were in fact founded at least to some degree in both cases. For it is clearthat the realist metaphysics and authoritarianism <strong>of</strong> the aims <strong>of</strong> the neo-scholasticmovement in philosophy were undermined by the substance <strong>of</strong> Duhem’s views.Conversely, Duhem’s non-Catholic readers could regard Duhem’s historical interest in


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 156medieval science as representing little more than another version <strong>of</strong> neo-scholasticism.The historical researches <strong>of</strong> Crombie and others suggest that the problem requires aclearer understanding <strong>of</strong> the differences between historical eras rather than matters <strong>of</strong>faith, but Martin’s observation that ‘Duhem seems to have fallen between every availablestool’ ([6.50], p. 211) would seem to be the least one could say not only <strong>of</strong> Duhem but <strong>of</strong>the judgments made concerning him. What the new concern with history illustrates is thevalue <strong>of</strong> Butterfield’s insight that a ‘Whig interpretation <strong>of</strong> history’ (or ‘presentism’ as itis also called)—that is, an interpretation <strong>of</strong> other eras from the perspective <strong>of</strong> one’s ownera—illuminates only one’s own prejudices (and that only from the point <strong>of</strong> view <strong>of</strong> asubsequent historiographer) without shedding light on the period in question. <strong>History</strong>without hermeneutics is blind.Against Koyré’s reading <strong>of</strong> the revolutionary transformation from the medieval to themodern world-view, which corroborates the non-or anti-Catholic reading <strong>of</strong> Duhem’sreactionary scholasticism, Jaki maintains that Duhem’s sympathetic account <strong>of</strong> thescholastic opposition to Aristotelian philosophy <strong>of</strong> natural place suggests that thismedieval perspective fostered rather than hindered the modern scientific turn such as thatassociated with, for example, Galileo’s speculations concerning the role <strong>of</strong> impetus.Other scholars, such as William Wallace, have <strong>of</strong>fered corroborating readings <strong>of</strong> the‘Galileo affair’, showing the importance <strong>of</strong> taking Galileo’s terms not in a putativelymodern context (following the conviction <strong>of</strong> Galileo’s visionary genius) but in their morepatent and for the modern reader all the more tacit historical and that is medievalcontext. 18 Wallace’s discussion <strong>of</strong> Galileo’s use <strong>of</strong> the Latin term ex suppositionsillustrates this point. 19 The problem is not only that readers from the perspective <strong>of</strong>modern (analytic) philosophy <strong>of</strong> science tend to translate ex suppositione as ex hypothesi,but that the perspective <strong>of</strong> the Catholic Church is automatically identified with that <strong>of</strong> ananti-modern, progress-retarding influence. This, in the apposite context <strong>of</strong> the contestbetween religion and science, shows the tenacity <strong>of</strong> the Whig interpretation <strong>of</strong> history.For this reason, Butterfield writes, ‘It matters very much how we start upon our labours—whether for example we take the Protestants <strong>of</strong> the sixteenth century as men who werefighting to bring about our modern world, while the Catholics were struggling to keep themedieval or whether we take the whole present as the child <strong>of</strong> the whole past and seerather the modern world emerging from the clash <strong>of</strong> both Catholic and Protestant.’ 20 ForButterfield the problem is the tendency to reduce the problem to one between Protestantand Catholic, between enlightened Whig and darkage traditionalist. To understandDuhem, one must go beyond confessional prejudice.In fact, as Martin takes pains to demonstrate, Duhem must be characterized as areluctant convert to his ultimately continuous account <strong>of</strong> the transition from medievalscience to modern science. Duhem moved towards this view in spite <strong>of</strong> his own originalviews as a scientist working at the peak <strong>of</strong> the modern self-understanding <strong>of</strong> the sciences,that is, despite his typically scientific (high modern or scientistic) formation at the turn <strong>of</strong>the last century. According to science’s own self-understanding then, and which is in partstill true for scientists today, the transition from the (in Koyré’s words ‘closed’) medievalview <strong>of</strong> the world to the (‘open’) modern world-view was—like the birth <strong>of</strong> the fullyarmoured Athena from the forehead <strong>of</strong> her father Zeus—a sudden, completelydiscontinuous or punctual, radical leap from classical and hellenic to fully-fledged


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 157modern science. This view eclipsing the scientific value <strong>of</strong> the Middle Ages was astypical for the average scientist in Duhem’s time as it can still be said to be true <strong>of</strong>scientists and <strong>of</strong> many philosophers today. Against the bias <strong>of</strong> this formation, it was lessDuhem’s religious faith, one could argue, than his rigorous education as a formal logicianthat brought him, indeed compelled him, to re-examine the historical record. In Jaki’sview, a view now with considerable historiographical support, in addition to Duhem’saxiom-atician’s rigour, the record suggests that the medieval cosmological viewpointworked not to obstruct the path to modern science in effect, where even Galileo’s termimpeto may be traced to Jean Buridan in the fourteenth century, but rather to further itsadvance. Duhem’s reading <strong>of</strong> medieval science as an essential bridge between classicalscience and Galileo’s inauguration <strong>of</strong> Newton’s project <strong>of</strong> modern scientific thinkingreflects a revolution, but the revolution for Duhem takes place in his own thinking,against his modern scientist’s ingrained thought-style but in accord with his trainedaxiomatician’s loyalty to the importance <strong>of</strong> first principles and logical coherence.Duhem’s argument stressed both subtlety and complexity, but it is clear that for himthe key question for any theory or hypothesis was its utility in ‘saving’ the phenomena.On such accounting, <strong>of</strong> course, not only was Galileo a child <strong>of</strong> his times, indebted to thescholasticism <strong>of</strong> Oresme and Buridan, but Galileo’s account was less successful than thePtolemaic alternative. From this point <strong>of</strong> view, Cardinal Bellarmine’s prudential cautionmay be read less as an illustration <strong>of</strong> jesuitry than as a representative <strong>of</strong> that kind <strong>of</strong>French common sense or Pascalian bons sens where the spirits <strong>of</strong> geometry and finesseintersect and for which, as both Martin and, years earlier, Dorothy Eastwood haveargued, Duhem had a notable affinity. Yet beyond the still-unsettled questions <strong>of</strong>Duhem’s personal reception, Duhem’s significance for analytic philosophy <strong>of</strong> science isnot in fact a subject <strong>of</strong> much debate owing to the prominence <strong>of</strong> the philosophersroutinely listed as having responded to Duhem’s influence, most notably Popper andQuine.Duhem’s argument against crucial experiments may also be seen to turn on hisunderstanding <strong>of</strong> theories as axiomatic systems and his appreciation <strong>of</strong> the nature <strong>of</strong> suchsystems. For Duhem, physical experiments cannot refute isolated theories. Wherealternative theoretical views are to be tested, an experiment designed to enable theexperimenter to choose between them only confirms one hypothesis or another. But as anexperiment confirms or refutes the theory and not the theoretical system, the results areinconclusive for not only may a subsequent experiment fail to confirm the theory, but arelated experiment may refute a related theory; the experimenter is free to make ad hocadjustments, and what has come to be called the ‘theory-ladenness’ <strong>of</strong> observationsmeans that such adjustments may well be already or subsequently ‘built into’ theinterpretation <strong>of</strong> the experimental results, without necessarily involving the awareness <strong>of</strong>the experimenter. Apart from such phenomenological hermeneutic questions as contextdependenceand interpretation, the significance <strong>of</strong> the theory in any case is articulatedonly within the theoretical complex <strong>of</strong> which it is a part. Just as there are no isolatedphenomena, there are no isolated theories but only theoretical systems. Thisinterdependence points to the reason for Duhem’s (as for Mach’s own) convictionconcerning the importance <strong>of</strong> history. Modification in the theory may preserve the systemand vice versa, and an understanding <strong>of</strong> the system requires an understanding <strong>of</strong> the


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 158original meaning <strong>of</strong> its terms. For Duhem, experiment is crucial, but neither falsificationnor demonstration provides certain or sure tests <strong>of</strong> eternal, unchanging truth. On thispoint, it is the history <strong>of</strong> science which justifies Duhem.Apart from Duhem’s views on history and related to his views on theoreticalindecidability, Duhem held a form <strong>of</strong> instrumentalism that was shared not only by Machand Poincaré, but also by Kirch<strong>of</strong>f, Hertz, Bridgman, Eddington and the Copenhagenschool <strong>of</strong> quantum physics. For Duhem, two aspects <strong>of</strong> theory must be distinguished, theexplanatory and the representational. As far as Duhem was concerned, although scientistsand philosophers <strong>of</strong> science <strong>of</strong> a realist bent regarded theories as explanation, the value <strong>of</strong>theory is ultimately its instrumental or conventional value. Instrumentalism is a view <strong>of</strong>scientific theories founded, as Karl Popper says, by ‘Osiander, Cardinal Bellarmine andBishop Berkeley’. 21 Linking Osiander to Cardinal Bellarmine, as most theoreticians stagethis drama, it is clear that the great antagonist to such instrumentalism for Popper and forothers is Galileo. And, as Ian Hacking puts it, ‘Galileo is everybody’s favourite hero—not only Chomsky and Weinberg but also Husserl.’ 22 To say as has already beensuggested that Galileo was not as radical or as ahead <strong>of</strong> his times as had been thought isto oppose the general conception <strong>of</strong> Galileo as a canonic scientific hero (or saint). This isthe associative point MacIntyre makes (arguing in a different direction) when he speaks<strong>of</strong> Feyerabend’s ‘anarchism’ as Emersonian in spirit, advocating ‘not “Every man hisown Jesus” but “Every man his own Galileo”’. 23 If Duhem is an instrumentalist, he alsostands opposed to Galileo. And he cannot do otherwise. Duhem, with his claim that ‘alaw <strong>of</strong> physics is properly speaking neither true nor false’ (The Aim and Structure <strong>of</strong>Physical Theory), is consequently one <strong>of</strong> the principal antagonists not only <strong>of</strong> Popper’srealist-falsificationist view <strong>of</strong> physical theories but <strong>of</strong> all realist views <strong>of</strong> science.Duhem’s instrumentalism continues to be important for the present pr<strong>of</strong>ile <strong>of</strong> thephilosophy <strong>of</strong> science in the English-speaking world. For Duhem, the same physical lawhas a potentially different extension at different times owing to the historicaldevelopment <strong>of</strong> these laws and their embodiment in experimental praxis. The meaning <strong>of</strong>a physical law is to be determined in the final analysis by the context <strong>of</strong> scientific practiceand the scheme <strong>of</strong> related laws involved in determining the meaning <strong>of</strong> that law. Thisprinciple provides the basis for the underdeterminist perspective on the relationshipbetween experimental evidence and theory and the constellation <strong>of</strong> related theories.Through the work <strong>of</strong> Quine and Davidson, this notion <strong>of</strong> underdeterminism led to thecurrent position on theoretical indecidability that has done so much to bring analyticphilosophy to a (theoretical) cul de sac if also, albeit indirectly, generating the currentemphasis on the importance <strong>of</strong> experiment in discussions within analytic philosophy <strong>of</strong>science.It is a testimony to the seminal character <strong>of</strong> the influence <strong>of</strong> both Duhem and Mach thatit is today thought necessary to return to their philosophic understanding <strong>of</strong> scientificpractice (as theory and experiment/praxis). This is not to say that they were in individualagreement among themselves but rather that each had distinct insights which similarlyfailed to be transmitted in subsequent debates. And the current urgency <strong>of</strong> an historicalturn in the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, clear since the work <strong>of</strong> Hanson, Feyerabend and Kuhn,is accordingly necessary largely if not only because <strong>of</strong> a correspondent refusal <strong>of</strong> historyin mainline or analytic philosophy <strong>of</strong> science.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 159GASTON BACHELARD: SCIENTISM WITH A HUMAN FACEGaston Bachelard was born at Bar-sur-Aube in 1884. Bachelard’s studies wereconducted, as he himself was given to muse, under the sign <strong>of</strong> delay and he worked as apart-time mechanical technician for the French postal service until 1913 when he earnedhis licence in mathematics and science, becoming a teacher at the Collège <strong>of</strong> BarsurAube.Upon earning his doctorate in 1927, he assumed the chair <strong>of</strong> philosophy atDijon and was then called to the chair <strong>of</strong> the history and philosophy <strong>of</strong> science at theSorbonne in 1940, where he remained until his retirement in 1954. He died in Paris in1962.Bachelard’s philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is expressed as a ‘dialectical rationalism’ or‘dialectical naturalism’. Just as Duhem’s anti-idealist conventionalism was read asconducive to the aims <strong>of</strong> materialism, although instrumentalist and thus inherently antirealist,so Marxist authors such as Louis Althusser and Roy Bhaskar have readBachelard’s naturalism as a kind <strong>of</strong> dialectical materialism to be employed againstideological appropriations <strong>of</strong> science. Although the current interest in Bachelard’sepistemology and consequently in his philosophy <strong>of</strong> science doubtless owes a good dealto Althusser, and without denigrating the value <strong>of</strong> Althusser’s reading for Marxist ormaterialist epistemology, the Marxist reception <strong>of</strong> Bachelard’s work and the word‘dialectic’, if drawn exclusively from Althusser’s programme, can be misleading(LeCourt). Still it should be emphasized that those working from Marxist perspectiveshave been far more assiduous in examining Bachelard’s philosophy for its epistemiccomponent than other traditionally analytic philosophers <strong>of</strong> science (Bhaskar).Bachelard’s emphasis is on a dialogical exchange, that is to say, a dialogue betweenthe knower and the known, a dialogue between poetic and scientific discourse. This is notto be construed as inherently (or essentially related to) a dialogue between poetry properand science proper. Instead the capital dialogical exchange is that between the scientistand the dreaming scientist himself: 24 the scientist and himself poetizing, or projecting(and thus ‘dreaming’ or effectively constituting or technically constructing) the world <strong>of</strong>scientific nature. Thus Bachelard wrote on the psychoanalysis <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong> thediscovery <strong>of</strong> fire as a dialogue between psychoanalysis and that history to find itspsychoanalysis metaphorically in (and <strong>of</strong>) the history <strong>of</strong> sexual desire. The metonymicassociation between the origin <strong>of</strong> fire (and electricity) and the fire (and electricity) <strong>of</strong>sexual passion points to a dialogue between image (the discovery <strong>of</strong> fire) and the humanreflection or projection <strong>of</strong> that same discovery. Similarly, the philosophy <strong>of</strong> no, by whichexpression Bachelard seeks to characterize the openness <strong>of</strong> the scientific attitude, is adialogical philosophy—or better a dialogical account—<strong>of</strong> scientific practice. To say thatthe scientist constitutes the phenomena, the objects <strong>of</strong> science, is not to describe aunilateral construction; rather the constitution is a formative, informative, reciprocalcreation, a making <strong>of</strong> the scientist himself as much as a making (a projection orconstitution) <strong>of</strong> the scientist’s world. This exchange with the world <strong>of</strong> scientific ortechnical experience articulates the scientist’s characteristic capacity for an anticipatoryopenness to scientific phenomena, an attitude ever open to possible revision upon


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 160encountering a new phenomenon. Such a ‘no’ is then heuristic in function not destructiveor eliminative: it describes what for Bachelard will be the enabling condition for thepossibility <strong>of</strong> openness to (scientific) novelty. The scientist is thereby summoned t<strong>of</strong>urther innovative and creative efforts, reconstituting a new framework embracing thenew experience.Bachelard sought to go beyond phenomenology and regarded Husserl’s owncontributions as so many points <strong>of</strong> (dialectical) departure for Bachelard’s own avowedlypolemical reflections. Thus Bachelard could speak <strong>of</strong> the need for a ‘phenomenotechnology’to reflect the engaged role <strong>of</strong> the human investigator and the world underinvestigation. Hermeneutically and phenomenologically sensitive authors have read thisperspective as compatible with a hermeneutic phenomenology <strong>of</strong> (reading) scientificinstrumentation. 25 But against such a tolerant syncretism <strong>of</strong> Bachelard’s poetizing scienceand phenomenological hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> scientific culture, Bachelard’s inherentlyantagonistic emphasis is more than clear in its original context. In the interest <strong>of</strong> andfollowing upon the inspiration <strong>of</strong> science, Bachelard aims to correct phenomenology.Owing to the scientific phenomenology implicit in the doing <strong>of</strong> science, as Bachelard’sphilosophy <strong>of</strong> ‘no’, ‘observation is always polemical; it either confirms or denies a priorthesis, a preexisting model, an observational protocol’. For Bachelard, philosophicreflection on science must be prepared to be instructed by science in practice. ‘A trulyscientific phenomenology is therefore essentially a phenomeno-technology’ (The NewScientific Spirit [6.54]). The result <strong>of</strong> this perspective is not merely the banal pragmatismone might expect. Because Bachelard expects that the prime experience <strong>of</strong> science is tobe a mathematical one, and that, as ‘the mathematical tool affects the craftsman who usesit’, it is not only safe to say that ‘Homo mathematicus is taking the place <strong>of</strong> homo faber’,but that ultimately ‘it is mathematics that opens new avenues to experience’. Close as thispoint <strong>of</strong> view is to Husserl, the gap remains and is widened by Husserl’s sense <strong>of</strong> crisis,as a separation even more exacerbated by Heidegger’s hermeneutic critique <strong>of</strong>technology along with the knowledge ideal <strong>of</strong> mathesis, or axiomatic certainty.More negatively, resolutely committed as Bachelard was to the scientific andEnlightenment ideal disposition <strong>of</strong> a constitutional happiness or cheerfulness, Bachelardfound the existentialist world-view particularly pernicious for it expressed what in hisview was a false opposition between enquiring subject (poetizing poet or scientist—forthey are or at least inherently can be considered the same) and world object (as created oras world to be known). Bachelard refused the distinction between the living subject and adead or alien or meaningless world. The poetic world <strong>of</strong> human meaning was continuouswith the scientific world, which for Bachelard bore the manifest imprint <strong>of</strong> the humanprojective imagination. Bachelard’s positivism accordingly preserves the casualcolloquial meaning <strong>of</strong> the word ‘positive’ as an optimistic outlook, or, in Bachelard’swords, a ‘happy’ perspective. This affirmative and essentially scientistic humanism isexpressed where Bachelard writes ‘Science calls a world into being, not through somemagic force, immanent in reality, but through a rational force immanent in the mind….Scientific work makes rational entities real, in the full sense <strong>of</strong> the word’ (New ScientificSpirit [6.54]).Bachelard’s work is extensively cited and has been the subject <strong>of</strong> numerouscommentaries, less in the context <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science than in principally literary


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 161and philosophical discussions <strong>of</strong> Bachelard’s poetics. Beyond anglophone continentalphilosophic interests, Bachelard’s eclectic style <strong>of</strong> reading between literature and sciencehas found significant hearings in France and Germany in part through the efforts <strong>of</strong> atradition <strong>of</strong> literary theorists (as Barthes recounts). In (particularly French) history andphilosophy <strong>of</strong> science, this reception is due to the influence <strong>of</strong> Bachelard’s student,Georges Canguilhem, the historian <strong>of</strong> physiological science, and R.Cavailles. In thiscompany, Michel Foucault may also be regarded as within Bachelard’s intellectualsphere. But if Foucault’s value may be traced to—better and more significantly, if here itcan be argued that Foucault’s value for science can only be understood in terms <strong>of</strong>—Bachelard’s influence (cf. Tiles who prefaces her own study [6.83] by saying that herrepresentation <strong>of</strong> Bachelard ‘is a rational construct’, 26 or Gutting who reads Bachelardand Canguilhem as background to Foucault, or Bhaskar who also prefers not to treat <strong>of</strong>Bachelard on his own, or on his own terms, but sets and thus inevitably defines Bachelardin opposition to Feyerabend), the question <strong>of</strong> the nature <strong>of</strong> the enduring significance <strong>of</strong>Bachelard’s philosophy for the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is more elusive. This difficulty isnot a matter <strong>of</strong> the conflict between religion and modern scientific sensibility—as it wasin Duhem’s case—but is doubtless due to Bachelard’s style. This is a style that is lessesoteric than simply dated and rather specific to French literary culture, at least accordingto Jonathan Culler’s plausible and sympathetic account. Culler implies that the lack <strong>of</strong>conceptual resonance among philosophers <strong>of</strong> science or philosophers proper in responseto Bachelard’s works (a limitation which is also shared by non-francophone literarytheorists) is due to Bachelard’s nineteenth-century style <strong>of</strong> rhetorical and imaginativereference. The style in question is one <strong>of</strong> diffuse allusion and allegory, like that <strong>of</strong>Jacques Lacan. In Culler’s view, Bachelard’s style is simply out <strong>of</strong> synch with currentmodes <strong>of</strong> expression and particularly unsuited for today’s impatient styles <strong>of</strong> reading. 27To the late twentieth-century reader’s impatience may be added a fatal incapacity, that isan inability to appreciate the sense, to infer and so to understand the full value <strong>of</strong>Bachelard’s allusions. An allusive, allegorical or metaphorical—in Bachelard’s wordspoetic—style presumes and is necessarily dependent upon the reader’s aptness for andfamiliarity with the conventions used.The capacity to note such allusive resonances in Bachelard’s work is essential both forreaders <strong>of</strong> Bachelard’s philosophy <strong>of</strong> science and for readers <strong>of</strong> his literary criticism.Accordingly, the literary theorist Ralph Smith notes that it is Bachelard’s ‘philosophy <strong>of</strong>science [which] must be understood in order to truly appreciate the full significance <strong>of</strong> hisessays on the imagination and to assess properly his contribution to literary criticism’. 28Where, for Bachelard, ‘Science in fact creates philosophy’ (The New Scientific Spirit[6.54]), any clear distinction between Bachelard’s value for literary criticism and sciencemust perforce be difficult to make. Still the lion’s share <strong>of</strong> this attribution <strong>of</strong> value isrepresented by studies in literary criticism. Apart from Gutting’s background reference toBachelard’s work in line with the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, and Tiles’s related discussions,Bachelard is better known for his literary contributions, in so far as Bachelard’s emphasison the imaginary continues to appeal to a distinctively French fascination with fantasyand the domains <strong>of</strong> reverie and poetic invention.Mary McAllester Jones’s recent study [6.76] employs the term ‘subversive’ toemphasize Bachelard’s predilection for the literary and for the imagination not on the


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 162terms <strong>of</strong> humanism but rather as ‘unhinging’ humanism. 29 This inverse, ‘subverting’emphasis corresponds to the fashionable celebration <strong>of</strong> the postmodern but also testifiesto the need to come to terms with scientism’s recondite and irrecusable humanism. CitingBachelard’s claim that ‘Man’s being is an unfixed being. All expression unfixeshim’ (Bachelard in Jones [6.76], 193), Jones reads this ‘unfixing’ in her account <strong>of</strong>Bachelard’s focus on the salutary spiritual value <strong>of</strong> challenge, dynamic flexibility andinnovation. Thus, in Jones’s expression <strong>of</strong> such an unhinged humanism, the movement orfluidity <strong>of</strong> articulation is paramount: ‘Man is unfixed by language, not decentered’ (Jones[6.76], 193).I think it helpful to add that this openness, as a very literal flexibility, is akin to PaulValéry’s anti-Platonic celebration <strong>of</strong> the divinity that is not given negative or obliquetestament, that is, not at all missed or failing, but which speaks precisely in our mutenessin the presence <strong>of</strong> beauty. 30 Such an awe or expression <strong>of</strong> silence in the face <strong>of</strong> thebeautiful rather than revealing an incapacity (such silence betrayed in the human inabilityto hold to a steady glance in the face <strong>of</strong> beauty proves the body’s counter-divinity asPlato maintains) is the caesura, the glancing gaping that affirms and confirms, sees, singsand consecrates what is seen. In Bachelard’s words with reference to Valéry, ‘thetemporal structure found in ambiguity can help us to intellectualize rhythms produced bysound…. We have come to realize that it is the idea that sings its song, that the complexinterplay <strong>of</strong> ideas has its own particular tonality, a tonality that can call forth deep withinus all a faint, s<strong>of</strong>t murmuring’ (La Dialectique de la durée, cited in Jones [6.76], p. 73).Silence thus testifies to the moving power or dynamis so important for Bachelard, whowas <strong>of</strong> course a reader <strong>of</strong> Valéry’s poetry and theory as well as a high-school teacher <strong>of</strong>chemistry and university pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> epistemology. For Bachelard’s enduring aim was toshow that the work <strong>of</strong> the scientist was not only comparable to that <strong>of</strong> the poet, but was inits own and full sense a poetics as well. And if, as noted, ‘science creates philosophy’, forBachelard it will also be science that, most properly said and equal to any poeticdiscipline, creates poetry.In the creative processes <strong>of</strong> poet and scientist, the play <strong>of</strong> thought echoes or respondsto what is in each case. This is what Bachelard means by writing, ‘Science calls a worldinto being, not through some magic force, immanent in reality, but through a rationalforce immanent in the mind.’ And it is in this creative, reflective way that Bachelardclaims that ‘Science in fact creates philosophy’. But that is to say that philosophy isscience reflecting on itself. The scientist is creator (poet) and philosopher, a modernPrometheus calling ‘a world into being’. Here, the different senses evoked by the idea <strong>of</strong>a ‘modern Prometheus’ in an English literary context (Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein) anda continental context (romanticized Titanism) are significant and testify to the difficultiesinherent in assimilating such an elusive and allusive author as Bachelard.A contemporary physicist and philosopher <strong>of</strong> science, and one who may be countedwithin the continental tradition, Bernard d’Espagnat, takes Bachelard’s importantreferences to Valéry a step further. For d’Espagnat, Valéry’s notion <strong>of</strong> spiritual valueexpresses a mysticism more veiled than obvious in Valéry’s contrast between spiritualand material(ist) domains. D’Espagnat suggests that the nuance to be grasped here is thatbetween a spiritual life without God (atheist) and spiritual life <strong>of</strong> a human (here, to be fairto d’Espagnat, perhaps not necessarily a humanist) kind. The difference is again not


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 163necessarily disjoint.Yet the association with mysticism should perhaps only be emphasized in a limitedway. Furthermore, for the sake <strong>of</strong> rigour, Bachelard’s version <strong>of</strong> humanist scientism canbe named a subversion <strong>of</strong> scientism only on the most fancifully esoteric level and thatlevel is ambivalently problematic because <strong>of</strong> its insistent humanism. Bachelard’s projectmust be conceived as a subversive humanism far more than a postmodernstyle subversion<strong>of</strong> humanism as Jones maintains. Such a subversive humanism must, it would seem, berethought if it may not in the end be said to yield the absence <strong>of</strong> the subject. Which is <strong>of</strong>course only to say that a subversive humanism remains a humanism. This subtlehumanism is such as d’Espagnat, for example, finds in Valéry. It is elusive because itentails the conjunction <strong>of</strong> mysticism and what d’Espagnat calls Valéry’s ‘positivism <strong>of</strong>principle’. 31 As the proponent <strong>of</strong> a mysticism which is simultaneously, coextensively inthe human, the ambiguity <strong>of</strong> Valéry’s position is rightfully his as poet. Bachelard’spoetics <strong>of</strong> science <strong>of</strong>fers an illumination <strong>of</strong> why a contemporary scientist such asd’Espagnat could turn to Valéry, a poet, as guide for ‘thinking’ science. Bachelard’sphilosophy <strong>of</strong> science represents (a position on) science as the high point <strong>of</strong> humanculture (as its most pr<strong>of</strong>itable-productive and progressive expression). But this scienceapprobativeperspective <strong>of</strong>fers a valorization <strong>of</strong> science echoing not only Bachelard’swell-rounded conservative cultural views but in uncanny resonance with the spirit <strong>of</strong> the‘two cultures’ debate (and their interplay) popularized for the anglophone and traditionalreader in the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science by C.P.Snow’s essay The Two Cultures.In Bachelard’s as well as Snow’s approach to the human achievement <strong>of</strong> science,science remains an ideal to be valued (and, post-Foucault, we can observe that this valueis also the power <strong>of</strong> science, a power Nietzsche and Lacan would tell us whichcontributes to the Enlightenment role or reign <strong>of</strong> terror). Where Snow glamorizes science,Bachelard renders science a kind <strong>of</strong> poetizing and its products, its ‘phenomenotechnologies’,a kind <strong>of</strong> poetry. In effect, science becomes myth. But this does not resolvethe opposition between logos and mythos, an opposition which has been traditional sincethe beginnings <strong>of</strong> Socratic philosophy. Since a glamorization <strong>of</strong> science is a part <strong>of</strong> ourcontemporary high-industrialist culture, Bachelard’s mythification <strong>of</strong> science, as apoetizing venture, far from being a revolutionary coding (much less a double orsubversive coding) only underlines the ruling mystique <strong>of</strong> science. In this supplanting <strong>of</strong>mythos by logos, mythos is not eliminated but absorbed by or subsumed under logos.Mythos becomes (is and as so named always was) a function <strong>of</strong> logos. With a culturalpresumption exceeding Mach or Duhem, Bachelard asserts the very poetic function <strong>of</strong>science. On Bachelard’s enthusiastic account, science as scientistically—which is also tosay (for such is the force <strong>of</strong> the mythic-logical conversion) science as poetically—conceived truly is poetry at its best.Bachelard’s express identification <strong>of</strong> the project <strong>of</strong> scientific practice and method, intheory and experiment, where the scientist is taken to constitute the manifest entities (andnot merely the image) <strong>of</strong> science (what Bachelard calls poetizing) inspired the structure<strong>of</strong> the sociological turn so decisive for the development <strong>of</strong> the new philosophy <strong>of</strong> sciencebeyond the received hypothetico-deductive or reconstructivist view (Latour, Bloor,Woolgar). Literally constructed, the poetic project <strong>of</strong> the world <strong>of</strong> science is a suitableobject for a sociology <strong>of</strong> knowledge and scientific practice or, in Bachelard’s esoteric


coinage, a psychoanalysis <strong>of</strong> science.Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 164THE HISTORY OF CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY OF SCIENCEFrom the perspective <strong>of</strong> Anglo-American analytic-style philosophy, continentalphilosophy may be identified as the tradition <strong>of</strong> philosophy committed to thinking withinthe philosophic tradition, that is, committed to explicitly reconstituting the enduring value<strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong> philosophy. For its part, analytic philosophy is not concerned with thehistory <strong>of</strong> philosophy although to be sure it is rooted in it. Nor is analytic philosophy, asdefined by Müller and Halder, concerned with the traditional objects <strong>of</strong> philosophicinquiry such as things or relations or events, but rather with ‘expressions, concepts,axioms, principles’. 32 On the basis <strong>of</strong> such a distinction between the objects <strong>of</strong>continental and analytic philosophic concern, Husserl’s otherwise putatively realist ‘Tothe things themselves!’ articulates an interest that is not merely stylistically butconstitutively antithetical to analytic philosophy.Patrick A.Heelan characterizes continental philosophy according to two interests: ‘(1)its preoccupation with the problem <strong>of</strong> the ‘constitution’ <strong>of</strong> knowledge, and (2) the effect<strong>of</strong> the historical and cultural world context <strong>of</strong> science on the ‘social constitution’ <strong>of</strong>scientific knowledge’. 33 Although the word ‘constitution’ occurs twice in this definition,rather than focusing on the phenomenological account <strong>of</strong> such constitution, recent effortsto articulate continental philosophies <strong>of</strong> scientific theory and practice emphasize theinterpretive turn to hermeneutics (Hiley, Bohman et al.). The hermeneutic turn is theinterpretive turn taken by many analytic philosophers after Rorty, and in so far as thisinterpretive turn is necessarily an historical turn it is also, as mentioned above, one that isfamiliar to analytic philosophers <strong>of</strong> science after Kuhn. The interpretive and historic turn,which may be designated the hermeneutic turn, thus represents the most salient line <strong>of</strong>intersection between continental and analytic-style philosophy. But preliminary to anyrigorous and significant expression <strong>of</strong> this intersection, as Rüdiger Bubner hasdemonstrated in a broader reflection on hermeneutics and critical theory, it is essential forthe hermeneutic turn to be properly conceived in its technical and (that means) historicalcontext. 34 This background critical context (and constellation <strong>of</strong> related interests) doesnot yet characterize the accepted path <strong>of</strong> received philosophy <strong>of</strong> science. Bubner’sprecision is <strong>of</strong> capital importance for the future <strong>of</strong> hermeneutic approaches to thephilosophy <strong>of</strong> science. In recent historical studies <strong>of</strong> science (Hacking, Jardine, Crombie),a noteworthy attention is paid to the concept <strong>of</strong> the broadly hermeneutic rather than thespecifically phenomenological philosophies <strong>of</strong> Husserl and Heidegger. Authors such asGadamer and even Nietzsche may be invoked and references made to Ricoeur, but I thinkit important to consider the consequences entailed by Bubner’s reservation that a genuineconversance with critical hermeneutics (in its theoretical and historical context) is <strong>of</strong>tenlacking.What is more crucial than even this lack <strong>of</strong> interpretive and historical competency isthe question <strong>of</strong> the advantage for the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science to be gained by taking the‘continental’ turn, as it were, be that turn construed more narrowly as a historical turn ormore radically as a hermeneutic turn. Would such a turn advance the fortunes <strong>of</strong> the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 165currently becalmed (post-Kuhnian, post-sociology <strong>of</strong> science and knowledge) philosophy<strong>of</strong> science? Long ago, Immanuel Kant observed that philosophy itself seemed almost notto progress at all if compared to the natural, formalizable or mathematical sciences. ForKant, in the first Critique and the Prolegomena, to express the difference betweenphilosophy and science, where science shows clear signs <strong>of</strong> cumulative and acceleratingdevelopment, philosophy, in contrast, appears dissolutely aporetic: without issue oradvance, and without consensus, lacking even a unified perspective or standard for whatwould count as such advance. To date, analytic-style philosophy seeks to be true to thescientific standard for philosophic progress as implied by Kant’s criticism, and seeks thekind <strong>of</strong> absolutist or cumulative understanding, including formal precision and consensus,which constitutes or at least approximates the pr<strong>of</strong>essional mien <strong>of</strong> a scientific endeavour.If the ideal <strong>of</strong> science remains the ideal <strong>of</strong> our modern era, and where science, echoingKant’s reference, is <strong>of</strong>fered as the standard for philosophy itself, it seems patentlyobvious that only a scientific (here, analytic) project <strong>of</strong> understanding the project <strong>of</strong>science could command our interest, and analytic philosophy, given its rightful or properdistinction, should also exclude other styles as irrelevant. Thus, as we have seen, Mach, ascientist who was hence already affiliated with the (as he thought) superior thought-style,eschewed the title <strong>of</strong> philosopher. If science shows concrete or factual progress wherephilosophy manifests only moribund confusion or intestine bickering, science by contrastwould appear to have the most progressive part.But the history <strong>of</strong> science shows that even in science the idea <strong>of</strong> progress is aconceptual chestnut. As Kuhn has it, one era’s idea <strong>of</strong> progress is the ‘paradigmatic’ errorto be overthrown by the ‘revolutions’ <strong>of</strong> another generation. Even with a cumulative, pre-Kuhnian scheme <strong>of</strong> simple progress, the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, failing to approximatethat ideal, is more ‘philosophical’ (indeed to the extent <strong>of</strong> following Kant’s aporeticaccount) than Mach’s ideal science. The philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, even analyticallyconstrued, even modelled as it is on science, is still not a science as such. Nor is it ametascience: if the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is to be a science <strong>of</strong> science, complete withconcrete progress and visible results, it has not been very successful. Offering an array(with no end in sight) <strong>of</strong> logical accounts, analytic philosophy <strong>of</strong> science may explain and<strong>of</strong>fer an understanding <strong>of</strong> the workings <strong>of</strong> science as it conceives them. It is at this formaljuncture that an analogy with the practice <strong>of</strong> science must end. For where science has todo with actual events, whether theoretically construed or experimentally constituted,where science is predictive, and thus amenable to verification or refutation, where relatedtheories and experimental tests may be expected to proliferate, the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science,in its project <strong>of</strong> explaining science, does not similarly test or check its explanationsagainst the substance or ‘fact’ <strong>of</strong> actual science. Thus the shock <strong>of</strong> the historical,interpretive or hermeneutic, and sociological turns in the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science. Far froma critique <strong>of</strong> science as a fact, the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science begins with science as it finds it:as a fact, a given, and a given to be accepted on the scientist’s own terms. Neither Machnor Duhem would champion this perspective, precisely because <strong>of</strong> their commitment tothe project <strong>of</strong> science. And Bachelard was too much a scientist himself despite hiscelebration <strong>of</strong> science to petrify it by treating it as an accomplished fact. Thus if the leastdemanding definition <strong>of</strong> the business <strong>of</strong> science as an explanation <strong>of</strong> what the world is, <strong>of</strong>the world as it is (truly, or really, or practically-pragmatically), is to ‘save the


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 166phenomena’ on some level, either directly (observationally) or theoretically, the business<strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science (qua, pretended science <strong>of</strong> science) will need to do the samefor science. But that means that the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science cannot, despite its scientisticambitions, become a science because such an account belongs within the perspective <strong>of</strong>philosophy.CONTINENTAL CURRENTS IN ANALYTIC-STYLE PHILOSOPHY OFSCIENCEThe concern <strong>of</strong> analytic philosophy is, as its name betrays, a concern with the logicalanalysis <strong>of</strong> language. Indeed, for the sake <strong>of</strong> this distinction, it should be said that analyticphilosophy is committed to the dissolution (that is, literally, the analysis) <strong>of</strong> philosophicproblems through their clarification. Once the traditional questions concerning things inthe world, cause and effect or freedom are analysed in terms <strong>of</strong> their meaning andsignificance one finds that one has to do with a logical account or tractatus concerningthe world (i.e., statements, claims and assertions).The analytic tradition <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is marked by its attention toquestions relating to the structure <strong>of</strong> scientific explanation and theory-making. If scienceis characterized by reciprocal theoretical and experimental activity, the philosophy <strong>of</strong>science in its analytic mode has shed more light on theory than on experiment.Conversely its disposition vis-à-vis experimental procedure is such that the very mention<strong>of</strong> historical studies whether by historians <strong>of</strong> science (Kuhn, Crombie) or by sociologists<strong>of</strong> science (Barnes, Shapin, Bloor, Latour, Woolgar, Knorr-Cetina) has had a disruptiveeffect on the analytic programme. For the analyst, historical studies are <strong>of</strong>tencharacterized by attempts at normative historical reconstruction. Feyerabend’s work<strong>of</strong>fers an example <strong>of</strong> such reconstruction, where efforts to restore the sense andsignificance <strong>of</strong> Mach’s contribution to the foundations <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> scienceshould be seen as a logical fulfilment <strong>of</strong> Mach’s appreciation <strong>of</strong> science as historicallyand normatively progressive.Note that this criticism <strong>of</strong> analytic-style philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is not a complaint raisedagainst analytic style philosophy <strong>of</strong> science from the side <strong>of</strong> continental philosophy.These criticisms have been <strong>of</strong>fered in tandem with the development <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong>science itself from the start, beginning with Mach and Duhem and <strong>of</strong>fered as well invarious styles <strong>of</strong> historical reflection by philosophers and historians <strong>of</strong> science acrosscultural boundaries, from Bachelard and Canguilhem to Hanson, Kuhn and Feyerabend.None <strong>of</strong> these, not excepting Bachelard and Canguilhem (or French philosophy <strong>of</strong>science today which remains as addicted to analytic as to continental approaches), may benamed a typical continental philosopher.Mach, Duhem and Bachelard along with a number <strong>of</strong> other scholars have argued thatscience itself is more critical, indeed more inherently ‘hermeneutic’, than philosophy. Butthis point too is problematic, and not only because <strong>of</strong> its counter-intuitive content—whereby science ends up with the virtue <strong>of</strong> being more hermeneutic than hermeneuticsitself. It is overhasty to conclude as Mach for one would argue, with Duhem andBachelard echoing him here, that scientists are the best judges <strong>of</strong> their own practice or


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 167that science provides its own best philosophy.Feyerabend has argued eloquently against this view in Against Method and his recentbooks. But we should not need Feyerabend’s warnings that if science is not inherently asocially responsible enterprise, science is nevertheless neither the Moloch nor theredeemer <strong>of</strong> culture and it is as a practical matter <strong>of</strong> funding in fact socially responsive. 35We do need to add, that for Feyerabend’s programme <strong>of</strong> taking responsibility for getting‘science’ to respond to social interests and needs, that if one is not to sink into theplatitudes <strong>of</strong> civic virtue, now more than Nietzsche could have imagined, we desperatelyneed a critique <strong>of</strong> critique, a critique <strong>of</strong> reason, <strong>of</strong> truth, <strong>of</strong> morality.If the analytic philosophic perspective represents the notion that (natural and objective)science is ‘mankind’s most successful truth enterprise’, as Heelan puts it, the continentalapproach rejects the Whiggish implications <strong>of</strong> this ideal. However, this is a subtle pointfor it must again be emphasized that today there is no approach to the philosophy <strong>of</strong>science, analytic or otherwise, which would advocate an unreconstructedly Whiggishideal. Yet if the perspective <strong>of</strong> a continental approach to the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science isinherently problematic owing to a perception <strong>of</strong> its views as ‘anti-science’, read <strong>of</strong>f fromits explicit rejection <strong>of</strong> scientific knowledge as a ‘privileged kind’, the pluralism <strong>of</strong>continental philosophy recommends a reconsideration. Such a review <strong>of</strong> continentalprospects for the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is under way.This phenomenological tradition begins with Husserl’s project <strong>of</strong> groundingmathematics and physics begun in his work on arithmetic and continued in his LogicalInvestigations and Ideas. Related to the Husserlian tradition in turn is Merleau-Ponty’sThe Primacy <strong>of</strong> Perception. Husserl’s interests grew out <strong>of</strong> the same tradition as and tothat extent matched analytic philosophy (Cobb-Stevens). Considering the commonorigins <strong>of</strong> analytic and continental philosophy as a response (variously expressed inHusserl and Frege) to the psychologism <strong>of</strong> Meinong and Brentano, one might propose, asMichael Dummett has done, that a basic standard for bridging the continental-analyticdivide should be a scholarly conversance with both Husserl and Frege. In this way, HugoDingler, a positivist and in that measure an analytic philosophic thinker, may also beproductively counted as one <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s students, indeed as a student who memorializedthe value <strong>of</strong> his teacher’s influence (Gethmann, Dingler). Recent reviews <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong>the Vienna circle point to a revaluation <strong>of</strong> the historical relationship betweenphenomenology and logical positivism. In line with this analytic/continental connection,Ströker, Orth, Gethmann and Haller may be read as <strong>of</strong>fering comprehensive discussions<strong>of</strong> the phenomenological tradition beginning with Husserl, while Gethmann in particularstresses the development <strong>of</strong> that tradition in Lorenzen and the Erlanger school and itsfurther development and the continuation <strong>of</strong> constructivist themes in evolutionaryepistemology (Wuketis, Löw, Maturana). According to Gethmann, beyond Husserl’stranscendent phenomenology, Heidegger’s specific brand <strong>of</strong> hermeneutic phenomenologymay be counted as a indirect influence on the development <strong>of</strong> the Erlanger school. IfFoucault is included, this line <strong>of</strong> association running from Husserl to Heidegger andbeyond is more obviously seen to resonate with the Edinburgh school <strong>of</strong> strong sociology<strong>of</strong> science (Rouse, Latour).Joseph Kockelmans defends as proto-analytic the realist perspective <strong>of</strong> hermeneuticcontinental approaches to the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science. For Kockelmans, a hermeneutic


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 168philosophy <strong>of</strong> science requires a ‘new conception’ <strong>of</strong> truth understood in Heideggerianterms as alētheic (truth as unconcealment), horizonal or, in Nietzsche’s terms,perspectival truth (Kockelmans, Heidegger, Gadamer, Babich). But where Kockelmans’sconcern is meaning, his reading <strong>of</strong> truth and science is closer to a Fregean conception <strong>of</strong>Sinn (sense meaning) and to the traditional Diltheyan Lebenswelt (life-world), articulatedin terms <strong>of</strong> a Gadamerian hermeneutics than to the later Heidegger’s conception <strong>of</strong> truthand ambiguity.Patrick Heelan’s interest remains true to the formal constitutive (eidetic,transcendental, and genetic) phenomenology that is Husserl’s project to found philosophyas a rigorous science and not just with respect to the so-called ‘crisis’ <strong>of</strong> his later work.Heelan’s hermeneutic phenomenology expresses a realism which he calls a horizonalrealism, articulating the basis for a phenomenology <strong>of</strong> experiment to be integrated withthe theoretical expression <strong>of</strong> science. Heelan’s phenomenology holds with Husserl’seidetic project the possibility <strong>of</strong> approximating the essence <strong>of</strong> a scientific object throughsuccessive pr<strong>of</strong>iles. The hermeneutic dimension reflects the necessity for considering thehistorical, social and disciplinary circumstance <strong>of</strong> the researcher. Theoretical descriptionsdenominate the experimental pr<strong>of</strong>iles that would be perceived under standard laboratoryconditions and, with a hermeneutic <strong>of</strong> experimental work, become truly descriptive <strong>of</strong>what is eidetically perceived in the laboratory. Heelan’s perspective accords with strongor robust realist readings <strong>of</strong> experimental science, but his is more promising than most forwith a hermeneutic phenomenological expression the realist perspective becomes amatter <strong>of</strong> perception not faith.In current English-language publications, the foremost representatives <strong>of</strong> so-called‘continental’ approaches to the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science in addition to Heelan andKockelmans include Theodore Kisiel and Thomas Seebohm. Older continental scholarsseem rather more concerned with the special problems <strong>of</strong> phenomenology (intuition andformal logic, the meaning <strong>of</strong> transcendence, etc.) rather than with questions specific tothe philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, while younger scholars read the value <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s andHeidegger’s thought with respect to science rather more historically and lesstheoretically. Recent studies (Gethmann, Orth, Harvey, Rouse, Crease) by contrast tendto argue for the historical influence upon rather than the current value <strong>of</strong> phenomenologyand hermeneutic reconceptualizations <strong>of</strong> the expression <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science.In sum, this means that the work <strong>of</strong> Heelan, Kockelmans, Kisiel, Seebohm (allcontinental scholars, most originally <strong>of</strong> geographically continental nationality butworking in the traditionally analytic academic world <strong>of</strong> United States philosophy <strong>of</strong>science), etc., must be seen as rather singular representatives <strong>of</strong> the philosophicaldevelopment and application <strong>of</strong> the phenomenological and hermeneutic traditionstowards an understanding <strong>of</strong> science including the natural sciences. And given thefactually analytic pr<strong>of</strong>ile <strong>of</strong> pr<strong>of</strong>essional philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, by far the most influentialcontributions to the imperative value <strong>of</strong> a continental turn to historical and hermeneuticexpressions <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science must be said to have come from traditionalanalytic philosophers <strong>of</strong> science, complementing where not directly acknowledging thework <strong>of</strong> Heelan et al. This is not due to the greater perspicacity <strong>of</strong> scholars in the analytictradition: it is only a function <strong>of</strong> its paradigmatic (and pr<strong>of</strong>essional) dominance. Thus, forexample, Hacking’s recent work on statistics in The Taming <strong>of</strong> Chance and his recent


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 169articles is characterized by more than a historical turn but a turn that must be properly andfully named (although Hacking does not employ the term) hermeneutic. And this samereference to hermeneutics is implicit when not explicit in many recent historical studies<strong>of</strong> science (Jardine, Crombie). What is more, in the turn to the social (in old-fashionedterms, to the life-world) dimensions <strong>of</strong> science inspired by the sociology <strong>of</strong> science andknowledge (Hiley et al., Fuller, Latour, McMullin, Shapin/Scheffler), a new fusion <strong>of</strong>styles in the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is emerging. If philosophy <strong>of</strong> science may not be saidto be returning to its historical continental roots in all these revolutions, a review <strong>of</strong> theseroots cannot but be salutary for the life <strong>of</strong> the broader discipline, for the range <strong>of</strong> styles,the plurality, <strong>of</strong> philosophies <strong>of</strong> science.NOTES1 The topic <strong>of</strong> the nature <strong>of</strong> a continental approach to the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science is almostnecessarily esoteric rather than general. The intersection <strong>of</strong> continental thought and thephilosophy <strong>of</strong> science is far from well defined in pr<strong>of</strong>essional philosophy. Indeed, the focuson Mach, Duhem and Bachelard may even appear tendentious for these authors might well berepresented as antecedent figures within traditional analytic philosophy <strong>of</strong> science. In factthey serve this antecedent function for both analytic and continental expressions <strong>of</strong> thephilosophy <strong>of</strong> science. Hence the issues raised in this chapter correspond to the history <strong>of</strong>continental philosophy and the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, their intersection, and the current state<strong>of</strong> research. As this last pr<strong>of</strong>ile is constantly in flux, a more detailed bibliography has beenincluded to indicate this ferment and to benefit further research.2 R.Harré, Philosophies <strong>of</strong> Science (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1976).3 A.MacIntyre, ‘Epistemological Crises, Dramatic Narrative, and the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science’,in G.Gutting (ed.), Paradigms and Revolutions: Appraisals and Applications <strong>of</strong> ThomasKuhn’s <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science (Notre Dame: University <strong>of</strong> Notre Dame Press, 1980), pp. 54–74.4 H.Redner, The Ends <strong>of</strong> Science (Boulder: Westview Press, 1987).5 K.Hübner, Critique <strong>of</strong> Scientific Reason (Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1983), p. 35.6 As a recent and comprehensive contribution to this perspective and the debate concerning itand the history <strong>of</strong> the Vienna circle as a whole in the North American context <strong>of</strong> what is byand large an American discipline, the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, see G.Holton, ‘Ernst Mach andthe Fortunes <strong>of</strong> Positivism in America’, Isis, 83:1 (1992):27–60.7 C.Dilworth, ‘Empiricism vs. Realism: High Points in the Debate during the Past 150 Years’,Studies in the <strong>History</strong> and <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, 21 (3):431–62 (447).8 P.Frank, ‘Kausalgesetz und Erfahrung’, Annalen der Naturphilosophie, 6 (1906):443–50.9 Harré (note 1), p. 29.10 M.Tiles [6.245], 227.11 Blackmore cites Hans Kleinpeter’s 1912 letter to Mach, reporting that ‘Nietzsche read one <strong>of</strong>your essays in a scientific journal and spoke very favourably about it’ ([6.8], 123). Andaccording to Alwin Mittasch, Mach himself sent a copy <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> his articles to Nietzschebearing the hand-written dedication ‘Für Herrn Pr<strong>of</strong>. Dr. Nietzsche hochachtungsvoll ErnstMach’ (Mittasch [6.151], 367). Mach’s views correspond to Nietzsche’s refusal todistinguish between the organic and the inorganic world as discontinuous (indeed, asopposed). For Nietzsche the living and the dead are representations <strong>of</strong> a non-discontinuous


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 170order.12 It goes without saying that positivism has an almost uniformly negative connotation. Thisnegative evaluation is not unique to our own times. F.Ringer notes that in the Germanuniversities between the 1890s and the 1930s, during the Weimar period, ‘the label“positivist” was almost invariably used in a deroga-tory sense’ (‘The Origins <strong>of</strong> Mannheim’sSociology <strong>of</strong> Knowledge’, in McMullin [6.202], 55). This parallel with contemporarynegative connotations <strong>of</strong> positivism extended to a critique that similarly accords with thecorrective turns to the historical, the interpretive or hermeneutic and the social. For Ringer,the criticism <strong>of</strong> positivism entailed its own inherent ideology: ‘positivism was seen as a kind<strong>of</strong> intellectual acid, a potentially disastrous dissolvent <strong>of</strong> wholistic concepts, traditionalbeliefs, and socially integrative certainties. To “overcome” the problems raised byspecialization and positivism alike…there was an urgent need for a revitalization <strong>of</strong>philosophical idealism that would also reinstate Wissenschaft as a ground for an integral andpartly normative Weltanschauung.’13 I.Hacking, ‘“Style” for Historians and Philosophers’, Studies in the <strong>History</strong> and <strong>Philosophy</strong><strong>of</strong> Science, 23:1(1992):1–20 (12).14 Berthelot, Duhem scholars seem pleased to observe, is himself today very nearly forgottenand certainly more obscure than Duhem.15 The issue is a socially and historically complicated one. For background information on thistopic, see chapter 6 <strong>of</strong> M.J.Nye [6.51]. For a fuller discussion <strong>of</strong> the particular circumstances<strong>of</strong> Hélène Duhem’s efforts on behalf <strong>of</strong> her father’s unpublished work, see R.N.D.Martin[6.50],16 Parisians—and New Yorkers—will understand the pr<strong>of</strong>ound implications <strong>of</strong> such acircumstance. Although Duhem was characterized by his Bordeaux contemporaries as testy(‘violence himself’), it is not hard to imagine this perception a result <strong>of</strong> a provincial point <strong>of</strong>view.17 Today we might understand this perspective as a reaction against scientism, and it is stillrepresented by thinkers such as Jacques Ellul and René Dubos. For a discussion <strong>of</strong> the Frenchintellectual landscape with respect to the historical features <strong>of</strong> scientific dogma and religiousbelief including a discussion <strong>of</strong> Dubos’ situation regarded within such a vista, see H.W.Paul[6.52].18 W.A.Wallace, Prelude to Galileo: Essays on Medieval and Sixteenth Century Sources <strong>of</strong>Galileo’s Thought (Dordrecht: Reidel, 1981).19 See Wallace, Prelude to Galileo, ‘Galileo and Reasoning Ex Suppositione’, pp. 124–59.Among others, see M.Clavelin, The Natural <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Galileo: Essay on the Origins andFormation <strong>of</strong> Classical Mechanics (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press 1974) and R.E.Butts andJ.Pitt (eds), New Perspective on Galileo (Dordrecht: Reidel, 1978).20 Butterfield [6.212], 27.21 K.A.Popper, Conjectures and Refutations: The Growth <strong>of</strong> Scientific Knowledge (New York:Harper & Row, 1963), p. 99.22 Hacking (note 13), p. 7. Hacking feels compelled to add for reasons I dare not surmise, forHacking does not comment on this addition, ‘…and also Spengler’.23 A.MacIntyre, ‘Epistemological Crises, Dramatic Narrative, and the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science’,in Gutting (ed.) (note 3), p. 67.24 It is hard to read Bachelard as conceiving <strong>of</strong> the scientist as a woman, hence I use masculinepronouns advisedly in what follows.25 P.A.Heelan, ‘Preface’ to the English translation <strong>of</strong> Bachelard’s The New Scientific Spirit[6.54], xiii.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 17126 Tiles [6.83], xv.27 See J.Culler, Framing the Sign: Criticism and Its Institutions (Oxford: Blackwell, 1988). Seetoo J.Llewellyn, Beyond Metaphysics: The Hermeneutic Circle in Contemporary Continental<strong>Philosophy</strong> (Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1985). This dissonant reception may alsoaccount for the recurrent fascination with Bachelard.28 R.Smith [6.82], preface.29 Cf. J.Derrida’s discussion <strong>of</strong> the ‘hinge’ (brisure) in Of Grammatology, trans. G.Spivak(Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1974), pp. 65ff.30 Paul Valéry (1871–1945), French poet, literary theorist and essayist.31 B.d’Espagnat, Penser la science ou les enjeux du savoir (Paris: Bordas, 1990), p. 223.32 M.Müller and A.Halder, ‘Analytische Philosophie’, Kleines Philosophisches Wörterbuch,(Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder, 1971), p. 19.33 P.A.Heelan, ‘Hermeneutical Phenomenology and the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science’, inH.Silverman, Gadamer and Hermeneutics: Science, Culture, Literature (New York:<strong>Routledge</strong>, 1991), p. 213.34 See for example R.Bubner [6.131] and in particular Bubner [6.132].35 See Feyerabend [6.218, 6.219, 6.220].SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHYMachTranslations6.1 ‘On the Definition <strong>of</strong> Mass’, <strong>History</strong> and Root <strong>of</strong> the Principle <strong>of</strong> the Conservation <strong>of</strong>Energy, trans. P.E.B.Jourdain, Chicago: Open Court, 1872, 1911.6.2 The Science <strong>of</strong> Mechanics, trans. T.J.McCormack, Chicago: Open Court, 1893, 1960.6.3 The Analysis <strong>of</strong> Sensations and the Relation <strong>of</strong> the Physical to the Psychical, trans.C.M.Williams and S.Waterlow, Chicago: Open Court, 1914; New York: Dover, 1959.6.4 Popular Scientific Lectures, trans. T.J.McCormack, with additional lectures from1865 and 1897, La Salle: Open Court, 1894, 1943.6.5 Knowledge and Error: Sketches on the Psychology <strong>of</strong> Erring, trans. T.J. McCormack(chaps xxi and xxii) and P.Foulkes, ed. B.McGuiness, Dordrecht and Boston: D.Reidel,1976.6.6 Space and Geometry: In the Light <strong>of</strong> Physiological, Psychological, and PhysicalInquiry, trans. T.J.McCormack (three essays originally published in The Monist, 1901–3) La Salle: Open Court, 1906, 1960.Criticism6.7 Adler, F. Ernst Machs Überwindung des mechanischen Materialismus, Vienna, 1918.6.8 Blackmore, J.T. Ernst Mach: His Work, Life and Influence, Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong>California Press, 1972.6.9 Blackmore, J.T. Ernst Mach—A Deeper Look: Documents and New Perspectives,


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 172Dordrecht, Boston: Kluwer, 1992.6.10 Bradley, J. Mach’s <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, London: Athlone Press, 1971.6.11 Brentano, F. Über Ernst Machs ‘Erkenntnis und Irrtum’, Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1981.6.12 Dingler, H. Die Grundgedanken der Machschen Philosophie, Leipzig: Barth, 1924.6.13 Duhem, P. ‘Analyse de l’ouvrage de Ernst Mach: La mécanique, étude historique etcritique de son développement’, Bulletin des sciences mathématiques, 1.26(1903):261–83.6.14 Forman, P. ‘Weimar Culture, Causality, and Quantum Theory, 1918–1927’,Historical Studies in the Physical Sciences, 3 (1971):1–11.6.15 Frank, P. Modern Science and its <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Cambridge, Mass.: HarvardUniversity Press, 1949, 1961, pp. 13–62 and 69–95.6.16 Haller, R. and Stadler, F. (eds) Ernst Mach: Werk und Wirkung, Wien: Holder-Pichler-Tempsky, 1988.6.17 Hentschel, K. ‘Die Korrespondenz Duhem-Mach, zur “Modellbeladenheit” vonWissenschaftsgeschichte’, Annals <strong>of</strong> Science, 14 (1988):73–91.6.18 Holton, G. ‘Ernst Mach and the Fortunes <strong>of</strong> Positivism in America’, Isis, 83:1(1992):27–60.6.19 Janik, A. and Toulmin, S. Wittgenstein’s Vienna, New York: Simon & Schuster,1973.6.20 Jensen, K.M. Beyond Marx and Mach: Aleksandr Bogdanov’s <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> LivingExperience, Dordrecht: Reidel, 1978.6.21 Kaulbach, F. ‘Das anthropologische Interesse in Ernst Mach’s Positivismus’, inJ.Blühdorn and J.Ritter (eds) Positivismus im 19 Jahrhundert, Frankfurt: Klostermann,1971.6.22 Kraft, V. The Vienna Circle, New York: Greenwood Press, 1953.6.23 Lenin, V.I. Materialism and Empirio-Criticism, trans. A.Fineberg, London, Peking,Moscow: Foreign Languages Publishers’ House, 1952, 1972, (1930).6.24 Losee, J. A Historical Introduction to the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press, 1972, chapter 11.6.25 Mises, R.von Ernst Mach und die empirische Wissenschaftsauffassung, The Hague:Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1938.6.26 Mises, R.von Positivism: A Study in Human Understanding, trans. J. Bernstein andR.G.Newton, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1951.6.27 Musil, R. On Mach’s Theories, Washington, DC: University <strong>of</strong> America Press andMünchen: Philosophia Verlag, 1982.6.28 Schlick, M. Gesammelte Aufsätze, Wien: Gerold, 1938; Hildesheim: G. Olms, 1969.6.29 Smith, B. ‘Austrian Origins <strong>of</strong> Logical Positivism’, in B.Gower (ed.), LogicalPositivism in Perspective: Essays on Language, Truth, and Logic, Totowa: Barnes &Noble, 1987, pp. 35–68.6.30 Sommer, M. Evidenz im Augenblick. Eine Phänomenologie der reinen Empfindung,Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1987.6.31 Stadler, F. Vom Positivismus zur ‘Wissenschaftlichen Weltfassung’ am Beispiel derWirkungsgeschichte von Ernst Mach in Österreich von 1895 bis 1934, München (withbibliography), Wien: Locker, 1982.6.32 Weinberg, C.B. Mach’s Empirio-Pragmatism in Physical Science, New York: Albee


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 173Press, 1937.DuhemTranslations6.33 The Aim and Structure <strong>of</strong> Physical Theory, trans. P.Wiener, Princeton: PrincetonUniversity Press, 1954.6.34 Mediaeval Cosmology, trans. and selection R.Ariew, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong>Chicago Press , 1985.6.35 To Save the Phenomena: An Essay on the Idea <strong>of</strong> Physical Theory from Plato toGalileo, trans. E.Dolan and C.Maschier, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1969.6.36 The Origins <strong>of</strong> Statics: The Sources <strong>of</strong> Physical Theory, trans. G.Leneaux,V.Vagliente and G.Wagener, Boston and Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1991.Criticism6.37 Brenner, A. Duhem, science, realité et apparence, mathesis, Paris: J.Vrin, 1990.6.38 Eastwood, D.M. The Revival <strong>of</strong> Pascal: A Study <strong>of</strong> his Relation to Modern FrenchThought, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1936.6.39 Frank, P. Modern Science and its <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Cambridge, Mass.: HarvardUniversity Press, 1949.6.40 Harding, S. Can Theories Be Refuted? Essays on the Duhem-Quine Thesis,Dordrecht and Boston: Reidel, 1976.6.41 Hentschel, K. ‘Die Korrespondenz Duhem-Mach, zur “Modellbeladenheit” vonWissenschaftsgeschichte’, Annals <strong>of</strong> Science, 14 (1988):73–91.6.42 Losee, J. A Historical Introduction to the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press, 1972, chapter 11.6.43 Lowinger, A. The Methodology <strong>of</strong> Pierre Duhem, New York: Columbia UniversityPress, 1941.6.44 Jaki, S.L. Uneasy Genius: The Life and Work <strong>of</strong> Pierre Duhem, The Hague: Kluwer,1984.6.45 Jaki, S.L. Scientist and Catholic: An Essay on Pierre Duhem, Front Royal:Christendom Press, 1991.6.46 Maiocchi, R. Chimica e filos<strong>of</strong>ia, scienza, epistemologia, storia e religions nell’opera di Pierre Duhem, Firenze: Le Lettre, 1985.6.47 Martin, R.N.D. ‘Darwin and Duhem’, <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, 20 (1982):64–74.6.48 Martin, R.N.D. ‘Saving Duhem and Galileo: Duhemian Methodology and theSaving <strong>of</strong> the Phenomena’, <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, 25 (1987):301–19.6.49 Martin, R.N.D. ‘The Trouble with Authority: The Galileo Affair and One <strong>of</strong> itsHistorians’, The Bulletin <strong>of</strong> Science, Technology, and Society 9:5 (1989):294–301.6.50 Martin, R.N.D. Pierre Duhem, <strong>Philosophy</strong> and <strong>History</strong> in the Work <strong>of</strong> a BelievingPhysicist, La Salle: Open Court, 1991.6.51 Nye, M.J. Science in the Provinces: Scientific Communities and ProvincialLeadership in France, 1860–1930, Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong> California Press, 1986,


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 174chapter 6: ‘Bordeaux: Catholicism, Conservativism, and the Influence <strong>of</strong> Pierre Duhem’.6.52 Paul, H.W. The Edge <strong>of</strong> Contingency: French Catholic Reaction to ScientificChange from Darwin to Duhem, Gainesville: University <strong>of</strong> Florida Press, 1979.6.53 Rey, A. ‘La Philosophie scientifique de M.Duhem’, Revue de métaphysique et demorale, 12 (1904):699–744.BachelardTranslations6.54 The New Scientific Spirit, trans. A.Goldhammer, Boston: Beacon Press, 1985.6.55 The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> No: A <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> the New Scientific Mind, trans. G.C.Waterston, New York: Orion Press, 1969.6.56 The Psychoanalysis <strong>of</strong> Fire, trans. A.Ross, Boston: Beacon Press and London:<strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1964.6.57 The Poetics <strong>of</strong> Space, trans. M.Jolas, New York: Orion Press, 1964.6.58 The Poetics <strong>of</strong> Reverie, trans. D.Russell, New York: Orion Press, 1969.Criticism6.59 Présence de Gaston Bachelard: Epistémologie pour une anthropologie complète,Aix-en-Provence: Librarie de l’Université, 1988.6.60 Gaston Bachelard: Pr<strong>of</strong>ils epistémologiques, Philosophica, 32, Ottawa: Presses del’Université d’Ottowa, 1987.6.61 Hommage à Bachelard: Etudes de philosophie et d’histoire des sciences, Paris.1957.6.62 Bhaskar, R. ‘Feyerabend and Bachelard: Two Philosophers <strong>of</strong> Science’, New LeftReview, 94 (1975):31–55.6.63 Canguilhem, G. ‘Sur une épistémologie concordataire’, in [6.61].6.64 Canguilhem, G. Ideology and Rationality in the Hisory <strong>of</strong> the Life Sciences, trans.A.Goldhammer, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1988.6.65 Caws, P. Yorick’s World: Science and the Knowing Subject, Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong>California Press, 1993.6.66 Dubrulle, G. Philosophie zwischen Tag und Nacht: Ein Studie zur EpistemologieGaston Bachelards, Frankfurt: Peter Lang, 1983.6.67 Gaukroger, S.W. ‘Bachelard and the Problem <strong>of</strong> Epistemological Analysis’, Studiesin the <strong>History</strong> and <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, 7 (1976):189–244.6.68 Grieder, A. ‘Gaston Bachelard: “Phénoménologue” <strong>of</strong> Modern Science’, Journal <strong>of</strong>the British Society for Phenomenology, 17:2 (1986):107–23.6.69 Gutting, G. Chapter 1 in [6.167].6.70 LaLonde, M. La Théorie de la connaissance scientifique de Gaston Bachelard,Montréal: Fidés 1966.6.71 Lecourt, D. Bachelard ou le jour et le nuit (un essai de matérialisme dialectique),Paris: Grasset, 1974.6.72 Lecourt, D. L’epistémologie historique de Gaston Bachelard, Paris: Vrin, 1978.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 1756.73 Lecourt, D. Marxism and Epistemology: Bachelard, Canguilhem, and Foucault,trans. B.Brewster, London: NLB, 1979.6.74 McAllester Jones M. (ed.) The <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Poetics <strong>of</strong> Gaston Bachelard,Washington, DC: University <strong>of</strong> America Press, 1989.6.75 McAllester Jones, M. ‘Unfixing the Subject: Gaston Bachelard and Reading’, in[6.74], 149–61.6.76 McAllester Jones, M. ‘On Science, Poetry and the “honey <strong>of</strong> being”: Bachelard’sShelley’, in D.Wood (ed.) Philosopher’s Poets, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1990, pp. 153–76.6.77 McAllester Jones, M. Gaston Bachelard: Subversive Humanist, Madison: University<strong>of</strong> Wisconsin Press, 1991.6.78 Parker, N. ‘Science and Poetry in the Ontology <strong>of</strong> Human Freedom: Bachelard’sAccount <strong>of</strong> the Poetic and the Scientific Imagination’, in [6.74], 75–100.6.79 Schaettel, M. Bachelard critique ou l’achèmie du rêve: Un art de lire et de rêver,Lyon: L’Hermes, 1977.6.80 Schaettel, M. Gaston Bachelard: le rêve et la raison, Saint-Seine-L’Abbaye:Editions Saint-Seine-L’Abbaye, 1984.6.81 Smith, C. ‘Bachelard in the Context <strong>of</strong> a Century <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science’, in[6.74], 13–26.6.82 Smith, R.C. Gaston Bachelard, Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1982.6.83 Tiles, M. Bachelard: Science and Objectivity, Cambridge: Cambridge UniversityPress, 1984.6.84 Vadée, M. Bachelard ou le nouvel idéalisme épistémologique, Paris: EditionsSociales, 1975.Constructivism or evolutionary epistemology6.85 Delbrück, M. Wahrheit und Wirklichkeit: Über die Evolution des Erkennens,Hamburg/Zurich: Rosch & Röhring, 1986.6.86 Dürr, H.P. Das Netz des Physikers, München: Hanser, 1988.6.87 Eisenhardt, P. et al. (eds) Du steigst nie zweimal in denselben Fluss: Die Grenzender wissenschaftlichen Erkenntnis, Hamburg: Rohwolt, 1988.6.88 Janich, P. ‘Physics—Natural Science or Technology’, in W.Krohn et al., TheDynamics <strong>of</strong> Science and Technology, Dordrecht, Boston: D. Reidel, 1978.6.89 Janich, P. Grenzen der Naturwissenschaft, München: Beck, 1992.6.90 Maturana, U. and Varela, F. Autopoiesis and Cognition: The Realization <strong>of</strong> theLiving, Dordrecht and Boston: Reidel, 1980.6.91 Riedel, R. Biology <strong>of</strong> Knowledge, New York: Wiley, 1979.6.92 Safranski, R. Wieviele Wahrheit Braucht der Mensch: Über das Denkbare und dasLebbare, München: Hanser, 1990.6.93 Vollmer, G. Was können wir wissen? Bd 1: Die Natur der Erkenntnis, Stuttgart:Hizel, 1985.6.94 Watzlawick, P. and Frieg P. (eds) Das Auge des Betrachters: Beiträge zumKonstruktivismus, München and Zürich: Piper, 1991.6.95 Wolters, G. ‘“The first man who almost wholly understands me.” Carnap, Dinglerand Conventionalism’, in N.Rescher (ed.) The Heritage <strong>of</strong> Logical Positivism,


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 176Lanham: University Press <strong>of</strong> America, 1985.6.96 Wolters, G. ‘Evolutionäre Erkenntnistheorie—eine Polemik’, Vierteljahreschrift derNaturforschendenGessellschaft in Zürich, 133 (1988):125–42.6.97 Wuketis, F.M. (ed.) Concepts and Approaches in Evolutionary Epistemology:Towards an Evolutionary Theory <strong>of</strong> Knowledge, Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1984.6.98 Wuketis, F.M. (ed.) Evolutionary Epistemology and Its Implications for Humankind,Albany: State University <strong>of</strong> New York Press, 1990.Phenomenologically oriented approaches to the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science: Husserland Merleau-Ponty6.99 Cho, K.K. (ed.) <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Science in Phenomenological Perspective, TheHague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f/Kluwer, 1984.6.100 Compton, J. ‘Natural Science and the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Nature’, in J.Edie (ed.)Phenomenology in America, Athens: Ohio University Press, 1969.6.101 Gutting, G. ‘Phenomenology and Scientific Realism’, New Scholasticism, 48(1976), 263–6.6.102 Gutting, G. ‘Husserl and Scientific Realism’, <strong>Philosophy</strong> and PhenomenologicalResearch, 39 (1979):42–56.6.103 Hardy, L. ‘The Idea <strong>of</strong> Science in Husserl and the Tradition’, in [6.104].6.104 Hardy, L. and Embree, L. (eds) Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Natural Science, Dordrecht:Kluwer, 1992. Includes Steven Chasan, ‘Bibliography <strong>of</strong> Phenomenological<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science’.6.105 Harvey, C.W. Husserl’s Phenomenology and the Foundations <strong>of</strong> Natural Science,Athens: Ohio University Press, 1989.6.106 Harvey, C.W. and Shelton, J.D. ‘Husserl’s Phenomenology and the Ontology <strong>of</strong>the Natural Sciences’, in Hardy/Embree, Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Natural Science.6.107 Heelan, P.A. Quantum Mechanics and Objectivity, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1965.6.108 Heelan, P.A. Space-Perception and the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, Berkeley: CaliforniaUniversity Press, 1983.6.109 Heelan, P.A. ‘Husserl, Hilbert, and the Critique <strong>of</strong> Galilean Science’, in R.Sokolowski (ed.) Edmund Husserl and the Phenomenological Tradition, Washington,DC: University Press <strong>of</strong> America, 1988, pp. 158–73.6.110 Heelan, P.A. ‘Husserl’s <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science’, in J.Mohanty and W. McKenna(eds) Husserl’s Phenomenology: A Textbook, Pittsburgh and Washington, DC:University Press <strong>of</strong> America, 1989, pp. 387–428.6.111 Husserl, E. Phenomenology and the Crisis <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>: <strong>Philosophy</strong> as aRigorous Science and <strong>Philosophy</strong> and the Crisis <strong>of</strong> Man, trans. Q. Lauer, New York:Harper & Row, 1965.6.112 Husserl, E. The Crisis <strong>of</strong> European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology,trans. D.Carr, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1970.6.113 Kockelmans, J. Phenomenology and Physical Science: An Introduction to the<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Physical Science, Duquesne: Pittsburgh University Press, 1966.6.114 Kockelmans, J. and Kisiel, T. (eds) Phenomenology and the Natural Sciences,Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1970.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 1776.115 Langsdorf, L. ‘Realism and Idealism in the Kuhnian Account <strong>of</strong> Science’, in[6.104].6.116 Lohmar, D. Husserl’s Phänomenologie als Philosophie der Mathematik, Diss.Köln, 1987.6.117 Lohmar, D. Phänomenologie der Mathematik: Elemente der phänomenologischeAufklärung der mathematischen Erkenntnis, Dordrecht and Boston: Kluwer, 1989.6.118 McCarthy, M. The Crisis <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Albany: State University <strong>of</strong> New YorkPress, 1990.6.119 Merleau-Ponty, M. Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception, trans. C.Smith, London:<strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1962.6.120 Orth, E.W. (ed.) Die Phenomenologie und die Wissenschaften, Freiburg imMünchen: Alber, 1976.6.121 Orth, E.W. ‘Phänomenologie der Vernunft zwischen Szientismus, Lebenswelt undIntersubjektivität’, Phänomenologischen Forschungen, 22 (1989):63–87.6.122 Rang, B. Husserls Phänomenologie der materiellen Natur, Frankfurt:Klostermann, 1990.6.123 Seebohm, T.M., Føllesdal, D. and Mohanty, J.N. (eds) Phenomenology and theFormal Sciences, Dordrecht: Kluwer, 1992.6.124 Sommer, M. Husserl und die frühe Positivismus, Frankfurt: Klostermann, 1985.6.125 Strasser, S. Phenomenology and the Human Sciences: A Contribution to a NewPhilosophic Ideal, Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1974.6.126 Ströker, E. ‘Husserl’s Principle <strong>of</strong> Evidence: The Significance and Limitations <strong>of</strong> aMethodological Norm <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> as a Science’, trans. R.Pettit, in ContemporaryGerman <strong>Philosophy</strong>, University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1982, pp.111–38.6.127 Ströker, E. Husserls transzendentale Phänomenologie, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1987.Hermeneuticist approaches to the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science: Nietzsche andHeidegger6.128 Babich, B.E. Nietzsche’s <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science: Reflecting Science on the Ground<strong>of</strong> Art and Life, Albany: State University <strong>of</strong> New York Press, 1993.6.129 Baier, H. ‘Nietzsche als Wissenschaftskritiker’, Zeitschrift für philosophischeForschung, 21 (1966):130–43.6.130 Bleicher, J. The Hermeneutic Imagination: Outline <strong>of</strong> a Positive Critique <strong>of</strong>Scientism and Sociology, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1982.6.131 Bubner, R. Dialektik und Wissenschaft, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1973.6.132 Bubner, R. ‘On the Role <strong>of</strong> Hermeneutics in the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science’, in Essaysin Hermeneutics and Critical Theory, trans. E.Mathews, New York: ColumbiaUniversity Press, 1988.6.133 Connolly, J. and Keutner, T. Hermeneutics versus Science: Three German Views,Notre Dame: University <strong>of</strong> Notre Dame Press, 1988.6.134 Connolly, J. and Keutner, T. ‘Interpretation, Decidability, and Meaning’, in[6.133].6.135 Gadamer, H.-G. Reason in Science, trans. F.Lawrence, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT


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<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 179Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982.6.158 Stegmüller, W. ‘Walther von der Vogelweide’s Lyric <strong>of</strong> Dream-Love and Qasar3C 273’, in [6.133], pp. 102–52.6.159 Vaihinger, H. Nietzsche als Philosoph, Berlin, 1902.6.160 Vaihinger, H. The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> As If. A System <strong>of</strong> the Theoretical, Practical andReligious Fictions <strong>of</strong> Mankind, trans. C.K.Ogden, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul,1935.6.161 Wolff, J. Hermeneutic <strong>Philosophy</strong> and the Sociology <strong>of</strong> Art, London and Boston:<strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1975, chapters 1–3.Social, communicative and materialist (Marxist) continental approaches to thephilosophy <strong>of</strong> science6.162 Alford, C. Science and the Revenge <strong>of</strong> Nature: Marcuse and Habermas,Gainesville: University <strong>of</strong> Florida Press, 1985.6.163 Aronowitz, S. Science as Power: Discourse and Ideology in Modern Society,Minneapolis: University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Press, 1988.6.164 Bhaskar, R. Reclaiming Reality: A Critical Introduction, London: Verso, 1989.6.165 Bubner, R. ‘Dialectical Elements <strong>of</strong> a Logic <strong>of</strong> Discovery’ in [6.132].6.166 Foucault, M. The Order <strong>of</strong> Things: An Archaeology <strong>of</strong> the Human Sciences, NewYork: Pantheon Books, 1973.6.167 Gutting, G. Michel Foucault’s Archaeology <strong>of</strong> Scientific Reason, Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, 1989.6.168 Hacking, I. ‘Michel Foucault’s Immature Science’, Nous, 13 (1979):39–51.6.169 Hiley, D.R., Bohman, J. and Schusterman R. (eds The Interpretive Turn:<strong>Philosophy</strong>, Science, Culture , Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1991.6.170 Lyotard, J.-F. The Post-Modern Condition: A Report on Knowledge, trans.G.Bennington and B.Massumi, Minneapolis: University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Press, 1984.6.171 Marcuse, H. One Dimensional Man: Studies in the Ideology <strong>of</strong> Advanced IndustrialSociety, Boston: Beacon Press, 1964.6.172 Radder, H. The Material Realization <strong>of</strong> Science: A Philosophical View on theExperimental Natural Sciences Developed in Discussion with Habermas, Assen: VanGorcum, 1988.6.173 Rouse, J. Knowledge and Power: Toward a Political <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, Ithaca:Cornell University Press, 1987.6.174 Whitebook, J. ‘The Problem <strong>of</strong> Nature in Habermas’, Telos, 40 (1979): 41–69.Continental philosophy <strong>of</strong> technology6.175 Beck, H. Kulturphilosophie der Technik: Perspektiven zu technikMenschheit-Zukunft, Trier: Spec Verlag, 1979.6.176 Guzzoni, U. ‘Überlegungen zum Subjekt-Objekt-Modell Kritisches Denken unddas Verhältnis von Technik und Natur’, Dialektik 14. Humanität, Venunft, und Moralin der Wissenschaft, Köln: Pahl-Rugenstein, 1987: pp. 59–73.6.177 Ihde, D. Instrumental Reason: The Interface Between <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science and


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 180<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Technology, Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1991.6.178 Loscerbo, J. Being and Technology: A Study in the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> MartinHeidegger, The Hague: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1981.6.179 Winner, L. The Whale and the Reactor: A Search for Limits in an Age <strong>of</strong> HighTechnology, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1986.Related sociological studies <strong>of</strong> science and experimental epistemology6.180 Anderson, G. ‘Anglo-Saxon and Continental Schools <strong>of</strong> Meta-Science’,Continuum, 8 (1980):102–10. Also in [6.240].6.181 Ashmore, M. The Reflexive Thesis: Wrighting (sic) the Sociology <strong>of</strong> ScientificKnowledge, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1989.6.182 Barnes, B. Interests and the Growth <strong>of</strong> Knowledge, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & KeganPaul, 1977.6.183 Barnes, B. The Nature <strong>of</strong> Power, Urbana: University <strong>of</strong> Illinois Press, 1988.6.184 Bloor, D. Knowledge and Social Imagery, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul,1976; 2nd edn, 1991.6.185 Brannigan, A. The Social Basis <strong>of</strong> Scientific Discoveries, Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press, 1981.6.186 Brown, J. The Rational and the Social, New York: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1989.6.187 Collins, H. Changing Order: Replication and Induction in Scientific Practice,London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1985.6.188 Collins, H. and Pinch, T. Frames <strong>of</strong> Meaning: The Social Construction <strong>of</strong>Extraordinary Science, London and Boston: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1987.6.189 Crane, D. ‘The Gatekeepers <strong>of</strong> Science: Some Factors Affecting the Selection <strong>of</strong>Articles for Scientific Journals’, American Sociologist, 2 (1967): 195–201.6.190 Crane, D. Invisible Colleges: The Diffusion <strong>of</strong> Knowledge in ScientificCommunities, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1972.6.191 Gallison, P. How Experiments End, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1987.6.192 Haraway, D.J. Simians, Cyborgs, and Women: The Reinvention <strong>of</strong> Nature, NewYork: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1991.6.193 Heelan, P.A. ‘The Quantum Theory and the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Social-HistoricalPhenomena’, in P.Blosser, L.Embree and S.Kojima (eds), Japanese and AmericanPhenomenology, Washington, DC: University Press <strong>of</strong> America.6.194 Krige, J. Science, Revolution and Discontinuity, Atlantic Highlands: HumanitiesPress and Brighton: Harvester, 1980.6.195 Knorr-Cetina, K. The Manufacture <strong>of</strong> Knowledge, Oxford: Oxford UniversityPress, 1980.6.196 Knorr-Cetina, K. and Mulkey, M. (eds) Science Observed: Perspectives on theSocial Study <strong>of</strong> Science, London and Beverly Hills: Sage, 1983.6.197 Kutschmann, W. Der Naturwissenschaftler und sein Körper: Die Rolle der‘inneren Natur’ in der Experimentellen Naturwissenschaft der frühen Neuzeit,Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1986.6.198 Latour, B. Science in Action, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1987.6.199 Latour, B. The Pasteurization <strong>of</strong> France/Irreductions: A Politico-scientific Essay,


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 181Cambridge: Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1988.6.200 Latour, B. and Woolgar, L. Laboratory Life, London: Sage, 1979.6.201 Laudan, L. Progress and its Problems, Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong> California Press,1977.6.202 McMullin, E. (ed.) The Social Dimensions <strong>of</strong> Science, Notre Dame: University <strong>of</strong>Notre Dame Press, 1991.6.203 Myers, G. Writing Biology, Texts in the Social Construction <strong>of</strong> ScientificKnowledge, Madison: University <strong>of</strong> Wisconsin Press, 1990.6.204 Prelli, L. A Rhetoric <strong>of</strong> Science, Columbia, South Carolina: University <strong>of</strong> SouthCarolina Press, 1989.6.205 Redner, H. The Ends <strong>of</strong> Science, Boulder: Westview Press, 1987.6.206 Ringer, F. ‘The Origins <strong>of</strong> Mannheim’s Sociology <strong>of</strong> Knowledge’, in [6.202].6.207 Sapp, J. Where the Truth Lies: Franz Moewus and the Origins <strong>of</strong> MolecularBiology, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990.6.208 Shapin, S. and Schaffer, S. Leviathan and the Air Pump: Hobbes, Boyle, and theExperimental Life, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985.6.209 Winch, P. The Idea <strong>of</strong> a Social Science and its Relation to <strong>Philosophy</strong>, London:<strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1958.Related studies in the philosophy and history <strong>of</strong> science6.210 Agassi, J. Towards an Historiography <strong>of</strong> Science: <strong>History</strong> and Theory, vol. 2, TheHague, 1963.6.211 Butterfield, H. The Origins <strong>of</strong> Modern Science, New York: Macmillan, 1951, 1957,1965.6.212 Butterfield, H. The Whig Interpretation <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong>, New York: Norton, 1965(1931).6.213 Cartwright, N. How the Laws <strong>of</strong> Physics Lie, Oxford: Oxford University Press,1983.6.214 Churchland, P.M. and Hooker, C.A. (eds) Images <strong>of</strong> Science: Essays on Realismand Empiricism, Chicago and London: 1985.6.215 Crombie, A.C. Augustine to Galileo, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,1961.6.216 Cushing, J.T., Delaney, C.F. and Gutting, G.M. (eds) Science and Reality: RecentWork in the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, Notre Dame: University <strong>of</strong> Notre Dame Press,1981.6.217 Dijksterhuis, E.J. The Mechanization <strong>of</strong> the World Picture, trans. C. Dikshoorn,London: Clarendon, 1961.6.218 Feyerabend, P. Against Method: Outline <strong>of</strong> an Anarchistic Theory <strong>of</strong> Knowledge,London: Verso, 1975.6.219 Feyerabend, P. Farewell to Reason, London: Verso: 1987.6.220 Feyerabend, P. Three Dialogues on Knowledge, London: Verso, 1990.6.221 Gower, B. ‘Speculation in Physics: The <strong>History</strong> and Practice <strong>of</strong> Naturphilosphie’,Studies in <strong>History</strong> and <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, 3 (1973):301–56.6.222 Hacking, I. The Emergence <strong>of</strong> Probability: A Philosophical Study <strong>of</strong> Early Ideas


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> science 182about Probability, Induction and Statistical Inference, London and New York:Cambridge University Press, 1975.6.223 Hacking, I. Representing and Intervening: Introductory Topics in the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong>Natural Science, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983.6.224 Hacking, I. The Taming <strong>of</strong> Chance, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990.6.225 Hanson, N.R. Patterns <strong>of</strong> Discovery: An Inquiry Into the Conceptual Foundations<strong>of</strong> Science, Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong> California Press, 1958.6.226 Harman, P.M. Energy, Force, and Matter: The Conceptual Development <strong>of</strong>Nineteenth-Century Physics, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982.6.227 Hesse, M. Revolutions and Reconstructions, Bloomington: University <strong>of</strong> IndianaPress, 1980.6.228 Jardine, N. Fortunes <strong>of</strong> Inquiry, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986.6.229 Jardine, N. Scenes <strong>of</strong> Inquiry, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991.6.230 Kockelmans, J. <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science: The Historical Background, New York:Free Press, 1968.6.231 Kuhn, T. The Structure <strong>of</strong> Scientific Revolutions (2nd edn), Chicago: University <strong>of</strong>Chicago Press, 1962, 1970.6.232 Kuhn, T. The Essential Tension, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1977.6.233 Ladrière, J. The Challenge to Culture Presented by Science and Technology, Paris:Unesco, 1977.6.234 Lakatos, I. The Problem <strong>of</strong> Inductive Logic, Amsterdam: North Holland PublishingCo., 1968.6.235 Lakatos, I. ‘Falsification and the Methodology <strong>of</strong> Scientific ResearchProgrammes’, in Lakatos and A.Musgrave (eds) Criticism and the Growth <strong>of</strong>Knowledge, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1970, pp. 91–196.6.236 Priyogine, I. and Stengers, I. La Nouvelle Alliance: Metamorphose de la science,Paris: Editions Gallimard, 1979.6.237 Polanyi, M. Personal Knowledge: Towards a Post-Critical <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Chicago:University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1974.6.238 Price, D.J. de Solla Little Science, Big Science, New York: Columbia UniversityPress, 1963.6.239 Price, D.J. de Solla Science Since Babylon, New Haven: Yale University Press,1975.6.240 Radnitzky, G. and Andersson, G. (eds) Progress and Rationality in Science,Dordrecht: Reidel, 1978.6.241 Stegmüller, W. Metaphysik, Skepsis, Wissenschaft, Berlin: Springer, 1969.6.242 Stegmüller, W. The Structuralist View <strong>of</strong> Theories: A Possible Analogue <strong>of</strong> theBourbaki-Programme to Physical Science, Berlin: Springer, 1979.6.243 Suppe, F. (ed.) The Structure <strong>of</strong> Scientific Theories, Urbana: University <strong>of</strong> IllinoisPress, 1974.6.244 Suppe, F. The Semantic Conception <strong>of</strong> Scientific Theories and Scientific Realism,Urbana: University <strong>of</strong> Illinois Press, 1989.6.245 Tiles, M. ‘Science and the World,’ in G.H.R.Parkinson et al., The Handbook <strong>of</strong>Western <strong>Philosophy</strong>, New York: Macmillan, 1988, pp. 225–48.6.246 Toulmin, S. ‘The Construal <strong>of</strong> Inquiry: Criticism in Modern and Post-Modern


Science’, Critical Inquiry, 9 (1982):93–111.<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 183


CHAPTER 7Philosophies <strong>of</strong> MarxismLenin, Lukács, Gramsci, AlthusserMichael KellyINTRODUCTIONMarxist philosophy can be seen as a struggle with Hegel or a struggle with capitalism,that is, as an intellectual or a political movement. Neither <strong>of</strong> these views can be veryreadily reduced to the other, but nor can they be entirely separated. It is difficult to dealwith Marxism in terms <strong>of</strong> a particular discipline when so much <strong>of</strong> it sprawls awkwardlyacross the lines which delineate disciplinary boundaries within the English-speakinginstitutions <strong>of</strong> knowledge. The attempt here to approach it within a philosophical contextcan scarcely avoid transgressing that context and introducing material which, in a narrowdefinition <strong>of</strong> philosophy, may be thought out <strong>of</strong> place. To consider Marxism at all,philosophy may need to consider itself a more commodious enterprise.A history <strong>of</strong> Marxist philosophy cannot be innocent. The Marxist tradition includeshistories <strong>of</strong> philosophy and philosophies <strong>of</strong> history. It also includes notoriouslyconflicting accounts <strong>of</strong> the nature and status <strong>of</strong> both history and philosophy. Nor is thereany better agreement among non-Marxist thinkers on the nature and status <strong>of</strong> Marxistphilosophy. A study <strong>of</strong> its history must enter a fiercely contested field <strong>of</strong> combat, where,more than in any other philosophical tradition, the struggle is waged not only in theintellectual realm but also in the social and geopolitical arenas. The context in which thisstudy is written, in the turbulent and uncertain aftermath <strong>of</strong> the collapse <strong>of</strong> communistregimes throughout Europe, carries its quantum <strong>of</strong> intellectual risk, and confers a certainuntimeliness on what is to be said.Far from being a philosophia perennis, Marxist philosophy is in constant mutation,spurred not only by the shifting contours <strong>of</strong> its environment but also by the changingproblems and purposes <strong>of</strong> its practitioners. With the passage <strong>of</strong> time, there has grown upan increasing multiplicity <strong>of</strong> re-interpretations <strong>of</strong> canonical texts and commentaries,several divergent accounts <strong>of</strong> who the founder (or founders) were, which <strong>of</strong> their writingsmay be relied on and which subsequent commentators should be consulted. In manycases, such issues have been the occasion <strong>of</strong> bitter controversy, and several schools <strong>of</strong>Marxist thought have vigorously claimed to possess the only authentic version. Somehave, for a time at least, been willing and able to support that claim with judicial or evenmilitary coercion. An initial question is therefore that <strong>of</strong> identity: in what sense can asubstantive Marxist philosophy be coherently defined across the diversity <strong>of</strong> its forms?Eschewing orthodoxies, the present study will be content with a looser understanding <strong>of</strong>the Marxist tradition as a family <strong>of</strong> movements, connected in complex and <strong>of</strong>ten


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 185conflictual relationships. In such a brief span as this chapter, it will not be possible toexamine more than a few moments in the tradition, and the main lines <strong>of</strong> theirinterrelation. Such a broad approach to Marxism carries a price. In particular, it cannot domore than gesture at the coherence and breadth <strong>of</strong> view which some versions <strong>of</strong> Marxismhave achieved, and which some, but not all, Marxists have regarded as a major strengthand achievement.A closely related issue is what status to accord to philosophy within Marxism.Invariably, this refers back to the relationship between Marx and Hegel. Marx’s muchrepeated distinction between Hegel’s system (castigated as the idealist shell) and hismethod (lauded as the rational kernel) has given rise to deeply conflicting interpretations.Whereas some have argued that Marxism continues the Hegelian project <strong>of</strong> providing ageneral philosophical framework which unifies the entire field <strong>of</strong> human knowledge,others have contended that Marx’s signal achievement was to abandon philosophy,having exposed its ambitions as illusory. There are many other positions between thesetwo poles. Without invoking an easy dialectical supersession <strong>of</strong> these terms, the presentstudy grasps the nettle at least to the extent <strong>of</strong> accepting that there is a field <strong>of</strong> discoursewithin Marxism which must be recognized as philosophical, even when (perhapsespecially when) it purports to announce the end <strong>of</strong> philosophy.At the heart <strong>of</strong> the problem is the relation between theory and practice. The startingpoint lies in the major insight <strong>of</strong> Marxist thought that in addition to understanding orinterpreting the world it should seek to change it. Implied in this notion is the view that inthe first instance thought is a product <strong>of</strong> human social activity and that in the secondinstance it contributes to producing or shaping the future course <strong>of</strong> that activity. Appliedto philosophy specifically, it suggests that philosophers who refrain from seeking changeare by default helping to maintain the existing social order. It may then be inferred thatphilosophers who declare themselves as Marxist (or vice versa) are engaged, throughtheir philosophy, in a project <strong>of</strong> social change. The consequences <strong>of</strong> such an inference forMarxist philosophers personally have at different times and places ranged from exile,torture and execution to celebrity, fame and fortune: more <strong>of</strong>ten the former than the latter.The shadow <strong>of</strong> the philosopher-king also looms in the important historical figures whoinhabit the pantheon <strong>of</strong> Marxist philosophy, including Lenin, Stalin and Mao Tse-tung intheir day. Their example compounds the tension between theory and practice in urgingMarxist political figures to exercise leadership in philosophy and philosophers to don themantle <strong>of</strong> statecraft: a wider gulf to bridge within some cultures than within others.Karl Marx’s own discomfort on the interface between his theoretical and politicalresponsibilities was summed up in his reaction to French ‘Marxists’, whose workprompted his much-quoted comment that ‘I am not a Marxist’. While it may be rash toplace too much weight on this boutade, it usefully illustrates the problematic relationshipbetween Marxist philosophy and an individual author. Perhaps more than elsewhere,there are visible limits on the extent to which an author can, or would wish to, claimownership <strong>of</strong> the texts or ideas ascribed to him or her. If Marx was led to disown his selfappointeddisciples during his lifetime, it would be prudent not to assume too close acorrespondence between his or other thinkers’ writings and the positions with which theyare usually associated. Such prudence would be encouraged by the common phenomenonin Marxism <strong>of</strong> texts coming to exercise influence only long after they were written and in


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 186quite different circumstances from those in which they were produced. This is eminentlytrue <strong>of</strong> major works <strong>of</strong> Marx, Lenin, Gramsci and Lukács. A thinker is <strong>of</strong>ten brandishedas a banner, designating a particular view which may or may not be found explicitly inhis or her work. Frequently, by a process <strong>of</strong> displacement, a thinker or even aphilosophical concept will also come to function as a coded reference to a politicalposition or programme, which cannot be directly addressed. An author or idea is in thisrespect primarily a signifier, whose meaning is closely dependent on the context <strong>of</strong> itsutterance. They can in this way be emptied <strong>of</strong> meaning, though it is also common forthem to become supersaturated with meaning, when accumulated layers <strong>of</strong> commentaryeffectively come to bar access to a heavily glossed text.Marxist philosophy is largely inextricable from the groups and movements for which ithas been formulated or which have adopted it as a theoretical approach likely to promotethe achievement <strong>of</strong> their political purposes and programmes. Among them have been thelabour and trade union movements, the political parties <strong>of</strong> the left, the movements fornational self-determination and the states and regimes which under one guise or anotherhave espoused Marxism. Institutionalization <strong>of</strong> this kind has several effects which <strong>of</strong>tendifferentiate Marxist philosophy from other philosophies. One which is rarely remarkedupon is that the channels <strong>of</strong> its communication are frequently those <strong>of</strong> a sponsoringorganization, whether a political paper or journal, a political training programme or apublishing house with a recognizable political or social complexion. Not infrequently,work <strong>of</strong> Marxist inspiration has been excluded from the channels available topr<strong>of</strong>essional philosophy. Marxist texts are always characterized by high levels <strong>of</strong>intertextuality, such that their importance is <strong>of</strong>ten only grasped by a reader who isfamiliar with other canonical or contemporary texts from which they are specificallydistinguished. Another distinguishing feature is the frequent effort to express Marxistideas in a way which is sufficiently simple and systematic to be widely understood andapplied, particularly by a non-specialist readership. Allied to this is the degree <strong>of</strong>constraint under which work is produced, ranging from standard formats and house stylesto varying degrees <strong>of</strong> editorial intervention and collective authorship. No doubt this isinseparable from the effect institutions have <strong>of</strong> vesting philosophy with authority beyondthe intrinsic merit <strong>of</strong> rational discussion.There remains one final question for the present historical study: what is the object <strong>of</strong>study? Is it a history <strong>of</strong> philosophers, however defined, or <strong>of</strong> ideas, or <strong>of</strong> intellectualmovements? And what criterion <strong>of</strong> selection and ordering is to be applied in the face <strong>of</strong> adaunting abundance <strong>of</strong> material? The close dependence <strong>of</strong> Marxist philosophy on thematerial conditions <strong>of</strong> its production and its reception suggests that it should beapproached as a history <strong>of</strong> ideas, though the confines <strong>of</strong> space dictate that it will here beexamined most <strong>of</strong>ten in terms <strong>of</strong> an individual philosopher. But while ideas andphilosophers do have individual and collective histories, their history is not wholly theirown. Concepts, propositions or arguments appear, change and disappear at times and inplaces that can be charted, but their development cannot be adequately understood inisolation from other historical processes, which provide both the conditions <strong>of</strong>intelligibility and the main motive force for change. Ideas, in other words, draw their lifeand strength more from social than from logical relations, though in the present study thesocial context can be only lightly sketched.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 187If ideas do not entirely have their own history, then they may best be approachedthrough entities which do have their own history. From this perspective, it is clear thatcountries, or regions, <strong>of</strong>fer the most manageable historical framework. Countriescertainly do have their own history, and it may even be argued that having a history iswhat makes a country a country. The identity <strong>of</strong> a modern nation is closely bound up withthe construction, by itself and others, <strong>of</strong> a historical narrative in which it figures as thesubject. <strong>Philosophy</strong> is one <strong>of</strong> the cultural forms through which a nation represents itself,articulating a general statement <strong>of</strong> its own identity and its history, especially in relation tothe acquisition <strong>of</strong> state power. Marxist philosophy has for most <strong>of</strong> the twentieth centurybeen a major participant in defining and representing this process, and the remainder <strong>of</strong>this chapter will therefore be structured in terms <strong>of</strong> national and regional Marxistphilosophical movements.SOVIET MARXISMThe Soviet Union was the first country to adopt Marxism as an <strong>of</strong>ficial philosophy.Supported by resources <strong>of</strong> the state and the prestige <strong>of</strong> the October Revolution, SovietMarxism was for most <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century the dominant version <strong>of</strong> Marxistphilosophy in the world. Its domination was never complete, <strong>of</strong> course, and much <strong>of</strong> thedebate among Marxist philosophers has been directed towards attacking or defending allor part <strong>of</strong> the Soviet synthesis.Towards the end <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century, Russian socialists discovered Marxist ideas,and, largely under the direction <strong>of</strong> George Valentinov Plekhanov (1856–1918),elaborated them into a schematic and all-embracing philosophy. Plekhanov’s major work,The Development <strong>of</strong> the Monist View <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong> (1895) became both an authoritativestatement and a model for later Soviet approaches to Marxism. He critically analysedseveral currents <strong>of</strong> previous European philosophy, drawing out the strengths andlimitations <strong>of</strong> their thought as a preparation for the resolution <strong>of</strong> their problems in theMarxist materialist conception <strong>of</strong> history. The materialism <strong>of</strong> the eighteenth-centuryFrench Enlightenment, the conception <strong>of</strong> history <strong>of</strong> nineteenth-century French historians,the French Utopian socialists’ concept <strong>of</strong> society and the dialectical philosophy <strong>of</strong> theGerman idealists were each examined and found to be useful but flawed. He thenexpounded Marx’s solutions, based on Engels’s short accounts <strong>of</strong> his own and Marx’sphilosophy, which Plekhanov characterized as a ‘modern dialectical materialism’, thuscoining the term which later became the generic title for <strong>of</strong>ficial Soviet Marxism. He laida particularly strong emphasis on the determining role played by the economic base <strong>of</strong>society, as against the political, legal and ideological superstructures, which he saw asmerely a function <strong>of</strong> the base, facilitating or impeding economic developments.Without dwelling on the detail <strong>of</strong> his interpretation, it may be noted that Plekhanovfirmly established the practice <strong>of</strong> approaching Marxism through the exegesis <strong>of</strong> passagesfrom Marx and Engels, confirming a scriptural tradition in which texts are theauthoritative source <strong>of</strong> truth. He also approached Marxism through the intellectual history<strong>of</strong> its antecedents, with several important consequences. In the first instance, it situatedMarxism in the mainstream <strong>of</strong> European thought, with all the intellectual prestige


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 188attaching to it, particularly among the Francophile Russian intelligentsia. Second, itsuggested that, within this tradition, Marxism appears as a modern and therefore bettersolution to long-running problems, the very example <strong>of</strong> human progress. Third, itconfirmed the contestatory and polemical character <strong>of</strong> Marxism, which is almost definedby its conflict with other schools <strong>of</strong> thought. These characteristics were amplified overthe years, as Plekhanov became the catechist <strong>of</strong> Russian Marxism. Even though hebecame a leader <strong>of</strong> the Mensheviks from 1903, his philosophical writings were warmlyendorsed by Lenin, and his influence continued for several years after the Revolution andhis own death in 1918.Lenin’s main philosophical work is Materialism and Empiriocriticism (1908). In it heattacked what he considered to be idealist deviations in the theory <strong>of</strong> knowledge,canvassed by leading intellectuals within the Marxist movement, among them Plekhanov,who saw convergences with religious thought. Lenin contested the view that discoveriesin modern physics, challenging Newtonian mechanics, lent support to these ‘revisionist’tendencies. Apart from the reiteration <strong>of</strong> classical statements <strong>of</strong> principle drawn fromEngels, the major impact <strong>of</strong> the work was to reinforce the polemical mode in whichRussian Marxist philosophy was increasingly couched, with the invective andstigmatizing labels which were more common in political discourse. Lenin also publisheda number <strong>of</strong> short popularizing accounts <strong>of</strong> Marxism, including an essay, The ThreeSources and Three Component Parts <strong>of</strong> Marxism (1913), which identified the foundingtriad <strong>of</strong> Marxism as German philosophy, English economics and French politics, eachsuperseded by Marx’s theoretical advances.The importance <strong>of</strong> these works is primarily that they were written by the leader <strong>of</strong> therevolutionary movement which took power in 1917, and founder <strong>of</strong> the Soviet state. Inthis capacity, they underwent the same canonization as Lenin himself, after his death in1924. Used to support several sides in the philosophical debates <strong>of</strong> the 1920s, theyachieved the status <strong>of</strong> scripture when, in the early 1930s, Joseph Stalin declared Lenin tohave made such a significant advance in Marxism that it was henceforth to be known asMarxism-Leninism. The sanctification was selective, however. In particular, Lenin’snotes on his enthusiastic reading <strong>of</strong> Hegel, published in 1929, did not attract Stalin’sapproval.The process by which Marxism-Leninism became the state philo-sophy <strong>of</strong> the SovietUnion was marked by bitter controversies, particularly among the pr<strong>of</strong>essionalphilosophers who vied with one another to secure the support <strong>of</strong> Stalin. The groundwork<strong>of</strong> Marxism-Leninism was laid in the codification <strong>of</strong> historical materialism by NikolaiIvanovitch Bukharin (1888–1938), in his manual The Theory <strong>of</strong> Historical Materialism(1921). It sparked an intense debate, much <strong>of</strong> it conducted in the pages, and editorialpremises, <strong>of</strong> the leading philosophical journal Pod znamenem marksizma (‘Under thebanner <strong>of</strong> Marxism’—1922–44). On one side, the ‘mechanists’ (Skvortsov-Stepanov,Timiryazev and others) held, with Bukharin, that Marxism now had no need <strong>of</strong>philosophy since it had advanced to the stage <strong>of</strong> scientific knowledge. Consequently therewas no place for philosophers and ideologists to intervene in matters <strong>of</strong> natural science.On the other side, the ‘dialecticians’ (Deborin, Tymyansky, Sten and others) argued, inthe tradition <strong>of</strong> Plekhanov, that Marxist philosophy was increasingly needed togeneralize, unify and direct enquiry in all areas <strong>of</strong> knowledge, as a ‘science <strong>of</strong> sciences’.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 189The debate was concluded in 1929 when Bukharin’s fall into political disfavour took themechanists with him. The dialecticians’ victory was, however, shortlived. Their generalposition passed into orthodoxy, but they themselves were criticized by a new generation<strong>of</strong> ‘bolshevizing’ philosophers who accused them <strong>of</strong> overestimating Plekhanov at theexpense <strong>of</strong> Lenin, and <strong>of</strong> unspecified links with Trotsky (who had in fact generally beenreluctant to pronounce on philosophical matters).At the centre <strong>of</strong> these debates was the question <strong>of</strong> authority, which fell into two parts.First, what authority did philosophy have to direct activity in other areas <strong>of</strong> society,especially the strategic areas <strong>of</strong> science and technology? The answer to this was that ithad complete authority to legislate and pronounce: Marxist philosophy was fundamentalto the successful construction <strong>of</strong> socialism, both in one country and worldwide. Second,what authority is philosophy itself subject to? The answer to this is that it was subject notto some internal philosophical principle or tradition but to the interests <strong>of</strong> the workingclass, represented by the Communist Party, embodied in its General Secretary, Stalin,whose authority was derived from Lenin. The specific contribution <strong>of</strong> Lenin to Marxismwas in turn declared to be his championing <strong>of</strong> partisanship in philosophy, interpretedultimately as the obligation <strong>of</strong> submission to the Party. This was the point at whichMarxism-Leninism assumed the position <strong>of</strong> <strong>of</strong>ficial state philosophy.The 1930s were a period during which Stalin extended his power over the whole <strong>of</strong>Soviet life, and over the expanding communist movement throughout the world.Codification and ‘bolshevization’ went hand in hand under the banner <strong>of</strong> Marxism-Leninism, and reached their apogee in the era <strong>of</strong> the great purges with the publication in1938 <strong>of</strong> the definitive Stalinist manual, <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> the Communist Party <strong>of</strong> the SovietUnion (Bolsheviks), A Short Course. One chapter <strong>of</strong> the Short Course, credited to Stalinhimself, laid out in simple schematic form the basic dogma <strong>of</strong> dialectical and historicalmaterialism. The four principle features <strong>of</strong> dialectics, as opposed to metaphysics, arelisted as interconnection, change, qualitative leaps and contradiction, while the threefeatures <strong>of</strong> materialism, as opposed to idealism, stipulate that the world is material, existsindependently <strong>of</strong> mind, and is knowable. This dialectical materialism is the guiding star<strong>of</strong> the party <strong>of</strong> the proletariat and when applied to the study <strong>of</strong> history it yields historicalmaterialism. This recognizes that spiritual life (including ideas and institutions) is areflection <strong>of</strong> economic production, and that the determining force in historicaldevelopment is the mode <strong>of</strong> production, composed <strong>of</strong> forces <strong>of</strong> production and relations<strong>of</strong> production. Five types <strong>of</strong> productive (i.e. property) relations have existed: primitivecommunal, slave, feudal, capitalist and socialist, and the transitions between them havealways occurred through revolutions triggered by the faster progress <strong>of</strong> productive forces(instruments, people, skill) than their associated relations.The authority <strong>of</strong> the Short Course, assisted by its blunt clarity, channelled Marxistphilosophy into a narrow and dogmatic orthodoxy, which held absolute sway in theSoviet Union and in world communism until after Stalin’s death. Since that time it hasbeen the implicit reference point <strong>of</strong> much <strong>of</strong> Marxist debate, even (perhaps especially)when Stalinism is most vehemently denounced. Soviet dogmatism was given a furthertwist in the early days <strong>of</strong> the Cold War when, under the direction <strong>of</strong> Andrei Zhdanov,culture, including philosophy, was relentlessly confined to the defence and illustration <strong>of</strong>Soviet Marxist preeminence in all things. This included strong discouragement <strong>of</strong> interest


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 190in non-Marxist philosophy, even where, as with Hegel, it had strong connections withMarxism, and even extending to Marx’s own noncanonical writings, particularly the ParisManuscripts <strong>of</strong> 1844.After the death <strong>of</strong> Stalin in 1953, and his denunciation by Krushchev at the 20thCongress <strong>of</strong> the Soviet Communist Party in 1956, the rigidly dogmatic approach began toease. But an indelible pattern was set, which no amount <strong>of</strong> destalinization could remove.The authority <strong>of</strong> the state, the primacy <strong>of</strong> the party, the obligatory teaching <strong>of</strong> Marxism-Leninism at all stages <strong>of</strong> the Soviet education system and a strongly hierarchicalacademic establishment, all served to maintain the social and intellectual structure <strong>of</strong>Soviet Marxism largely unchanged. The Stalinist ‘Vulgate’ developed into an elaboratescholastic system, in which controversies might rage over the interpretation <strong>of</strong> aparticular passage <strong>of</strong> the canon, or over the status <strong>of</strong> a particular doctrine. A goodexample was the successful campaign to rehabilitate the negation <strong>of</strong> the negation, omittedby Stalin from the Short Course, as one <strong>of</strong> the universal dialectical laws <strong>of</strong> development.Paradoxically, the very close identification <strong>of</strong> Marxism-Leninism with the state andparty also largely insulated it from developments which took place elsewhere in Marxistphilosophy. The logic was simple: if a foreign thinker was not a member <strong>of</strong> a communistparty, he or she was not an authentic Marxist, and could be recognized only as some form<strong>of</strong> renegade or deviant from Marxism; conversely, if he or she was a party member, his orher work could not be publicly discussed without infringing the principle <strong>of</strong> noninterferencein the affairs <strong>of</strong> a fraternal party. The result was inevitably a thrivingunderground preoccupation with foreign Marxist philosophers, and with major non-Marxist philosophers. The resulting gulf between the public and private face <strong>of</strong> SovietMarxism rendered it extremely friable under pressure <strong>of</strong> events. Marxism-Leninism in theUSSR’s eastern European satellites, and in pro-Soviet communist movements elsewhere,was clearly marked as a coded acceptance <strong>of</strong> Russian domination, political or ideological.In those parties which espoused the Eurocommunist line in the 1970s, it was symbolicallyrejected, while in many others it was discreetly abandoned. In any event, it had noindependent strength on which to draw, and when the state and party which sponsored itcollapsed at the beginning <strong>of</strong> the 1990s, Soviet Marxism effectively came to an end.Since it has been the focus and archetype <strong>of</strong> Marxism for most <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century, itremains to be seen whether its demise will also prove to be the end <strong>of</strong> Marxism as such.The Chinese variant <strong>of</strong> Stalinist Marxism has also been influential. Chinesecommunism developed two main currents <strong>of</strong> philosophy, one being the orthodoxMarxism-Leninism <strong>of</strong> the Short Course, introduced by Moscow-trained intellectuals andpromoted by the Comintern, the Third or Communist International (1919–43) founded byLenin to direct the policy and activities <strong>of</strong> Communist parties worldwide. The othercurrent was an adaptation <strong>of</strong> the first by intellectuals based in the revolutionaryheadquarters at Yenan during the late 1930s, <strong>of</strong> whom the most successful was Mao Tsetung(1893–1976). Apart from a much greater emphasis on the role <strong>of</strong> the peasantry, Maodeveloped a classification <strong>of</strong> contradictions in terms <strong>of</strong> whether they were antagonistic ornon-antagonistic in nature, primary or secondary in the specific context, and what theirprimary and secondary aspects were. He argued that contradictions and their aspectscould in certain circumstances pass from one type to another, particularly when they werehandled correctly in the practice <strong>of</strong> the revolutionary party.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 191With the success <strong>of</strong> the Chinese revolution in 1948, and particularly after the death <strong>of</strong>Stalin, Mao was increasingly presented as a second Lenin, and Peking as an alternative toMoscow in the leadership <strong>of</strong> the world communist movement. During the 1960s, mostcountries witnessed the rise <strong>of</strong> Maoist communist movements, which in western Europewere small, but particularly successful in student circles. They were particularlyinfluenced by the events <strong>of</strong> the Cultural Revolution, during which the ‘little red book’ <strong>of</strong>Quotations from Chairman Mao Tse-tung elevated his neo-Stalinism to cult status,condensing the <strong>of</strong>ficial philosophy, renamed Marxism-Leninism-Mao-Tse-tung Thought,into all-purpose gobbets and slogans. From this apotheosis, Chinese communism returnedfrom an internationalist to a nationalist Marxism-Leninism, and for a time during the1980s began to allow the expression <strong>of</strong> humanist forms <strong>of</strong> Marxism associated withLukács and Gramsci. Whether and how soon Chinese communism will incur a fatecomparable to its Soviet counterpart can only be a matter <strong>of</strong> speculation, but it is clearthat its influence on Marxist philosophy elsewhere largely ceased in the mid-1970s.CENTRAL EUROPEAN MARXISMIn the early years after the First World War, before root and branch bolshevization hadset them all marching to the rhythm <strong>of</strong> Moscow, there was still a flourishing culture <strong>of</strong>philosophical debate among central European Marxists. To a large extent this wasconducted in the German-speaking circles which had been the intellectual centre <strong>of</strong>gravity <strong>of</strong> pre-Bolshevik Marxism. Pervaded by the humanism <strong>of</strong> the SecondInternational, the organization which brought together the social-democratic and labourparties <strong>of</strong> Europe (1889–1914), and oriented toward a respect for intellectual and culturalvalues, it was blotted out by triumphant Marxism-Leninism and lay largely ignored untilthe post-Stalinist era <strong>of</strong> the 1960s. At that stage it was rediscovered in the writings <strong>of</strong>Korsch, Lukács, Benjamin, Bloch and others, and given widespread currency, largely bymovements opposed to the dominant communist orthodoxy.Several attempts have been made to construct an alternative tradition by aggregatingthese writers with the Frankfurt school, with Italian Marxists, and with French writers asdiverse as Althusser and Sartre, to create a ‘western Marxism’. Such has been the project<strong>of</strong> the British New Left Review, which has done a great deal to create an appropriatecanon <strong>of</strong> texts in English, and has rendered accessible a broad range <strong>of</strong> non-SovietMarxist theorists. None the less, the notion <strong>of</strong> ‘western Marxism’, coined in the mid-1950s by Maurice Merleau-Ponty, loses historical coherence as soon as it is extendedbeyond the germanophone debates <strong>of</strong> the interwar period. For this reason, it is morehelpful to consider the diverse central European writers withouthaving to wrestle theminto an artificial unanimity with each other and with writers from other intellectual andpolitical traditions.Undoubtedly, the giant among these philosophers is Georg (György) Lukács (1885–1971). Born in Budapest to a wealthy and cultured family, and educated in theuniversities <strong>of</strong> Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, he wrote with equal facilityin German and Hungarian, and played a significant role in the political history <strong>of</strong>Hungary and <strong>of</strong> the international communist movement, as well as being the central


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 192figure in major literary and philosophical debates. Brought up in the Germanphilosophical tradition <strong>of</strong> Kant, Dilthey and Simmel, he came to espouse Marxism viaMax Weber and then Hegel, whose thought exercised an enduring fascination for him. Aleading figure <strong>of</strong> the leftist faction in the Hungarian Communist Party during theturbulent events <strong>of</strong> 1919–20, Lukács developed an interpretation <strong>of</strong> Marxism sharply atodds with the dialectical materialism which gained ascendancy in Moscow. Throughmost <strong>of</strong> his career he was the target <strong>of</strong> repeated attacks on his ‘revisionist’ positions,despite his efforts at different times to assert his own orthodoxy. There has beenconsiderable discussion as to whether Lukács’s philosophical positions can be directlycorrelated with his political shift towards a conciliatory attitude to the non-communistleft. But since his political sympathies were in many respects close to Bukharin, whosephilosophy he opposed, it would be rash to draw any reductive conclusions.Undoubtedly Lukács’s major work is his collection <strong>of</strong> essays <strong>History</strong> and ClassConsciousness, published in 1923. It was the focus for controversy in the years followingits publication, and again at the beginning <strong>of</strong> the Cold War. It was widely circulated inFrench translation in the 1960s, before Lukács approved its reappearance in German andEnglish in 1967. The basic thrust <strong>of</strong> the book was to relocate Marx firmly in the tradition<strong>of</strong> Hegel, and to draw out the Hegelian concepts which Marx had sought to refashion. Inthe first essay (‘What is orthodox Marxism?’) Lukács argues that Marx had adopted theprogressive part <strong>of</strong> the Hegelian method, namely the dialectic, setting it against themythologizing remnants <strong>of</strong> ‘eternal values’ which Hegel himself had been strugglingagainst. In this sense, Marx was directing against Hegel the very criticism that Hegel hadlevelled against Kant and Fichte, that they immortalized particular moments <strong>of</strong> abstractreflection at the expense <strong>of</strong> an awareness <strong>of</strong> process, concrete totality, dialectics andhistory. Hegel, he argued, had been unable to progress from the level <strong>of</strong> abstractions to aperception <strong>of</strong> the real driving forces <strong>of</strong> history, and it had been Marx’s originality todiscover these forces.Perhaps the most influential essay in the book, entitled ‘Reification and theconsciousness <strong>of</strong> the proletariat’, launched the interpretation <strong>of</strong> Marxism as a theory <strong>of</strong>alienation, remarkably antici-pating the argument <strong>of</strong> Marx’s Paris Manuscripts <strong>of</strong> 1844,which had not yet been brought to light. Lukács highlighted the exchangeable commodityas the basic unit <strong>of</strong> capitalist economies, and the fetishism <strong>of</strong> commodities as aninevitable consequence, leading people to neglect the human content <strong>of</strong> activity in favour<strong>of</strong> its quantifiable exchange value. He argued that it was a logical necessity for thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> capitalism that all relations must eventually be reduced to the structure <strong>of</strong>commodity-exchange. This process <strong>of</strong> reification led, he thought, to all aspects <strong>of</strong> lifebeing calculated and quantified, alienating the individuality <strong>of</strong> both people and things.Carried to its conclusion, it also stamped its imprint on human consciousness and reifiedthe most intimate areas <strong>of</strong> human relations and the most rigorous <strong>of</strong> scientificinvestigations. Within bourgeois society there was clearly no prospect <strong>of</strong> a radical escapefrom the ravages <strong>of</strong> reification. The only hope <strong>of</strong> a solution was to transform philosophyinto praxis, a practical orientation <strong>of</strong> thought and consciousness towards reality. Realityin this sense was understood as a process <strong>of</strong> becoming, a totality. Only the practical classconsciousness <strong>of</strong> the proletariat, grasping itself as the subject <strong>of</strong> the social totality, couldbe expected to transform a theory <strong>of</strong> praxis into a practical theory which overturns the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 193real world, revolutionizes the totality and overcomes the process <strong>of</strong> reification. Even thenit would succeed only as long as it retained its practical orientation and avoided theHegelian pitfalls <strong>of</strong> schematization, repetitive mechanical patterns (such as the famoustriad: thesis, antithesis, synthesis), and the undialectical project <strong>of</strong> extending its attentionbeyond human society to a philosophy <strong>of</strong> nature.Lukács’s reaffirmation <strong>of</strong> Hegel’s relevance was in one sense a reclamation <strong>of</strong> Marxfor the European philosophical tradition, and a challenge to the increasing tendency tosanctify Lenin, visible in the last months <strong>of</strong> the latter’s life and stridently pursued byStalin in the campaign <strong>of</strong> bolshevization. His strictures against Hegel’s shortcomingswere in another sense an implicit reproach to the codification <strong>of</strong> Marxism into a set <strong>of</strong>rigid abstractions, culminating in the Short Course. He reaffirmed the dialecticalrelationship between subject and object, between theory and practice, as a fundamentaltenet <strong>of</strong> Marxism which guaranteed its progressive and transformative potential. Thealternative, he argued, would be a relapse into Utopian dualism, characteristic <strong>of</strong>revisionism, and generating an ossified theory which would serve as a catch-alljustification <strong>of</strong> any kind <strong>of</strong> practice. This would most likely lead to a conservative right-Hegelian worship <strong>of</strong> the state from which Marx had rescued the posterity <strong>of</strong> Hegel. It isnot difficult to see the Marxist-Leninist equivalent looming over the argument.But Lukács did not only set a challenge to Soviet Marxism, he also set an intellectualagenda for an alternative, Hegelianizing Marxism. Cultured and humanistic in its ethos, itdrew strength from romantic idealism and traditions <strong>of</strong> religious fervour. The philosophy<strong>of</strong> alienation <strong>of</strong>fered a subtle dialectic with a strong appeal to intellectuals, while thephilosophy <strong>of</strong> praxis <strong>of</strong>fered a basis for activism and engagement in the politicalstruggles <strong>of</strong> the working class, cast as the secular source <strong>of</strong> salvation. Over the longerterm, the richness <strong>of</strong> Lukács’s conceptualization, and the many philosophical links itmade with the European intellectual mainstream, made <strong>History</strong> and Class Consciousnessa bridge between the western New Left <strong>of</strong> the 1960s and the non-Stalinist roots for whichit was so ardently searching. Lukács himself, though long-lived, played a singularlydistant role in his own rediscovery, obliged as he was to play intellectual hide and seekwith the political authorities in Moscow and Budapest. For most <strong>of</strong> his career, he wasmuch more widely recognized as a literary theorist and critic <strong>of</strong> European literature,deeply involved in the cultural controversies, and more than a little reticent about hisearlier philosophy.Though he was much read, Lukács had few disciples in central Europe. Perhaps themost noteworthy is the Romanian scholar, Lucien Goldmann (1913–70), who met andadmired Lukács in Vienna but spent most <strong>of</strong> his adult life in Paris, where he distinguishedhimself primarily through his analysis <strong>of</strong> French literature using approaches drawn fromLukács and from the structuralism <strong>of</strong> Jean Piaget.Closer in spirit and preoccupations was Lukács’s contemporary and friend Karl Korsch(1886–1961). A leading figure in the powerful German Communist Party <strong>of</strong> the 1920s,Korsch took a leftist stance vehemently opposed to the bolshevization <strong>of</strong> the CommunistInternational. His most influential work, Marxism and <strong>Philosophy</strong> (1923), aroused sharphostility and, with other oppositional leaders he was eventually ousted from the Party. In1936 he emigrated permanently to the United States.Korsch noted that nineteenth-century Marxism had largely ignored philosophy, and he


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 194traced the fact to Marx’s and Engels’s view that their materialist conception <strong>of</strong> historyand society was destined to supersede classical German philosophy, from which itsprang, and ultimately destined to replace philosophy. He castigated the undialecticalapproach <strong>of</strong> those who had assumed that philosophy was therefore abolished, and <strong>of</strong>those who wished to reinstate it, pointing out that its abolition was necessary butdependent on the revolutionary transformation <strong>of</strong> the historical circumstances whichproduced it. Since this transformation had not taken place, the rejection <strong>of</strong> philosophywas premature, while its reinstatement was retrograde. The result <strong>of</strong> abolition was thatMarxist economic or political theory were being proposed as value-free sciences whichcould equally be used by opponents <strong>of</strong> socialism, and that in practice socialists werecombining Marxism with various substitute philosophies which did provide systems <strong>of</strong>values. Conversely, the result <strong>of</strong> reinstatement was to reinforce philosophy as an obstacleto the process <strong>of</strong> its own historical suppression.Since Korsch was attacking both the theorists <strong>of</strong> the Second International, who hadabandoned philosophy, and those <strong>of</strong> the Comintern, who were reinstating it, he attractedfierce criticism from both sides. There were strong affinities between his position and that<strong>of</strong> Lukács, but both were increasingly isolated voices in the political aftermath <strong>of</strong> thefailure to achieve socialism internationally. The revolutionary fervour and the messianictone <strong>of</strong> their thought did not chime with the increasingly inhospitable social and politicalclimate in central Europe.More consonant with the disillusioned and embattled left <strong>of</strong> the interwar period is thework <strong>of</strong> Walter Benjamin (1892–1940), a Berliner who largely avoided political activismbut expressed a revolutionary Marxist approach in his critical essays. Benjamin was acritic and historian <strong>of</strong> culture, rather than a philosopher, sharing the perception <strong>of</strong> theFrankfurt school (which is treated elsewhere in this volume) that culture had in somerespects overtaken politics as the main field <strong>of</strong> struggle. His work on Brecht (with whomhe enjoyed a close friendship) and Baudelaire, and his more philosophical essayscollected as Illuminations, began to attract renewed attention in western Europe duringthe 1970s. Benjamin was a deliberately non-systematic thinker, considering images,aphorisms and allegories as a more potent means <strong>of</strong> gaining purchase on the course <strong>of</strong>history. Progressive change was likely, he thought, to arise either from a long-termstrategy <strong>of</strong> attrition or from an extremely focused unleashing <strong>of</strong> explosive social forces.In either event, his approach was expressed in the contemporary maxim <strong>of</strong> ‘pessimism <strong>of</strong>the intellect, optimism <strong>of</strong> the will’, and he summed up his conception <strong>of</strong> history byreference to a drawing by Paul Klee showing the angel <strong>of</strong> history facing backwards tolook with pity on the debris <strong>of</strong> its victims, but propelled into the future by a stormblowing from paradise, which constitutes progress. Benjamin himself fell victim to theupheavals <strong>of</strong> history, taking his own life to avoid falling into the hands <strong>of</strong> the Gestapo ashe attempted to flee from occupied France into Spain.Central European intellectuals, caught between the hammer <strong>of</strong> fascism and the anvil <strong>of</strong>Marxism-Leninism, plunged into an understandable slough <strong>of</strong> despond with the approach<strong>of</strong> war. The basis for any optimism was slender, but, such as it was, it was articulated inthe philosophy <strong>of</strong> possibility <strong>of</strong> Ernst Bloch (1885–1977). Born and educated in Berlin,Bloch developed a syncretic philosophy in which Marxist elements jostled with religiousmysticism, vitalism and classical German philosophy. During his wartime exile in the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 195United States, he wrote most <strong>of</strong> his major work, The Principle <strong>of</strong> Hope, which waspublished in East Germany, where he had returned, during the 1950s. He later fled toWest Germany following disagreements with the communist authorities which he hadgenerally supported, without becoming a party member.Bloch’s thought, expressed almost as aphoristically as Benjamin’s, follows a humanistinspiration to argue that the basic nature <strong>of</strong> a human being is characterized by living andworking towards a future goal which is in the process made real, actualizing one out <strong>of</strong>the many potential forms <strong>of</strong> existence. The task <strong>of</strong> creating a utopia is central to humanexistence, and falls not only to the intellect but also to the imagination and emotions,which can awaken latent possibilities within the present. Ever since earliest times, humansocieties have woven images and stories <strong>of</strong> utopias, which they have variously attemptedto bring into being, without ever completely succeeding. The constantly renewed drive todo this is a principle <strong>of</strong> hope which energizes human activity and finds its highestexpression in the Marxist project <strong>of</strong> a concrete utopia, which can be compared with thekingdom <strong>of</strong> heaven.Bloch’s very unspecific characterization <strong>of</strong> what kind <strong>of</strong> utopia may be hoped for is insharp contrast with his euphoric endorsements <strong>of</strong> East German social achievements, andhe has been criticized for both. But, assisted by his own longevity, Bloch’s work isanother important contribution from the generation <strong>of</strong> central European Marxistphilosophers who were formed and continued to write outside the orthodox Marxist-Leninist framework. Though Bloch, Benjamin, Korsch and Lukács are in many respectsdifferent both politically and philosophically, they do share common roots in the classicalGerman philosophical tradition which culminated in Hegel, and a deep regard for thevalue and efficacity <strong>of</strong> European cultural traditions. It is this shared culture which givesthem their potential for resisting the reduction <strong>of</strong> philosophy to an instrument to be used,modified or discarded as it suits a particular political purpose.ITALIAN MARXISMFrom the end <strong>of</strong> the First World War to the end <strong>of</strong> the Second, Italian Marxism led anunderground life, most <strong>of</strong> which was only brought to wider attention long afterwards. Itwas not born in the underground, however. Before the Great War, Marxists were wellestablishedfigures in the Italian mainstream, active participants in debates which wereshaped by the neo-Hegelian revival.Most prominent <strong>of</strong> the early Italian Marxists was Antonio Labriola (1843–1904),whose Essays on the Materialist Conception <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong> (1895–1900) were readthroughout Europe at the turn <strong>of</strong> the century. His undogmatic and humanist approach wasalert to the sinuosities <strong>of</strong> history but lyrical about the mission <strong>of</strong> the proletariat to givemeaning to it. His thought left its mark on philosophers like Benedetto Croce (1866–1952) and Giovanni Gentile (1875–1944), who both grappled with Labriola’s Marxismbefore taking an avowedly Hegelian path away from it towards liberal and, in Gentile’scase, fascist conclusions. The triumph <strong>of</strong> Mussolini in the early 1920s createdextraordinary difficulties for communists and Marxists in Italy, with activists driven intoexile, or hiding, or prison. In exile, a leader like Palmiro Togliatti (1893–1964) was able


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 196to shape the political direction <strong>of</strong> the Comintern, though not the development <strong>of</strong> Marxistphilosophy.Paradoxically, it was the imprisonment <strong>of</strong> the Italian Communist Party leader, AntonioGramsci (1891–1937) that produced the most influential theoretical and philosophicaldevelopment. Born <strong>of</strong> a poor family in Sardinia, Gramsci studied history and philosophyat the university <strong>of</strong> Turin before throwing himself into revolutionary politics early in theFirst World War. He became an editor <strong>of</strong> the influential socialist review Ordine nuovo(‘New order’) in 1919 and played a key role in the foundation <strong>of</strong> the Italian CommunistParty, becoming its leader in 1923, when his policy <strong>of</strong> broad alliances eventuallyprevailed. His political activity in Italy and abroad ended when he was arrested in Romeand imprisoned in 1926. Spending the rest <strong>of</strong> his life in appalling conditions in prison andhospital, Gramsci wrote prolifically, reflecting deeply on Marxist principles in virtualisolation from current events. His influence stems mainly from his Prison Notebooks,which were published in Italy soon after the Second World War but only became widelyknown during the late 1960s, when they were identified as <strong>of</strong>fering an attractivealternative to Soviet Marxism.Philosophically, Gramsci’s affinities were with the Hegelian tradition which he hadencountered through Croce. He considered that Marx’s achievement had been to create asynthesis from the two opposing schools into which Hegelianism had divided. He alsothought that Marx’s own posterity had divided into two schools, mechanistic materialismand dialectical idealism, which now needed to be welded into a new synthesis. Hisproposal was a philosophy <strong>of</strong> praxis, a name he chose partly as a code-word for Marxismto placate the prison censors but partly also because it encapsulated his distinctiveconception <strong>of</strong> history as an aggregation <strong>of</strong> human practical activity.At the core <strong>of</strong> Gramsci’s philosophy was the humanist question: what is man? A latergeneration, attempting to meet feminist critiques, has rephrased the question: What ishuman existence? Gramsci’s answer was that humanity is reflected in every individualperson, and consists <strong>of</strong> the individual, other people and nature. The individual enters intorelationships with other people and with nature, primarily through work, generating anetwork <strong>of</strong> relationships. These relationships form organic social entities, which becomeconscious <strong>of</strong> themselves and become capable <strong>of</strong> purposeful and effective action. Thus theindividual is an integral part <strong>of</strong> the process <strong>of</strong> change which is history, its consciousmotive force, and the whole complex <strong>of</strong> changing relationships is part <strong>of</strong> each individual.Human existence is synonymous with the socio-historical process and the question ‘whatis human existence?’ must therefore be reformulated as ‘what can human existencebecome?’Within Gramsci’s humanist vision, philosophy appears as the consciousness <strong>of</strong> thehistorical process, not only a dimension <strong>of</strong> the totality <strong>of</strong> human praxis, and thereforeinherently political, but also part <strong>of</strong> the consciousness <strong>of</strong> each individual within it. It wasin a sense a collective subjectivity, and its value lay in its appropriateness to the task <strong>of</strong>the collectivity rather than in its relation to any objective reality. In any case, hequestioned whether it was meaningful to speak <strong>of</strong> a reality existing independently fromhuman praxis. He thought it necessary for the unity and advancement <strong>of</strong> humanity thatphilosophy should overcome the distance, frequently observed, between the doctrine <strong>of</strong>the intellectuals and that <strong>of</strong> ordinary people. There was in particular, he argued, a need


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 197for Marxism to foster intellectuals who were an organic part <strong>of</strong> the working people andcapable <strong>of</strong> raising the level <strong>of</strong> consciousness <strong>of</strong> the masses, without bringing elitist ideasfrom outside. In this way, it would, he suggested, be possible to build a unity <strong>of</strong> ideas andpolitical action which could challenge the hegemony <strong>of</strong> bourgeois philosophy andpolitics.The concept <strong>of</strong> hegemony is Gramsci’s most influential and contentious innovation,since it emphasizes that the exercise <strong>of</strong> power in a society is secured not only by therepressive use <strong>of</strong> state power but also more crucially by the maintenance <strong>of</strong> a moral,intellectual and cultural consensus. For the working class and its allies to win power, it isnot sufficient to engineer a coup d’état, it is also necessary to build an alternative culturalconsensus capable <strong>of</strong> securing hegemony. This is a much broader and more long-termtask, requiring a different kind <strong>of</strong> organization from the highly centralized and disciplinedparties built by the Comintern. Learning lessons from the ideological power exercised bythe Catholic Church, Gramsci was responding to the fact that Mussolini’s fascism hadbeen successful in gaining popular support, and recognizing that a long ‘war <strong>of</strong> position’would be needed to win over the masses for socialism. The alternative, which he rejected,was to fall back on faith in the likelihood <strong>of</strong> the blind workings <strong>of</strong> history producing asuitable revolutionary opportunity. For socialists reading Gramsci thirty years later,however, hegemony appeared to emphasize the strategic importance <strong>of</strong> ideological andcultural struggle as an alter-native to traditional politics, which seemed to <strong>of</strong>fer noprospect <strong>of</strong> radical change.Because <strong>of</strong> their fragmentary, allusive and <strong>of</strong>ten obscure nature, Gramsci’s prisonwritings allow <strong>of</strong> a range <strong>of</strong> interpretations. At one end <strong>of</strong> the range, they can be seen as arestatement <strong>of</strong> fairly orthodox Marxism-Leninism, somewhat veiled by the circumstancesin which they were produced. That is largely how they were presented when they werefirst published. At the other end <strong>of</strong> the range, they can be interpreted as a penetratingrebuttal <strong>of</strong> Soviet Marxism which <strong>of</strong>fers an entirely different basis on which to developMarxist philosophy. That is largely how they have been received since their rediscoveryin the 1960s. The philosophy <strong>of</strong> praxis served to challenge the distinction between theoryand practice, obviating the need for a body <strong>of</strong> theory and thus for the scholastic apparatus<strong>of</strong> hitherto existing Marxism. The concept <strong>of</strong> hegemony served to challenge thedistinction between base and superstructure, reducing the importance <strong>of</strong> economics, at atime <strong>of</strong> relative prosperity, and increasing that <strong>of</strong> cultural theory, at a time <strong>of</strong> rapidexpansion in audiovisual communication. In this way Gramsci’s posthumous reputationgrew both from his conceptual innovations and from the new political directions his ideasopened up.In postwar Italy, Gramsci’s humanist and historicist positions dominated Marxistdebate for many years, assisted by the success <strong>of</strong> the Communist Party in givingintellectuals an organic role to play within political activity. His influence was notunchallenged, however. In particular, Galvano della Volpe (1895–1968) maintained apersistent critique <strong>of</strong> historicism, which he regarded as a product <strong>of</strong> the contamination <strong>of</strong>Marxism by Italian idealist philosophy. An academic rather than an activist, della Volpedrew on the egalitarian and democratic thought <strong>of</strong> Rousseau, counterposed to theHegelian theory <strong>of</strong> the state, and argued that Marxism should concern itself with specificscientific knowledge <strong>of</strong> the world, rather than with indeterminate abstractions.


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 198With the political effervescence <strong>of</strong> the 1960s came a flourishing Marxist culture whichpermeated most areas <strong>of</strong> intellectual inquiry, prompting intense philosophical debatesbetween the diverse movements and schools <strong>of</strong> thought which sprang up inside andoutside the Communist Party. Two philosophers <strong>of</strong> the far left may be mentioned ashaving been influential in the English-speaking world. Lucio Colletti, brought up in thetradition <strong>of</strong> della Volpe, sought to demystify the historicism <strong>of</strong> Gramsci and to refute theview that Marxism could draw on an underlying materialism in the dialectic <strong>of</strong> Hegel,whom he regarded as essentially a Christian philosopher. Ultimately, however, heconcluded that dialectical mystification was present even in Marx, and he began todistance himself from Marxism. His hostility to idealism was shared by SebastianoTimpanaro, who attacked the French attempts to reconcile Marxism with existentialist(Sartre) and structuralist (Althusser) theories. A strong proponent <strong>of</strong> materialism, whichhe saw as lacking in Gramsci, Timpanaro asserted the objectivity <strong>of</strong> scientific knowledgeand sought recognition for the autonomous existence <strong>of</strong> the natural world, necessary as atheoretical basis for science and for ecological awareness.These philosophers are not proposed as representative <strong>of</strong> debates over the past thirtyyears, and the present study cannot <strong>of</strong>fer an extensive survey <strong>of</strong> the variety <strong>of</strong> ItalianMarxists. They include a Utopian Marxism strongly imbued with Christian spiritualism,and several suggested combinations <strong>of</strong> Marxism with other contemporary schools <strong>of</strong>thought (psychoanalytical, ecological, feminist among others). Moreover, as the example<strong>of</strong> Colletti suggests, Marxist philosophy shades into other philosophical movements.With the transformation <strong>of</strong> the Italian Communist Party into a social democratic party, itmay be that Italy has largely lost the institutional framework which made it important, oreven possible, to distinguish Italian Marxism from other philosophies which are notspecifically Marxist.FRENCH MARXISMMarxist philosophy came late to France, despite the close contacts which Marx andEngels had with French socialists. This was partly because Proudhon’s syndicalistsocialism continued to have a deep and abiding influence, and partly because <strong>of</strong> theperiods <strong>of</strong> repression following the failed revolutions <strong>of</strong> 1848 and 1871. In the 1890s,Marx’s daughters, Laura and Jenny, and his two French sons-in-law, Paul Lafargue andCharles Longuet, did a great deal to make his ideas known in France. Lafargue (1842–1911), the most active <strong>of</strong> them, propagated a highly simplified economic determinismwhich Marx himself was wont to criticize. His main opponent, Jean Jaurès (1859–1914),countered this with a neo-Kantian ethical socialism in which he hoped to synthesizeMarx’s ideas with various other progressive doctrines. Their debate was largely curtailedby the intellectual truce which followed the unification <strong>of</strong> the main socialist groupings in1905.The most sophisticated French contributor to pre-war Marxism, Georges Sorel (1847–1922), was a maverick whose unorthodox Marxism included an unusually vigorous attackon rationalism, and a corresponding advocacy <strong>of</strong> revolutionary myth. At odds with most<strong>of</strong> his contemporaries, Sorel’s ideas were more influential outside France, especially in


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 199Italy, where Mussolini claimed them as an inspiration for his fascist movement.After the First World War, a new generation <strong>of</strong> young intellectuals graduallyintroduced a thriving Marxist culture, within or on the margins <strong>of</strong> the Communist Party.Most prominent <strong>of</strong> them was Henri Lefebvre (1901–91), a prolific and long-lived thinkerwho set his mark on sociology as well as on Marxist philosophy. Emerging from thesurrealist movement <strong>of</strong> the 1920s, he used his energy and erudition to popularize theearly writings <strong>of</strong> Marx, some <strong>of</strong> which he translated into French, and to publish severalvolumes by or about Hegel, who was just beginning to arouse interest in France.Enjoying the more intellectually relaxed climate <strong>of</strong> the Popular Front period, Lefebvrewrote what eventually became the most successful short exposition <strong>of</strong> Marxism inFrance, Dialectical Materialism (1939). Despite its orthodox-sounding title, it set out ahumanist Marxism fundamentally opposed to that <strong>of</strong> the Short Course, which appeared atabout the same time.Lefebvre affirmed the superiority <strong>of</strong> Hegel’s dialectic over formal logic, based on thedialectic’s attempt to achieve a synthesis <strong>of</strong> the concept and its content, and thence asynthesis <strong>of</strong> thought and being. What distinguished the Marxist dialectic was that,whereas Hegel had sought to derive the content from the concept, Marx saw the need toenable the content to direct the development <strong>of</strong> the concept. The resulting dialecticalmaterialism, he thought, transcended both idealism and materialism, and oriented thedialectic towards a resolution <strong>of</strong> contradictions in practical activity, or praxis. Theunfolding <strong>of</strong> dialectical praxis in history would, he believed, lead to the practicalrealization <strong>of</strong> the full potential <strong>of</strong> human existence in what he called ‘Total Man’.Recognizing the obstacles to the fulfilment <strong>of</strong> the dialectic <strong>of</strong> praxis, Lefebvresystematized the analysis <strong>of</strong> alienation, which he argued was a fundamental structure <strong>of</strong>human activity, and could be summarized in terms <strong>of</strong> a three-stage evolution. In the first(spontaneous) stage, activity generates some form <strong>of</strong> order in response to needs; in thesecond (conscious) stage, the spontaneous order is shaped into rational structures so as towork more effectively; and in the third (illusory) stage, the rational structures becomefixed and fetishized, beginning to hinder further development, and being misappropriatedand used as an instrument <strong>of</strong> oppression by one group over another. The revolutionaryoverthrow <strong>of</strong> alienated structures thus appears as a requirement <strong>of</strong> human self-realization.It is clear that, by its generality, Lefebvre’s analysis can be applied to the oppressive role<strong>of</strong> the state under communism as much as under capitalism, and to the sclerosis <strong>of</strong>thought in the Communist Party as much as in the Sorbonne.In the first years after the Second World War, Lefebvre was lionized by the FrenchCommunist Party (PCF) as one <strong>of</strong> its most distinguished intellectuals but, unlike itsItalian counterpart, the PCF tended to regard major intellectuals as figures <strong>of</strong> symbolicrather than practical importance. With the tightening <strong>of</strong> the Cold War, he was reproachedfor his lack <strong>of</strong> orthodoxy, and withdrew from philosophy into sociology, which providedthe focus for his subsequent work. In the late 1950s he became an influential figure onthe non-communist left, where his dialectical humanism was widely welcomed as anopen and non-dogmatic basis for social critique. His conception <strong>of</strong> philosophy alsoshifted to a suspicion that any general philosophical assertions would be likely to fall intomystification. Ontological or cosmological statements should, he thought, be left to poetsand musicians, and Marxist philosophy should concentrate on honing the concepts <strong>of</strong>


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 200dialectics as a critical method, to be part <strong>of</strong> what he termed metaphilosophy. This meantthat praxis, which was action-oriented, should be supplemented by other dimensions,including a creative function, which he termed poesis, to form a concept <strong>of</strong> ‘everydaylife’. More productive in sociology than in philosophy, Lefebvre’s humanist andHegelian Marxism <strong>of</strong>fered plausible explanations for the uprising <strong>of</strong> students and workersin France in May 1968 and proved an attractive conceptual framework for some members<strong>of</strong> the radical movements involved.The chief spokesman for Marxist-Leninist philosophy in the postwar period was RogerGaraudy (b. 1913), who articulated a Stalinism <strong>of</strong> strict obedience up to the 20thCongress <strong>of</strong> the CPSU in 1956. In its aftermath, he had the task not only <strong>of</strong> leading thephilosophical denunciation <strong>of</strong> Stalin but also, implicitly at least, <strong>of</strong> finding a suitablereplacement philosophy for the French Communist Party. His first step was to propose aMarxist humanism directed towards the discovery <strong>of</strong> Total Man, little different insubstance from that <strong>of</strong> Lefebvre, though political difficulties made it impossible toacknowledge the debt. His second step was more original, however, in that he sought anexplicit dialogue with other forms <strong>of</strong> humanism, particularly in the Catholic andexistentialist intellectual movements. The vitalist philosophy <strong>of</strong> Teilhard de Chardin,exercising widespread posthumous influence, seemed to <strong>of</strong>fer significant commonground, though Garaudy stopped short <strong>of</strong> accepting that evolution would culminate asTeilhard suggested, in the creation <strong>of</strong> God. Garaudy turned to Hegel, who was alsoattracting the interest <strong>of</strong> theologians, as a possible basis for a common humanistphilosophy. The alarm his ‘God-building’ caused in communist circles was a materialfactor in leading the Party to abandon the notion <strong>of</strong> an <strong>of</strong>ficial philosophy in 1966.Disavowed by the Party for disagreements over the events <strong>of</strong> 1968, Garaudy underwent areligious conversion, first to Catholicism and then to Islam.The most trenchant opponent <strong>of</strong> the path followed by Garaudy was Louis Althusser(1918–90), who developed a critique <strong>of</strong> humanist Marxism, producing in the process aninnovative and influential philo-sophical reworking <strong>of</strong> Marx, expressed in two studiespublished in 1965, For Marx and Reading Capital. A pr<strong>of</strong>essional philosopher rather thanan activist, he was initially inspired by Mao Tse-tung’s writings on practice and oncontradiction, and was widely followed in French Maoist circles <strong>of</strong> the 1960s and early1970s. Althusser began from a reexamination <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong> Marxist philosophy, inwhich he argued that there was a radical discontinuity between Marx and hispredecessors, Hegel and Feuerbach. He suggested that Marx had first rejected the idealistsystem <strong>of</strong> Hegel, and then the materialist humanism <strong>of</strong> Feuerbach, in order to emergewith a distinctive and scientific theory. He dismissed the view that the theory was asupersession <strong>of</strong> Hegel and Feuerbach, which would imply that it conserved importantparts <strong>of</strong> their philosophy, and argued that Marx had made an epistemological break,establishing his theory as a science <strong>of</strong> history, entirely distinct from the ideologicalconceptions from which it has emerged. He noted that ideas and concepts tended toemerge in response to a historical situation and to aggregate into more or less coherentcombinations, each <strong>of</strong> which formed a problematic. Retaining a particular conceptgenerally implied accepting the entire problematic to which it belonged, and thus matureMarxism had to exclude ideas drawn from pre-Marxist problematics. Marx’s own earlywritings with their notions <strong>of</strong> alienation, human self-realization and Hegelian dialectics


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 201came before the epistemological break and should therefore be considered as belongingto pre-Marxist and unscientific problematics. Althusser conceded that Marx’s laterwritings sometimes contained ideological residues, but generalized his argument to assertthat the concept <strong>of</strong> the epistemological break could be applied to distinguish what wasscientific (or theoretical, as he preferred to say) from what was ideological in Marx’swork, or in the work <strong>of</strong> anyone else. In this way theoretical practice could be clearlyseparated from ideological practices.Althusser next identified the problem that while the mature Marxist theoretical practicewas well developed, Marx had never gone back to reformulate the philosophicalprinciples which it implied. There was, in other words, no theory <strong>of</strong> theoretical practice.In its absence, various ideological approximations were made to serve, most <strong>of</strong> themHegelian in origin. He suggested that these had now become an obstacle to the furtherdevelopment <strong>of</strong> Marxism, and set himself the task <strong>of</strong> undertaking a philosophical reading<strong>of</strong> Marx, Engels and Lenin, especially Marx’s major work Capital, attempting toelucidate a theory <strong>of</strong> theoretical practice. Since such a theory was not articulatedexplicitly, the texts would need to be read ‘symptomatically’, to detect symptoms whichmight point to the theory at work in a practical way. If the theory had not been suppliedby Marx, it could certainly not be taken from Hegel or Feuerbach. Althusserconsequently drew from Spinoza’srationalism, Freudian psychoanalysis and Saussureanstructural linguistics to provide usable concepts.Althusser began with the concept <strong>of</strong> contradiction. The Hegelian notion <strong>of</strong> a struggle <strong>of</strong>opposites was replaced by the notion <strong>of</strong> a process <strong>of</strong> production, in which a raw material<strong>of</strong> some kind was transformed into a product by some process <strong>of</strong> transformationinvolving human work, or practice, and an appropriate means <strong>of</strong> production. In societies,or social formations, there are four main processes <strong>of</strong> production, each with manysubsidiary processes: they are the economic, political, ideological and theoreticalpractices. These practices are highly interlocking in that each is conditioned by all theothers, a situation which he designated ‘overdetermination’, borrowing from Freud’sanalysis <strong>of</strong> dream images. Contradictions, or transformations, in one level <strong>of</strong> practicemight transfer to or condense in another, and if contradictions in several or all practicescame to fuse together, then a general transformation or revolution would be likely toensue.The concept <strong>of</strong> overdetermination was presented as a more complex, and morerigorous, basis for the analysis <strong>of</strong> history than the Hegelian dialectic it replaced, andcontained a different conception <strong>of</strong> causality. The linear cause-and-effect principle <strong>of</strong>classical physics, and the expressive causality <strong>of</strong> the Hegelian dialectic, were replaced bya structural causality in which a particular event is not determined by an earlier event or amore fundamental event, but is overdetermined by a structure <strong>of</strong> practices to which itbelongs. There is no centre to the structure, and since practices develop unevenly, one <strong>of</strong>them is dominant in the structure at a given time, though none is permanently so. Eveneconomic practice has no permanent domination, though it has the special power <strong>of</strong>determining which practice does dominate. This is Althusser’s version <strong>of</strong> the base-andsuperstructuremodel <strong>of</strong> society, reformulated to give greater relative autonomy to thesuperstructures, which no longer merely reflect the economic base. Thus, althougheconomic developments are determinant in the last instance, there is no moment at which


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 202they abruptly take over, and so ‘the lonely hour <strong>of</strong> the last instance never comes’.Althusser’s model was crowned in effect by philosophy (designated as Theory, or thetheory <strong>of</strong> theoretical practice) which had the role <strong>of</strong> ensuring the coherence and rigour <strong>of</strong>other theories (and their corresponding practices), and therefore appeared as a science <strong>of</strong>sciences. Criticized for his theoreticism, he devoted most <strong>of</strong> his writings after 1968 toself-criticism in which a series <strong>of</strong> retreats from ‘high’ Althusserian positions wasaccompanied by further conceptual innovations. Three <strong>of</strong> these may be mentioned asparticularly influential. First, he advanced an alternative conception <strong>of</strong> philosophy asclass struggle in theory, and as a weapon in the revolution. This suggested that its rolewas to ensure the theoretical correctness <strong>of</strong> political practice and the political correctness<strong>of</strong> theory. Second, he redefined the dialectic <strong>of</strong> history as a process without a subject or agoal, as opposed to the Hegelian dialectic which was both humanist, in seeing humanexistence as the subject <strong>of</strong> history, and ideological, in seeing history as advancingpurposefully towards some final end. And third, he <strong>of</strong>fered an account <strong>of</strong> ideology as thenecessary illusion <strong>of</strong> a lived relationship between individuals and their circumstances. Inthis, he argued that most <strong>of</strong> the apparatuses <strong>of</strong> a modern state are primarily ideological,rather than repressive, in that their main function is to elicit the consent <strong>of</strong> the governed.People are incorporated into these ideological state apparatuses by the effect, which allideology has, <strong>of</strong> calling on individuals to recognize themselves as subjects, in the senseboth <strong>of</strong> being persons responsible for themselves and <strong>of</strong> being subordinated to anauthority. His analysis <strong>of</strong> ideology has been widely adopted in critical theory and politicalphilosophy internationally.Of the philosophers who have continued Althusser’s work, three are particularlyworthy <strong>of</strong> note. Etienne Balibar developed a critique <strong>of</strong> the abandonment, in France andelsewhere, <strong>of</strong> the concept <strong>of</strong> the dictatorship <strong>of</strong> the proletariat, and has appliedAlthusserian analysis to issues <strong>of</strong> nation, race and class. Pierre Macherey developed atheory <strong>of</strong> how literature is produced, rather than created, and reveals the contradictionswhich ideology serves to conceal. He also advocated an appropriation <strong>of</strong> Spinozistconceptions by Marxism in preference to Hegelian ideas. Georges Labica re-examinedMarx’s early writings, criticizing the simplistic schema <strong>of</strong> his adoption <strong>of</strong> Englishpolitical economy, French socialism and German philosophy, and arguing that he finallysucceeded in escaping from philosophical mystifications only by substantiallyabandoning philosophy in favour <strong>of</strong> a science <strong>of</strong> history. Labica is also the major Frenchinstigator <strong>of</strong> academic research into the history <strong>of</strong> Marxist thought.Althusser’s ideas remained oppositional on the French left, partly because <strong>of</strong> hispolitical disagreements with the French Communist Party, <strong>of</strong> which he was a member,and partly because non-communist critics tended to view his enterprise as an attempt torescue Stalinist conceptions. His name was largely erased from public discussion after1980 when he killed his wife, in a bout <strong>of</strong> his recurrent psychiatric disorder. None theless, many <strong>of</strong> his ideas became common currency in Marxist philosophy, and have hadwidespread influence particularly in literary and cultural criticism. Paradoxically, hisonslaught against Hegel also had the effect <strong>of</strong> stimulating renewed interest in Hegelianstudies in France.Several Marxist philosophers responded to the challenge by carefully re-examining theconcepts which had come through Hegel. Jacques D’Hondt sought to rehabilitate the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 203progressive content <strong>of</strong> Hegel’s own life and thought. Solange Mercier-Josa argued that itwas productive to look at the original Hegelian versions <strong>of</strong> Marx’s main concepts so as tograsp the originality <strong>of</strong> his reworking <strong>of</strong> them, and also perhaps to retrieve some usefulHegelian concepts which Marx neglected to rework. Perhaps the most comprehensive <strong>of</strong>the attempts to find a synthesis in the Hegelian style is the work <strong>of</strong> Lucien Sève. In aseries <strong>of</strong> studies, culminating in a compendious work, An Introduction to Marxist<strong>Philosophy</strong> (1980), Sève sought to systematize the concept <strong>of</strong> contradiction, suggestingthat the distinction between antagonistic and non-antagonistic forms should not excludetheir mutual interpenetration. He maintained the Hegelian distinction between objectiveand subjective dialectics and consequently between real historical development and thelogical ordering <strong>of</strong> concepts with which to grasp it, while at the same time affirming thedialectical relationship between them. Sève also argued that Marxist materialism,understood as a scientific approach to knowledge rather than as a political ideology, wasnot specifically atheistic and should be open to learning from what religious thoughtexpressed in intuitive or imaginative terms.The breadth and erudition <strong>of</strong> Marxist philosophy in the 1960s and 1970s made it one <strong>of</strong>the dominant currents in French and European intellectual life, with a strong place in theschools and universities, as well as in political discourse. Towards the end <strong>of</strong> theseventies it began to run out <strong>of</strong> steam, under a combination <strong>of</strong> pressures which includedthe alternative attraction <strong>of</strong> other schools <strong>of</strong> thought (feminism, poststructuralist,psychoanalysis, ecology, spiritualism and postmodernism), as well as shifts in nationalpolitics and the accelerating decline <strong>of</strong> communism internationally. A variety <strong>of</strong>strategies was proposed to rejuvenate Marxism, including the incorporation <strong>of</strong> ItalianGramscian and Anglo-Saxon analytical versions <strong>of</strong> Marxism, but more <strong>of</strong>ten includingeclectical borrowings from non-Marxist currents. Perhaps most significant was theimpact <strong>of</strong> questioning from various quarters as to the need for, or legitimacy <strong>of</strong>, such acomprehensive intellectual enterprise (or master-narrative) as Marxism had historicallyundertaken. It was a question which struck an undeniable chord with intellectuals whowere increasingly working without reference to a real or imagined Marxist collectivity(state, party or pr<strong>of</strong>essional grouping) which could give a communal identity or aninstitutional basis to their thought. As a result, Marxist philosophy was in serious disarrayeven before the historical events <strong>of</strong> 1989 plunged it into catastrophe.CONCLUSIONSince the present study is undertaken in the perspective <strong>of</strong> ‘continental philosophy’, itwould not be appropriate to conclude without evoking the implied standpoint <strong>of</strong> theobserver, that is, the philosophy <strong>of</strong> the English-speaking world, and in particular <strong>of</strong> theBritish Isles. The supposition that continental philosophy is something which happenselsewhere, on a real or imagined continent <strong>of</strong> Europe, indicates the extent to which thedominant currents <strong>of</strong> English-speaking philosophy have sought to isolate their intellectualtraditions from foreign influences. In practice, English-speaking academic philosophy hasbeen deeply engaged with continental European philosophers, even though they have<strong>of</strong>ten, like Popper or Wittgenstein, been regarded as honorary English philosophers. The


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 204strategy <strong>of</strong> exclusion implied by the term ‘continental’ serves to keep out undesirables, <strong>of</strong>which the least desirable has generally been the Marxist tradition. Until recent times, theexclusion <strong>of</strong> Marxism from at least academic philosophy has been largely complete, withthe result that it has fallen to other disciplines, particularly literary and cultural studies,sociology, politics, history, geography and archaeology, to introduce continental Marxistphilosophers to English-speaking intellectuals.Marxism-Leninism was given some currency through the agency <strong>of</strong> communist parties,whose small size tended to exacerbate their dependence on Moscow. But for most <strong>of</strong> theperiod from the 1920s to the 1960s its influence was confined to the trade unionmovement. During the 1930s a small number <strong>of</strong> intellectuals were attracted tocommunism, and one <strong>of</strong> them, Christopher Caudwell, might have founded an indigenousMarxism in Britain had he not been killed fighting for the Republic in Spain. Later,Maurice Cornforth (1909–80) was an effective exponent <strong>of</strong> Marxist-Leninist philosophy,applying it in polemics against Popperian positivism and linguistic philosophy during the1960s, and began to formulate a more critical view <strong>of</strong> Marxism shortly before his death.During the 1970s, English-speaking communist parties, in rapid decline, divided betweenMarxist-Leninists and Eurocommunists, who took Gramsci as their main philosophicalinspiration.During the 1960s a strong interest in Marxism emerged in the New Left groupingswhich were founded by dissident communists and Trotskyists. They drew on the non-Marxist-Leninist writings which were being published in France and Italy. The Americanjournal Telos and the English journal New Left Review, and its publishing house, played amajor role in the cultural, political and historical fields, in translating and introducing thework <strong>of</strong> Marxists who have been discussed above. From the early 1970s, the journalRadical <strong>Philosophy</strong> played a similar role with particular emphasis on philosophicaldiscussion, by no means all Marxist. The growth <strong>of</strong> a flourishing English-speakingMarxist culture was visible from the 1960s with the emergence <strong>of</strong> literary and culturalcritics like Raymond Williams, Stuart Hall, Terry Eagleton and Fredric Jameson, andhistorians such as E.P. Thompson, Christopher Hill, Eric Hobsbawm and PerryAnderson, among others. <strong>Philosophy</strong> proved more resistant to Marxist influence, thoughit is visible in the philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, particularly in the work <strong>of</strong> Roy Bhaskar, whosetheory <strong>of</strong> scientific realism was linked to a project <strong>of</strong> general human emancipation. Moreambitious and influential has been the work <strong>of</strong> Jon Elster and G.A.Cohen, who haveattempted to reformulate the main principles <strong>of</strong> Marxism in terms <strong>of</strong> analyticalphilosophy. The confrontation <strong>of</strong> Marx with Popper, Keynes and Austin producesinsights which are refreshing within the analytical tradition and challenging to Hegeliandialectics. The reconciliation is inevitably incomplete, however, and involves rejectingmuch <strong>of</strong> Marx’s socialism and historical materialism.English-speaking Marxist theory has developed in relative dissociation from powerfulMarxist political movements. It has keenly observed such movements abroad, but theirdomestic counterparts have been either far left groups with marginal influence ormainstream parties with little commitment to particular doctrines. Its academicdetachment has to some extent insulated it from the debacle <strong>of</strong> communism in 1989. Thatyear did not bring Marxist philosophy to an end, but it does provide a convenient point atwhich to end the narrative <strong>of</strong> its history. Though it is always rash to extend history so far


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 205towards the present that it cannot be seen at any historical distance, 1989 is mainlysignificant in that the collapse <strong>of</strong> communism, symbolized by the breaching <strong>of</strong> the BerlinWall, was a turning point in international history heavy with consequences for Marxistphilosophy. While some English-speaking writers have continued to feel at ease in abroadly Marxist moral and philosophical framework, the political fall-out <strong>of</strong> 1989 hasimpelled others to take a more sympathetic view <strong>of</strong> other alternatives. This lattertendency is also encouraged by the increasingly chill winds blowing from the continenton unreconstructed Marxism.Marxist philosophy has generally been distinguished by its close relationship to itssocial context, and in particular to the institutional forms through which its practical andpolitical orientation is mediated. In its most institutional form, Marxism-Leninism, itbecame inextricably tied to the Soviet state and to the network <strong>of</strong> communist parties andclient states which pledged their allegiance to it, including mutatis mutandis the Chinesevariant. To a large extent, it has collapsed with the states and parties which sustained it,and, in Europe at least, writings in this tradition are now unreadable, except as historicaldocu-ments, or as liturgy for the fragmented groups <strong>of</strong> old believers who continue to keepthe faith. The question which remains posed is how far this erasure will affect otherMarxist traditions which have been outlined in the present chapter.The answer can as yet be only speculative, but it is probable that the future <strong>of</strong> Marxismas an identifiable philosophy will depend on the persistence or emergence <strong>of</strong> states,groupings or movements which can provide a plausible institutional basis for theimperative to change the world as well as interpreting it. It is unlikely for the foreseeablefuture that any individual state will provide such a basis, and the calamities which haveovertaken those which did so in the past will more probably serve as a counter-example.Similarly the health and influence <strong>of</strong> those political parties which still claim the namecommunist or Marxist suggests that they are scarcely better placed. If the link betweentheory and practice is taken seriously, then the failure <strong>of</strong> practice must call into questionthe validity <strong>of</strong> the theory. It is only a partial defence to argue that the previous practicalimplementation <strong>of</strong> the theory was deficient, since that accepts a substantive severance <strong>of</strong>the link.If the chief originality <strong>of</strong> Marxism is that it claimed to have the means to put its theoryinto practice, then it has largely lost that originality. An attenuated commitment to changewould effectively place Marxism in the same position as any <strong>of</strong> a number <strong>of</strong> philosophieswhich express moral or social imperatives with general hortatory effect. Viewed in thislight, it becomes less important to set precise limits on what may be called Marxism. Formost <strong>of</strong> its history, Marxist philosophy has had an active and influential place as a strandin many currents <strong>of</strong> thought. Some, like the Frankfurt school, took it as a starting point;some, like the French existentialists, attempted to marry it with another tradition; andsome, like the structuralists, accepted it as one element feeding into their theory. There isno reason to suppose that the process <strong>of</strong> intellectual cross-fertilization is likely to comeabruptly to an end.The loss <strong>of</strong> a distinct and coherent tradition <strong>of</strong> Marxist philosophy would in somerespects liberate its proponents from their obligations to a collectivity, and perhaps als<strong>of</strong>rom the authority <strong>of</strong> a canon. In other respects, however, it would remove a point <strong>of</strong>reference and an identity, which has had the unusual role <strong>of</strong> forming common links


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 206between the different cultural and intellectual environments <strong>of</strong> Europe whether western,central or eastern, and <strong>of</strong> opening them out to a wider world outside. The resistance tooverarching world-views or master narratives is no doubt in part a response to theconstricting effects <strong>of</strong> international Marxism especially in its dogmatic forms. In a worldwhere postmodernism is setting the intellectual and cultural agenda, there may be a rolefor a humanist post-Marxism which retained its varieties and its international dimensionswithout proclaiming the necessity or authority to synthesize them. But if Benjamin’sangel <strong>of</strong> history is still being driven by the storm from paradise, it is unlikely to lingerover the debris that it leaves behind, and it remains to be seen how much <strong>of</strong> Marxistphilosophy will survive from the wreckage.BIBLIOGRAPHYThe following is a list <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> the relevant texts published in English. It is divided intoprimary texts and critical texts, though in the nature <strong>of</strong> the subject, the distinctionbetween the two is in some respects arbitrary.Primary texts7.1 Althusser, L. Essays in Ideology, London: Verso, 1984.7.2 Althusser, L. Essays in Self-criticism, London: New Left Books, 1976.7.3 Althusser, L. For Marx, London: Verso, 1990.7.4 Althusser, L. Reading Capital, London: New Left Books, 1970.7.5 Balibar, E. and Wallerstein, I. Race, Nation, Class: Ambiguous Identities, London:Verso, 1991.7.6 Benjamin, W. Charles Baudelaire, a Lyric Poet in the Era <strong>of</strong> High Capitalism,London: New Left Books, 1972.7.7 Benjamin, W. Illuminations, London: Jonathan Cape, 1970.7.8 Bhaskar, R. Dialectic, London: Verso, 1992.7.9 Bhaskar, R. Scientific Realism and Human Emancipation, London: Verso, 1986.7.10 Bloch, E. The Principle <strong>of</strong> Hope, 3 vols, Oxford: Blackwell, 1986.7.11 Colletti, L. From Rousseau to Lenin, London: New Left Books, 1972.7.12 Colletti, L. Marxism and Hegel, London: New Left Books, 1973.7.13 Cornforth, M. Communism and <strong>Philosophy</strong>, London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1980.7.14 Cornforth, M. The Open <strong>Philosophy</strong> and the Open Society, London: Lawrence &Wishart, 1968.7.15 Della Volpe, G. Critique <strong>of</strong> Taste, London: New Left Books, 1978.7.16 Della Volpe, G. Rousseau and Marx and Other Writings, London: Lawrence &Wishart, 1978.7.17 Engels, F. Anti-Dühring, London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1975.7.18 Engels, F. Dialectics <strong>of</strong> Nature, Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1972.7.19 Garaudy, R. Marxism in the Twentieth Century, London, 1970.7.20 Garaudy, R. The Turning Point <strong>of</strong> Socialism, London, 1970.7.21 Goldmann, L. The Hidden God, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1964.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 2077.22 Goldmann, L. The Human Sciences and <strong>Philosophy</strong>, London: Jonathan Cape, 1969.7.23 Gramsci, A. Letters from Prison, ed. L.Lawner, New York: Harper & Row, 1973.7.24 Gramsci, A. Selections from his Cultural Writings, ed. D.Forgacs and G. Nowell-Smith, London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1985.7.25 Gramsci, A. Selections from the Prison Notebooks, ed. Quintin Hoare andG.Nowell-Smith, London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1971.7.26 Ilyenkov, E.V. Dialectical Logic: Essays in its <strong>History</strong> and Theory, Moscow:Progress Publishers, 1977.7.27 Konstantinov, F.V. (ed.) The Fundamentals <strong>of</strong> Marxist-Leninist <strong>Philosophy</strong>,Moscow: Progress Publishers, 1974.7.28 Korsch, K. Marxism and <strong>Philosophy</strong>, London: New Left Books, 1970.7.29 Labriola, A. Essays on the Materialist Conception <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong>, Chicago: CharlesH.Kerr, 1908.7.30 Lenin, V.I. Collected Works, London: Lawrence & Wishart; Moscow, ProgressPublishers, 1972. <strong>Volume</strong> 18 contains Materialism and Empiriocriticism, and volume38 contains his Philosophical Notebooks.7.31 Lefebvre, H. Critique <strong>of</strong> Everyday Life, London: Verso, 1991.7.32 Lefebvre, J. Dialectical Materialism, London: Jonathan Cape, 1968,7.33 Lukács, G. The Destruction <strong>of</strong> Reason, London: Merlin, 1980.7.34 Lukács, G. <strong>History</strong> and Class Consciousness, London: Merlin, 1971.7.35 Lukács, G. The Ontology <strong>of</strong> Social Being, 3 vols, London: Merlin, 1978–80.7.36 Macherey, P. A Theory <strong>of</strong> Literary Production, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul,1978.7.37 Mao Tse-tung, Four Essays on <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Peking: Foreign Languages Press, 1966.7.38 Mao Tse-tung, Selected Works, vols 1–4, Peking: Foreign Languages Press, 1967–9.7.39 Marx, K. Selected Writings, ed. D.McLellan, Oxford: Oxford University Press,1977.7.40 Marx, K. and Engels, F. Basic Writings on Politics and <strong>Philosophy</strong>, ed. by L.S.Feuer, London: Fontana, 1969.7.41 Marx, K., and Engels, F. Collected Works, London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1975–.About two-thirds <strong>of</strong> the planned fifty volumes have now appeared.7.42 Oizerman, T.I. The Making <strong>of</strong> the Marxist <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Moscow: ProgressPublishers, 1981.7.43 Plekhanov, G.V. Selected Philosophical Works, 5 vols, London: Lawrence &Wishart; Moscow, Progress Publishers, 1974. <strong>Volume</strong> 1 contains The Development <strong>of</strong>the Monist View <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong>.7.44 Roemer, J. (ed.) Analytical Marxism, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,1986.7.45 Timpanaro, S. On Materialism, London: New Left Books, 1975.Critical texts7.46 Acton, H.B. The Illusion <strong>of</strong> the Epoch, London: Cohen & West, 1955.7.47 Anderson, P. Considerations on Western Marxism, London: New Left Books, 1976.7.48 Anderson, P. Arguments within English Marxism, London: Verso, 1980.


Philosophies <strong>of</strong> marxism 2087.49 Avinieri, S. Varieties <strong>of</strong> Marxism, The Hague: Martinus Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1977.7.50 Benton, T. The Rise and Fall <strong>of</strong> Structural Marxism, London: Macmillan, 1984.7.51 Berki, R.N. The Genesis <strong>of</strong> Marxism, London: Dent, 1988.7.52 Berlin, I. Karl Marx, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1978.7.53 Boggs, C. Gramsci’s Marxism, London: Pluto Press, 1976.7.54 Borkenau, F. European Communism, London: Faber, 1953.7.55 Borkenau, F. World Communism,University <strong>of</strong> Michigan Press, 1962.7.56 Bottomore, T. (ed.) A Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Marxist Thought, London: Blackwell, 1983.7.57 Callinicos, A. Althusser’s Marxism, London: Pluto Press, 1976.7.58 Callinicos, A. Marxism and <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1983.7.59 Carver, T. Marx and Engels, London: Wheatsheaf Books, 1983.7.60 Caute, D. Communism and the French Intellectuals, London: Macmillan, 1964.7.61 Caute, D. The Fellow-travellers, London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1973.7.62 De George, R.T. Patterns <strong>of</strong> Soviet Thought, Ann Arbor, 1966.7.63 De George, R.T. The New Marxism, New York, 1968.7.64 Derfler, L. Paul Lafargue and the Founding <strong>of</strong> French Marxism, Cambridge, Mass.:Harvard University Press, 1991.7.65 Deutscher, I. Stalin: A Political Biography, Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1966.7.66 Deutscher, I. Marxism in Our Time, London: Jonathan Cape, 1972.7.67 Eagleton, T. Walter Benjamin, or Towards a Revolutionary Criticism, London:Verso, 1981.7.68 Elliott, G. Althusser, the Detour <strong>of</strong> Theory, London: Verso, 1987.7.69 Evans, M. Lucien Goldmann, Brighton: Harvester Press, 1981.7.70 Fiori, G. Antonio Gramsci: Life <strong>of</strong> a Revolutionary, London: New Left Books, 1970.7.71 German, R.A. (ed.) A Biographical Dictionary <strong>of</strong> Neo-Marxism, Westport:Greenwood Press, 1985.7.72 Hirsh, A. The French New Left, Boston: South End Press, 1981.7.73 Holub, R. Antonio Gramsci: Beyond Marxism and Postmodernism, London:<strong>Routledge</strong>, 1992.7.74 Hudson, W. The Marxist <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Ernst Bloch, London: Macmillan, 1982.7.75 Hunt, I. Analytical and Dialectical Marxism, London: Avebury, 1993.7.76 Hyppolite, J. Studies on Marx and Hegel, New York, 1969.7.77 Jacoby, R. Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Defeat: The Contours <strong>of</strong> Western Marxism, Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, 1981.7.78 Jameson, F. Marxism and Form, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1971.7.79 Judt, T. Marxism and the French Left, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986.7.80 Kelly, M. Modern French Marxism, Oxford: Blackwell, 1982.7.81 Kolakowski, L. Main Currents <strong>of</strong> Marxism, 3 vols, Oxford: Oxford UniversityPress, 1978.7.82 Labedz, L. Revisionism: Essays on the <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Marxist Ideas, London and NewYork, 1961.7.83 Leonhard, W. The Three Faces <strong>of</strong> Marxism, New York: Holt, Rinehart & Winston,1974.7.84 Lichtheim, G. Marxism in Modern France, London and New York: ColumbiaUniversity Press, 1966.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 2097.85 Lichtheim, G. Marxism, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 3rd impression, 1967.7.86 Lichtheim, G. Lukács, London: Fontana, 1970.7.87 Lukes, S. Marxism and Morality, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1985.7.88 MacIntyre, S. A Proletarian Science: Marxism in Britain 1917–1933, London:Lawrence & Wishart, 1986.7.89 Matthews, B. (ed.) Marx 100 Years on, London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1983.7.90 Merquior, J.G. Western Marxism, London: Paladin, 1986.7.91 Mészáros, I. Lukács’ Concept <strong>of</strong> Dialectic, London: Merlin, 1972.7.92 Mouffe, C. (ed.) Gramsci and Marxist Theory, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul,1979.7.93 Poster, M. Existential Marxism in Postwar France, Princeton: Princeton UniversityPress, 1975.7.94 Rossi-Landi. F. Marxism and Ideology, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990.7.95 Scanlan, J.P. Marxism in the USSR, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985.7.96 Schram, S.R. Mao Tse-tung, Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1966.7.97 Schram, S.R. The Political Thought <strong>of</strong> Mao Tse-tung, Harmondsworth: PenguinBooks, 1969.7.98 Sowell, T. Marxism, <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Economics, London, George Allen & Unwin,1985.7.99 Tismaneaunu, V. The Crisis <strong>of</strong> Marxist Ideology in Eastern Europe, London: CroomHelm, 1988.7.100 Wetter, G. Dialectical Materialism, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1958.


CHAPTER 8Critical theoryHorkheimer, Adorno, HabermasDavid RasmussenHEGEL, MARX AND THE IDEA OF A CRITICAL THEORYCritical theory 1 is a metaphor for a certain kind <strong>of</strong> theoretical orientation which owes itsorigin to Hegel and Marx, its systematization to Horkheimer and his associates at theInstitute for Social Research in Frankfurt, and its development to successors, particularlyto the group led by Jürgen Habermas, who have sustained it under various redefinitions tothe present day. As a term, critical theory is both general and specific. In general it refersto that critical element in German philosophy which began with Hegel’s critique <strong>of</strong> Kant.More specifically it is associated with a certain orientation towards philosophy whichfound its twentieth-century expression in Frankfurt.What is critical theory? The term bears the stamp <strong>of</strong> the nascent optimism <strong>of</strong> thenineteenth century; a critical theory can change society. Critical theory is a tool <strong>of</strong> reasonwhich, when properly located in a historical group, can transform the world.‘Philosophers have always interpreted the world, the point is to change it.’ So statesMarx’s famous eleventh thesis on Feuerbach. Marx got this idea from Hegel who, in hisPhenomenology <strong>of</strong> Spirit, 2 developed the concept <strong>of</strong> the moving subject which, throughthe process <strong>of</strong> self-reflection, comes to know itself at ever higher levels <strong>of</strong> consciousness.Hegel was able to combine a philosophy <strong>of</strong> action with a philosophy <strong>of</strong> reflection in sucha manner that activity or action was a necessary moment in the process <strong>of</strong> reflection. Thisgave rise to one <strong>of</strong> the most significant discourses in German philosophy, that <strong>of</strong> theproper relationship between theory and practice. Human practical activity, praxis in thesense that classical Greek philosophy had defined it, could transform theory. There aretwo famous instances where Hegel attempted to demonstrate the interrelationship <strong>of</strong>thought and action in his Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Spirit, namely, the master/ slave dialecticand the struggle between virtue and the way <strong>of</strong> the world. In the former example, whichattempts to demonstrate the proposition, ‘Self-Consciousness exists in and for itselfwhen, and by the fact that, it so exists for another: that is, it exists only in beingacknowledged,’ 3 the slave transforms his or her identity by moulding and shaping theworld and thus becomes something other than a slave. In the latter example, the modernway <strong>of</strong> the world (essentially Adam Smith’s concept <strong>of</strong> the political economy <strong>of</strong> civilsociety) triumphs over the ancient classical concept <strong>of</strong> virtue as a higher form <strong>of</strong> humanself-knowledge oriented toward freedom. Historical development, as theinstitutionalization <strong>of</strong> human action, became an element in human rationality. Criticaltheory derives its basic insight from the idea that thought can transform itself through a


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 211process <strong>of</strong> self-reflection in history.Marx, early on in his development in a text that has come down to us under the title Onthe Jewish Question, 4 argued from Hegel’s critical insight into the context <strong>of</strong> modernsociety. Having already done an analysis a few months before <strong>of</strong> Hegel’s <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong>Right, he turned his attention to the development <strong>of</strong> the modern state by reflecting onBruno Bauer’s essay by the same name. Here, he would come to the conclusion that thecourse <strong>of</strong> human freedom culminating in the modern state (which Hegel had so brilliantlydocumented as leading from slavery to emancipation—the so-called course <strong>of</strong> humanreason) was no emancipation at all. Indeed, the promised liberation <strong>of</strong> modern societyfrom the shackles <strong>of</strong> the Middle Ages had not occurred. Hence, the task <strong>of</strong> socialemancipation which could be carried on by critical reflection would lead the very agents<strong>of</strong> that reflection to a further task, namely, the transformation <strong>of</strong> society throughrevolution. Consequently, the promise <strong>of</strong> critical theory would be radical socialtransformation. The ancient assumption that the purpose <strong>of</strong> reflection was for knowledgeitself, allied with the further assumption that pure contemplation was the proper end <strong>of</strong>the human subject, was replaced by another end <strong>of</strong> reflection also to be derived fromclassical thought, but with its own peculiarly modern twist; theory when allied withpraxis has a proper political end, namely, social transformation.However, for Marx this was not enough. Two factors remained. First, whence was suchknowledge to be derived? Second, what would be the nature <strong>of</strong> such knowledge?Between the autumn <strong>of</strong> 1843 and the summer <strong>of</strong> 1844, Marx would provide answers toboth questions. The answers came in the form <strong>of</strong> a class theory in which the newlyemerging ‘proletariat’ were to play the central role. For Marx, they became the concretesubject <strong>of</strong> history with the result that hopes for emancipation would be anchored in acritical theory, which would in turn be associated with the activity <strong>of</strong> a particular class.Again, Hegel had provided the groundwork for this understanding by associating thebasic interest in civil society in his philosophy <strong>of</strong> law with the interest <strong>of</strong> a particularStände. Of the three orders <strong>of</strong> society—agricultural, business and civil service—it wasonly the latter which could represent the universal interests <strong>of</strong> humankind. With Marx,that latter task was transferred from the civil servants, who could no longer be trusted, tothe proletariat, who he somewhat confidently asserted would bring about the socialrevolution necessary to overcome the contradictions with modern political society.With regard to the second question, it was again Hegel, the philosopher <strong>of</strong> modernitypar excellence, who taught Marx to look not to intuition per se but to the manifestation <strong>of</strong>reason in practical institutional form for an appropriate understanding <strong>of</strong> the world. Hegelhad been the first philosopher both to understand and to use the work <strong>of</strong> the politicaleconomists in his work. Marx, first in a review <strong>of</strong> James Mill’s Elements <strong>of</strong> PoliticalEconomy and later in a much more elaborate fashion, would work out a thesis about thedynamics <strong>of</strong> history leading him to assert that economic activity had a certain priority inthe development <strong>of</strong> history.This thesis would lead Marx to assert shortly thereafter, in The German Ideology, 5 thatfor the first time real history could begin. The very assumption behind a book which hadthe audacity to put the term ‘ideology’ into the title was that thought alone wasideological. There was a higher truth which Marx, through his methodology, would beable to attain, namely the ‘productive’ activity <strong>of</strong> humankind. Human history would then


Critical theory 212be simultaneous with human production. The term for this new approach to the world <strong>of</strong>reflection and action would be ‘historical materialism’ and it would attack other more‘idealistic’ modes <strong>of</strong> thinking as ‘ideological’. Hence, a critical theory would be able tounearth the false presumptions that had heret<strong>of</strong>ore held humanity in their sway. Later, inCapital, Marx would label the kind <strong>of</strong> thinking which he had characterized as ‘ideology’in The German Ideology as ‘fetishism’. He did so in the famous last section <strong>of</strong> the firstchaper <strong>of</strong> volume 1, entitled ‘The fetishism <strong>of</strong> commodities and the secret there<strong>of</strong>.Marx’s choice and use <strong>of</strong> metaphor is interesting, if not compelling. He uses ‘ideology’,‘fetishism’ and ‘secret’ as if there was some ominous conspiracy against humankindwhich a certain kind <strong>of</strong> critical and theoretical orientation could unmask. The term‘fetishism’ had a religious origin designating a fundamental confusion regardingperceptual orientations to the world. The very assumption that a certain theoreticalorientation could unleash the ‘secret’ behind ideology as a kind <strong>of</strong> ‘fetishism’ representeda kind <strong>of</strong> confidence that would not only shape the historical development <strong>of</strong> criticaltheory in the future, but also unearth its problematic nature.At the risk <strong>of</strong> oversimplification, one might state that there are two basic strains in thehistory <strong>of</strong> German philosophy. One strain argues that thought or reason is constitutive,the other that it is transformative. The former orientation can be traced to the debateinitiated by Kant over the limits <strong>of</strong> human reason, while the latter can be traced toHegel’s philosophy <strong>of</strong> history, which attempted to locate philosophical reflection in adiscourse about the history <strong>of</strong> human freedom.Critical theory could be said to ally itself with this latter theme, even though theconstitutive element would play an ever more significant role. In its classical, Hegelian-Marxist, context, critical theory rests on the nascent Enlightenment assumption thatreflection is emancipatory. But what is the epistemological ground for this claim? Inother words, how is thought constitutive for action? Which form <strong>of</strong> action is proper,appropriate or correct? In the early writings, Marx attempted to ground theepistemological claims <strong>of</strong> transformative action in the concept <strong>of</strong> Gattungswesen, i.e.,species being. This concept, taken directly from Ludwig Feuerbach, who in turn hadconstructed it from both Hegel and Aristotle, affirms that in contrast to the radicalindividuation <strong>of</strong> the subject in modern thought, the aim or purpose <strong>of</strong> a human being is tobe determined through intersubjective social action. In Hegelian terms, one constitutesvalid self-knowledge through social interaction defined as human labour. According toMarx, the problem with the modern productive process is that it fails to allow the workerto constitute him-or herself as a species being, i.e., as a person who can function foranother human being. Hence, the labour process reduces him or her to an animal, asopposed to a human, level making him or her autonomous, competitive and inhuman—co-operating with the productive process and not with other human beings. The point <strong>of</strong>revolution would be to bring the human being to his or her full and proper capacities as abeing for whom the species would be the end, object and aim.There were problems with this view. To be sure, Marx represents the culmination <strong>of</strong> acertain kind <strong>of</strong> political theory that began with Hobbes, and which was in turn critical <strong>of</strong>original anthropological assumptions that saw the human being as an autonomous agentemerging from a state <strong>of</strong> nature. However, in a certain sense, the concept <strong>of</strong> species-beingwas as metaphysical as the Hobbesian notion <strong>of</strong> the human being in a state <strong>of</strong> nature, a


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 213view which was so aptly and appropriately criticized by Rousseau. It is my view thatMarx was aware <strong>of</strong> the essentially epistemological problem that lay at the foundation <strong>of</strong>his own thought. Does one ground a theory <strong>of</strong> emancipation on certain anthropologicalassumptions regarding the nature <strong>of</strong> the species, assumptions which were as metaphysicalas those the theory was attempting to criticize? Marx attempted to overcome thisdilemma by providing historical evidence. In this context, his later work, the volumes <strong>of</strong>Capital, represent a massive attempt to give an account <strong>of</strong> human agency which was bothhistorical and scientific. Hence, the quest for a valid constitutive ground for criticaltheory began with Marx himself. Marx as a political economist would bring massivehistorical research to bear on the claim that capitalism is merely a phase in humandevelopment and not the be-all and end-all <strong>of</strong> history. Hence, as a true Hegelian, hewould assert that like any economic system it bore the seeds <strong>of</strong> its own destruction. As aconsequence, the metaphysical claims present in the notion <strong>of</strong> species-being would reemergeas a claim about the implicit but incomplete socialization present in capitalism,which, when rationalized, would transform the latter into socialism. As is well known,Marx even went beyond that to attempt to develop, on the basis <strong>of</strong> his historicalinvestigations, a scientific, predictive formula announcing the end <strong>of</strong> capitalism on thebasis <strong>of</strong> the ‘falling rate <strong>of</strong> pr<strong>of</strong>it’. The formula assumed that as capital advanced it wouldbe able to generate less and less pr<strong>of</strong>it and so would lose its own incentive. Hence, theforce <strong>of</strong> capitalism, unleashed, would lead to its own imminent self-destruction. Thevictor, <strong>of</strong> course, would be socialism, which would emerge from the fray, new-born andpure, the ultimate rationalization <strong>of</strong> the irrationalism implicit in capitalism. As the familywould inevitably give way to the force <strong>of</strong> civil society in Hegel’s philosophy <strong>of</strong> law, socapitalism would break down and re-emerge as socialism.In 1844 the young Marx had accused his one acknowledged theoretical mentor, Hegel,<strong>of</strong> harbouring a certain ‘latent positivism’. 6 There are those who would accuse the olderMarx <strong>of</strong> having done the same. If capitalism is to fall <strong>of</strong> its own weight, what is the linkbetween thought and revolutionary action that so inspired the younger Marx? Indeed,what role would the proletariat, the heret<strong>of</strong>ore messianic class <strong>of</strong> underlings, play in thetransformation <strong>of</strong> society? And what <strong>of</strong> critical theory? It too would be transformed intojust one more scientific, predictive positivistic model. In Marx’s favour, this desire tosecure the claims <strong>of</strong> a critical theory on the firm foundation <strong>of</strong> positivistic science wasalways in tension with the more critical claims <strong>of</strong> exhaustive historical analysis. But itwas Marx himself who bequeathed to the late nineteenth century, and subsequently byimplication to the twentieth century, the ambiguities <strong>of</strong> a critical theory. One couldimagine the great social thinkers <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth and twentieth centuries comingtogether to pose a single question: upon what can we ground a critical theory? Would itbe the proletariat now transformed into the working class? economic scientific analysis?the critical reflection <strong>of</strong> a specific historically chosen agent (the vanguard)? informedindividual praxis? Perhaps critical theory would produce a ‘dialectic <strong>of</strong> enlightenment’ socunning that its very inauguration would produce its own destruction as certain later heirswould predict. Certainly, the late nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries saw theconcretization <strong>of</strong> a particular form <strong>of</strong> Marxism in a political society, not merely in theformer USSR but also in the various workers’ movements in Europe and elsewhere, aswell as in the founding <strong>of</strong> the International, which would raise these questions. A kind <strong>of</strong>


Critical theory 214critical theory found its apologists from Engels to Lenin, from Bernstein to Luxemburg,from Kautsky to Plekhanov. Yet the systematization <strong>of</strong> critical theory as a model <strong>of</strong>reflection owes its life in the twentieth century to a group <strong>of</strong> academics who, originallyinspired by the German workers’ movement, attempted to give to critical theory a life inthe German university.FROM GRÜNBURG TO HORKHEIMER: THE FOUNDATION OFCRITICAL THEORYAlthough the term ‘critical theory’ in the twentieth century owes its definition primarilyto an essay written in 1937 by Max Horkheimer, 7 the institute which became associatedwith this term was founded almost two decades earlier. Certainly one <strong>of</strong> the moreinteresting experiments in the history <strong>of</strong> German institutional thought began when FelixWeil, the son <strong>of</strong> a German exporter <strong>of</strong> grains from Argentina, convinced his father,Hermann, to provide an endowment which would enable a yearly income <strong>of</strong> DM 120,000to establish, in the year 1922, an Institute for Social Research in affiliation with theUniversity <strong>of</strong> Frankfurt. Weil, inspired by the workers’ movement, and having written athesis on socialism, wanted an institute which could deal directly with the problems <strong>of</strong>Marxism on a par equal to other established disciplines in the University. The firstcandidate for director, Kurt Albert Gerlach, who planned a series <strong>of</strong> inaugural lectures onsocialism, anarchism and Marxism, died <strong>of</strong> diabetes before he could begin. Hisreplacement, Karl Grünberg, a pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> law and political science from the University<strong>of</strong> Vienna, an avowed Marxist, who had begun in the year <strong>of</strong> 1909 an Archive for the<strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Socialism and the Worker’s Movement, was present at the <strong>of</strong>ficial creation <strong>of</strong>the Institute on 3 February 1922. In his opening address, he indicated that Marxismwould be the guiding principle <strong>of</strong> the Institute. And so it was for a decade. To be sure, itwas the kind <strong>of</strong> Marxism that was still inspired by the nineteenth century, by the idea <strong>of</strong>the proletariat, by the workers’ movement, by the example <strong>of</strong> the Soviet Union and theMarx-Engels Institute in Moscow, by the conception <strong>of</strong> Marxism as a kind <strong>of</strong> sciencewhich could penetrate heret<strong>of</strong>ore unknown truths which had been obscured by so-called‘bourgeois’ thought. Indeed, mocking Frankfurt students celebrated its orthodoxy byreferring to it as ‘Café Marx’.Certainly, Marxism need not be vulgar to be orthodox. Academic problems which werestandard fare for a now more or less established theoretical tradition were commonplace.Principal among them was the study <strong>of</strong> the workers’ movement. Indeed, if Marxian classtheory was correct, the proletariat were to bear the distinctive role <strong>of</strong> being those whowere able to interpret history and bring about the transformation that such insight wouldsustain. Praxis would then be associated solely with their activity. From anepistemological point <strong>of</strong> view, the problem <strong>of</strong> the relation <strong>of</strong> theory to praxis would berevealed. As Lukács would later think, there would be a certain transparent identitybetween Marxian social theory and the activity <strong>of</strong> the working class. Hence, academicstudy <strong>of</strong> the working class would be the most appropriate, indeed, the most proper,subject <strong>of</strong> study for an institute which conceived itself in Marxist terms.For the Institute for Social Research at that time, Marxism was conceived by analogy


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 215to science. Hence, the original works <strong>of</strong> the Institute were associated with capitalistaccumulation and economic planning, studies <strong>of</strong> the economy in China, agriculturalrelations in France, imperialism and, along with this, through close collaboration with theSoviet Union, the establishment <strong>of</strong> a collection <strong>of</strong> the unpublished works <strong>of</strong> Marx andEngels. However, it wasn’t until the leadership passed from Grünberg to the more ablehands <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the young assistants at the institute, Max Horkheimer, in 1931, that theInstitute was to make its mark through both productivity and scholarship. AlthoughHorkheimer was never the believing Marxist Grünberg had been, certain events inGermany and the world would shape the Institute, distancing it from Marxian orthodoxy.The rise <strong>of</strong> fascism and the splintering <strong>of</strong> the workers’ movement as well as theStalinization <strong>of</strong> Russia would force the Institute to stray from the conventional Marxistwisdom about both theory and science as well as shake its confidence in the workers’movement.During the 1930s, the roster <strong>of</strong> the institute would include Theodor Adorno, LeoLowenthal, Erich Fromm, Fredrich Pollach, Herbert Marcuse, Walter Benjamin(indirectly though, since he never became a fully-fledged member) and others. Althougheach figure would eventually be known for independent work, and although certainmembers would break with the general orientation <strong>of</strong> the Institute, in retrospect what issomewhat amazing about this illustrious group <strong>of</strong> scholars was its concern for sharing acommon theoretical programme under a distinctive directorship. Indeed, the two mostpowerful theoretical minds, Adorno (1903–69) and Horkheimer (1895–1973), continuedto collaborate for their entire lifetimes. Also, it was during this period that the distinctiveperspective with which this group came to be identified began to be developed. Moderncritical theory can be dated from this period.The problematic which sparked a critical theory <strong>of</strong> the modern form was the demise <strong>of</strong>the working class as an organ <strong>of</strong> appropriate revolutionary knowledge and action coupledwith the rise <strong>of</strong> fascism and the emergence <strong>of</strong> Stalinization. Taken together, these eventswould de-couple the link between theory and revolutionary practice centred in theproletariat which had become commonplace in Marxian theory. What became apparent toHorkheimer and others at the Institute was that once this link was broken, essentially thelink with a certain form <strong>of</strong> ideology, it would be necessary to forge a unique theoreticalperspective in the context <strong>of</strong> modern thought in general and German thought in particular.It would not be enough either comfortably to study the workers’ movement or to defineMarxist science. The road upon which the Institute embarked would have to bear its owndistinctive stamp and character. In brief, not only would this de-coupling give criticaltheory its peculiar dynamic for the 1930s but, as the torch was passed in the 1960s to ayounger generation, this same thrust would give it definition. Hence, while Grünberg’sArchive for the <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Socialism and the Workers’ Movement would define theInstitute in more traditional Marxian terms, the chief organ <strong>of</strong> the Institute underHorkheimer, The Journal for Social Research, would record a different purpose, namelythe movement away from Marxian materialism. Writing in 1968 Jürgen Habermas wouldput it this way:Since the years after World War II the idea <strong>of</strong> the growing wretchedness <strong>of</strong> theworkers, out <strong>of</strong> which Marx saw rebellion and revolution emerging as a


Critical theory 216transitional step to the reign <strong>of</strong> freedom, had for long periods become abstractand illusory, and at least as out <strong>of</strong> date as the ideologies despised by the young.The living conditions <strong>of</strong> laborers and employees at the time <strong>of</strong> The CommunistManifesto were the outcome <strong>of</strong> open oppression. Today they are instead motivesfor trade union organization and for discussion between dominant economic andpolitical groups. The revolutionary thrust <strong>of</strong> the proletariat has long sincebecome realistic action within the framework <strong>of</strong> society. In the minds <strong>of</strong> men atleast, the proletariat has been integrated into society.(Critical Theory [8.104], vi)Horkheimer’s 1937 essay, ‘Traditional and Critical Theory’, which attempted tosystematically define critical theory, does not begin by underlining an association with theMarxist heritage which still distinguished the Institute and journal with which it wasassociated. Rather the essay begins by trying to answer the more general question regardingtheory per se, ‘What is theory?’ (ibid., p. 188). In the traditional sense, theory is akind <strong>of</strong> generalization based upon experience. From Descartes to Husserl theory has beenso defined, argues Horkheimer. As such, however, theory traditionally defined has apeculiar kind <strong>of</strong> prejudice which favours the natural sciences. Horkheimer, reflecting thegreat Diltheyian distinction between Geisteswissenschaften (social sciences) andNaturwissenschaften (natural sciences) makes the appropriate criticism. Social scienceimitates natural science in its self-definition as theory. Put simply, the study <strong>of</strong> societymust conform to the facts. But Horkheimer would argue that it is not quite so simple.Experience is said to conform to generalizations. The generalizations tend to conform tocertain ideas present in the minds <strong>of</strong> the researchers. The danger is apparent: so defined,theory conforms to the ideas in the mind <strong>of</strong> the researcher and not to experience itself.The word for this phenomenon, derived from the development <strong>of</strong> the Marxist theoreticaltradition following Lukács’s famous characterization in 1934, is ‘reification’. Horkheimerdoesn’t hesitate to use it. Regarding the development <strong>of</strong> theory he states, ‘But theconception <strong>of</strong> theory was absolutized, as though it were grounded in the inner nature <strong>of</strong>knowledge as such, or justified in some other ahistorical way, and thus it became a reifiedideological category’ (ibid., p. 194). Although various theoretical approaches would comeclose to breaking out <strong>of</strong> the ideological constraints which restricted them, theoreticalapproaches such as positivism, pragmatism, neo-Kantianism and phenomenology,Horkheimer would argue that they failed. Hence, all would be subject to the logicomathematicalprejudice which separates theoretical activity from actual life. Theappropriate response to this dilemma is the development <strong>of</strong> a critical theory. ‘In fact,however, the self-knowledge <strong>of</strong> present-day man is not a mathematical knowledge <strong>of</strong>nature which claims to be the eternal logos, but a critical theory <strong>of</strong> society as it is, atheory dominated at every turn by a concern for reasonable conditions <strong>of</strong> life’ (ibid., p.199). Of course, the construction <strong>of</strong> a critical theory won’t be easy. Interestingly enough,Horkheimer defines the problem epistemologically. ‘What is needed is a radicalreconsideration not <strong>of</strong> the scientist alone, but <strong>of</strong> the knowing individual as such’ (ibid.).Horkheimer’s decision to take critical theory in the direction <strong>of</strong> epistemology was notwithout significance. Critical theory, which had heret<strong>of</strong>ore depended upon the Marxisttradition for its legitimation, would have to define itself by ever distancing itself from that


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 217tradition. Indeed, one <strong>of</strong> the peculiar ironies resulting from this particular turn is that thevery tradition out <strong>of</strong> which critical theory comes, namely Marxism, would itself fallunder the distinction between traditional and critical theory. Ultimately, in many ways theMarxist tradition was as traditional as all the other traditions. But, <strong>of</strong> course, the 1937essay fails to recognize this. Indeed, this dilemma <strong>of</strong> recognition would play itself out inthe post-1937 period. This is the very irony <strong>of</strong> the systematization <strong>of</strong> critical theory.Equally, this epistemological turn would change permanently the distinction andapproach <strong>of</strong> critical theory. As I suggested earlier, critical theory found its foundation inthe transformative tradition in German thought as inspired by Hegel and Marx. Now,having embarked upon an epistemological route, it would find it necessary to draw uponthe constitutive dimension <strong>of</strong> German thought. If one could not ground critical theory inMarxian orthodoxy, certainly the assumption behind the 1937 essay, it would benecessary to find the constitutive point <strong>of</strong> departure for critical theory in an analysis <strong>of</strong>knowledge as such. Unfortunately, Horkheimer was unprepared to follow his own uniqueinsight. Instead, the constitutive elements <strong>of</strong> knowledge to which he refers are taken in amore or less unexamined form from the Marxian heritage. The distinction betweenindividual and society, the concept <strong>of</strong> society as bourgeois, the idea that knowledgecentres in production, the critique <strong>of</strong> the so-called liberal individual as autonomous, theprimacy <strong>of</strong> the concept <strong>of</strong> history over logos—these so-called elements which areconstitutive <strong>of</strong> a critical theory were part <strong>of</strong> the Marxist heritage.Taken as a whole, ‘Tradition and Critical Theory’ is strongly influenced by theHegelian-Marxist idea that the individual is alienated from society, that liberal thoughtobscures this alienation, and that the task <strong>of</strong> critical theory must be to overcome thisalienation. Horkheimer put it this way,The separation between the individual and society in virtue <strong>of</strong> which theindividual accepts as natural the limits prescribed for his activity is relativizedin Critical Theory. The latter considers the overall framework which isconditioned by the blind interaction <strong>of</strong> individual activities (that is, the existentdivision <strong>of</strong> labour and class distinctions) to be a function which originates inhuman action and therefore is a possible object <strong>of</strong> painful decision and rationaldetermination <strong>of</strong> goals.(ibid., p. 207)Horkheimer is vehement in his critique <strong>of</strong> the kind <strong>of</strong> thought that characterizes so-called‘bourgeois’ individualism. For him, ‘bourgeois thought’ harbours a belief in an individualwho is ‘autonomous’ believing that it, the autonomous ego, is the ground <strong>of</strong> reality.Horkheimer counters this view with another, reminiscent <strong>of</strong> the early Marx. ‘Criticalthinking is the function neither <strong>of</strong> the isolated individual nor a sum total <strong>of</strong> individuals.Its subject is rather a definite individual in his real relation to other individuals andgroups, in his conflict with a particular class, and, finally, in the resultant web <strong>of</strong>relationships with the social totality and with nature’ (ibid., pp. 201–11).Of course, this view is dangerously close to traditional Marxian class theory andHorkheimer knows it. After all, who is this ‘definite individual’ whose ‘real relation’ is toother individuals? Traditional Marxist theory answered, the proletariat. Horkheimer is


Critical theory 218suspicious. ‘But it must be added that even the situation <strong>of</strong> the proleteriat is, in thissociety, no guarantee <strong>of</strong> correct knowledge’ (ibid., p. 213). Horkheimer is hard pressed t<strong>of</strong>ind the appropriate replacement <strong>of</strong> the proletariat without falling back into what hecalled ‘bourgeois individualism’. He is doubtful <strong>of</strong> the proletariat’s ability somehow to‘rise above…differentiation <strong>of</strong> social structure…imposed from above’. But if he wants toeliminate the proletariat as a source <strong>of</strong> truth or correct knowledge, he doesn’t quite do it.Indeed, the intellectual or critic can proclaim his or her identity with the proletariat.Horkheimer is not entirely without optimism. ‘The intellectual is satisfied to proclaimwith relevant admiration the creative strength <strong>of</strong> the proletariat and finds satisfaction inadapting himself to it and canonizing it’ (ibid., p. 214). Indeed, Horkheimer is optimisticabout this identification. If, however, the theoretician and his specific object are seen asforming a dynamic unity with the oppressed class, so that his presentation <strong>of</strong> societalcontradictions is not merely the expression <strong>of</strong> the concrete historical situation but also aforce within it to stimulate change, then his real function emerges’ (ibid., p. 215).Horkheimer’s reliance on Marxian doctrine as the epistemological foundation forcritical theory becomes more apparent as the essay develops. Hence, a critical theory <strong>of</strong>society will show ‘how an exchange economy, given the condition <strong>of</strong> men (which, <strong>of</strong>course, changes under the very influence <strong>of</strong> such an economy), must necessarily lead to aheightening <strong>of</strong> those social tensions which in the present historical era lead in turn towars and revolution’ (ibid., p. 266). As such, critical theory has a peculiar insight into thepotential history <strong>of</strong> modern society. As Marx used political economy and the theory <strong>of</strong>the primacy <strong>of</strong> production, Horkheimer will use this model <strong>of</strong> economic determinism topredict the development <strong>of</strong> social contradictions in the modern world. Indeed, he goes asfar as to state that critical theory rests upon a ‘single existential judgment’, namely, ‘thebasic form <strong>of</strong> the historically given commodity economy, on which modern history rests,contains in itself the internal and external tensions <strong>of</strong> the modern era’ (ibid., p. 227).Equally, critical theory will be able to overcome the ‘Cartesian dualism’ thatcharacterized contemporary traditional theory by linking critical with practical activity,theory and praxis. Indeed, it was this belief that critical theory was somehow related topractical activity that would distinguish this kind <strong>of</strong> theoretical endeavour. ‘The thinkermust relate all the theories which are proposed to the practical attitudes and social stratawhich they reflect’ (ibid., p. 232).In retrospect, one may view this 1937 declaration as something <strong>of</strong> a tour de forceattempting to break away from at least some <strong>of</strong> the most fundamental tenets <strong>of</strong> traditionalMarxist theory, while at the same time in a curious way being caught in the very web <strong>of</strong>the system from which it was trying to escape. Hence, while dissociating itself from theassumption that truth and proper knowledge were to be rendered through the proletariat,the fundamental tenet <strong>of</strong> Marxian class theory, this treatise on critical theory celebratedconcepts such as economic determinism, reification, critique <strong>of</strong> autonomy and socialcontradiction—assumptions derived from traditional Marxian social theory—as validnotions. Simultaneously, this position could not seek to justify itself independently <strong>of</strong> theevents <strong>of</strong> the time. As the French Revolution determined Hegel’s concept <strong>of</strong> the politicalend <strong>of</strong> philosophy as human freedom, and as the burgeoning Industrial Revolutiondetermined Marx’s thought, critical theory attempted to respond to the events <strong>of</strong> the time,the decline <strong>of</strong> the workers’ movement and the rise <strong>of</strong> fascism. Hence, the indelible mark


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 219<strong>of</strong> the Institute, and <strong>of</strong> the essay on critical theory in the decade <strong>of</strong> the 1930s, was theconviction that thought was linked to social justice. The thesis, as old as the GermanEnlightenment itself, was that thought could somehow be emancipatory. Thepredominance <strong>of</strong> this view gave the Institute its particular character, especially whencontrasted to the other German philosophical movements <strong>of</strong> the time, phenomenology,existentialism and, to some extent, positivism. Although influenced by the same set <strong>of</strong>events as the other German philosophical movements it was critical theory that was todistinguish itself by addressing the political oppression <strong>of</strong> the day.HORKHEIMER, ADORNO, AND THE DIALECTICALTRANSFORMATION OF CRITICAL THEORYCritical theory in the post-1937 period would be characterized by two essentially relatedperspectives, one which broadened its critique <strong>of</strong> modes <strong>of</strong> rationality under the heading‘critique <strong>of</strong> instrumental reason’ and the other which attempted a grand analysis <strong>of</strong>culture and civilization under the heading ‘dialectic <strong>of</strong> enlightenment’. With theonslaught <strong>of</strong> the Second World War, Horkheimer and Adorno shared not only a deeppessimism about the future course <strong>of</strong> rationality but also a loss <strong>of</strong> hope in thepotentialities <strong>of</strong> a philosophy <strong>of</strong> history for purposes <strong>of</strong> social transformation. Theconfidence in the great potentialities <strong>of</strong> thought as unleashed by the GermanEnlightenment went underground, replaced by the pessimism <strong>of</strong> the two major thinkers <strong>of</strong>critical theory who gave up not only on being thinkers in solidarity with the proletariatbut also on the redemptive powers <strong>of</strong> rationality itself. In this sense, not only do theyrepresent a critique <strong>of</strong> what is now quite fashionably called ‘modernity’, but they may bethe harbingers <strong>of</strong> postmodernity as well.In the course <strong>of</strong> the development <strong>of</strong> critical theory under the ever more pessimisticvision <strong>of</strong> its principal representatives, the focus would change from Hegel and Marx toWeber. Although they were never to give up entirely on Hegel and Marx, it was Weberwho would articulate the pessimistic underside <strong>of</strong> the Enlightenment which Horkheimerand Adorno would come to admire. Hegel, through his notion <strong>of</strong> reflection which made adistinction between true and false forms <strong>of</strong> externalization, between Entaüsserung andEntfremdung, always sustained the possiblity <strong>of</strong> reason being able to overcome itsfalsifications. Marx, although less attentive to this distinction, retained the possibility <strong>of</strong>overcoming falsification or alienation through social action. Hence, whether it wasthrough the reconciliatory power <strong>of</strong> reason in the case <strong>of</strong> Hegel, or the transformativeforce <strong>of</strong> social action in the case <strong>of</strong> Marx, a certain emancipatory project was held intact.Horkheimer, and eventually Adorno, initially endorsed that project. However, whenHorkheimer wrote his Critique <strong>of</strong> Instrumental Reason [8.105] it was under the influence<strong>of</strong> Weber’s brilliant, sobering vision regarding reason and action forged through acomprehensive analysis <strong>of</strong> the genesis and development <strong>of</strong> western society. Weber hadspeculated that in the course <strong>of</strong> western history, reason, as it secularizes, frees itself fromits more mythic and religious sources and becomes ever more purposive, more oriented tomeans to the exclusion <strong>of</strong> ends. In order to characterize this development, Weber coinedthe term Zweckrationalität, purposive-rational action. Reason, devoid <strong>of</strong> its redemptive


Critical theory 220and reconciliatory possibilities, could only be purposive, useful and calculating. Weberhad used the metaphor ‘iron cage’ as an appropriate way <strong>of</strong> designating the end, the deadend<strong>of</strong> modern reason. Horkheimer would take the analysis one step further. Hischaracterization <strong>of</strong> this course was designated by the term, ‘instrumental reason’. Impliedin this usage is the overwhelming force <strong>of</strong> reason for purposes <strong>of</strong> social control. Thecombined forces <strong>of</strong> media, bureaucracy, economy and cultural life would bear down onthe modern individual with an accumulated force which could be described only asinstrumental. Instrumental reason would represent the ever-expanding ability <strong>of</strong> thosewho were in positions <strong>of</strong> power in the modern world to dominate and control society fortheir own calculating purposes. So conceived, the kind <strong>of</strong> analysis which began with thegreat optimism inaugurated by the German Enlightenment (which sustained the beliefthat reason could come to comprehend the developing principle <strong>of</strong> history and thereforesociety) would end with the pessimistic realization that reason functions for socialcontrol, not in the name <strong>of</strong> enlightenment or emancipation. And what then <strong>of</strong> a criticaltheory?No doubt that question occurred to Horkheimer and Adorno, who, as exiles, nowsouthern Californians, collaborated on what in retrospect must be said to be one <strong>of</strong> themost fascinating books <strong>of</strong> modern times, Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment. Is enlightenment,the avowed aim <strong>of</strong> a critical theory, ‘self-destructive’? That is the question posed by thebook, the thesis <strong>of</strong> which is contained in its title. Enlightenment, which harbours the verypromise <strong>of</strong> human emancipation, becomes the principle <strong>of</strong> domination, domination <strong>of</strong>nature and thus, in certain hands, the basis for the domination <strong>of</strong> other human beings. Inthe modern world, knowledge is power. The book begins with an analysis <strong>of</strong> Bacon’s socalled‘scientific attitude’. The relation <strong>of</strong> ‘mind’ and ‘nature’ is ‘patriarchal’ (ibid., p. 4);‘the human mind, which overcomes superstition, is to hold sway over a disenchantednature’ (ibid.). ‘What men want to learn from nature is how to use it in order wholly todominate it and other men. That is the only aim’ (ibid.). Hence, ‘power and knowledge’are the same. But the thesis is more complex. The term ‘dialectic’ is used here in a formwhich transcends Hegel’s quasi-logical usage. Here dialectic circles back upon itself insuch a manner that its subject, enlightenment, both illuminates and destroys. Myth istransformed into enlightenment, but at the price <strong>of</strong> transforming ‘nature into mereobjectivity’ (ibid., p. 9). The increment <strong>of</strong> power gained with enlightenment has as itsequivalent a simultaneous alienation from nature. The circle is vicious: the greaterenlightenment, the greater alienation. Magic, with its desire to control, is replaced byscience in the modern world, which has not only the same end but more effective means.According to this thesis, the very inner core <strong>of</strong> myth is enlightenment. ‘The principle <strong>of</strong>immanence, the explanation <strong>of</strong> every event as repetition, that the enlightenment upholdsagainst mythic imagination, is the principle <strong>of</strong> myth itself’ (ibid., p. 12). Indeed, theyobserve, in the modern obsession with the mathematization <strong>of</strong> nature (the phenomenon soaccurately observed by Edmund Husserl in his famous The Crisis <strong>of</strong> European Scienceand Transcendental Phenomenology) they find representatives <strong>of</strong> a kind <strong>of</strong> ‘return <strong>of</strong> themythic’ in the sense that enlightenment always ‘intends to secure itself against the return<strong>of</strong> the mythic’. But it does so by degenerating into the ‘mythic cult <strong>of</strong> positivism’. In this‘mathematical formalism’, they claim, ‘enlightenment returns to mythology, which itnever knew how to elude’ (ibid., p. 27). Such is the peculiar character <strong>of</strong> the dialectic <strong>of</strong>


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 221enlightenment, which turns upon itself in such a way that it is subsumed by the veryphenomenon it wishes to overcome.Critical theory distinguishes itself in this period by ever distancing itself from theMarxian heritage with which it originally associated. Some would see this as a departurefrom the very sources <strong>of</strong> reason from which it was so effectively nourished. Hence, aform <strong>of</strong> rationality gone wild. Others might see it from a different perspective. Perhapsthe Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment represents the coming <strong>of</strong> age <strong>of</strong> critical theory as criticaltheory finally making the turn into the twentieth century. As such, the philosophy <strong>of</strong>history on which it so comfortably rested, with its secure assumptions about the place <strong>of</strong>enlightenment in the course <strong>of</strong> western history (to say nothing <strong>of</strong> the evolution <strong>of</strong> classand economy), was undercut by the authors’ curious insight into the nature <strong>of</strong>enlightenment itself. Enlightenment is not necessarily a temporal phenomenon given itsclaims for a particular time and place in modern historical development. Rather, forHorkheimer and Adorno, enlightenment is itself dialectical, a curious phenomenonassociated with rationality itself. In this view, the dialectic <strong>of</strong> enlightenment could betraced to the dawn <strong>of</strong> human civilization. Here we encounter a form <strong>of</strong> critical theoryinfluenced not only by Kant, Hegel, Marx and Weber but also by Nietzsche and perhapsKierkegaard. It would follow that texts that witnessed the evolution <strong>of</strong> human historywould be placed side by side with those which gave testimony to its origin.Enlightenment can then be traced not to the so-called German Enlightenment, or to thewestern European Enlightenment, but to the original written texts <strong>of</strong> western civilization,which, as any former Gymnasium student knows, were those <strong>of</strong> Homer. Nietzsche iscredited with the insight. ‘Nietzsche was one <strong>of</strong> the few after Hegel who recognized thedialectic <strong>of</strong> enlightenment’ (ibid., p. 44). They credit him with the double insight thatwhile enlightenment unmasks the acts <strong>of</strong> those who govern, it is also a tool they useunder the name <strong>of</strong> progress to dupe the masses. ‘The revelation <strong>of</strong> these two aspects <strong>of</strong>the Enlightenment as an historic principle made it possible to trace the notion <strong>of</strong>enlightenment as progressive thought, back to the beginning <strong>of</strong> traditional history’ (ibid.).Horkheimer and Adorno do not concentrate much on the illusory character <strong>of</strong> theenlightenment in Homer, ‘the basic text <strong>of</strong> European civilization’ as they call it. Thatelement has been over-emphasized by the so-called fascist interpreters <strong>of</strong> both Homer andNietzsche. Rather, it is the use or interpretation <strong>of</strong> myth as an instrument <strong>of</strong> dominationas evidenced in this classic text that they perceive as fundamental. Here, Weber andNietzsche complement one another. The other side <strong>of</strong> the dialectic <strong>of</strong> enlightenment is thethesis on instrumental reason. Hence, the ‘individuation’ <strong>of</strong> self which is witnessed in theHomeric text is carried out through what seems to be the opposition <strong>of</strong> enlightenment andmyth. ‘The opposition <strong>of</strong> enlightenment to myth is expressed in the opposition <strong>of</strong> thesurviving individual ego to multifarious fate’ (ibid., p. 46). The Homeric narrativesecularizes the mythic past in the name <strong>of</strong> the hero’s steadfast orientation to his own‘self-preservation’. It secularizes it by learning to dominate it. Learning to dominate hasto do with the ‘organization’ <strong>of</strong> the self. But the very instrumentality associated withdomination has its curious reverse side; something like that which Marcuse would latercall ‘the return <strong>of</strong> the repressed’. As they put it regarding Homer, ‘Like the heroes <strong>of</strong> allthe true novels later on, Odysseus loses himself in order to find himself; the estrangementfrom nature that he brings about is realized in the process <strong>of</strong> the abandonment to nature


Critical theory 222he contends in each adventure; and, ironically, when he, inexorably, returns home, theinexorable force he commands itself triumphs as the judge and avenger <strong>of</strong> the legacy <strong>of</strong>the powers from which he has escaped’ (ibid., p. 48).There is no place where this curious double thesis is more effectively borne out than inthe phenomenon <strong>of</strong> sacrifice. Influenced by Ludwig Klage’s contention regarding theuniversality <strong>of</strong> sacrifice, they observe that individuation undercuts the originary relation<strong>of</strong> the lunar being to nature which sacrifice implies. ‘The establishment <strong>of</strong> the self cutsthrough that fluctuating relation with nature that the sacrifice <strong>of</strong> the self claims toestablish’ (ibid., p. 51). Sacrifice, irrational though it may be, is a kind <strong>of</strong> enabling devicewhich allows one to tolerate life. ‘The venerable belief in sacrifice, however is probablyalready an impressed pattern according to which the subjected repeat upon themselves theinjustice that was done them, enacting it again and again in order to endure it’ (ibid.).Sacrifice, when universalized and said to apply to the experience <strong>of</strong> all <strong>of</strong> humanity, iscivilization. Its elimination would occur at enormous expense. The emergence <strong>of</strong>rationality is based on denial, the denial <strong>of</strong> the relationship between humanity and nature.‘The very denial, the nucleus <strong>of</strong> all civilizing rationality, is the germ cell <strong>of</strong> aproliferating mythic irrationality: with the denial <strong>of</strong> nature in man not merely the telos <strong>of</strong>the outward control <strong>of</strong> nature but the telos <strong>of</strong> man’s own life is distorted andbefogged’ (ibid., p. 54). The great loss is <strong>of</strong> course that the human being is no longer ableto perceive its relationship to nature in its compulsive preoccupation with selfpreservation.The dialectic <strong>of</strong> enlightenment continues to play itself out. To escape fromsacrifice is to sacrifice oneself. Hence the subthesis <strong>of</strong> Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment: ‘thehistory <strong>of</strong> civilization is the history <strong>of</strong> the introversion <strong>of</strong> sacrifice. In other words, thehistory <strong>of</strong> renunciation’ (ibid., p. 55). It is this sub-thesis that they associate with the‘prehistory <strong>of</strong> subjectivity’ (ibid., p. 54).The text to which Horkheimer and Adorno have turned their attention is written byHomer, but the story is about the prehistory <strong>of</strong> western civilization. Odysseus is theprophetic seer who in his deeds would inform the course <strong>of</strong> action to be followed byfuture individuals. Odysseus is the ‘self who always restrains himself, he sacrifices forthe ‘abnegation <strong>of</strong> sacrifice’ and through him we witness the ‘transformation <strong>of</strong> sacrificeinto subjectivity’. Above all, Odysseus ‘survives’, but ironically at the ‘concession <strong>of</strong>one’s own defeat’, an acknowledgement <strong>of</strong> death. Indeed, the rationality represented byOdysseus is that <strong>of</strong> ‘cunning’: a necessity required by having to choose the only routebetween Scylla and Charybdis in which each god has the ‘right’ to do its particular task.Together the gods represent ‘Olympian Justice’ characterized by an ‘equivalence betweenthe course, the crime which expiates it, and the guilt arising from that, which in turnreproduces the curse’ (ibid., p. 58). This is the pattern <strong>of</strong> ‘all justice in history’ whichOdysseus opposes. But he does so by succumbing to the power <strong>of</strong> this justice. He doesnot find a way to escape the route charted past the Sirens. Instead, he finds a way tooutwit the curse by having himself chained to the mast. As one moves from myth toenlightenment, it is cunning with its associated renunciation which characterizes reason.The great promise held by enlightenment is now seen when perceived in retrospect fromthe perspective <strong>of</strong> the earlier Horkheimer and Adorno to be domination, repression andcunning.The thesis contained in Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment can be extended beyond the origin


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 223<strong>of</strong> western civilization. As its authors attempt to show, it can be brought back to critiqueeffectively the eighteenth-century Enlightenment as well as attempts to overcome it. Asself-preservation was barely seen in Homer as the object <strong>of</strong> reason, the so-calledhistorical Enlightenment made a fetish <strong>of</strong> it. ‘The system the Enlightenment has in mindis the form <strong>of</strong> knowledge which copes most pr<strong>of</strong>iciently with the facts and supports theindividual most effectively in the mastery <strong>of</strong> nature. Its principles are the principles <strong>of</strong>self-preservation.’ ‘Burgher’, ‘slave owner’, ‘free entrepreneur’ and ‘adminstrator’ are itslogical subjects. At its best, as represented in Kant, reason was suspended between ‘trueuniversality’ in which ‘universal subjects’ can ‘overcome the conflict between pure andempirical reason in the conscious solidarity <strong>of</strong> the whole’ (ibid., p. 83), and calculatingrationality ‘which adjusts the world for the ends <strong>of</strong> self-preservation’. In this view, Kant’sattempts to ground morality in the law <strong>of</strong> reason came to naught. In fact, Horkheimer andAdorno find more base reasons for Kant’s attempt to ground morality in the concept <strong>of</strong>‘respect’. ‘The root <strong>of</strong> Kantian optimism’ is based in this view on the fear <strong>of</strong> a retreat <strong>of</strong>‘barbarism’. In any case, in this view the concept <strong>of</strong> respect was linked to the bourgeoiswhich in latter times no longer existed in the same way. Totalitarianism as represented infascism no longer needed such concepts nor did it respect the class that harboured them.It would be happy with science as calculation under the banner <strong>of</strong> self-preservation alone.The link between Kant and Nietzsche is said to be the Marquis de Sade. In Sade’swritings, it is argued, we find the triumph <strong>of</strong> calculating reason, totally individualized,freed from the observation <strong>of</strong> ‘another person’. Here, we encounter a kind <strong>of</strong> modernreason deprived <strong>of</strong> any ‘substantial goal’, ‘wholly functionalized’, a ‘purposelesspurposiveness’ totally unconcerned about effects which are dismissed as ‘purely natural’.Hence, any social arrangement is as good as any other and the ‘social necessities’including ‘all solidarity with society duty and family’ can be dissolved.If anything, then, enlightenment means ‘mass deception’ through its fundamentalmedium <strong>of</strong> the ‘culture industry’ where the rationality <strong>of</strong> ‘technology’ reigns. ‘Atechnological rationale is the rationale <strong>of</strong> domination itself (ibid., p. 121). In film, inmusic, in art, in leisure this new technology has come to dominate in such a way that thetotality <strong>of</strong> life and experience have been overcome. In the end, in accord with this view,the so-called enlightenment <strong>of</strong> modern civilization is ironic, total, bitter and universal.Enlightenment as self-deception manifests itself when art and advertising become fusedin an idiom <strong>of</strong> a ‘style’ that fashions the modern experience as an ideology from whichthere is no escape. In the blur <strong>of</strong> modern images, all phenomena are exchangeable. Anyobject can be exchanged for any other in this ‘superstitious fusion <strong>of</strong> word andthing’ (ibid., p. 164). In such a world, fascism becomes entertainment, easily reconciledwith all the other words and images and ideologies in the vast arena <strong>of</strong> modernassimilation.In the end, Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment can be viewed as a kind <strong>of</strong> crossroads formodern philosophy and social theory. On the one hand, reason can function critically, buton the other, it cannot ground itself in any one perspective. Reason under the image <strong>of</strong>self-preservation can only function for the purpose <strong>of</strong> domination. This is critical theorytwice removed; removed from its foundations in the Marxism <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth centuryfrom which it attempted to establish its own independence, and removed once again fromany foundation to function as a raging power <strong>of</strong> critique without foundation. In this sense,


Critical theory 224this book, more than any other to come from the so-called Frankfurt school, hailed theend <strong>of</strong> philosophy, and did so in part to usher in the era now designated as postmodernity.Thus, it was not only to the successive reconstruction <strong>of</strong> phenomenology from Husserlthrough Heidegger that the harbingers <strong>of</strong> postmodernity could point as legitimateforebears <strong>of</strong> their own movement, but to the voices which rang out in the Dialectic <strong>of</strong>Enlightenment whose prophetic rage led the way. It was left to Foucault to probe themultiple meanings <strong>of</strong> the discipline <strong>of</strong> the self and the institutional repression <strong>of</strong> thesubject unleashed by the Enlightenment, and to Derrick to articulate the groundlessness<strong>of</strong> a position which seeks the role <strong>of</strong> critic but cannot find the way to a privilegedperspective which would make possible the proper interpretation.ADORNO AND THE AESTHETIC REHABILITATION OF CRITICALTHEORYBut if critical theory was willing in the late 1940s to give up partially on theEnlightenment and the possibility <strong>of</strong> a modality <strong>of</strong> thought that harboured within it apotential for emancipation, it was not totally ready to do so. Hence, critical theory in itscurious route from the early 1920s to the present would make one more turn, a turntoward aesthetics. The wager on aesthetics would keep alive, if in muted fashion, theemancipatory hypothesis with which critical theory began. Adorno, inspired in part byBenjamin, would lead the way out from the ashes left in the wake <strong>of</strong> an instrumentalrationality whose end, as the end <strong>of</strong> philosophy, was almost apparent. If the generalclaims <strong>of</strong> the Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment were to be sustained, the theoreticalconsequences for critical theory would be devastating. Hence the question regarding themanner in which a critical theory could be rehabilitated, but this time under the suspicion<strong>of</strong> a full-blown theory <strong>of</strong> rationality. In a sense, through Horkheimer’s and Adorno’srather devastating analysis <strong>of</strong> rationality as fundamentally instrumental, and <strong>of</strong>enlightenment as fundamentally circular, it would have seemed that the very possibilityfor critique itself would be undermined. The aesthetic redemption <strong>of</strong> the claims <strong>of</strong> criticaltheory would have to be understood from the perspective <strong>of</strong> the framework <strong>of</strong> suspicionregarding the claims <strong>of</strong> cognition. Since cognition would result inevitably ininstrumentality, it would be necessary to find a way in which critique could belegitimated without reference to cognition per se. Aesthetics, with which Adorno hadbeen fascinated from the time <strong>of</strong> his earliest published work, would provide a way out. IfDialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment could be read as a critique <strong>of</strong> cognition, art represents forAdorno a way <strong>of</strong> overcoming the dilemma established by cognition. Adorno sees thecapacity <strong>of</strong> a non-representational theory in the potentiality <strong>of</strong> art as manifestation. Theexplosive power <strong>of</strong> art remains in its representing that which cannot be represented. Inthis sense it is the nonidentical in art that can represent society, but only as its other. Artfunctions then for Adorno in the context <strong>of</strong> the programme <strong>of</strong> critical theory as a kind <strong>of</strong>stand-in for a cognitive theory, which cannot be attained under the force <strong>of</strong>instrumentality.Adorno, however, was not quite ready to give up on a philosophy <strong>of</strong> history which hadinformed his earlier work. Hence, under the influence <strong>of</strong> Benjamin and in direct contrast


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 225to Nietzsche and Heidegger, he was able to incorporate his understanding <strong>of</strong> art within atheory <strong>of</strong> progress. At the end <strong>of</strong> his famous essay ‘The Work <strong>of</strong> Art in the Age <strong>of</strong>Mechanical Reproduction’, 8 originally published in the Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung in1936, 9 Benjamin has postulated the thesis that with photography, ‘for the first time inworld history, mechanical reproduction emancipates the work <strong>of</strong> art from its parasiticaldependence on ritual’. As a consequence, art no longer needed to sustain a claim onauthenticity. After photography, the work <strong>of</strong> art is ‘designed for reproducibility’. Fromthis observation, Benjamin drew a rather astonishing conclusion: ‘But the instant thecriterion <strong>of</strong> authenticity ceases to be applicable to artistic production, the total function <strong>of</strong>art is reversed. Instead <strong>of</strong> being based on ritual, it begins to be based on anotherpractice—politics’ (ibid., p. 244). However, it should not be assumed that the politicswith which modern an was to be associated was immediately emancipatory. The thesiswas as positive as it was negative. ‘The logical result <strong>of</strong> Fascism is the introduction <strong>of</strong>aesthetics into political life’ (ibid., p. 241). But for Benjamin this was a form <strong>of</strong> therelationship between aesthetics and politics which would attempt to rekindle the oldassociation between art and ritual. ‘The violation <strong>of</strong> the masses, whom Fascism, with itthe Führer cult, forces to their knees, has its counterpart in the violation <strong>of</strong> an apparatuswhich is pressed into the production <strong>of</strong> ritual values’ (ibid.). However, the tables can beturned; while fascism ‘equals the aestheticism <strong>of</strong> politics’, Benjamin claimed, Marxist ashe was, that ‘communism responds to politicizing art’ (ibid., p. 242).Adorno would use this insight into the nature <strong>of</strong> art and historical development freed <strong>of</strong>Benjamin’s somewhat materialist orientation. While he affirmed that ‘modern art isdifferent from all previous art in that its mode <strong>of</strong> negation is different’ becausemodernism ‘negates tradition itself, Adorno addressed the issue <strong>of</strong> the relation <strong>of</strong> art notto fascism but to capitalist society. Beyond that, Adorno’s task was to show how artcould overcome the dilemma <strong>of</strong> rationality as defined through the critique <strong>of</strong>instrumentality, while at the same time sustaining the claim that art had a kind <strong>of</strong>intelligibility. How could art be something other than a simple representation <strong>of</strong> thatsociety? Adorno would return to the classical aesthetic idea <strong>of</strong> mimesis in order to makehis point. Art has the capacity to represent, but in its very representation it can transcendthat which it is representing. Art survives not by denying but by reconstructing. ‘Themodernity <strong>of</strong> art lies in its mimetic relation to a petrified and alienated reality. This, andnot the denial <strong>of</strong> that mute reality, is what makes art speak’ (Aesthetic Theory [8.23], 31).Art, in other words, represents the non-identical. ‘Modern art is constantly practicing theimpossible trick <strong>of</strong> trying to identify the non-identical’ (ibid.).Art then can be used to make a kind <strong>of</strong> claim about rationality. ‘Art’s disavowal <strong>of</strong>magical practices—art’s own antecedents—signifies that art shares in rationality. Itsability to hold its own qua mimesis in the midst <strong>of</strong> rationality, even while using themeans <strong>of</strong> that rationality, is a response to the evils and irrationality <strong>of</strong> the bureaucraticworld.’ Art then is a kind <strong>of</strong> rationality that contains a certain ‘non-rational’ element thateludes the instrumental form. This would suggest that it is within the power <strong>of</strong> art to gobeyond instrumental rationality. This is what art can do which cannot be done incapitalist society per se. ‘Capitalist society hides and disavows precisely this irrationality,whereas art does not.’ Art then can be related to truth. Art ‘represents truth in the tw<strong>of</strong>oldsense <strong>of</strong> preserving the image <strong>of</strong> an end smothered completely by rationality and <strong>of</strong>


Critical theory 226exposing the irrationality and absurdity <strong>of</strong> the status quo’ (ibid., p. 79).It is Adorno’s claim then that although art may be part and parcel <strong>of</strong> what Weberdescribed as rationalization, that process <strong>of</strong> rationalization in which art partakes is notone which leads to domination. Thus, if art is part <strong>of</strong> what Weber called the‘disenchantment <strong>of</strong> the world’, it leads us in a direction different from that <strong>of</strong>instrumental reason. Hence, the claim that ‘Art mobilizes technology in a differentdirection than domination does’ (ibid., p. 80). And it is for this reason, thinks Adorno,that we must pay attention to the ‘dialectics <strong>of</strong> mimesis and rationality that is intrinsic toart’ (ibid.).Whereas the Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment could be conceived as a critique <strong>of</strong> cognition,Adorno uses art to rehabilitate a cognitive claim. ‘The continued existence <strong>of</strong> mimesis,understood as the non-conceptual affinity <strong>of</strong> a subjective creation with its objective andunposited other, defines art as a form <strong>of</strong> cognition and to that extent as “rational”’ (ibid.).Hence, in a time when reason has, in Adorno’s view, degenerated to the level <strong>of</strong>instrumentality, one can turn to art as the expression <strong>of</strong> the rehabilitation <strong>of</strong> a form <strong>of</strong>rationality which can overcome the limitation <strong>of</strong> reason by expressing its non-identitywith itself. In this sense, the claims <strong>of</strong> critical theory would not be lost but betransformed. Indeed, the earlier emancipatory claims <strong>of</strong> critical theory would bereappropriated at another level. Here again, Adorno’s view seems to be shaped by that <strong>of</strong>his friend Walter Benjamin. Art can reconcile us to the suffering which can never beexpressed in ordinary rational terms. While ‘reason can subsume suffering underconcepts’ and while it can ‘furnish means to alleviate suffering’, it can never ‘expresssuffering in the medium <strong>of</strong> experience’. Hence, art has a unique role to play under atransformed understanding, i.e., the role <strong>of</strong> critical theory. ‘What recommends itself, then,is the idea that art may be the only remaining medium <strong>of</strong> truth in an age <strong>of</strong>incomprehensible terror and suffering’ (ibid., p. 27). In other words, art can anticipateemancipation, but only on the basis <strong>of</strong> a solidarity with the current state <strong>of</strong> humanexistence. ‘By cathecting the repressed, art internalizes the repressing principle, i.e. theunredeemed condition <strong>of</strong> the world, instead <strong>of</strong> merely airing futile protests against it. Artidentifies and expresses that condition, thus anticipating its overcoming’ (ibid., p. 26).For Benjamin it was this view <strong>of</strong> and solidarity with suffering experienced by others inthe past which has not been redeemed. For him then, happiness is not simply an emptyEnlightenment term. It has a slightly messianic, theological twist. His fundamental thesiswas ‘Our image <strong>of</strong> happiness is indissolubly bound up with the image <strong>of</strong>redemption’ (ibid., p. 254).Finally, if it is possible to look at Adorno’s later work on aesthetics from theperspective <strong>of</strong> the position worked out with Horkheimer in Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment, itappears that a case can be made for the retrieval <strong>of</strong> the earlier emancipatory claims <strong>of</strong>critical theory on the basis <strong>of</strong> the non-identical character <strong>of</strong> the work <strong>of</strong> art. To be sure,Adorno, along with Horkheimer, had left little room to retrieve a critical theory in thewake <strong>of</strong> their devastating critique <strong>of</strong> the claims <strong>of</strong> reason. Indeed, the claims for artwould have to be measured against this very critique. Yet, in a peculiar way, Adorno wasconsistent with the prior analysis. If reason would always lead to domination, then artwould have to base its claim on its ability to express the non-identical. However, the taskremained to articulate those claims precisely. In order to do so Adorno would <strong>of</strong>ten find


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 227himself falling back on a philosophy <strong>of</strong> history which, by the standards articulated in hisearlier critique, he had already invalidated.HABERMAS AND THE RATIONAL RECONSTRUCTION OF CRITICALTHEORYWith Jürgen Habermas, Adorno’s one-time student, the discourse over the rehabilitation<strong>of</strong> critical theory was taken to a higher level. Habermas’s initial strategy was torehabilitate the notion <strong>of</strong> critique in critical theory. Clearly, Habermas has long-helddoubts about the way in which his philosophical mentors in Frankfurt failed to ground acritical theory in a theory <strong>of</strong> rationality which would harbour an adequate notion <strong>of</strong>critique. On this he has written eloquently in both The Theory <strong>of</strong> Communicative Action(1981, [8.85]) and The Philosophical Discourse <strong>of</strong> Modernity (1985, [8.88]). What I havefound interesting in studying the works <strong>of</strong> Habermas is the manner in which the argumentfor a critical theory <strong>of</strong> rationality began to take shape as an alternative argument to theone which Horkheimer and Adorno put forth. In this context, Habermas would availhimself <strong>of</strong> certain resources within the tradition <strong>of</strong> contemporary German philosophywhich his mentors overlooked. I suggested earlier that German philosophy since Kant hasbeen shaped by the interaction between the themes <strong>of</strong> constitution and transformation. Ifmodern critical theory began with a relatively firm belief that the grounds for theemancipatory assumptions regarding critique were clear and given in a certain orientationtoward theory, in retrospect that foundation became ever less secure. Eventually, critique,as in Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment, became caught in a never-ending circle <strong>of</strong> internalrepression and external domination. Hence, the promise <strong>of</strong> critical theory had beenundermined. It was the great merit <strong>of</strong> Habermas’s early work to have seen the dilemmaand to have addressed it in terms <strong>of</strong> turning not to the transformative but to theconstitutive element in the German philosophical tradition. Critical theory was forHabermas, at least originally, the problem <strong>of</strong> ‘valid knowledge’, i.e., an epistemologicalproblem.It should come as no surprise then that when Habermas first juxtaposes traditional andcritical theory, following in the footsteps <strong>of</strong> Horkheimer’s 1937 article, he engagesEdmund Husserl not only on the status <strong>of</strong> theory but also on the nature <strong>of</strong> science. By sodoing, he appropriates two <strong>of</strong> the themes that were germane and <strong>of</strong> a piece in latetranscendental phenomenology, namely, the association <strong>of</strong> the concept <strong>of</strong> theory with amore or less political notion <strong>of</strong> liberation or emancipation and the preoccupation <strong>of</strong>phenomenology with the status <strong>of</strong> science.As early as the writing <strong>of</strong> Knowledge and Human Interests (1969, [8.82]), Habermassustained the thesis that critical theory could be legitimated on the basis <strong>of</strong> makingapparent the undisclosed association between knowledge and interest. This association,however, could be specified only on the basis <strong>of</strong> the clarification <strong>of</strong> theory in its moreclassical form. According to Habermas theoria was a kind <strong>of</strong> mimesis in the sense that inthe contemplation <strong>of</strong> the cosmos one reproduces internally what one perceives externally.Theory then, even in its traditional form, is conceived to be related to the ‘conduct <strong>of</strong>one’s life’. In fact, in this interpretation <strong>of</strong> the traditional view, the appropriation <strong>of</strong> a


Critical theory 228theoretical attitude creates a certain ethos among its practitioners. Husserl is said to havesustained this ‘traditional’ notion <strong>of</strong> theory. Hence, when Husserl approached thequestion <strong>of</strong> science he approached it on the basis <strong>of</strong> his prior commitment to the classicalunderstanding <strong>of</strong> theory.In Habermas’s view, it is this commitment to theory in the classical sense whichdetermines Husserl’s critique <strong>of</strong> science. Husserl’s attack on the objectivism <strong>of</strong> thesciences led to the claim that knowledge <strong>of</strong> the objective world has a ‘transcendental’basis in the pre-scientific world, that sciences, because <strong>of</strong> their prior commitment tomundane knowledge <strong>of</strong> the world, are unable to free themselves from interest, and thatphenomenology, through its method <strong>of</strong> transcendental self-reflection, can free thisassociation <strong>of</strong> knowledge and mundane interest through a commitment to a theoreticalattitude which has been defined traditionally. In this view, the classical conception <strong>of</strong>theory, which phenomenology borrows, frees one from interest in the ordinary world withthe result that a certain ‘therapeutic power’, as well as a ‘practical efficacy’, is claimedfor phenomenology.Habermas endorses Husserl’s procedure, while at the same time pointing out its error.Husserl is said to be correct in his critique <strong>of</strong> science, which, because <strong>of</strong> its ‘objectivistillusion’, embedded in a belief in a ‘reality-in-itself’, leaves the matter <strong>of</strong> the constitution<strong>of</strong> these facts undisclosed with the result that it is unaware <strong>of</strong> the connection betweenknowledge and interest. In Husserl’s view, phenomenology, which makes this clear, canrightfully claim for itself, against the pretensions <strong>of</strong> the sciences, the designation ‘puretheory’. Precisely here Husserl would bring the practical efficacy <strong>of</strong> phenomenology tobear. Phenomenology would be said to free one from the ordinary scientific attitude. Butphenomenology is in error because <strong>of</strong> its blind acceptance <strong>of</strong> the implicit ontologypresent in the classical definition <strong>of</strong> theory. Theory in its classical form was thought t<strong>of</strong>ind in the structure <strong>of</strong> the ‘ideal world’ a prototype for the order <strong>of</strong> the human world.Habermas says in a rather insightful manner, ‘Only as cosmology was theoria alsocapable <strong>of</strong> orienting human action’ ([8.82], 306). If that is the case, then thephenomenological method which relied on the classical concept <strong>of</strong> theory was to have acertain ‘practical efficacy’, which was interpreted to mean that a certain‘pseudonormative power’ could be derived from the ‘concealment <strong>of</strong> its actual interest’.In the end, phenomenology, which sought to justify itself on the basis <strong>of</strong> its freedomfrom interest, has instead an undisclosed interest which it derived from a classicalontology. Habermas believes classical ontology in turn can be characterized historically.In fact, the concept <strong>of</strong> theory is said to be derived from a particular stage in humanemancipation where catharsis, which had been engendered heret<strong>of</strong>ore by the ‘mysterycults’, was now taken into the realm <strong>of</strong> human action by means <strong>of</strong> ‘theory’. This in turnwould mark a new stage, but certainly not the last stage, in the development <strong>of</strong> human‘identity’. At this stage, individual identity could be achieved only through theindentification with the ‘abstract laws <strong>of</strong> cosmic order’. Hence, theory represents theachievements <strong>of</strong> a consciousness that is emancipated, but not totally. It is emancipatedfrom certain ‘archaic powers’, but it still requires a certain relationship to the cosmos inorder to achieve its identity. Equally, although pure theory could be characterized as an‘illusion’, it was conceived as a ‘protection’ from ‘regression to an earlier stage’. Andhere we encounter the major point <strong>of</strong> Habermas’s critique, namely, the association <strong>of</strong> the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 229contemplative attitude, which portends to dissociate itself from any interest, and thecontradictory assumption that the quest for pure knowledge is conducted in the name <strong>of</strong> acertain practical interest, namely, the emancipation from an earlier stage <strong>of</strong> humandevelopment.The conclusion is that both Husserl and the sciences he critiques are wrong. Husserl iswrong because he believes that the move to pure theory is a step which frees knowledgefrom interest. In fact, as we have seen, the redeeming aspect <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s phenomenologyis that it does in fact have a practical intent. The sciences are wrong because althoughthey assume the purely contemplative attitude, they use that aspect <strong>of</strong> the classicalconcept <strong>of</strong> theory for their own purposes. In other words, the sciences use the classicalconcept <strong>of</strong> pure theory to sustain an insular form <strong>of</strong> positivism while they cast <strong>of</strong>f the‘practical content’ <strong>of</strong> that pure theory. As a consequence, they assume that their interestremains undisclosed.Significantly, when Habermas turns to his critique <strong>of</strong> science, he sides with Husserl.This means that Husserl has rightly critiqued the false scientific assumption that‘theoretical propositions’ are to be correlated with ‘matters <strong>of</strong> fact’, an ‘attitude’ whichassumes the ‘self-existence’ <strong>of</strong> ‘empirical variables’ as they are represented in‘theoretical propositions’. But not only has Husserl made the proper distinction betweenthe theoretical and the empirical, he has appropriately shown that the scientific attitude‘suppresses the transcendental framework that is the precondition <strong>of</strong> the meaning <strong>of</strong> thevalidity <strong>of</strong> such propositions’ (ibid., p. 307). It would follow, then, that if the properdistinction were made between the empirical and the theoretical and if the transcendentalframework were made manifest, which would expose the meaning <strong>of</strong> such propositions,then the ‘objectivist illusion’ would ‘dissolve’ and ‘knowledge constitutive’ interestswould be made ‘visible’. It would follow that there is nothing wrong with the theoreticalattitude as long as it is united with its practical intent and there is nothing wrong with theintroduction <strong>of</strong> a transcendental framework, as long as it makes apparent the heret<strong>of</strong>oreundisclosed unity <strong>of</strong> knowledge and interest.What is interesting about this analysis is that the framework for the notion <strong>of</strong> critique isnot to be derived from dialectical reason as Horkheimer originally thought but fromtranscendental phenomenology. One must be careful here. I do not wish to claim thatHabermas identifies his position with Husserl. Rather, it can be demonstrated that hederives his position on critique from a critique <strong>of</strong> transcendental phenomenology. Assuch, he borrows both the transcendental frame-work for critique and the emphasis ontheory as distinguished from empirical fact that was established by Husserl. Therefore, atthat point he argues for a ‘critical social science’ which relies on a ‘concept <strong>of</strong> selfreflection’which can ‘determine the meaning <strong>of</strong> the validity <strong>of</strong> critical propositions’.Such a conception <strong>of</strong> critical theory borrows from the critique <strong>of</strong> traditional theory theidea <strong>of</strong> an ‘emancipatory cognitive interest’ which, when properly demythologized, isbased not on an emancipation from a mystical notion <strong>of</strong> universal powers <strong>of</strong> control butrather from a more modern interest in ‘autonomy and responsibility’. This latter interestwill appear later in his thought as the basis for moral theory.On the basis <strong>of</strong> this analysis, one might make some observations. Clearly, from thepoint <strong>of</strong> view <strong>of</strong> the development <strong>of</strong> critical theory, Habermas rightfully saw the necessity<strong>of</strong> rescuing the concept <strong>of</strong> critique. Implicit in that attempt is not only the rejection <strong>of</strong>


Critical theory 230Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment but also Adorno’s attempt to rehabilitate critical theory on thebasis <strong>of</strong> aesthetics. However—and there is considerable evidence to support thisassumption—the concept <strong>of</strong> critical theory which had informed Horkheimer’s early essayon that topic had fallen on hard times. As the members <strong>of</strong> the Institute for SocialResearch gradually withdrew from the Marxism that had originally informed theirconcept <strong>of</strong> critique, so the foundations upon which critical theory was built began tocrumble. Habermas’s reconceptualization <strong>of</strong> the notion <strong>of</strong> critique was obviously bothinnovative and original. It was also controversial. Critique would not be derived from aphilosophy <strong>of</strong> history based on struggle but from a moment <strong>of</strong> self-reflection based on atheory <strong>of</strong> rationality. As Habermas’s position developed it is that self-reflective momentwhich would prove to be interesting.HABERMAS: CRITIQUE AND VALIDITYCritique, which was rendered through the unmasking <strong>of</strong> an emancipatory interest vis-àvisthe introduction <strong>of</strong> a transcendentalized moment <strong>of</strong> self-reflection, re-emerges in thelater, as opposed to the earlier, works <strong>of</strong> Habermas at the level <strong>of</strong> validity. The linkbetween validity and critique can be established through the transcendentalized moment<strong>of</strong> self-reflection which was associated with making apparent an interest in autonomy andresponsibility. Later, that moment was transformed through a theory <strong>of</strong> communicativerationality to be directed to issues <strong>of</strong> consensus. Validity refers to a certain backgroundconsensus which can be attained through a process <strong>of</strong> idealization. As critique wasoriginally intended to dissociate truth from ideology, validity distinguished between thatwhich can be justified and that which cannot. Hence, it readdresses the claims forautonomy and responsibility at the level <strong>of</strong> communication. It could be said that the questfor validity is superimposed upon the quest for emancipation. There are those who wouldargue that moral theory which finds its basis in communicative action has replaced theolder critical theory with which Habermas was preoccupied in Knowledge and HumanInterests. I would argue somewhat differently that Habermas’s more recent discoursetheory <strong>of</strong> ethics and law is based on the reconstructed claims <strong>of</strong> a certain version <strong>of</strong>critical theory.However, before justifying this claim, I will turn to the basic paradigm shift inHabermas’s work from the philosophy <strong>of</strong> the subject to the philosophy <strong>of</strong> languageinvolving construction <strong>of</strong> a theory <strong>of</strong> communicative action on the one hand and thejustification <strong>of</strong> a philosophical postion anchored in modernity on the other. Both movescan be referenced to the debate between earlier and later critical theory.If Horkheimer’s, and later Adorno’s, concept <strong>of</strong> ‘instrumental rationality’ is but areconstruction <strong>of</strong> Max Weber’s concept <strong>of</strong> purposiverational action, it would follow thata comprehensive critique <strong>of</strong> that view could be directed to Weber’s theory <strong>of</strong>rationalization. In Habermas’s book, The Theory <strong>of</strong> Communicative Action, it is thistheory that is under investigation as seen through the paradigm <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong>consciousness. Weber’s thesis can be stated quite simply: if western rationality has beenreduced to its instrumental core, then it has no further prospects for regenerating itself.Habermas wants to argue that the failure <strong>of</strong> Weber’s analysis, and by implication the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 231failure <strong>of</strong> those like Horkheimer and Adorno who accepted Weber’s thesis, was toconceive <strong>of</strong> processes <strong>of</strong> rationalization in terms <strong>of</strong> subject-object relations. In otherwords, Weber’s analysis cannot be dissociated from Weber’s theory <strong>of</strong> rationality.According to this analysis, his theory <strong>of</strong> rationality caused him to conceive <strong>of</strong> things interms <strong>of</strong> subject-object relations. Habermas’s thesis, against Weber, Horkheimer andAdorno, is that a theory <strong>of</strong> rationality which conceives <strong>of</strong> things in terms <strong>of</strong> subjectobjectrelations cannot conceive <strong>of</strong> those phenomena in other than instrumental terms. Inother words, all subject-object formulations are instrumental. Hence, if one were toconstruct a theory <strong>of</strong> rationalization in non-instrumental terms, it would be necessary toconstruct an alternative theory <strong>of</strong> rationality. The construction <strong>of</strong> a theory <strong>of</strong>communicative action based on a philosophy <strong>of</strong> language rests on this assumption.In Habermas’s view, the way out <strong>of</strong> the dilemma <strong>of</strong> instrumentality into which earliercritical theory led us is through a philosophy <strong>of</strong> language which, through a reconstructedunderstanding <strong>of</strong> speech-act theory, can make a distinction between strategic andcommunicative action. Communicative action can be understood to be non-instrumen-talin this sense: ‘A communicatively achieved agreement has a rational basis; it cannot beimposed by either party, whether instrumentally through intervention in the situationdirectly or strategically through influencing decisions <strong>of</strong> the opponents’ ([8.85], p. 287).It is important to note that the question <strong>of</strong> validity, which I argued a moment ago was theplace where the emancipatory interest would be sustained, emerges. A communicativeaction has within it a claim to validity which is in principle criticizable, meaning that theperson to whom such a claim is addressed can respond with either a yes or a no based, inturn, on reasons. Beyond that, if Habermas is to sustain his claim to overcoming thedilemma <strong>of</strong> instrumental reason he must agree that communicative actions arefoundational. They cannot be reducible to instrumental or strategic actions. Ifcommunicative actions were reducible to instrumental or strategic actions, one would beback in the philosophy <strong>of</strong> consciousness where it was claimed by Habermas, and a certainform <strong>of</strong> earlier critical theory as well, that all action was reducible to strategic orinstrumental action. 10It is Habermas’s conviction that one can preserve the emancipatory thrust <strong>of</strong> modernityby appropriating the discursive structure <strong>of</strong> language at the level <strong>of</strong> communication.Hence, the failure <strong>of</strong> Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment was to misread modernity in anoversimplified way influenced by those who had given up on it. Here is represented adebate between a position anchored in a philosophy <strong>of</strong> history which can no longersustain an emancipatory hypothesis on the basis <strong>of</strong> historical interpretation, and a positionwhich finds emancipatory claims redeemable, but on a transcendental level. Ultimately,the rehabilitation <strong>of</strong> critical theory concerns the nature and definition <strong>of</strong> philosophy. If theclaims <strong>of</strong> critical theory can be rehabilitated on a transcendental level as the claims <strong>of</strong> aphilosophy <strong>of</strong> language, then it would appear that philosophy as such can be defined visà-visa theory <strong>of</strong> communicative action. Habermas’s claim that the originary mode <strong>of</strong>language is communicative presupposes a contrafactual communicative communitywhich is by nature predisposed to refrain from instrumental forms <strong>of</strong> domination. Hence,the assertion <strong>of</strong> communicative over strategic forms <strong>of</strong> discursive interaction assumes apolitical form <strong>of</strong> association which is written into the nature <strong>of</strong> language as such as theguarantor <strong>of</strong> a form <strong>of</strong> progressive emancipation. In other words, if one can claim that the


Critical theory 232original form <strong>of</strong> discourse is emancipatory, then the dilemma posed by instrumentalreason has been overcome and one is secure from the seductive temptation <strong>of</strong> thedialectic <strong>of</strong> enlightenment.NOTES1 There are three excellent works on the origin and development <strong>of</strong> critical theory. The mostcomprehensive is the monumental work by R.Wiggershaus [8.140]. M.Jay’s historical work[8.131] introduced a whole generation <strong>of</strong> Americans to critical theory. Helmut Dubiel [8.128]presents the development <strong>of</strong> critical theory against the backdrop <strong>of</strong> German and internationalpolitics.2 Hegel, Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Spirit, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1977.3 Ibid., p. 111.4 K.Marx, ‘On the Jewish Question’, in The Marx-Engels Reader, ed. R.Tucker, New York:Norton, 1972.5 Ibid., pp. 110–65.6 Ibid., pp. 83–103.7 M.Horkheimer, ‘Traditional and Critical Theory’, in Critical Theory, New York: Herder &Herder, 1972.8 W.Benjamin, ‘The Work <strong>of</strong> Art in the Age <strong>of</strong> Mechanical Reproduction’, Illuminations[8.36].9 Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung, 5:1 (1936).10 For a more comprehensive analysis <strong>of</strong> the issues involved in this distinction, see mydiscussion in [8.96].SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHYJournals <strong>of</strong> the Institute <strong>of</strong> Social Research8.1 Archiv für die Geschichte des Sozialismus und der Arbeiterbewegung, I–XV, 1910–30.8.2 Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung, vols 1–8, 2, Leipzig, Paris, New York, 1932–9.8.3 Studies in <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Social Science, New York, 1940–1.8.4 Frankfurter Beiträge zur Soziologie, Frankfurt, 1955–74.AdornoPrimary textsFor Adorno’s collected works, see Gesammelte Schriften [GS] (23 volumes), ed.R.Tiedemann, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1970–. See also Akte: Theodor Adorno 1924–1968,in the archives <strong>of</strong> the former philosophy faculty at the University <strong>of</strong> Frankfurt.For a bibliography <strong>of</strong> Adorno’s work, see René Görtzen’s ‘Theodor W. Adorno:Vorläufige Bibliographie seiner Schriften und der Sekundärliteratur’, in Adorno


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 233Konferenze 1983, ed. L.Friedeburg and J.Habermas, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1983.8.5 Kierkegaard: Konstruktion des ästhetischen, Tübingen, 1933.8.6 Philosophie der neuen Musik, Tübingen: Mohr, 1949.8.7 The Authoritarian Personality, co-authored with E.Frenkel-Brunswick, D. Levinson,and R.Sanford, New York: Harper, 1950 (2nd edn, New York: Norton, 1969).8.8 Minima Moralia: Reflexionen aus dem beschädigten Leben, Berlin and Frankfurt:Suhrkamp, 1980.8.9 Prismen: Kulturkritik und Gesellchaft, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1955.8.10 Noten zur Literatur I, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1974.8.11 Jargon der Eigentlichkeit, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1964.8.12 Negativ Dialektik, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1966.8.13 The Positivist Dispute in German Sociology, introduction and two essays byAdorno, London: Heinemann, 1969.8.14 Ästhetische Theorie, in GS, vol. 7, 1970.8.15 Noten zur Literatur, ed. R.Tiedemann, in GS, vol. 11, 1974.8.16 Hegel: Three Studies, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1993.Translations8.17 <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Modern Music, London: Sheed & Ward, 1973.8.18 Minima Moralia: Reflections from Damaged Life, London: New Left Books, 1974.8.19 Prisms, London: Neville Spearman, 1967.8.20 Jargon <strong>of</strong> Authenticity, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1973.8.21 Negative Dialectics, New York: Seabury Press, 1973.8.22 Against Epistemology: A Metacritique, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1982.8.23 Aesthetic Theory, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1984.8.24 Notes to Literature, 2 vols, New York: Columbia University Press, 1992.Criticisms8.25 Brunkhorst, H. Theodor W.Adorno, Dialektik der Moderne, München: Piper, 1990.8.26 Früchtl, J. and Calloni, M., Geist gegen den Zeitgeist: Erinnern an Adorno,Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1991.8.27 Jay, M. Adorno, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1984.8.28 Lindner, B. and Ludke, M. (eds) Materialien zur ästhetischen Theorie Theodor W.Adorno’s: Konstruktion der Moderne, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1980.8.29 Wellmer, A. Zur Dialektik von Moderne und Postmoderne: Vernunftkritik nachAdorno, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1985.Adorno and Horkheimer8.30 Dialektik der Aufklärung, Amsterdam: Querido, 1947.8.31 Sociologia, Frankfurt: Europäische Verlagsanstalt, 1962.Benjamin


Critical theory 234Primary textsFor Benjamin’s collected works, see Gesammelte Schriften (7 vols), ed. R.Tiedemannand H.Schweppenhäuser, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1972–89. See also Briefe (2 vols), ed.G.Scholem and T.Adorno, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1966; Schriften (2 vols), ed. T.Adornoand G.Scholem, Frankfurt 1955. See also Habilitationakte Walter Benjamins in thearchive <strong>of</strong> the former philosophy faculty at the University <strong>of</strong> Frankfurt. For abibliography see R.Tiedemann, ‘Bibliographie der Erstdrucke von Benjamins Schriften’,in Zur Aktualität Walter Benjamins, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1972, pp. 227–97.8.32 Deutsche Menschen: Eine Folge von Briefen, written under pseudonym Detlef Holz,Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1977.8.33 Zur Kritik der Gewalt and andere Aufsätze, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1965.8.34 Berliner Chronik, ed. G.Scholem, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1970.8.35 Moskauer Tagebuch, ed. G.Smith, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1980.Translations8.36 Illuminations, Essays and Reflections, ed. and introduced by H.Arendt, New York:Schocken, 1968.8.37 Charles Baudelaire; A Lyric Poet in the Era <strong>of</strong> High Capitalism, London: New LeftBooks, 1973.8.38 Understanding Brecht, London: New Left Books, 1973.8.39 Communication and the Evolution <strong>of</strong> Society, Boston: Beacon Press, 1979.Criticism8.40 Buck-Morss, S. The Dialectics <strong>of</strong> Seeing: Walter Benjamin and the Arcades Project,Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1989.8.41 Roberts, J. Walter Benjamin, London: Macmillan Press, 1982.8.42 Scheurmann, I. and Scheurmann, K. Für Walter Benjamin: Dokumente, Essays undein Entwurf, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1992.8.43 Scholem, G. The Correspondence <strong>of</strong> Walter Benjamin and Gerschom Scholem:Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1992. Frankfurt, 1975.8.44 Tiedemann, R. Studien zur Walter Benjamins, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1973.FrommFor his collected works, see Gesamtausgabe (10 vols), ed. R.Funk, Stuttgart: DeutscheVerlags-Anstalt, 1980–1. A bibliography is found in vol. 10.8.45 ‘Die Entwicklung des Christusdogmas: Eine psychoanalytische Studie zursozialpsychologischen Funktion der Religion’, Imago, 3:4 (1930).8.46 Escape From Freedom, New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1941.8.47 Man for Himself: An Inquiry into the Psychology <strong>of</strong> Ethics, New York: Rinehart,1947.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 2358.48 The Sane Society, New York: Rinehart, 1955.8.49 The Art <strong>of</strong> Loving, New York: Rinehart, 1956.8.50 Beyond the Chains <strong>of</strong> Illusion: My Encounter with Marx and Freud, New York:Simon & Schuster, 1962.8.51 The Heart <strong>of</strong> Man, New York: Harper & Row, 1964.8.52 The Anatomy <strong>of</strong> Human Destructiveness, New York: Holt, Rinehart, Winston, 1973.8.53 To Have or To Be? New York: Harper & Row, 1976.Grünberg8.54 ‘Festrede gehalten zur Einweihung des Instituts für Sozialforschung an derUniversität Frankfurt a.M. am 22 Juni 1924’, Frankfurter Universitätsreden, 20(1924).HabermasPrimary texts8.55 Das Absolute und die Geschichte: van der Zweispaltigkeit in Schellings Denken,dissertation, Universität Bonn, 1954.8.56 Strukturwandel der Öffenlichkeit, Berlin: Luchterland, 1962.8.57 Technik und Wissenschaft als Ideologie, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1968.8.58 Erkenntnis und Interesse, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1969.8.59 Theorie und Praxis, (2nd edn) Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1971.8.60 Kultur und Kritik: Verstreute Aufsätze, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1973.8.61 Legitimationsprobleme im Spätkapitalismus, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1973.8.62 Zur Rekonstruktion des Historischen Materialismus, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1976.8.63 Communication and the Evolution <strong>of</strong> Society, Boston: Beacon Press, 1979.8.64 Theorie des kommunikativen Handelns, 2 vols, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1981.8.65 Zur Logik der Sozialwissenschaften, 5th edn, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1982.8.66 Moralbewuβtsein und kommunikatives Handeln, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1983.8.67 Vorstudien und Ergänzungen zur Theorie des kommunikativen Handelns, Frankfurt:Suhrkamp, 1984.8.68 Philosophische Diskurs der Moderne, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1985.8.69 Eine Art Schadensabwicklung, Frankfurt, Suhrkamp, 1987.8.70 Nachmetaphysisches Denken, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1988.8.71 Texte und Kontexte, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1990.8.72 Erläuterungen zur Diskursethik, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1991.8.73 Vergangenheit als Zukunft, Zürich: Pendo Interview, 1991.8.74 Faktizität und Geltung: Beiträge zur Diskurstheorie des Rechts und desdemokratischen Rechtsstaats, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1992.Translations8.75 Structural Change <strong>of</strong> the Public Sphere, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1989.


Critical theory 2368.76 Toward a Rational Society, London: Heinemann, 1971.8.77 Knowledge and Human Interests, Boston: Beacon Press, 1971.8.78 Theory and Practice, London: Heinemann, 1974.8.79 Legitimation Crisis, Boston: Beacon Press, 1975.8.80 The Theory <strong>of</strong> Communicative Action, 2 vols, Boston: Beacon Press, 1984, 1987.8.81 On the Logic <strong>of</strong> the Social Sciences, Cambridge, Mass., MIT Press, 1988.8.82 Moral Consciousness and Communicative Action, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press,1989.8.83 The Philosophical Discourse <strong>of</strong> Modernity, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1987.8.84 The New Conservatism: Cultural Criticism and the Historians’ Debate, Cambridge,Mass.: MIT Press, 1989.8.85 Post-Metaphysical Thinking, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1992.Criticism8.86 Arato, A. and Cohen J. (eds) Civil Society and Political Theory, Cambridge, Mass.:MIT Press, 1992.8.87 Bernstein, R. (ed.) Habermas and Modernity, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1985.8.88 Calhoun, C. (ed.) Habermas and the Public Sphere, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press,1992.8.89 Dallmayr, W. (ed.) Materialen zu Habermas ‘Erkenntnis und Interesse’, Frankfurt:Suhrkamp, 1974.8.90 Flynn, B. Political <strong>Philosophy</strong> at the Closure <strong>of</strong> Metaphysics, London: HumanitiesPress, 1992.8.91 Held, D. and Thompson, J. (eds) Habermas: Critical Debates, Cambridge, Mass.:MIT Press, 1982.8.92 Honneth, A. Kritik der Macht, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1985.8.93 Honneth, A. and Joas, H. (eds) Communicative Action: Essays on JürgenHabermas’ Theory <strong>of</strong> Communicative Action, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1991.8.94 Honneth, A. et al. (eds) Zwischenbetrachtungen im Prozess der Aufklärung,Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1989.8.95 McCarthy, T. The Critical Theory <strong>of</strong> Jürgen Habermas, Cambridge, Mass.: MITPress, 1978.8.96 Rasmussen, D. Reading Habermas, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1990. Rasmussen, D.(ed.) Universalism and Communitarianism, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1988.8.97 Schnädelbach, H. Reflexion und Diskurs, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1977.8.98 Thompson, J. Critical Hermeneutics: A Study in the Thought <strong>of</strong> Paul Ricoeur andJürgen Habermas, New York: Cambridge University Press, 1981.HorkheimerFor Horkheimer’s collected works, see Gesammelte Schriften (18 vols), ed. G. Noerr andA.Schmidt, Frankfurt: Fischer, 1987–. Most <strong>of</strong> Horkheimer’s essays in the Zeitschrift fürSozialforschung are found in Kritische Theorie: Eine Dokumentation (2 vols), ed.A.Schmidt, Frankfurt: Fischer, 1968. See also Akte Max Horkheimer, 1922–65 in the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 237archives <strong>of</strong> the former philosophy faculty at the University <strong>of</strong> Frankfurt. For abibliography, see Horkheimer Heute, ed. A. Schmidt and N.Altwicker, Frankfurt:Fischer, 1986, pp. 372–99.8.99 ‘Die Gegenwärtige Lage der Sozialphilosophie und die Aufgaben eines Instituts fürSozialforschung’, Frankfurter Universitätsreden, 37 (1931).8.100 Dämmerung, written under the pseudonym Heinrich Regius, Zürich: Oprecht andHelbling, 1934.8.101 Eclipse <strong>of</strong> Reason, New York: Oxford University Press, 1974.8.102 ‘Zum Begriff der Vernunft’, Frankfurter Universitätsreden, 7 (1953).8.103 Kritische Theorie: Eine Dokumentation, 2 vols, ed. A.Schmidt, Frankfurt: Fischer,1968.8.104 Critical Theory, New York: Herder & Herder, 1972.8.105 Critique <strong>of</strong> Instrumental Reason, New York: Seabury Press, 1974.Criticism8.106 Gumnior, H. and Ringguth, R. Horkheimer, Reinbeck bei Hamburg: Rowohlt,1973.8.107 Tar, Z. The Frankfurt School: The Critical Theories <strong>of</strong> Max Horkheimer andTheodor Adorno, New York: Wiley, 1977.LowenthalFor his collected works, see Schriften (4 vols), ed. H.Dubiel, Frankfurt, 1980.8.108 Prophets <strong>of</strong> Deceit: A Study <strong>of</strong> the Techniques <strong>of</strong> the American Agitator, Palo Alto:Pacific Books, 1970.8.109 Literature and the Image <strong>of</strong> Man, Boston: Beacon Press, 1957.8.110 Literature, Popular Culture, and Society, Palo Alto: Pacific Books, 1968.8.111 Critical Theory and Frankfurt Theorists: Lectures, Correspondence,Conversations, New Brunswick: Transaction Books, 1989.MarcuseFor Marcuse’s collected works, see Gesammelte Schriften (9 vols), Frankfurt: Suhrkamp,1978–87. For a complete bibliography <strong>of</strong> Marcuse’s works, see The Critical Spirit:Essays in Honor <strong>of</strong> Herbert Marcuse, ed. K.Wolff and B.Moore, Boston: Beacon Press,1967.8.112 Reason and Revolution: Hegel and the Rise <strong>of</strong> Social Theory, New York: OxfordUniversity Press, 1941.8.113 Eros and Civilization: A Philosophical Inquiry Into Freud, Boston: Beacon Press,1955.8.114 Reason and Revolution: Hegel and the Rise <strong>of</strong> Social Theory, 2nd edn, Boston:Beacon Press, 1960.8.115 Eros and Civilization, 2nd edn, with preface, ‘Political Preface, 1966’, Boston:Beacon Press, 1966.


Critical theory 2388.116 Negations: Essays in Critical Theory, Boston: Beacon Press, 1968.8.117 Counterrevolution and Revolt, Boston: Beacon Press, 1972.8.118 The Aesthetic Dimension: Towards a Critique <strong>of</strong> Marxist Aesthetics, Boston:Beacon Press, 1978.Criticism8.119 Görlich, B. Die Wette mit Freud: Drei Studien zu Herbert Marcuse, Frankfurt:Nexus, 1991.8.120 Institut für Sozialforschung (eds) Kritik und Utopie im Werk von Herbert Marcuse,Frankfurt: Suhrkamp, 1992.8.121 Pippin, R. (ed.) Marcuse: A Critical Theory and the Promise <strong>of</strong> Utopia, SouthHadley: Bergin & Garvey, 1988.Pollock8.122 The Economic and Social Consequences <strong>of</strong> Automation, Oxford: Basil Blackwell,1957.General criticism8.123 Benhabib, S. Critique, Norm, and Utopia: A Study <strong>of</strong> the Foundations <strong>of</strong> CriticalTheory, New York: Columbia University Press, 1986.8.124 Benhabib, S. and Dallmayr, F. (eds) The Communicative Ethics Controversy,Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1990.8.125 Bubner, R. Essays in Hermeneutics and Critical Theory, New York: ColumbiaUniversity Press, 1988.8.126 Dallmayr. F. Between Freiberg and Frankfurt: Toward a Critical Ontology,Amherst: University <strong>of</strong> Massachusetts Press, 1991.8.127 Dubiel, H. Kritische Theorie der Gesellschaft, München: Juventa, 1988.8.128 Dubiel, H. Theory and Politics, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1985.8.129 Guess, R. The Idea <strong>of</strong> Critical Theory, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,1981.8.130 Held, D. An Introduction to Critical Theory, London: Hutchinson, 1980.8.131 Jay, M. The Dialectical Imagination: A <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> the Frankfurt School and theInstitute <strong>of</strong> Social Research, 1923–1950, Boston: Little Brown, 1973.8.132 Kearney, R. Modern Movements in European <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Manchester: ManchesterUniversity Press, 1987.8.133 Kellner, D. Critical Theory, Marxism and Modernity, Baltimore: Johns HopkinsUniversity Press, 1989.8.134 McCarthy, T. Ideal and Illusions: On Reconstruction and Reconstruction inContemporary Critical Theory, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1991.8.135 Marcus, J. and Tar, Z. (eds) Foundations <strong>of</strong> the Frankfurt School <strong>of</strong> SocialResearch, London: Transaction Books, 1984.8.136 Norris, C. What’s Wrong with Postmodernism: Critical Theory and the Ends <strong>of</strong>


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 239<strong>Philosophy</strong>, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1990.8.137 O’Neill, J. (ed.) On Critical Theory, New York: Seabury Press, 1976.8.138 Schmidt, A. Zur Idee der Kritischen Theorie, München: Hanser, 1974.8.139 Wellmer, A. Critical Theory <strong>of</strong> Society, New York: Seabury Press, 1974.8.140 Wiggershaus, R. Die Frankfurter Schule, Munchen: Hanser, 1986.I wish to thank James Swindal for his assistance in the preparation <strong>of</strong> the bibliography.


CHAPTER 9HermeneuticsGadamer and RicoeurG.B.MadisonTHE HISTORICAL BACKGROUND: ROMANTIC HERMENEUTICSAlthough the term ‘hermeneutics’ (hermeneutica) is, in its current usage, <strong>of</strong> early modernorigin, 1 the practice it refers to is as old as western civilization itself. Under thetraditional appellation <strong>of</strong> ars interpretandi, hermeneutics designates the art <strong>of</strong> textualinterpretation, as instanced in biblical exegesis and classical philology. In modern times,hermeneutics progressively redefined itself as a general, overall discipline dealing withthe principles regulating all forms <strong>of</strong> interpretation. It was put forward as a discipline thatis called into play whenever we encounter texts (or text-analogues) whose meaning is notreadily apparent and which accordingly require an active effort on the part <strong>of</strong> theinterpreter in order to be made intelligible. In addition to this exegetical function,hermeneutics also viewed its task as that <strong>of</strong> drawing out the practical consequences <strong>of</strong> theinterpreted meaning (‘application’). This dual role <strong>of</strong> understanding (or explanation)(subtilitas intelligendi, subtilitas explicandi) and application (subtilitas applicandi) isperhaps especially evident in the case <strong>of</strong> juridical hermeneutics where the task is not onlyto ascertain the ‘meaning’ or ‘intent’ <strong>of</strong> the law but also to discern how best to apply it inthe circumstances at hand.In the early nineteenth century, at the hands <strong>of</strong> Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768–1834),the scope <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics was expanded considerably. Indeed, Schleiermacher claimedfor hermeneutics the status <strong>of</strong> an overall theory (allgemeine Hermeneutik) specifying theprocedures and rules for the understanding not only <strong>of</strong> textual meaning but <strong>of</strong> culturalmeaning in general (Kunstlehre). Rooted in the romantic tradition, Schleiermacher, <strong>of</strong>tenreferred to as the ‘father <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics’, empha-sized the ‘psychological’ or‘divinatory’ function <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics—the purpose <strong>of</strong> interpretation being that <strong>of</strong>‘divining’ the intentions <strong>of</strong> an author, or, in other words, reconstructing psychologicallyan author’s mental life (‘to understand the discourse just as well as and even better thanits creator’). 2 The purpose <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics is thus that <strong>of</strong> unearthing the original meaning<strong>of</strong> a text, this being equated by Schleiermacher with the meaning originally intended bythe author. 3 This view <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics as a form <strong>of</strong> cultural understanding(understanding another culture or historical epoch, for instance) and the concomitant,‘psychological’ view <strong>of</strong> understanding (as a grasping <strong>of</strong> the subjective intentions <strong>of</strong>authors or actors) was developed more fully towards the end <strong>of</strong> the century by WilhelmDilthey (1833–1911).One <strong>of</strong> the most salient features <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century was the rapid expansion <strong>of</strong>


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 241the human sciences (Geisteswissenschaften), historiography in particular. The task thatDilthey set himself was that <strong>of</strong> furnishing a methodological foundation for these newsciences, similar to the way in which, a century earlier, Kant had sought to ‘ground’ thenatural sciences philosophically. Conceding, like Kant, an exclusivity in the explanation<strong>of</strong> natural being to the natural sciences (Naturwissenschaften), Dilthey sought to gobeyond Kant by arguing (as the historian J.G.Droysen had before him) that the humansciences have their own specific subject matter and, accordingly, their own, equallyspecific, method. A spokesperson for the Lebensphilosophie current at the time, Diltheymaintained that the proper object <strong>of</strong> the human sciences is something specifically human,namely the inner, psychic life (Erlebnis, lived experience) <strong>of</strong> historical and social agents.Whereas the natural sciences seek to explain phenomena in a causal and, so to speak,external fashion (Erklären), the method proper to the human sciences is that <strong>of</strong>emphathetic understanding (Verstehen). The task <strong>of</strong> the human scientist is, or should be,that <strong>of</strong> transporting himself or herself into an alien or distant life experience, as thisexperience manifests or ‘objectifies’ itself in documents, texts (‘written monuments’) andother traces or expressions (Ausdrucken) <strong>of</strong> inner life experiences and world-views(Weltanschauungen). The Lebensphilosophie assumption operative here is that, becausethe human scientist is a living being, a part <strong>of</strong> life, he or she is, as a matter <strong>of</strong> principle,capable <strong>of</strong> reconstructively understanding other objectifications <strong>of</strong> life. Understanding(the method proper to the human sciences) is thus a matter <strong>of</strong> interpretation, andinterpretation (Deutung) is the means whereby, through its outward, objective‘expressions’, we can come to know in its own innerness what is humanly other, can, ineffect, imaginatively coincide with it; relive it. Dilthey thus viewed the goal or purpose <strong>of</strong>interpretation as that <strong>of</strong> achieving a reproduction (Nachbildung) <strong>of</strong> alien life experiences.Dilthey’s purpose in conceptualizing the hermeneutical enterprise in this way was, as Iindicated, to secure for the human sciences their own methodological autonomy and theirown scientific objectivity vis-à-vis the natural sciences. The human sciences can layclaim to their own rightful epistemological status, can, indeed, lay claim to validity, if, aswas Dilthey’s aim, it can be shown that there is a ‘method’ which is specific to them, andwhich is different from the one characteristic <strong>of</strong> the natural sciences. This, Diltheyargued, was the method <strong>of</strong> Verstehen, as opposed to that <strong>of</strong> Erklärung; the task <strong>of</strong> thehuman sciences is not to ‘explain’ human phenomena, but to ‘understand’ them.As a matter <strong>of</strong> historical interest, it may be noted that Dilthey’s ‘solution’ to whatcould be called the ‘problem <strong>of</strong> the human (or social) sciences’ was revived severaldecades later in the mid twentieth century by Peter Winch, at roughly the same time thatGadamer and Ricoeur were developing their own quite different version <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics.In opposition to the then dominant positivist approach to the human sciences, which (asin the case <strong>of</strong> Carl Hempel and his ‘covering law’ model) 4 maintained that thesedisciplines could be made ‘scientific’ if they could manage, somehow, to incorporate theexplanatory methods <strong>of</strong> the natural sciences, Winch argued that the ‘explanatory’approach is totally inappropriate in the human sciences. With Wittgenstein’s notion <strong>of</strong>‘forms <strong>of</strong> life’ in mind, Winch maintained that ‘the concepts used by primitive peoplescan only be interpreted in the context <strong>of</strong> the way <strong>of</strong> life <strong>of</strong> those peoples’. The task <strong>of</strong> theanthropologist, for instance, can be no more than that <strong>of</strong> empathetically projectinghimself or herself into an alien ‘form <strong>of</strong> life’. When one has empathetically described in


Hermeneutics 242this way a particular ‘language game’, there is nothing more to be done. Like Dilthey,Winch drew a radical distinction between empathetic understanding and causalexplanation and suggested that the human sciences should limit themselves to the former,arguing that human or social relations are an ‘unsuitable subject for generalizations andtheories <strong>of</strong> the scientific son to be formulated about them’. ‘The concepts used byprimitive peoples’, he insisted, ‘can only be interpreted in the context <strong>of</strong> the way <strong>of</strong> life <strong>of</strong>those peoples.’ 5 Winch’s position is accurately characterized by Richard J.Bernstein inthe following terms:Winch’s arguments about the logical gap between the social and the natural canbe understood as a linguistic version <strong>of</strong> the dichotomy between theNaturwissenschaften and the Geisteswissenschaften. Even the arguments that heuses to justify his claims sometimes read like a translation, in the new linguisticidiom, <strong>of</strong> those advanced by Dilthey. 6The important thing to note in this regard is how this Diltheyan-style attempt to make <strong>of</strong>life a special and irreducible category and to set it up as the foundational justification fora special and irreducible son <strong>of</strong> science is, by that very fact, to oppose it to anotherdistinct category, that <strong>of</strong> nature, which generates another, opposed kind <strong>of</strong> science.Explanation and understanding are viewed as two different, and even antagonistic, modes<strong>of</strong> inquiry. As we shall see later in this chapter, one <strong>of</strong> the prime objectives <strong>of</strong> Ricoeur’shermeneutics has been to overcome the understanding/explanation dichotomy inheritedfrom Dilthey which has bedevilled so much <strong>of</strong> the debate in the twentieth century as tothe epistemological status <strong>of</strong> the human sciences. Indeed, it could be said that one <strong>of</strong> theprincipal tasks <strong>of</strong> contemporary phenomenological hermeneutics 7 continues to consist, onthe one hand, in ‘depsychologizing’ or ‘desubjectivizing’ the notion <strong>of</strong> meaning(rejecting thereby an empathetic notion <strong>of</strong> understanding) and, on the other hand, andcorrelatively, in attempting to specify the particular sense in which (or the degree towhich) it can properly be said that the human sciences are indeed ‘explanatory’.In order to position ourselves for understanding what is distinctive about thehermeneutics <strong>of</strong> Gadamer and Ricoeur, it should also be noted that the Schleiermacher-Dilthey tradition in hermeneutics (customarily referred to as ‘romantic hermeneutics’)has been carried on in this century in the work <strong>of</strong> Emilio Betti and E.D.Hirsch, Jr, both <strong>of</strong>whom have strenuously objected to the version <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics put forward by Gadamerand Ricoeur. In an attempt to revive traditional hermeneutics (which they viewphenomenological hermeneutics as having unfortunately displaced), Betti and Hirschhave sought to argue anew for hermeneutics as a general body <strong>of</strong> methodologicalprinciples and rules for achieving validity in interpretation.Betti, the founder in 1955 <strong>of</strong> an institute for hermeneutics in Rome, has sought toresuscitate Dilthey’s concern for achieving objective validity in our interpretations <strong>of</strong> thevarious ‘objectifications’ <strong>of</strong> human experience. He has attacked Gadamer for, as he seesit, undermining the scientific concern for objectivity and, because <strong>of</strong> the emphasis thatGadamer places on the notion <strong>of</strong> ‘application’ (to be discussed below), <strong>of</strong> opening thedoor to arbitrariness (or ‘subjectivism’) in interpretation and, indeed, to relativism. At theoutset <strong>of</strong> his major work <strong>of</strong> 1962, Die Hermeneutik als allgemeine Methodik der


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 243Geiteswissenschaften, 8 Betti indirectly accused Gadamer <strong>of</strong> abandoning the ‘venerableolder form <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics’ by having turned his back on its overriding concern forcorrectness or objectivity in interpretation.Betti’s critique was taken up by Hirsch with the publication in 1967 <strong>of</strong> the latter’sValidity in Interpretation, 9 the first original and systematic treatise on hermeneuticswritten in English. As the title <strong>of</strong> his book so clearly indicates, Hirsch, like Betti and theother romantic hermeneuticists before him, was concerned to make <strong>of</strong> hermeneuticsascience capable <strong>of</strong> furnishing ‘correct’ interpretations <strong>of</strong> ‘verbal meanings’ presumed toexist independently <strong>of</strong> the interpretive process itself. Hirsch’s critical arguments are muchthe same as those <strong>of</strong> Betti, but he does add a new, methodological twist to his overallposition. Hirsch’s strategy for transforming interpretation into a genuine science is, quitesimply, to transfer—lock, stock and barrel—the method <strong>of</strong> hypothetico-deductionism andPopperian falsificationism from the philosophy <strong>of</strong> the natural sciences to the humanitiesand, in particular, to the interpretation <strong>of</strong> literary texts. Like Popper’s ‘logic <strong>of</strong> scientificdiscovery’, Hirsch’s ‘logic <strong>of</strong> validation’ maintains that there can be no method for‘guessing’ (‘understanding’) an author’s meaning but that once such ‘conjectures’ or‘hypotheses’ happen to be arrived at, they can subsequently be subjected to rigoroustesting in such a way as to draw ‘probability judgments’ supported by ‘evidence’. ‘Theact <strong>of</strong> understanding’, Hirsch writes, ‘is at first a genial (or a mistaken) guess, and thereare no methods for making guesses, or rules for generating insights. The methodologicalactivity <strong>of</strong> interpretation commences when we begin to test and criticize ourguesses’ (Validity, p. 207). And the activity <strong>of</strong> testing ‘interpretive hypotheses’, he says,‘is not in principle different from devising experiments that can sponsor decisionsbetween hypotheses in the natural sciences’ (p. 206).The curious result <strong>of</strong> Hirsch’s attempt to make <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics a science is to havenarrowed considerably the scope that, traditionally, was claimed for it by the romantics.Hermeneutics is no longer concerned with understanding, interpretation and applicationbut with interpretation alone, and this conceived <strong>of</strong> merely as ‘validation’. In Hirsch’shands hermeneutics becomes essentially no more than an interpretive technique (technēhermeneutikē) for arbitrating between possible meanings, conflicting interpretations, withthe aim <strong>of</strong> deciding which <strong>of</strong> them is the one and only true meaning <strong>of</strong> the text, i.e., theone intended by the author. Moreover, in conceiving <strong>of</strong> ‘validation’ in a Popperian andpositivistic fashion, Hirsch effectively collapses the distinction between the natural andthe human sciences, 10 sacrificing in the process the concern <strong>of</strong> Dilthey and others tosafeguard the integrity and autonomy <strong>of</strong> the latter. Hirsch resolves the long-standingexplanation/understanding debate—but at the total expense <strong>of</strong> ‘understanding’. Heuncritically endorses the scientistic claim that the natural sciences represent a model forall legitimate knowledge and are canonical for all other forms <strong>of</strong> knowledge.In the wake <strong>of</strong> Betti and Hirsch, critics <strong>of</strong> Gadamer and Ricoeur continue to iterate the(by now well-worn) objection that their version <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics is incapable <strong>of</strong>generating a method by means <strong>of</strong> which ‘correct’ interpretations <strong>of</strong> textual meaning canbe conclusively arrived at and that, because <strong>of</strong> this, it inevitably results in subjectivismand relativism. 11 We can begin to understand what is specific to phenomenologicalhermeneutics when we can understand its own reasons for rejecting the modernistobsession with ‘method’ and when, moreover, we can see why phenomenological


Hermeneutics 244hermeneutics should in its turn accuse traditional hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> falling prey to a naiveform <strong>of</strong> objectivism.MOVING BEYOND THE TRADITION: PHENOMENOLOGICALHERMENEUTICSIt would seem to be something <strong>of</strong> a general rule that any specifically human phenomenonis understood best when understood in terms <strong>of</strong> that from which it differs. It is certainlythe case in any event that what goes to make up the specificity <strong>of</strong> the hermeneuticsdefended by Hans-Georg Gadamer (1900-) and Paul Ricoeur (1915-) is the way in whichit differs from, and stands opposed to, traditional hermeneutics, as portrayed in thepreceding remarks. For his part Ricoeur has explicitly characterized his hermeneutics interms <strong>of</strong> its oppositional role when he declared: ‘I am fighting on two fronts.’ The tw<strong>of</strong>ronts he is referring to are, on the one hand, the ‘romantic illusion’ <strong>of</strong> empatheticunderstanding and, on the other hand, the ‘positivist illusion’ <strong>of</strong> a textual objectivityclosed in upon itself and wholly independent <strong>of</strong> the subjectivity <strong>of</strong> both author andreader’ (OI, 194–5). 12 In the latter case Ricoeur had the structuralist approach to texts inmind, but his remark would apply equally well to Hirsch’s brand <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics to thedegree that the latter seeks to maintain the pristine objectivity <strong>of</strong> a text closed in uponitself and wholly independent <strong>of</strong> the subjectivity <strong>of</strong> the reader (<strong>of</strong> its ‘application’).Gadamer has sought in a similar way to clarify his position by differentiating it from that<strong>of</strong> Betti.In the Foreword to the second edition (1965) <strong>of</strong> his magnum opus, Truth and Method,Gadamer attempted to defend himself against Betti’s criticisms. His response wasbasically two-sided. On the one hand, he sought to justify his lack <strong>of</strong> concern for‘method’ and, on the other, to defend himself against the charge <strong>of</strong> ‘subjectivism’. Inregard to the question <strong>of</strong> method he stated:My revival <strong>of</strong> the expression ‘hermeneutics’, with its long tradition, hasapparently led to some misunderstandings. 13 I did not intend to produce an artor technique <strong>of</strong> understanding, in the manner <strong>of</strong> the earlier hermeneutics. I didnot wish to elaborate a system <strong>of</strong> rules to describe, let alone direct, themethodical procedure <strong>of</strong> the human sciences…. My real concern was andisphilosophic: not what we do or what we ought to do, but what happens to usover and above our wanting and doing. 14In other words, the goal that Gadamer set himself was that <strong>of</strong> envisaginghermeneutics in a way thoroughly different from the way in which ittraditionally had been envisaged. In stark contrast to the positivistinspired view<strong>of</strong> hermeneutics that Hirsch was subsequently to defend, Gadamer’s goal wasnot prescriptive (laying down ‘rules’ for (correct) interpretation) but, in thephenomenological sense <strong>of</strong> the term, descriptive (seeking to ascertain whatactually occurs whenever we seek to understand something). The differencebetween Gadamer’s hermeneutics and traditional hermeneutics could be aptlycompared to the difference between traditional philosophy <strong>of</strong> science, <strong>of</strong> either a


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 245positivist or Popperian sort, and the radically new approach to the philosophy<strong>of</strong> science instituted by Thomas Kuhn in The Structure <strong>of</strong> Scientific Revolutions(first published in 1962, two years after the original German edition <strong>of</strong>Gadamer’s Truth and Method), a work which was to revolutionize thephilosophy <strong>of</strong> science. Analogously to Gadamer, Kuhn sought not (like, forinstance, Popper) to lay down methodological criteria that scientists must meet ifwhat they do is to merit the appellation ‘science’, but sought instead simply todescribe that particular activity which we refer to when we speak <strong>of</strong> someone‘doing science’ (the actual characteristics <strong>of</strong> which are more <strong>of</strong>ten than notsignificantly different from what scientists are liable to say they are doing whenpressed to make philosophical statements about their actual practice). WithGadamer explicitly in mind, Kuhn was later to describe his own work as‘hermeneutical’.As the text cited above clearly indicates, Gadamer’s purpose was not‘methodological’ but, as he says, ‘philosophic’. That is, Gadamer’s goal was toelaborate a general philosophy <strong>of</strong> human understanding, in all <strong>of</strong> its variousmodes. It is precisely for this reason that his thought is <strong>of</strong>ten referred to as‘philosophical hermeneutics’. 15 A couple <strong>of</strong> pages further on in the ForewordGadamer, again with reference to Betti, states his ‘philosophic concern’ in thefollowing way:The purpose <strong>of</strong> my investigation is not to <strong>of</strong>fer a general theory <strong>of</strong> interpretationand a differential account <strong>of</strong> its methods (which E.Betti has done so well) but todiscover what is common to all modes <strong>of</strong> understanding and to show thatunderstanding is never subjective behaviour toward a given ‘object’, but towardsits effective history—the history <strong>of</strong> its influence; in other words, understandingbelongs to the being <strong>of</strong> that which is understood.([9.7], xix)What in the present context is to be noted is how, in this last remark, Gadamer isattempting to respond to Betti’s accusation <strong>of</strong> ‘subjectivism’. Understanding, Gadamer iseffectively saying, is not so much a ‘subjective’ as it is an ontological process.Understanding is not something that the human subject or we ‘do’ as it is something that,by reason <strong>of</strong> our ‘belonging’ to history (Zugehörigkeit), happens to us. Understanding isnot a subjective accomplishment but an ‘event’ (Geshehen), i.e., ‘something <strong>of</strong> which aprior condition is its being situated within a process <strong>of</strong> tradition’ ([9.7], 276).If, as we shall see, phenomenological hermeneutics is adamantly opposed to all forms<strong>of</strong> objectivism, it is equally opposed to all forms <strong>of</strong> modern subjectivism. As Ricoeurwould say, it is continually constrained to do battle on two fronts. The central thrust <strong>of</strong>phenomenological hermeneutics is to move beyond both objectivism and subjectivism,which is to say, also, beyond relativism. One <strong>of</strong> the core features <strong>of</strong> Ricoeur’shermeneutics has been his ongoing attempt to articulate a notion <strong>of</strong> ‘the subject’ whichwould be free from all forms <strong>of</strong> modern subjectivism. 16 Unlike other forms <strong>of</strong> postmodernthought, hermeneutics has strenuously resisted the current, and very fashionable, antihumanistcalls for the abolition <strong>of</strong> ‘the subject’ (the ‘end <strong>of</strong> “man”’). The notion <strong>of</strong> the


Hermeneutics 246subject, hermeneutics insists, is not to be abandoned—but it must indeed be stripped <strong>of</strong>all its modernist, metaphysical accretions. This continued allegiance on the part <strong>of</strong>hermeneutics to the notion <strong>of</strong> the subject testifies to its rootedness in thephenomenological tradition inaugurated by Edmund Husserl.THE PHILOSOPHICAL BACKGROUND OF PHENOMENOLOGICALHERMENEUTICS: HUSSERL AND HEIDEGGERAll <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s philosophizing, from roughly 1900 onwards, was a sustained attempt toovercome the debilitating legacy <strong>of</strong> modern philosophy and, in particular, thesubject/object dichotomy instituted by Descartes. 17 A pivotal moment in the unfolding <strong>of</strong>Husserl’s phenomenology occurred in 1907 with a series <strong>of</strong> five lectures delivered inGöttingen (published subsequently in 1950 by Walter Biemel under the title Die Idee derPhänomenologie). In these lectures Husserl introduced his celebrated ‘phenomenologicalreduction’, the express purpose <strong>of</strong> which was to achieve a decisive overcoming <strong>of</strong> whatthe French translator <strong>of</strong> this work, Alexandre Lowit, has called ‘la situation phénoménaledu clivage’, in other words, the subject/object split which presides over the origin andsubsequent unfolding <strong>of</strong> modern philosophy from Descartes onwards. To speak incontemporary terms, what Husserl was seeking to accomplish by means <strong>of</strong> the‘reduction’ was a thoroughgoing ‘decon-struction’ <strong>of</strong> the central problematic <strong>of</strong> modernphilosophy itself, namely, the ‘epistemological’ problem <strong>of</strong> how an isolated subjectivity,closed in upon itself, can none the less manage to ‘transcend’ itself in such a way as toachieve a ‘knowledge’ <strong>of</strong> the ‘external world’. 18 This, it may be noted, is, in one <strong>of</strong> itsmany variants, the problem which continues to inform the work <strong>of</strong> Betti and Hirsch (howto ‘validate objectively’ our own ‘subjective ideas’).Thanks to the ‘reduction’ however, Husserl effectively displaced or deconstructed theepistemological problematic itself. He did so by discrediting (revealing the ‘philosophicalabsurdity’ <strong>of</strong>) its two constitutive notions: the notion <strong>of</strong> an ‘objective’, ‘in-itself’ worldand the correlative notion that ‘knowledge’ consists in forming inner ‘representations’ onthe part <strong>of</strong> an isolated ‘cognizing subject’ <strong>of</strong> this supposedly objective or ‘external’world. The subsequent history <strong>of</strong> the phenomenological movement in the twentiethcentury—from Heidegger and Merleau-Ponty to Gadamer and Ricoeur—could be viewedas nothing other than an attempt ‘to extract the most extreme possibilities’ 19 fromHusserl’s own deconstruction <strong>of</strong> the epistemological problematic. Building on Husserl’sown point <strong>of</strong> departure, phenomenological hermeneutics has systematically defined itselfin terms <strong>of</strong> its opposition to both objectivism and subjectivism.If the key methodological notion in Husserl’s phenomenology is that <strong>of</strong> the reduction,the key substantive notion is the one that Husserl uncovered late in his life, that <strong>of</strong> thelife-world (Lebenswelt). This too was to play a decisive role in the evolution <strong>of</strong>hermeneutics. 20 As was later pointed out by Merleau-Ponty (who in his own revision <strong>of</strong>Husserlian phenomenology anticipated a great many <strong>of</strong> the themes developed later on ingreater detail by hermeneutics), what Husserl’s phenomenological reduction servesultimately to reveal is the life-world itself and this, Merleau-Ponty observed, is exactlywhat Heidegger referred to as ‘being-in-the-world’. 21 The basic paradigm <strong>of</strong> modern


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 247epistemologism, dominated as it is by the subject/object dichotomy, is that <strong>of</strong> an isolatedsubjectivity (the ‘mind’) which is supposed to be related to the ‘external’ or ‘objective’world by means <strong>of</strong> ideas or sense impressions (subsisting within the ‘mind’ itself) whichare said to be ‘true’ (a ‘true likeness’) to the degree that they adequately ‘represent’ or‘refer to’ facts or states <strong>of</strong> affairs in ‘reality’. This modernist view <strong>of</strong> things (which couldappropriately be labelled ‘referentialist-representationalism’) is one that continues toprevail with theorists such as Betti and Hirsch. It was in opposition to modernepistemologism, however, that Martin Heidegger argued in Being and Time (1927) that arelation (a commercium) between the subject and the world does not first get establishedon the level <strong>of</strong> ‘cognition’ or ‘knowledge’. 22 Before any explicit awareness on its part,the human subject (Dasein) finds itself already in a world, ‘thrown’ into it, as it were.This surrounding world, the life-world, is thus one which is ‘always already’ there. Whatthis pregivenness (as Husserl would say) <strong>of</strong> the life-world means is that, by virtue <strong>of</strong> ourvery existence, i.e. our ‘being-in-the-world’, we possess what Heidegger called a ‘preontologicalunderstanding’ <strong>of</strong> the world (<strong>of</strong> ‘being’). All explicit understandings ortheorizings do no more than build on this always presupposed—and thus never fullythematizable—‘ground’. For Heidegger, therefore, understanding is not so much a mode<strong>of</strong> ‘knowing’ as it is one <strong>of</strong> ‘being’. As Gadamer would subsequently put it,consciousness is more Sein than Bewusstsein.Heidegger refers to this situation as ‘facticity’: if there is an always presupposedelement in all our explicit understandings, this means that, in our various interpretations<strong>of</strong> things, we can never hope to achieve total transparency. The lesson thatphenomenological hermeneutics was to draw from this Heideggerian position is thathuman understanding is essentially ‘finite’. As Ricoeur has said: ‘The gesture <strong>of</strong>hermeneutics is a humble one <strong>of</strong> acknowledging the historical conditions to which allhuman understanding is subsumed in the reign <strong>of</strong> finitude.’ 23 What this means is thatthere can be no ‘science’, in the traditional philosophical sense <strong>of</strong> the term (episteme,scientia intuitiva), <strong>of</strong> existence (or <strong>of</strong> ‘being’). The hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> Gadamer andRicoeur could most fittingly be characterized as nothing other than a systematic attemptto draw all the philosophical conclusions that follow from a recognition <strong>of</strong> theinescapable finitude <strong>of</strong> human understanding (this is why they will argue, againstobjectivists such as Betti and Hirsch, that it is impossible ever to arrive at the (one andonly) correct interpretation <strong>of</strong> a text or any other human product). Their hermeneuticswill be ‘a hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> finitude’ ([9.15], 96).Heidegger’s ‘existential analytic’—his phenomenological-interpretive description <strong>of</strong>human existence and its basic structures (what he referred to as Existentialen), his attemptto elaborate a ‘hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> facticity’, <strong>of</strong> everyday life, the life-world—provided thecrucial impetus for subsequent hermeneutics. What is peculiar to Heidegger’shermeneutics is that it is an ontological hermeneutics. It is ontological (rather than‘methodological’) in that, unlike what traditionally had gone under the heading‘hermeneutics’, it was not concerned to specify criteria for ‘correct’ interpretations butinstead had for its object something much more fundamental (Heidegger referred to hisproject as ‘fundamental ontology’), namely a properly philosophical elucidation orinterpretation <strong>of</strong> the basic (ontological) structures <strong>of</strong> human understanding which is tosay, human existence) itself. The move that Heidegger made in this connection was to


Hermeneutics 248prove decisive for the subsequent development <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics. Understanding,Heidegger insisted, is not merely one attribute <strong>of</strong> our being, something that we may‘have’ or not (in the sense in which we are said to ‘have knowledge’); understanding israther that which, as existing beings, we most fundamentally are.As existing beings, we exist only in the mode <strong>of</strong> becoming (as Kierkegaard—fromwhom Heidegger drew much <strong>of</strong> his inspiration—would have said), and thus what wemost fundamentally are is not anything fixed and given but rather what we can become,i.e., possibility. This in turn means that the understanding which we are is itself nothingother than an understanding <strong>of</strong> the possible ways in which we could be (‘Understandingis the Being <strong>of</strong> such potentiality-for Being’, BT, 183). As existing, understanding beings,we are continually ‘projecting’ possible ways <strong>of</strong> being (our being is defined in terms <strong>of</strong>these ‘projects’). What Heidegger calls ‘interpretation’ (Auslegung) is itself nothing otherthan a possibility belonging to understanding. That is, when our prethematic, prepredicativeor tacit understanding is developed, it becomes interpretation. 24 Interpretation(explication, laying-out, Auslegen) is the working-out (Ausarbeitung) <strong>of</strong> the possiblemodes <strong>of</strong> being that have been projected by the understanding. The point that Heideggeris insisting on is that interpretation is always derivative; interpretation discloses onlywhat has already been understood (albeit only tacitly).In other words, interpretation is never without presuppositions (Heidegger referred tothese as ‘fore-structures’). It is never the mere mirroring <strong>of</strong> an ‘objectivity’ which simplystands there naked before us (the ‘bare facts’); in interpretation there is always somethingthat is ‘taken for granted’. With the example <strong>of</strong> textual interpretation in mind, Heideggerpointedly remarks that if in one’s interpretations one appeals to ‘what “stands there”, thenone finds that what “stands there” in the first instance is nothing other than the obviousundiscussed assumption [Vormeinung] <strong>of</strong> the person who does the interpreting’ (BT,192). There is, then, an essential circularity between understanding and interpretation.In this way Heidegger effectively ontologizes what traditional hermeneutics had calledthe ‘hermeneutical circle’, which, as a methodological rule, simply meant that wheninterpreting a text one ought continually to interpret the parts in terms <strong>of</strong> the whole, andthe whole in terms <strong>of</strong> the parts. For Heidegger, however, the ‘circle’ <strong>of</strong> understandinggoes much deeper; it is in fact rooted in the existential constitution <strong>of</strong> human being itself.Human understanding itself has a circular structure. This amounts to saying that allinterpretive understandings are presuppositional or ‘anticipatory’ by nature (interpretationmust…already operate in that which is understood’ (BT, 194).Since the ‘circle’ is constitutive <strong>of</strong> our very being—since, in other words, it constitutesthe very condition <strong>of</strong> possibility <strong>of</strong> our understanding anything at all—it would bealtogether misleading to view it, as a logician might, as a ‘vicious circle’. Even to viewthe circularity involved in all understanding—its ‘presuppositional’ nature—as aninevitable or unfortunate imperfection <strong>of</strong> human understanding that, in an ideal situation,could or ought to be overcome would mean, Heidegger says, that one has misunderstoodthe act <strong>of</strong> understanding ‘from the ground up’ (BT, 194). Indeed, all attempts to deny the‘circle’ or to escape from it testify to a false consciousness. What Heidegger is herecalling into question is the Cartesian ideal that has dominated all <strong>of</strong> modern philosophy,namely, the notion that truly ‘objective’ knowledge must be presuppositionless or‘foundational’, grounded upon some rock-solid, ‘objective’ foundation (even the logical


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 249positivists continued to demand such a foundation and believed that they had found it in acombination <strong>of</strong> the laws <strong>of</strong> logic and raw ‘sense data’). Thus, he maintains that theobjectivistic ideal <strong>of</strong> ‘a historiology which would be as independent <strong>of</strong> the standpoint <strong>of</strong>the observer as our knowledge <strong>of</strong> Nature is supposed to be’ is a false ideal, an idol, infact, <strong>of</strong> the understanding. Both scientistic objectivism and common sense (the ‘naturalattitude’, as Husserl would have said) misunderstand understanding (see BT, 363). Theimportant thing, Heidegger says, the lesson to be drawn from the phenomenologicalanalysis <strong>of</strong> human being-in-the-world, is that we ought not even to try to get out <strong>of</strong> thecircle but should attempt rather ‘to come into it in the right way’ (BT, 195). We must, inother words, learn in our theorizing to do without ‘foundations’ (such as, in textualinterpretation, the supposedly original intention <strong>of</strong> the author). It would not be too much<strong>of</strong> an exaggeration to say that the whole meaning and significance <strong>of</strong> post-Heideggerianhermeneutics consists in its strenuous attempt to take this lesson to heart and,accordingly, to elaborate a theory <strong>of</strong> understanding and interpretation that could mostproperly be termed ‘non-foundational’.PHENOMENOLOGICAL HERMENEUTICS: THE BASIC THEMESThe putative purpose <strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s lengthy analysis in Being and Time <strong>of</strong> the basicstructures <strong>of</strong> human being was to set the stage for raising anew the age-old question <strong>of</strong>the meaning <strong>of</strong> Being, a question which Heidegger believed had increasingly been lostsight <strong>of</strong> since the time <strong>of</strong> the ancient Greeks. In subsequent writings Heidegger attemptedto find a more direct approach to the Being-question (die Seinsfrage), abandoning in theprocess the existential orientation <strong>of</strong> his earlier work which, he believed, had distractedhim from this overriding issue. The key actor in Heidegger’s later writings is no longerthe human being (Dasein) but Being itself, Being-as-such. Neither Gadamer nor Ricoeurchose to follow Heidegger in this all-out pursuit <strong>of</strong> ‘Being’. The following remark <strong>of</strong>Gadamer reflects well the agenda that hermeneutics has set itself—and which is not that<strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s ontological eschatology: ‘What man needs is not only a persistent asking<strong>of</strong> ultimate questions, but the sense <strong>of</strong> what is feasible, what is possible, what is correct,here and now’ ([9.7], xxv).Throughout his career Ricoeur has, for his part, held fast to a fundamentally existentialmotivation, conceiving <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics as an attempt on the part <strong>of</strong> the reflecting subjectto come to grips with ‘the desire to be and the effort to exist which constitute us’ 25 (his‘existentialism’ is at the root <strong>of</strong> his opposition to scientistic objectivism), and over thelast several decades Gadamer has greatly expanded the scope <strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s earlier,existential hermeneutics (the ‘hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> facticity’), elaborating in the process anall-inclusive philosophical discipline. As he once remarked: ‘I bypass Heidegger’sphilosophic intent, the revival <strong>of</strong> the “problem <strong>of</strong> Being”.’ 26 Unlike Heidegger, Gadamerhas focused his interest not on the question <strong>of</strong> ‘Being’ but on the Geisteswissenschaften,on the nature and scope <strong>of</strong> the human sciences. ‘We make’, he said, ‘a decided relationbetween the human sciences and philosophy…. The human sciences are not only aproblem for philosophy, on the contrary, they represent a problem <strong>of</strong> philosophy’ (PHC,112). As the subject matter <strong>of</strong> his writings testifies, Ricoeur has also devoted a great deal


Hermeneutics 250<strong>of</strong> his philosophical attention to human science issues. If there is a difference between thetwo hermeneuticists in this regard, it is that Ricoeur feels that Gadamer has slightedimportant methodological issues having to do with the human sciences in his concern toaccord them a special ontological status vis-à-vis the natural sciences (‘an entirelydifferent notion <strong>of</strong> knowledge and truth’ [PHC, 113]). We shall, accordingly, return tothe relation between hermeneutics and the human sciences after having explored some <strong>of</strong>the basic tenets <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics qua philosophy.In responding to Betti’s charge that his shift away from the concern <strong>of</strong> traditionalhermeneutics for verificatory method encourages subjectivism and arbitrariness ininterpretation, Gadamer, it will be recalled, asserted: ‘understanding is never subjectivebehaviour toward a given “object”, but towards its effective history—the history <strong>of</strong> itsinfluence.’ One <strong>of</strong> the most outstanding features <strong>of</strong> Gadamer’s hermeneutics is theemphasis he places on the ‘historicality’ or tradition-laden nature <strong>of</strong> humanunderstanding. ‘It is not really ourselves who understand’, he in fact says, ‘it is always apast that allows us to say, “I have understood”’ ([9.5] 58). Gadamer defends himselfagainst the charge <strong>of</strong> subjectivism by maintaining that interpretation is never—indeed,can never be—the act <strong>of</strong> an isolated, monadic subject, for the subject’s own selfunderstandingis inevitably a function <strong>of</strong> the historical tradition to which he or shebelongs. In fact, Gadamer attempts to turn the tables on the objectivists by arguing thatthe ‘presuppositionless’ or ‘objective’ view <strong>of</strong> understanding that their theory <strong>of</strong>interpretation calls for is an existential impossibility, that, as Heidegger would say, itinvolves a thoroughgoing misunderstanding <strong>of</strong> human understanding.It is in this context that Gadamer’s famous ‘rehabilitation’ <strong>of</strong> prejudice must beunderstood. When Gadamer provocatively asserts that prejudices are integral to allunderstanding, he is not condoning wilful bias or bigotry. He is simply generalizing onHeidegger’s observations on the ‘anticipatory’ nature <strong>of</strong> understanding, the fact that allunderstanding operates within the context <strong>of</strong> certain pre-given ‘fore-structures’.‘Prejudice’ must be understood in the literal sense <strong>of</strong> a ‘pre-judgment’ (or a pre-reflectivejudgment), a presupposition, not in the pejorative sense <strong>of</strong> the term which has prevailedsince the Enlightenment. The polemical thrust <strong>of</strong> Gadamer’s speaking <strong>of</strong> ‘prejudice’ is infact directed against what he calls the Enlightenment ‘prejudice against prejudice’ ([9.7],240). There can be, he wants to argue, ‘legitimate prejudices’. Here is yet another, andmost basic, instance <strong>of</strong> how phenomenological hermeneutics essentially defines itself inopposition to modernist objectivism. The aim <strong>of</strong> Gadamer’s rehabilitation <strong>of</strong> prejudice isto call into question the very notions <strong>of</strong> reason and knowledge that we have inheritedfrom Cartesianism and the rationalism <strong>of</strong> the Enlightenment.In this rationalist view <strong>of</strong> things reason stands opposed to authority; the ‘prejudiceagainst prejudice’ is indeed, on a deeper level, a prejudice against ‘authority’ itself and assuch. The peculiarly rationalist prejudice is that true knowledge can be had only byfreeing ourselves from all inherited beliefs and opinions (the ‘authority <strong>of</strong> the tradition’)so as to create a tabula rasa on which genuinely ‘objective’ knowledge can be erected.What Gadamer objects to here is the quite arbitrary way in which Enlightenmentrationalism equates authority with blind obedience and domination; as there can be‘legitimate prejudices’, so likewise the recognition <strong>of</strong> authority can itself be fully rational.Gadamer asserts:


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 251It is true that it is primarily persons that have authority; but the authority <strong>of</strong>persons is based ultimately, not on the subjection and abdication <strong>of</strong> reason, buton recognition and knowledge—knowledge, namely, that the other is superior tooneself in judgment and insight and that for this reason his judgment takesprecedence, i.e., it has priority over one’s own. This is connected with the factthat authority cannot actually be bestowed, but is acquired and must beacquired, if someone is to lay claim to it. It rests on recognition and hence on anact <strong>of</strong> reason itself which, aware <strong>of</strong> its own limitations, accepts that others havebetter understanding. Authority in this sense, properly understood, has nothingto do with blind obedience to a command. Indeed, authority has nothing to dowith obedience, but rather with knowledge.([9.7],As Gadamer goes on to say, if we accord recognition to anything, it is because ‘whatauthority states is not irrational and arbitrary, but can be accepted in principle’ ([9.7],249). There is, therefore, something like rightful authority, the recognition where<strong>of</strong> isitself fully rational.Gadamer contends that the Enlightenment ideal <strong>of</strong> Reason, as a ‘faculty’ enabling theindividual to make contact with ‘reality’ unmediated by authority and tradition, is in factan idol <strong>of</strong> modernity. He is especially opposed to the modernist assumption that reason soconceived (in an objectivistic-instrumentalist fashion) should serve as the basis for thecomplete reorganization (‘rationalization’) <strong>of</strong> society. As Richard Bernstein points out:‘We can read his philosophic hermeneutic as a meditation on the meaning <strong>of</strong> humanfinitude, as a constant warning against the excesses <strong>of</strong> what he calls “planning reason”, acaution that philosophy must give up the idea <strong>of</strong> an “infinite intellect”.’ 27Curiously enough (though not surprisingly), the modernist quest for ‘objectiveknowledge’ is itself supremely subjectivistic. It presupposes that the thinking subject hasdirect access only to the contents <strong>of</strong> its own ‘mind’ (which is assumed to be fullytransparent to itself) but that, with suitable methodological procedures, this isolatedindividual can, by means <strong>of</strong> Reason, achieve genuine knowledge on his or her own. Anappropriate label for this view would be ‘methodological solipsism’. For Gadamer,however, ‘Understanding is not to be thought <strong>of</strong> so much as an action <strong>of</strong> one’ssubjectivity, but as the placing <strong>of</strong> oneself within a process <strong>of</strong> tradition, in which past andpresent are constantly fused’ ([9.7], 258).It can thus be seen that Gadamer’s defence <strong>of</strong> ‘prejudice’ goes hand in hand with theemphasis he places on tradition; indeed, for Gadamer the ultimate locus <strong>of</strong> authority istradition itself. It is interesting to note in this regard that post-positivist philosophy <strong>of</strong>science has, in the case <strong>of</strong> Thomas Kuhn, Paul Feyerabend and others, sought to highlightthe role that tradition plays in that rational enterprise called ‘science’. Scientists, it is nowrecognized, do not simply ‘observe and describe’ bare facts; what they look for, and whatthey accordingly find, is a function not <strong>of</strong> an abstract method (‘the experimental method’)but <strong>of</strong> the ‘paradigms’ or research traditions in which they happen to be working (andinto which they have been enculturated in their training as scientists). This parallelbetween the new philosophy <strong>of</strong> science and Gadamerian hermeneutics is perhaps


Hermeneutics 252especially interesting and noteworthy in that in his work Gadamer has focusedexclusively on the human sciences and has not sought to indicate what a hermeneuticalapproach to the natural sciences might look like. But the point that the new philosophers<strong>of</strong> science are making is a properly Gadamerian one: there are no answers ‘inthemselves’; the only answers that scientists get is to the questions they have asked, andthese are ones which they owe to the tradition within which they are working.In his reflections on the human sciences Gadamer has devoted particular attention tothe importance <strong>of</strong> the question. The logic <strong>of</strong> the human sciences, he says, is ‘a logic <strong>of</strong> thequestion’ ([9.7], 333, see also 325ff.). All knowledge comes only in the form <strong>of</strong> ananswer to a question. And much as Feyerabend was later to do in his Against Method,Gadamer insists that ‘There is no such thing as a method <strong>of</strong> learning to ask questions, <strong>of</strong>learning to see what needs to be questioned’ ([9.7], 329). This <strong>of</strong> course does not mean,as a neopositivist like Hirsch would maintain, that there is no ‘art <strong>of</strong> questioning’. Thereis indeed such an art, and this is precisely one we learn from the tradition to which, asthinking beings, we belong.From what has been said, it can be readily appreciated why, in his attempt to elaboratean overall philosophy <strong>of</strong> human understanding, Gadamer should devote so much <strong>of</strong> hisattention to the notion <strong>of</strong> tradition. If there is no understanding without presuppositions or‘prejudices’, then it is incumbent on a philosophical hermeneutics to thematize the rolethat tradition plays in our understanding, since our enabling presuppositions are historicalby nature, something handed down to us by the tradition(s) to which we belong—a primeinstance <strong>of</strong> ‘the historicality that is part <strong>of</strong> all understanding’ ([9.7], 333). In highlightingtradition in this way, Gadamer is led to articulate one <strong>of</strong> the core notions in his work, that<strong>of</strong> wirkungsgeschichtliche Bewusstsein.Like so many other German terms, this one defies easy translation. The ‘hermeneuticalconsciousness’ it designates is ‘the consciousness <strong>of</strong> effective history’ or, alternatively,‘the consciousness in which history is effectively at work’. What effective-history‘means’ is that ‘both what seems to us worth enquiring about and what will appear as anobject <strong>of</strong> investigation’ are determined in advance ([9.7], 267–8). The term connotes aconsciousness which is at once affected by history and aware <strong>of</strong> itself as so affected, anawareness which precludes our regarding history as an object since it is itself alreadyimplicated in history. 28 As Ricoeur characterizes it, effective-history is ‘the massive andglobal fact whereby consciousness, even before its awakening as such, belongs to anddepends on that which affects it’ ([9.15], 74). ‘Effective-history’ is Gadamer’s responseto ‘historical objectivism’. Gadamer not only argues that there can be no purely‘objective’ knowledge <strong>of</strong> history—since history is already effectively at work in allhistoriological attempts at understanding it—he argues also that the rootedness <strong>of</strong>understanding in its own history (a history which it therefore continually ‘presupposes’)must not be viewed as an impediment to genuine understanding, to ‘truth’. Or as Ricoeursums it up: ‘The action <strong>of</strong> tradition [effective-history] and historical investigation arefused by a bond which no critical consciousness could desolve without rendering theresearch itself nonsensical’ ([9.15], 76).That indeed is Gadamer’s main point. Effective-history does not signal a limitation onour ability to understand (unless, <strong>of</strong> course, one wishes to contrast human understandingwith divine understanding, in which case human understanding will always come out the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 253loser) as much as it designates the positive and productive possibility <strong>of</strong> anyunderstanding that lays claim to truth. To speak in traditional philosophical terms,effective-history is the very condition <strong>of</strong> possibility <strong>of</strong> understanding. Effective-historyprovides us with our ‘enabling’ presuppositions.There is a phenomenological parallel between the world in which we exist as thinkingbeings and the world in which we exist as perceiving beings: both have horizons. 29Effective-history provides us with the intelligible horizon within which, as thinkingbeings, we ‘live, move, and have our being’. Now, what occurs in the case <strong>of</strong> historical orintercultural understanding is what Gadamer calls a ‘fusion <strong>of</strong>horizons’ (Horizontsverschmelzung). The term ‘fusion’ is perhaps misleading, however.When we attain to a ‘hermeneutical consciousness’ <strong>of</strong> another historical or culturalhorizon, we do not coincide with the other (cf. Dilthey’s notion <strong>of</strong> nachleben, re-living),but our horizon and that <strong>of</strong> the other partially overlap, as it were. The best illustration <strong>of</strong>such a ‘fusion’ is that <strong>of</strong> a meaningful conversation. As Gadamer writes:Just as in a conversation, when we have discovered the standpoint and horizon<strong>of</strong> the other person, his ideas become intelligible, without our necessarily havingto agree with him, the person who thinks historically comes to understand themeaning <strong>of</strong> what has been handed down, without necessarily agreeing with it, orseeing himself in it. 30([9.7], 270)Were one inclined to draw out the applicational significance <strong>of</strong> Gadamer’s notion <strong>of</strong> afusion <strong>of</strong> horizons, it would be most instructive to interpret it in the light <strong>of</strong> recentdebates about ‘incommensurability’. 31 What this would serve to reveal is how the notion<strong>of</strong> a fusion <strong>of</strong> horizons, like so many other hermeneutical notions, is an intrinsicallyoppositional or dialectical notion. In regard, for instance, to the question as to whetherdifferent cultural world-views are in any way ‘commensurable’, the fusion-<strong>of</strong>-horizonsnotion would oblige one to defend a position which would be neither absolutist norrelativist. On the one hand, the hermeneuticist would want to argue—as Richard Rorty,for instance, has done—against the idea <strong>of</strong> ‘universal commen-suration’, the idea, that is,that the values operative in different cultures can be measured or ranked according tosome univocal, hierarchical standard <strong>of</strong> comparison, by means <strong>of</strong> some kind <strong>of</strong>epistemological algorithm. On the other hand, however, the hermeneuticist would want toargue just as strenuously against an unrestrained ‘particularism’, i.e., against the outrightrejection <strong>of</strong> universalism altogether (cf. Rorty’s defence <strong>of</strong> ‘ethnocentrism’). Thehermeneutical notion <strong>of</strong> a fusion <strong>of</strong> horizons means (in practical or pragmatic terms) thata meaningful dialogue with the ‘other’ (a genuine contact with the other, as other) isalways possible, given the necessary effort and good will—even though a Hegelian-likeAufhebung <strong>of</strong> differences in a univocally uniform understanding is neither possible noreven, for that matter, desirable. 32 Expressing much the same point, though in a somewhatdifferent way, Ricoeur observes:This [the fusion <strong>of</strong> horizons] is a dialectical concept which results from therejection <strong>of</strong> two alternatives: objectivism, whereby the objectification <strong>of</strong> the


Hermeneutics 254other is premissed on the forgetting <strong>of</strong> oneself; and absolute knowledge,according to which universal history can be articulated within a single horizon.We exist neither in closed horizons, nor within an horizon that is unique. Nohorizon is closed, since it is possible to place oneself in another point <strong>of</strong> viewand in another culture…. But no horizon is unique, since the tension between theother and oneself is unsurpassable.([9.15], 75)To sum up: what Gadamer has called ‘tradition’ is nothing other than the way in whichour own horizons are constantly shifting through ‘fusion’ with other horizons. ‘In atradition,’ he says, ‘this process <strong>of</strong> fusion is continually going on, for there old and newcontinually grow together to make something <strong>of</strong> living value, without either beingexplicitly distinguished from the other’ ([9.7], 273). The all-inclusive name for thephenomenon in question is ‘understanding’.To highlight in this way the ‘horizonal’ nature <strong>of</strong> understanding is, once again, tounderscore the essential finitude <strong>of</strong> all understanding. ‘Philosophical thinking’, Gadamerinsists, ‘is not science at all…. There is no claim <strong>of</strong> definitive knowledge, with theexception <strong>of</strong> one: the acknowledgement <strong>of</strong> the finitude <strong>of</strong> human being in itself.’ 33 Theimportant thing to note in this regard, however, is that while an emphasis on finitude rulesout the possibility <strong>of</strong> our ever attaining to ‘definitive knowledge’, it does not exclude thepossibility <strong>of</strong> truth. It does not, that is, if and when truth is no longer conceived <strong>of</strong> in ametaphysical fashion, as a state <strong>of</strong> rest in which one has achieved a final coincidence withthe object in question (e.g., the meaning <strong>of</strong> a text), but is reconceptualized to mean amode <strong>of</strong> existence in which we keep ourselves open to new experiences, to furtherexpansions in our horizons. Truth, for Gadamer, is not a static but a dynamic concept. It isnot an epistemological but an existential concept, designating a possible mode <strong>of</strong> beingin-the-world.When, in the very last line <strong>of</strong> Truth and Method, Gadamer speaks <strong>of</strong> ‘adiscipline <strong>of</strong> questioning and research, a discipline that guarantees truth’, what he meansby ‘truth’ tends to coincide with the notion <strong>of</strong> openness. This is why he writes: ‘The truth<strong>of</strong> experience always contains an orientation towards new experience…. The dialectic <strong>of</strong>experience has its own fulfilment not in definitive knowledge, but in that openness toexperience that is encouraged by experience itself’ ([9.7], 319). 34If human understanding is effectively historical, this means that it is also linguisticthrough and through, since it is through language that the tradition is effectively mediatedand ‘fused’ with the present (which means also that in the language we speak and bymeans <strong>of</strong> which we achieve understanding the past continues to be effectively present).‘The linguistic quality <strong>of</strong> understanding’, Gadamer remarks, ‘is the concretion <strong>of</strong>effective-historical understanding’; ‘it is the nature <strong>of</strong> tradition to exist in the medium <strong>of</strong>language’ ([9.7], 351). Ricoeur has summed up the chief consequence <strong>of</strong> the ‘newontology <strong>of</strong> understanding’ in the following way: ‘there is no self-understanding which isnot mediated by signs, symbols and texts…that is to say that it is language that is theprimary condition <strong>of</strong> all human experience’ (OI, 191). For both Gadamer and Ricoeur theultimate goal <strong>of</strong> all understanding is self-understanding, and, to the degree that thisoccurs, it occurs by means <strong>of</strong> language. As was mentioned earlier, hermeneutics forRicoeur is nothing other than an attempt on the part <strong>of</strong> the reflecting subject to come to


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 255grips with ‘the desire to be’ (‘le désire d’être’), and there is, he says, a basic ‘proximitybetween desire and speech’. In fact, the path to self-understanding, he says, ‘lies in thespeech <strong>of</strong> the other which leads me across the open space <strong>of</strong> signs’. Like Gadamer,Ricoeur believes that the condition for understanding and self-understanding is thelinguistically mediated tradition to which we belong, ‘the whole treasury <strong>of</strong> symbolstransmitted by the cultures within which we have come, at one and the same time, intoboth existence and speech’ (OI, 192–3).At one point in his career, 35 Ricoeur equated hermeneutics with the interpretation <strong>of</strong>symbols, i.e., various double-meaning expressions such as stain, fall, wandering,captivity, and so on, the purpose <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics being that <strong>of</strong> explicating the non-literalmeaning <strong>of</strong> these expressions, thereby recollecting and restoring the fullness <strong>of</strong> theirsymbolic meaning. In work undertaken subsequent to what he calls his ‘linguistic turn’,Ricoeur’s view <strong>of</strong> the scope <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics expanded to include the entire range <strong>of</strong>human linguisticality, the issue <strong>of</strong> textuality in particular. Gadamer for his part devotedfully one-third <strong>of</strong> Truth and Method to a discussion <strong>of</strong> language. If ‘all understanding isinterpretation’, it is equally the case, Gadamer insists, that ‘all interpretation takes placein the medium <strong>of</strong> language’. Language, he says, ‘is the universal medium in whichunderstanding itself is realized’ ([9.7], 350).This is Gadamer’s thesis concerning the ‘linguisticality’ (Sprachlichkeit) <strong>of</strong>experience, regarded by some as ‘his most original contribution to the history <strong>of</strong>hermeneutics’. 36 As he formulates it, the thesis is a strong one:Linguistic interpretation is the form <strong>of</strong> all interpretation, even when what is tobe interpreted is not linguistic in nature, i.e., is not a text, but is a statue or amusical composition. We must not let ourselves be confused by these forms <strong>of</strong>interpretation which are not linguistic, but in fact presuppose language.([9.7], 360)A natural reaction on the part <strong>of</strong> many readers is to object that, surely, we haveexperiences which are not linguistic in nature. As if in realization <strong>of</strong> the somewhatcounter-intuitive nature <strong>of</strong> his thesis, Gadamer goes on to say:We must understand properly the nature <strong>of</strong> the fundamental priority <strong>of</strong> languageasserted here. Indeed, language <strong>of</strong>ten seems ill-suited to express what we feel.In the face <strong>of</strong> the overwhelming presence <strong>of</strong> works <strong>of</strong> art the task <strong>of</strong> expressingin words what they say to us seems like an infinite and hopeless undertaking. Itseems like a critique <strong>of</strong> language that our desire and capacity to understandalways go beyond any statement that we can make. But this does not affect thefundamental priority <strong>of</strong> language.([9.7], 362)It is indeed necessary, as Gadamer says, to understand properly the nature <strong>of</strong> the prioritybeing asserted here. Gadamer is not advocating a kind <strong>of</strong> Sprachidealismus, a linguisticidealism. He is not defending a metaphysical thesis to the effect that there is nothingoutside <strong>of</strong> language or that everything can be reduced to language—as Derrida was


Hermeneutics 256subsequently perceived to be saying (‘Il n’y a pas de hors-texte’). The linguisticalitythesisdoes not deny the meaningfulness <strong>of</strong> non-linguistic modes <strong>of</strong> experience; rather itaffirms that meaningfulness by maintaining that it can always, in principle, be brought toexpression (can be interpreted) in language. If the pre-linguistic could not be sointerpreted, it would indeed be meaningless to speak <strong>of</strong> it as having any meaning at all.Thus, as Gadamer says:language always forestalls any objection to its jurisdiction. Its universality keepspace with the universality <strong>of</strong> reason. Hermeneutical consciousness is onlyparticipating in something that constitutes the general relation between languageand reason. If all understanding stands in a necessary relation <strong>of</strong> equivalence toits possible interpretation and if there are basically no bounds set tounderstanding, then the linguistic form which the interpretation <strong>of</strong> thisunderstanding finds must contain within it an infinite dimension that transcendsall bounds. Language is the language <strong>of</strong> reason itself.([9.7], 363)Ricoeur too insists on this ‘general relation between language and reason’. The operantpresupposition or ‘central intuition’ 37 underlying his hermeneutical endeavours is thatexistence is indeed meaningful, that, notwithstanding the very real existence <strong>of</strong>unmeaning, necessity (unfreedom) and evil, there is in existence ‘a super-abundance <strong>of</strong>meaning to the abundance <strong>of</strong> non-sense’. 38 The core <strong>of</strong> what could be called Ricoeur’sphilosophical faith is his belief in the dicibilité, the ‘sayability’, <strong>of</strong> experience. Heformulates this ‘wager for meaning’ or this ‘presupposition <strong>of</strong> meaning’ in the followingway: ‘It must be supposed that experience in all its fullness…has an expressibility[dicibilité] in principle. Experience can be said, it demands to be said. To bring it tolanguage is not to change it into something else, but, in articulating and developing it, tomake it become itself ([9.15], 115).Perhaps no more forceful statement could be adduced to highlight the fundamentaldifference between hermeneutics and other forms <strong>of</strong> postmodern philosophy which alsoemphasize the centrality <strong>of</strong> language but which proceed to draw from such a recognitionconclusions <strong>of</strong> a philosophically agnostic sort (cf. Derrida’s notions <strong>of</strong> différance and‘undecidability’). For hermeneutics the fact that our understanding <strong>of</strong> things is alwaysmediated by language does not mean that language is a barrier preventing us from havinggenuine access to ‘reality’. Precisely because <strong>of</strong> the linguisticality <strong>of</strong> understanding,hermeneutics insists that there is—‘in principle’, as Ricoeur would say—nothing that wemight wish to understand which cannot, in one way or another, be brought to language.As Gadamer states: ‘everything that is intelligible must be accessible to understandingand to interpretation. The same thing is as true <strong>of</strong> understanding as <strong>of</strong> language’ ([9.7],365). ‘Every language’, he maintains, ‘…is able to say everything it wants’ ([9.7], 363).This <strong>of</strong> course is not to say that one could ever succeed in saying everything that there isto be said about anything; experience <strong>of</strong> the world is not only expressible, it is infinitelyexpressible and is, therefore, inexhaustible in its meaning. 39It should be noted that the hermeneutical ‘postulate <strong>of</strong> meaningfulness’, <strong>of</strong>expressibility, is not merely an article <strong>of</strong> (philosophical) faith but is based on an


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 257ontological thesis as to the relationship between human understanding (what traditionalphilosophy would have called the ‘mind’) and reality. The thesis is one to whichGadamer gave the following succinct formulation: ‘Being that can be understood islanguage’ ([9.7], 432). Let us attempt to unpack this very provocative assertion.What exactly the thesis as to the ‘linguisticality <strong>of</strong> the world’ means can perhaps bestbe grasped when it is reinserted in the phenomenological context from which it derives;for hermeneutics the relation between language and the world parellels the relationbetween consciousness and the world as described by Husserl. As was mentioned earlier,the ‘phenomenological reduction’ was the means by which Husserl sought to overcomethe subject/object split <strong>of</strong> philosophical modernity. What the reduction served to reveal isthe ‘intentionality’ <strong>of</strong> consciousness: ‘all consciousness is consciousness <strong>of</strong> its object, <strong>of</strong>the world.’ In other words, in being conscious, one is not first <strong>of</strong> all conscious <strong>of</strong> one’sown consciousness and then, only subsequently, <strong>of</strong> an object; on the contrary, selfconsciousnessis derivative—‘parasitical’, even—upon an immediate consciousness <strong>of</strong>the object. 40 Consciousness is therefore not something we have to break out <strong>of</strong> in order toencounter the world. As Merleau-Ponty remarked, ‘there is no inner man’; 41consciousness is ‘always already’ in a world and thus is itself a mode <strong>of</strong> being-in-theworld.Transposed from the register <strong>of</strong> consciousness to that <strong>of</strong> language, the intentionalitythesismeans that between language and the world there exists, as Gadamer puts it, amutual belonging, an ‘affiliation’. What language ‘expresses’ is nothing other than theworld itself, and thus, as Gadamer says, ‘language has no independent life apart from theworld that comes to language within it’ ([9.7], 401). Echoing, as it were, Heidegger’scharacterization <strong>of</strong> language as ‘das Haus des Seins’, the home <strong>of</strong> being, Gadamer insistson ‘the intimate unity <strong>of</strong> word and object’. Objecting to ‘the instrumentalist devaluation<strong>of</strong> language that we find in modern times’ ([9.7], 365), Gadamer maintains that languageis not simply a tool, ‘a mere means <strong>of</strong> communication’ ([9.7], 404). ‘Language’, he says,‘is not just one <strong>of</strong> man’s possessions in the world, but on it depends the fact that man hasa world at all.’ By strict phenomenological logic, the conclusion follows: ‘this world islinguistic in nature’ ([9.7], 401). Thus, to speak <strong>of</strong> ‘the nature <strong>of</strong> things’ or <strong>of</strong> ‘thelanguage <strong>of</strong> things’ is, Gadamer remarks, to use two expressions ‘that for all intents andpurposes mean the same thing’ ([9.5], 69).Like the notion <strong>of</strong> a fusion <strong>of</strong> horizons, the hermeneutical view <strong>of</strong> language is adialectical concept resulting from a rejection <strong>of</strong> two alternative views <strong>of</strong> language. On theone hand, just as phenomenology rejects the modernist view <strong>of</strong> consciousness as a mere‘representation’ <strong>of</strong> the ‘external’ world, so likewise hermeneutics rejects the modernistview <strong>of</strong> language as nothing more ‘than a mere sign system to denote the totality <strong>of</strong>objects’ ([9.7], 377). The words <strong>of</strong> a natural language, Gadamer insists, are not merely‘signs’ that ‘refer’ to an alinguistic, pre-given reality. Words are not mere labels that westick on things that are fully defined in themselves; they are the very means by which thethings themselves exist for us. To say that language is the universal medium <strong>of</strong> ourexperience <strong>of</strong> the world means, practically or pragmatically speaking, that it is quitedevoid <strong>of</strong> meaning to speak <strong>of</strong> a totally extra-linguistic reality. The age-old goal <strong>of</strong>transcending language in such a way as to coincide with reality as it is ‘in itself, with atranscendental signified (as Derrida would say), is thereby shown to be a vain and


Hermeneutics 258meaningless pursuit. Hermeneutics spells the ‘end <strong>of</strong> metaphysics’ when it insists thatbeing itself is (to borrow a phrase from Jacques Lacan) ‘structuré comme un langage’,structured like a language.On the other hand, hermeneutics also rejects not only modernism but also thosepostmodern views <strong>of</strong> language which, in addition to viewing language as a mere system<strong>of</strong> signs, maintain as well that the system is closed in upon itself and that it ‘refers’ tonothing other than itself—which is to say, to nothing ‘real’ at all. That indeed would be aform <strong>of</strong> linguistic idealism.For hermeneutics, language is neither a mere tool nor an autonomous object in its ownright; it is the medium <strong>of</strong> understanding itself, and all understanding is in the last analysisa form <strong>of</strong> self-understanding. Faithful to its origins in existential phenomenology,hermeneutics views language as the means whereby a speaking subject arrives atunderstanding in dialogue with other speaking subjects. For his basic model <strong>of</strong>linguistically-mediated understanding, Gadamer invariably takes as his privilegedexample what is itself an instance <strong>of</strong> language as praxis: conversation (Gespräch). 42 Heseeks, as he says, ‘to approach the mystery <strong>of</strong> language from the conversation that weourselves are’ ([9.7], 340). Language, he says, ‘has its true being only in conversation, inthe exercise <strong>of</strong> understanding between people’ ([9.7], 404). By ‘conversation’ Gadamerunderstandsa process <strong>of</strong> two people understanding each other [‘fusion <strong>of</strong> horizons’]. Thus itis characteristic <strong>of</strong> every true conversation thateach opens himself to the otherperson, truly accepts his point <strong>of</strong> view as worthy <strong>of</strong> consideration and getsinside the other to such an extent that he understands not a particular individual,but what he says. The thing that has to be grasped is the objective rightness orotherwise <strong>of</strong> his opinion, so that they can agree with each other on the subject.([9.7], 347)We should note that, as Gadamer defines it, conversation is an instance <strong>of</strong> dialogue. Whatmakes the conversation a dialogue is that it is not simply the intersection <strong>of</strong> twomonologues; in a conversation there exists a genuine commonality. What makes for thiscommonality is not the individual ‘subjectivities’ <strong>of</strong> the interlocutors but rather what theconversation is ‘about’, ‘what is being said’, i.e., the ‘topic’ or ‘subject’ <strong>of</strong> theconversation or what Gadamer calls die Sache, that which is at issue (at play, en jeu) inthe conversation. 43 As in a game situation, what guides and rules over the conversation isnot the subjective intentions <strong>of</strong> the participants but ‘the object to which the partners in theconversation are directed’ ([9.7], 330). It should also be noted how the above definition<strong>of</strong> conversation also contains an implicit reference to the concept <strong>of</strong> truth, ashermeneutics conceives <strong>of</strong> it: truth (according to one reading <strong>of</strong> Gadamer’s somewhatambiguous remarks on the subject) is essentially the agreement that the interlocutorsarrive at in the course <strong>of</strong> a conversation on the issue at stake.Gadamer’s portrayal <strong>of</strong> language under the aegis <strong>of</strong> conversation is typically‘ontological’: it is part and parcel <strong>of</strong> his overall attempt to elaborate a philosophy (anontology) <strong>of</strong> human understanding. However, privileging as it does the point <strong>of</strong> view <strong>of</strong>the speaking subject (or subjects), it bypasses the approach to language taken by the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 259science <strong>of</strong> linguistics and the methodological implications there<strong>of</strong>. One <strong>of</strong> Ricoeur’s chiefpreoccupations has been to remedy this situation by engaging in a debate with theobjective science <strong>of</strong> language. Resisting Gadamer’s separation <strong>of</strong> ‘truth’ from ‘method’,Ricoeur defines his own approach vis-a-vis that <strong>of</strong> Heidegger and Gadamer as wanting tocontribute ‘to this ontological vehemence an analytical precision which it wouldotherwise lack’ (OI, 196).Like Gadamer, Ricoeur holds to ‘the conviction that discourse never exists for its ownsake, for its own glory, but that in all <strong>of</strong> its uses it seeks to bring into language anexperience, a way <strong>of</strong> living in and <strong>of</strong> Being-in-the-world which precedes it and whichdemands to be said’ (OI, 196). However, he believes that it is not sufficient simply toassert this conviction but that it must be justified given what could be called the‘semiological’ challenge. What exactly is this challenge?For structural or Saussurian linguistics (from which philosophicalpoststructuralism wasto draw much <strong>of</strong> its inspiration and, in particular, its rejection <strong>of</strong> the notion <strong>of</strong> ‘thesubject’), language is an autonomous system <strong>of</strong> differences, one <strong>of</strong> internal dependencieswhich are self-referential and self-defining. In this respect the system has no outside, onlyan inside, and, as a mere code, it is anonymous. This means that, from a ‘semiological’point <strong>of</strong> view, language has neither subject nor meaning nor reference, nor, a fortiori, is itto be viewed as a means <strong>of</strong> communication. It would seem, therefore, that in their viewson language hermeneutics and ‘semiology’ are irreconcilably opposed. 44Typically <strong>of</strong> his general approach to issues, Ricoeur has sought to arbitrate this disputeand to elaborate ‘a new phenomenology <strong>of</strong> language which would take seriously thechallenge <strong>of</strong> semiology, <strong>of</strong> structural linguistics, <strong>of</strong> all the “structuralisms”’. 45 He hasdone so by arguing that while on the micro level <strong>of</strong> phonological and lexical units thestructuralist approach to language is, qua science, fully justified, it none the less fails toaccount for what is uniquely characteristic <strong>of</strong> language when one considers largerlinguistic units, such as the sentence and, above all, the text. When language isconsidered no longer merely as an atemporal system <strong>of</strong> signs but as an event <strong>of</strong> discourse,as an ‘actualisation <strong>of</strong> our linguistic competence in performance’, it becomes apparent,Ricoeur argues, that language does indeed communicate something meaningful about theworld to a subject attuned to it (see [9.15], 132ff.). As we shall see in the next sectionwhen considering the hermeneutical principles <strong>of</strong> text-interpretation, what a textcommunicates is indeed a world, i.e., a possible mode <strong>of</strong> being-in-the-world.Ricoeur’s debate or Auseinandersetzung with structural linguistics illustrates very wellone <strong>of</strong> the persistent elements in his philosophizing. From his early work in philosophicalanthropology (where he sought to overcome the idealist limitations <strong>of</strong> Husserl’sphilosophy <strong>of</strong> consciousness) to his current concern with textuality, semantic innovationand the narrative function, Ricoeur has throughout waged a philosophical battle on tw<strong>of</strong>ronts. While seeking to overcome all forms <strong>of</strong> modern subjectivism and, in particular, allpsychologistic theories <strong>of</strong> meaning (e.g., those which equate meaning with authorialintention), he has consistently opposed various structuralist and poststructuralist attemptsto get rid <strong>of</strong> the notion <strong>of</strong> subjectivity altogether. What Ricoeur has worked to articulateis a renewed, transformed and, above all, decentred notion <strong>of</strong> the subject, i.e., one whichviews subjectivity not as a metaphysical ‘origin’ <strong>of</strong> meaning but as the result (‘effect’) <strong>of</strong>its transformative encounter with the ‘other’. If, as Habermas has done in a recent work,


Hermeneutics 260we were to take as one <strong>of</strong> the more noteworthy traits <strong>of</strong> contemporary philosophy itscritique <strong>of</strong> ‘a self-sufficient subjectivity that is posited absolutely’ 46 (‘the philosophy <strong>of</strong>the subject’, the ‘philosophy <strong>of</strong> consciousness’), the hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> Gadamer andRicoeur would stand out as exemplary in this regard. In its basic philosophicalorientation—key elements <strong>of</strong> which we have surveyed in this section—hermeneutics is aprime instance <strong>of</strong> the general movement in twentieth-century philosophy which has beena movement away from the paradigm <strong>of</strong> (monological) consciousness to that <strong>of</strong>(dialogical) intersubjectivity. To insist, as hermeneutics does, on the effective-historicaland linguistic nature <strong>of</strong> consciousness is, eo ipso, to insist on its intersubjective nature.To maintain that ‘the goal <strong>of</strong> all communication and understanding is agreementconcerning the object’ ([9.7, 260) is to aim at a conception <strong>of</strong> meaning and truth which isneither objectivistic nor subjectivistic. Truth is not to be thought <strong>of</strong> objectivistically as‘correspondence’ to some in-itself reality, nor is meaning to be thought <strong>of</strong>subjectivistically as something residing ‘within’ subjectivity itself. The attempt on thepart <strong>of</strong> phenomenological hermeneutics to move decisively beyond both objectivism andrelativism is especially evident in regard to its theories on text-interpretation, an issue towhich we now turn.THE HERMENEUTICAL THEORY OF TEXT INTERPRETATION‘The best definition for hermeneutics’, Gadamer writes, ‘is: to let what is alienated by thecharacter <strong>of</strong> the written word or by the character <strong>of</strong> being distantiated by cultural orhistorical distances speak again. This is hermeneutics: to let what seems to be far andalienated speak again.’ 47 As we have seen, however, Gadamer distances himself from thetradition <strong>of</strong> romantic hermeneutics by insisting that his ‘philosophical’ hermeneutics isnot intended as a skilled procedure, a body <strong>of</strong> knowledge that ‘can be brought under thediscipline <strong>of</strong> consciously employed rules and thus be deemed a technical doctrine’.Rather, it is, as he says (borrowing a phrase from Habermas), a ‘critical reflectiveknowledge’, i.e., an attempt to articulate what is ontologically presupposed in all acts <strong>of</strong>text-interpretation which seek to bridge over cultural or historical distances. 48 As acritical reflection, it seeks to uncover ‘the naive objectivism within which historicalsciences, taking their bearings from the self-understanding <strong>of</strong> the natural sciences, aretrapped’.In regard to text-interpretation, the ‘naive objectivism’ to be uncovered and overcomeis the belief that (as with respect to ‘reality’ naturalistically or scientistically conceived)texts contain within themselves (as Hirsch would say) a perfectly well-defined,determinate, selfsame, and unchanging meaning that it is the business <strong>of</strong> interpretationmerely to lay bare. It goes without saying that this objectivistic view <strong>of</strong> ‘knowledge’ isthoroughly at odds with the philosophical theory <strong>of</strong> human understanding outlined above.How then, we may ask, does philosophical hermeneutics conceive <strong>of</strong> textual meaning andthe business <strong>of</strong> interpretation?The basic point can be stated fairly tersely: what interpretation seeks to understand isnot the intention <strong>of</strong> the author, but the meaning <strong>of</strong> the text. To put the matter yet anotherway: textual meaning is not reducible to authorial intention. A ‘good’ text is precisely


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 261one which has something to say to us, its readers, over and above what its author may (ormay not) have intended and willed. 49 As Gadamer pointedly asks: ‘Does an author reallyknow so exactly and in every sentence what he means’ ([9.7], 489)? ‘The sense <strong>of</strong> a text’,Gadamer says, ‘in general reaches far beyond what its author originally intended.’ Andthus ‘the task <strong>of</strong> understanding is concerned in the first place with the meaning <strong>of</strong> the textitself’ ([9.7], 335).’ 50 The task <strong>of</strong> interpretation is to develop or explicate these textualmeanings—by means, as we shall see, <strong>of</strong> ‘application’. The distinctive tenet <strong>of</strong>philosophical hermeneutics is that, as Gadamer says, interpretation is never simplyreproduction ([9.7], 345).Gadamer’s rejection <strong>of</strong> authorial intention as the supreme criterion <strong>of</strong> textual meaningfollows from his views on conversation. As we have seen, a genuine conversation is onewherein we are not preoccupied with ‘reading the other person’s mind’ but areconcerned, instead, with coming to a mutual understanding (‘agreement’) with him or heron the topic under discussion. For Gadamer, the same is, or ought to be, the case in ourencounter with texts. Reading involves ‘not a mysterious communion <strong>of</strong> souls, but asharing <strong>of</strong> a common meaning’. The goal <strong>of</strong> interpretive understanding is not ‘torecapture the author’s attitude <strong>of</strong> mind but…the perspective within which he has formedhis views’ ([9.7], 259–60)—in other words, to join with him or her in a conversation onthe issue at stake in the text. Such is the ‘hermeneutic situation’ with regard to texts.To speak <strong>of</strong> ‘conversation’ is necessarily also to speak <strong>of</strong> a ‘fusion <strong>of</strong> horizons’. Whatoccurs in the act <strong>of</strong> reading or interpretation is a ‘fusion’ <strong>of</strong> the ‘horizon’ <strong>of</strong> the text (whatRicoeur calls the ‘world <strong>of</strong> the text’) with that <strong>of</strong> the reader. The meaning <strong>of</strong> the text isthe result <strong>of</strong> this ‘fusion’. Textual meaning is therefore nothing substantial in itself butexists rather in the form <strong>of</strong> an event, and this event is the act <strong>of</strong> reading. 51 If, as we haveseen, there are no answers but to questions we ourselves pose, then it is thepresupposition <strong>of</strong> ‘fore-meanings’ we bring to bear on a text which are decisive in whatthe text ‘tells’ us. ‘The only “objectivity” here’, Gadamer insists, ‘is the confirmation <strong>of</strong> afore-meaning in its being worked out’ ([9.7], 237).This <strong>of</strong> course is not to say that we are free to project our own presuppositions on tothe text arbitrarily—this would precisely not be a conversation in the Gadamerian sense.Indeed, to the degree that in reading a ‘fusion’ actually does occur, to that very degreeour own presuppositions are put at risk. The mark <strong>of</strong> arbitrary prejudices, Gadamer says,is that ‘they come to nothing in the working-out’ ([9.7], 237). This not infrequentlyhappens. Our fore-meanings are <strong>of</strong>ten not confirmed but challenged, and it is precisely inthis way that our own horizons are transformed, such that we gain in understanding. Notonly is understanding, in the final analysis, a form <strong>of</strong> self-understanding, but all selfunderstandingis ultimately a matter <strong>of</strong> self-transformation. When we encounter a text orobject whose newness is a challenge to our acquired presuppositions, what that objectsays to us is: ‘You must change yourself.’ Thus, in the act <strong>of</strong> reading, by means <strong>of</strong> thefusion <strong>of</strong> horizons effected thereby, we achieve an understanding <strong>of</strong> what is other byrelating its horizon to our own; however, in order to do so, we are at the same timechallenged to expand our own horizons, such that, through and by means <strong>of</strong> reading, ourown selves are renewed. The postmodern paradigm <strong>of</strong> intersubjectivity under whichphilosophical hermeneutics operates is perhaps no more in evidence than here, in itstheory <strong>of</strong> text-interpretation. ‘Only through others’, Gadamer says, ‘do we gain true


Hermeneutics 262knowledge <strong>of</strong> ourselves’ (PHC, 107).Another way <strong>of</strong> expressing this whole matter would be to say that all interpretationnecessarily involves application (Anwendung, applicatio). We can be said to haveunderstood a text, grasped its meaning, only when we are able to relate (‘apply’) what itsays to our own situation, our own historical horizon. Indeed, if there would be no way inwhich we could relate what a text says (what it means, ‘wants to say’, veut dire) to ourown situation, if, in other words, there were no way we could translate the language <strong>of</strong>the text into our own historically conditioned language—then it would be meaningless tospeak <strong>of</strong> our having to do with a text in the first place, i.e., something presumed to havemeaning. We would have no more grounds for viewing the thing in question as a textthan we would to view markings on the floor <strong>of</strong> the Peruvian desert as traces <strong>of</strong> aliensubjectivities from outer space, rather than as mere curiosities <strong>of</strong> nature.For Gadamer, the three moments <strong>of</strong> the ‘hermeneutical situation’—understanding,interpretation and application—are inseparable. Just as understanding always involvesinterpretation, so also interpretation always includes the element <strong>of</strong> application. Inasserting this interconnection (‘the truly distinctive feature <strong>of</strong> philosophic hermeneutics’,in the words <strong>of</strong> one commentator 52 ), Gadamer is once again distancing himself from thetradition <strong>of</strong> romantic hermeneutics and, indeed, from the basic paradigms <strong>of</strong> modernepistemology in general. In linking together understanding, interpretation and application,he is rejecting outright the modernist view <strong>of</strong> ‘knowledge’ as correct ‘representation’ <strong>of</strong>an in-itself state <strong>of</strong> affairs. He is insisting, in a decidedly postmodern fashion, that allgenuine knowledge is in fact transformation. Understanding, he maintains, is nevermerely ‘a reproductive, but always a productive attitude as well…. It is enough to saythat we understand in a different way, if we understand at all’ ([9.7], 264). What thatmeans in regard to text-interpretation is that, since understanding a text involves itsapplication to the situation <strong>of</strong> the interpreter, it is necessarily the case that in changingcircumstances a text is understood appropriately ‘only if it is understood in a differentway every time’ ([9.7] 275–6). This is yet another inevitable consequence <strong>of</strong> linking upmeaning with the event <strong>of</strong> understanding. If, indeed, understanding (truth) is itself in thenature <strong>of</strong> an event then, as Gadamer remar—provocatively, but with perfectly goodreason none the less: ‘the same tradition must always be understood in a differentway’ ([9.7], 278). An understanding <strong>of</strong> things which failed constantly to renew itself inthis way—through ‘application’—would be nothing more than (to borrow a phrase fromHegel) ‘the repetition <strong>of</strong> the same majestic ruin’. 53It may be noted in passing that Gadamer’s notions <strong>of</strong> the fusion <strong>of</strong> horizons and,consequent upon this, the transformative nature <strong>of</strong> understanding is enough to deflect one<strong>of</strong> the main criticisms <strong>of</strong>ten directed at his work, namely that it amounts to a form <strong>of</strong>cultural or intellectual conservatism. From what we have seen, it should be obvious thatGadamer’s defence <strong>of</strong> tradition is in no way a paean to an incessant repetition <strong>of</strong> thesame. If the ‘same’—the tradition—is not always understood differently, it ceases to whatGadamer understands by ‘tradition’. What are commonly referred to as ‘traditional’societies—ones which seek to deny change and transformative becoming and toperpetuate inviolate a particular societal order—are precisely ones which are devoid <strong>of</strong>tradition in the Gadamerian sense, i.e., a living tradition animated by a ‘historicalconsciousness’. The fact that language and its effective-history preforms our experience


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 263<strong>of</strong> the world does not, Gadamer insists, ‘remove the possibilities <strong>of</strong> critique’.‘Conversation’ always holds open ‘the possibility <strong>of</strong> going beyond our conventions’ andensures ‘the possibility <strong>of</strong> our taking a critical stance with regard to every convention’. Inshort, tradition does not present ‘an obstacle to reason’ ([9.7], 495–6). Gadamer’sresponse to charges <strong>of</strong> conservatism could not be more categorical:It is a grave misunderstanding to assume that emphasis on the essential factor <strong>of</strong>tradition which enters into all understanding implies an uncritical acceptance <strong>of</strong>tradition and socio-political conservatism…. In truth the confrontation <strong>of</strong> ourhistoric tradition is always a critical challenge <strong>of</strong> the tradition.(PHC, 108)Gadamer’s position in this matter could be summed up in the following way: given thepresuppositional nature <strong>of</strong> human understanding, the idea <strong>of</strong> a total critique <strong>of</strong> what hasbeen handed down to us by tradition is utopic and is an existential impossibility, for theonly way in which we can critically scrutinize certain presuppositions is by tacitlyappealing to others. However, the fact that we stand always within tradition and cannot,for that reason, criticize everything at once, does not mean that there are things thatcannot be criticized, as a cultural conservative might maintain. The fact <strong>of</strong> the matter isthat, for Gadamer, there is nothing that cannot, at some time or other, be subjected tocriticism in the light <strong>of</strong> reason. For Gadamer reason and tradition do not stand in anantithetical relation. ‘Reason’, he in fact says, ‘always consists in not blindly insistingupon what is held to be true but in critically occupying oneself with it.’ 54Thus, in contrast to intellectual conservatives such as Alasdair MacIntyre and LeoStrauss, Gadamer’s trenchant critique <strong>of</strong> philosophical modernity is not intended tojustify a return to an idealized, premodern, metaphysical past. When, as he <strong>of</strong>ten does,Gadamer makes use <strong>of</strong> notions drawn from the philosophical tradition, it is with the aim<strong>of</strong> articulating a decidedly post-metaphysical and post-foundationalist—which is to say,postmodern—theory <strong>of</strong> human being and understanding (albeit one which differs inimportant ways from other forms <strong>of</strong> postmodern thought in that it seeks to avoid theirrelativistic and nihilistic tendencies).Gadamer’s way <strong>of</strong> summing up his notion <strong>of</strong> application by saying that the ‘same’tradition must always be understood ‘in a different way’ may strike one as being, to saythe least, paradoxical. It would be meaningless indeed were Gadamer presenting histheory <strong>of</strong> interpretation as a science in the traditional sense <strong>of</strong> the term; from a scientificpoint <strong>of</strong> view the same conclusions should invariably follow from the same premises.Unlike Betti and Hirsch, however, Gadamer is not attempting to make <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics ascience; indeed, he is resolutely turning his back on the age-old Platonic notion <strong>of</strong> science(episteme). What he is arguing for is ‘a knowledge that is not a science’. 55 In order toindicate what such a knowledge could be, Gadamer effectuates, in the course <strong>of</strong> hisdiscussion <strong>of</strong> application, a creative retrieval <strong>of</strong> Aristotle’s notion <strong>of</strong> phronesis.Phronesis is the key concept in Aristotle’s practical philosophy (ethics, politics) and isconcerned with the crucial issue <strong>of</strong> how something universal is to be applied in particularcircumstances. Phronesis designates a form <strong>of</strong> historically informed, prudential judgmentwhich seeks to determine not what is eternally true or valid (as in mathematics) but, as


Gadamer would say, ‘what is feasible, what is possible, what is correct, here andnow’ ([9.7], xxv). In opposition to Plato, Aristotle argued that in matters <strong>of</strong> practicalreasoning (whose object is human action) there can be no hard and fixed rules which, asin logic, can mechanically generate particular decisions. In practical reasoning there is, asit were, a dialectical relation between the universal and the particular; the relationbetween the two is one not <strong>of</strong> logical subsumption but <strong>of</strong> codetermination. The universalin question (an ethical maxim, a law, a principle <strong>of</strong> political philosophy, and so on) isoriented entirely towards its application and has no real meaning apart from it—in that,precisely, its raison d’être, as a theoretical principle, is itself entirely practical, in that it ismeant to serve as a guide to action—and yet the universal is not reducible to its particularapplications, either, since no single application <strong>of</strong> the universal is unequivocally dictatedby it and, consequently, can claim to exhaust it (to express its ‘univocal’ meaning). It isjust this sort <strong>of</strong> reciprocal or codetermining relation, Gadamer holds, that obtains betweena text (which, as something that is in a sense ‘self-same’, functions as a universal) andvarious interpretations (‘applications’) <strong>of</strong> it. He writes:The interpreter dealing with a traditional text seeks to apply it to himself. Butthis does not mean that the text is given for him as something universal, that heunderstands it as such and only afterwards uses it for particular applications.Rather, the interpreter seeks no more than to understand this universal thing, thetext; i.e., to understand what this piece <strong>of</strong> tradition says, what constitutes themeaning and importance <strong>of</strong> the text. In order to understand that, he must notseek to disregard himself and his particular hermeneutical situation. He mustrelate the text to this situation, if he wants to understand at all.([9.7], 289)Gadamer’s preferred model for text-interpretation is the interpretive activity <strong>of</strong> the jurist.‘Legal hermeneutics’, he maintains, ‘is able to point out what the real procedure <strong>of</strong> thehuman sciences is.’ As he goes on to say:Here we have the model for the relationship between past and present that weare seeking. The judge who adapts the transmitted law to the needs <strong>of</strong> thepresent is undoubtedly seeking to perform a practical task, but his interpretation<strong>of</strong> the law is by no means on that account an arbitrary re-interpretation. Hereagain, to understand and to interpret means to discover and recognise a validmeaning. He seeks to discover the ‘legal idea’ <strong>of</strong> a law by linking it with thepresent.From this Gadamer generalizes as follows:Hermeneutics 264Is this not true <strong>of</strong> every text, i.e., that it must be understood in terms <strong>of</strong> what itsays? Does this not mean that it always needs to be restated? And does not thisrestatement always take place through its being related to the present? …Legalhermeneutics is, then, in reality no special case but is, on the contrary, fitted torestore the full scope <strong>of</strong> the hermeneutical problem and so to retrieve the former


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 265unity <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics, in which jurist and theologican meet the student <strong>of</strong>humanities.([9.7], 292–3)It follows as a general conclusion that in text-interpretation it is altogetherinappropriate—indeed, quixotic—to seek to determine the single correct interpretation <strong>of</strong>a text. However, it also follows, and with equal force, that in text-interpretation, as inpractical reasoning in general, it is never the case that ‘anything goes’. If hermeneutics isan instance <strong>of</strong> practical reasoning, as indeed Gadamer insists that it is—‘The greattradition <strong>of</strong> practical philosophy lives on in a hermeneutics that becomes aware <strong>of</strong> itsphilosophic implications’ 56 —this means that while it is never possible to demonstrate thevalidity <strong>of</strong> one’s interpretations, it is nevertheless always possible to argue for them incogent, non-arbitrary, indeed, prudent ways. As an instance <strong>of</strong> practical philosophy,hermeneutics is as remote from dogmatic scientism as it is from interpretive anarchism. Itis precisely because hermeneutics is a practical philosophy in the Aristotelian sense <strong>of</strong> theterm that it can legitimately claim to have transcended both objectivism and relativism.Godamer’s interest in practical philosophy has led him to explore the relationshipbetween hermeneutics and rhetoric. The relationship between the two is both extensiveand deep. 57 If it is the case that hermeneutical reasoning is not a form <strong>of</strong> scientificdemonstration but <strong>of</strong> persuasive argumentation and that its object is not what is certainbut what is probable or likely, then it is obvious that it is to traditional rhetoric—thetheory <strong>of</strong> argumentation (in the words <strong>of</strong> Chaim Perelman 58 )—that hermeneutics isobliged to look for its theoretical and methodological grounding. The scope <strong>of</strong> rhetoric,Gadamer says, is truly unlimited, and thus to the universality <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics correspondsthe ubiquity <strong>of</strong> rhetoric. As he further remarks:Where, indeed, but to rhetoric should the theoretical examination <strong>of</strong>interpretation turn? Rhetoric from oldest tradition has been the only advocate <strong>of</strong>a claim to truth that defends the probable, the eikos (verisimile), and that whichis convincing to the ordinary reason, against the claim <strong>of</strong> science to accept astrue only what can be demonstrated and tested! Convincing and persuading,without being able to prove—these are obviously as much the aim and measure<strong>of</strong> understanding and interpretation as they are the aim and measure <strong>of</strong> orationand persuasion.([9.5], 24)Ricoeur shares with Gadamer the same basic approach to text-interpretation, the mostcommon element in which is perhaps the attempt to work out a ‘non-subjective’ theory <strong>of</strong>meaning. However, there are some noticeable differences between these two leadingrepresentatives <strong>of</strong> phenomenological hermeneutics, differences not so much in substance,perhaps, as in what they choose to accentuate. Three such differences may be noted.In the first instance, Ricoeur has always been uncomfortable with Gadamer’s apparentdichotomizing <strong>of</strong> ‘truth’ and ‘method’. Throughout his career Ricoeur has maintained astrong interest in the relationship between philosophy and the human sciences;accordingly, and in contrast to Gadamer, the focus <strong>of</strong> much <strong>of</strong> his attention has been on


Hermeneutics 266specific methodological issues. While he fully subscribes to the basic ontologicalconcerns <strong>of</strong> both Heidegger and Gadamer, he feels none the less that this particularpreoccupation on their part has tended to prevent philosophical hermeneutics fromentering into a serious dialogue with the more empirically oriented sciences. Reacting nodoubt to Gadamer’s somewhat underdefined notion <strong>of</strong> ‘truth’, 59 Ricoeur insists thatquestions <strong>of</strong> ‘validation’ cannot simply be bypassed. Gadamer’s ‘ontological’hermeneutics, he maintains, ignores the quite legitimate question <strong>of</strong> validation which sopreoccupied romantic hermeneutics. In Ricoeur’s eyes Gadamer develops not only theanti-psychologistic tendencies <strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s philosophy but also, unfortunately, its antimethodologicaltendencies as well. As a result, he says, a crisis is opened in thehermeneutical movement: ‘in correcting the “psychologizing” tendency <strong>of</strong>Schleiermacher and Dilthey, ontological hermeneutics sacrifices the concern forvalidation which, with the founders, provided a balance for the divinatory aspect.’ 60Ricoeur distinguishes his own ‘methodological’ hermeneutics from Gadamer’s‘ontological’ hermeneutics by saying that it attempts to place ‘interpretation theory indialogue and debate with the human sciences’. It is not surprising, therefore, that—in hiscontinuing attempt to mediate the ‘conflict <strong>of</strong> interpretations’—Ricoeur should make anexplicit attempt to incorporate Hirsch’s concerns for validation into his owninterpretation theory (though in a way which is hardly likely to have won Hirsch’sallegiance to the cause <strong>of</strong> phenomenological hermeneutics). 61Another aspect <strong>of</strong> Gadamer’s interpretation theory about which Ricoeur has expressedreservations is the conversation model on which Gadamer relies so extensively. In thelight <strong>of</strong> his concern over the nature <strong>of</strong> textuality as such, Ricoeur argues that therelationship between reader and text is significantly different from that between twoconversational partners. The latter should not be taken as a model for all instances <strong>of</strong>understanding, and it is definitely not appropriate for conceptualizing our relationshipwith texts: ‘the dialogical model does not provide us with the paradigm <strong>of</strong>reading’ ([9.15], 210). 62Far from viewing the act <strong>of</strong> reading as a kind <strong>of</strong> dialogue, we should, Ricoeurprovocatively remarks, consider even living authors as already dead and their books asposthumous—for only then does the readers’ relationship to the book become ‘completeand, as it were, intact’ ([9.15], 147). The reason for Ricoeur’s saying this is the pr<strong>of</strong>oundtransformation that he believes writing has on language. Ricoeur defines a text as ‘anydiscourse fixed by writing’ ([9.15], 145). but with this ‘fixation’ something importanthappens: the text achieves, as it were, an ‘emancipation with respect to theauthor’ ([9.15], 139). More specifically, in writing, the intention <strong>of</strong> the author and themeaning <strong>of</strong> the text cease to coincide (in spoken discourse, Ricoeur holds, the intention <strong>of</strong>the speaker and the meaning <strong>of</strong> what he says overlap) (see [9.15], 200). In other words,when language is transformed into a text, it assumes a life <strong>of</strong> its own, independent <strong>of</strong> that<strong>of</strong> its author. As Ricoeur expresses the matter: ‘the text’s career escapes the finite horizonlived by its author. What the text says now matters more than what the author meant tosay, and every exegesis unfolds its procedures within the circumference <strong>of</strong> a meaning thathas broken its moorings to the psychology <strong>of</strong> the author’ ([9.15], 201).This leads directly into the third difference between Ricoeur and Gadamer to be notedin the present context, having to do with the notion <strong>of</strong> ‘distantiation’. It will be recalled


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 267how at the outset <strong>of</strong> the present section I quoted Gadamer as saying: ‘The best definitionfor hermeneutics is: to let what is alienated by the character <strong>of</strong> the written word or by thecharacter <strong>of</strong> being distantiated by cultural or historical distances speak again.’ Thisremark might seem to imply that distantiation is a negative factor which it is the task <strong>of</strong>interpretation to overcome as much as possible. Ricoeur for his part appears to readGadamer in this way; he perceives as ‘the mainspring <strong>of</strong> Gadamer’s work…theopposition between alienating distantiation and belonging’—an opposition reflected inthe very title <strong>of</strong> Gadamer’s Truth and Method ([9.15], 131). He sees Gadamer as wantingto renounce the concern <strong>of</strong> the human sciences for objectivity so as to reaffirm our‘belongingness’ to the tradition. In opposition to this, Ricoeur states: ‘My own reflectionstems from a rejection <strong>of</strong> this alternative and an attempt to overcome it.’The point that Ricoeur wishes to emphasize is that the phenomenon <strong>of</strong> textualityovercomes ‘the alternative between alienating distantiation and participatory belonging’in such a way as to introduce ‘a positive and, if I may say so, productive notion <strong>of</strong>distantiation.’ Why is distantiation a ‘productive function’? Distantiation is productive inthat, in ‘alienating’ a text from its original context, it confers on the text a kind <strong>of</strong>‘autonomy’, thereby freeing it for what is in fact its true vocation, namely, that <strong>of</strong> being‘reactualized’ in ever new contexts (becoming in this way a genuinely ‘living’ text). 63This reactualization (or recontextualization) is what Ricoeur calls‘appropriation’ (Aneignung). He prefers this term to ‘application’ (Anwendung), since itunderscores the central role that the reader plays in regard to the text. To ‘appropriate’means ‘“to make one’s own” what was initially “alien”’ ([9.15], 185). It is the reader’sfunction to actualize (‘make actual, real”) the meaning <strong>of</strong> the text. A text is, by its verynature, addressed to someone, to ‘an audience which extends in principle to anyone whocan read’ ([9.15], 139). In a very real sense, the text’s audience is one ‘that it itselfcreates’ ([9.15], 202). In any event, without an audience (an addressee) to reactualize it,the meaning <strong>of</strong> a text would remain for ever ‘undecidable’, as Derrida has quite rightlyremarked. Thus, for Ricoeur, ‘reading is the concrete act in which the destiny <strong>of</strong> the textis fulfilled’ ([9.15], 164)Ricoeur’s position in this matter is a strict consequence <strong>of</strong> his rejection <strong>of</strong> thepsychologistic theory <strong>of</strong> meaning. The meaning <strong>of</strong> a text is its ‘reference’, but this isneither the psychological intention <strong>of</strong> the author nor an empirical state <strong>of</strong> affairs in the socalled‘objective’ world (‘ostensive reference’). The true referent <strong>of</strong> a text is what it is‘about’, what Gadamer calls die Sache, the ‘matter <strong>of</strong> the text’. Ricoeur calls this the‘world <strong>of</strong> the text’. He defines it as ‘the ensemble <strong>of</strong> [nonsituational] references openedup by the text’—as when we speak <strong>of</strong> the ‘world <strong>of</strong> the Greeks’, meaning thereby not anempirical reality but a particular understanding <strong>of</strong> the world ([9.15], 202). The ‘intendedmeaning <strong>of</strong> the text’ is the ‘world’ that it discloses; the projecting <strong>of</strong> a world is ‘theprocess which is at work in the text’ ([9.15], 164).For Ricoeur there is no text that does not express a ‘world’, that ‘does not connect upwith reality’, no matter how fictional the text may be ([9.15], 141). In opposition toRoland Barthes, Ricoeur strenuously maintains that the language <strong>of</strong> texts does not merely‘celebrate itself. Poetry and novels may not refer to any merely empirical reality, but theymost definitely do have a ‘second-order reference’. 64 The central task <strong>of</strong> interpretation isthat <strong>of</strong> explicating this higher-level reference; herein lies, according to Ricoeur, ‘the


Hermeneutics 268center <strong>of</strong> gravity <strong>of</strong> the hermeneutical question’ ([9.15], 132), ‘the most fundamentalhermeneutical problem’ ([9.15], 141):If we can no longer define hermeneutics in terms <strong>of</strong> the search for thepsychological intentions <strong>of</strong> another person which are concealed behind the text,and if we do not want to reduce interpretation to the dismantling <strong>of</strong> structures[as in the structuralist, purely explanatory approach], then what remains to beinterpreted? I shall say: to interpret is to explicate the type <strong>of</strong> being-in-the-worldunfolded in front <strong>of</strong> the text.This last remark provides a more precise indication <strong>of</strong> what Ricoeur means by the ‘world<strong>of</strong> the work’. This ‘world’ is none other than Husserl’s life-world or Heidegger’s beingin-the-world.That is to say, the ‘possible world’ ([9.15], 218) unfolded in a text isnothing other than a possible mode <strong>of</strong> being. In other words, it is a world which I, thereader, could (possibly) inhabit. By opening up a world for us, a text provides us with‘new dimensions <strong>of</strong> our being-in-the-world’ ([9.15], 202); it suggests to us new anddifferent ways in which we ourselves could be. ‘To understand a text’, Ricoeur says, ‘isat the same time to light up our own situation’ ([9.15], 202). It is at this point thatRicoeur’s theory <strong>of</strong> text-interpretation links up with his overriding concern to articulate anon-metaphysical concept <strong>of</strong> subjectivity, ‘a new theory <strong>of</strong> subjectivity’ ([9.15], 182).The key point here is that in appropriating the meaning (the ‘world’) <strong>of</strong> a text, thereader—the self—reappropriates itself, acquires in effect a new self. ‘What would weknow <strong>of</strong> love and hate,’ Ricoeur asks, ‘<strong>of</strong> moral feelings and, in general, <strong>of</strong> all that wecall the self, if these had not been brought to language and articulated byliterature’ ([9.15], 143)? The relation between text and reader is thus, as it were, a twowaystreet: the text depends on its readers for its actualization, but in the process <strong>of</strong>reading—giving the text a meaning—readers are themselves actualized(‘metamorphosed’)—given a self—by the text. In exposing ourselves to the text, weundergo ‘imaginative variations’ <strong>of</strong> our egos (see [9.15], 189) and receive in this wayfrom the text ‘an enlarged self, which would be the proposed existence corresponding inthe most suitable way to the world proposed’ ([9.15], 143). Thus, as Ricoeur remarks:In general we may say that appropriation is no longer to be understood in thetradition <strong>of</strong> philosophies <strong>of</strong> the subject, as a constitution <strong>of</strong> which the subjectwould possess the key. To understand is not to project oneself into the text; it isto receive an enlarged self from the apprehension <strong>of</strong> proposed worlds which arethe genuine object <strong>of</strong> interpretation.([9.15], 182–3)It can thus be seen that while Ricoeur’s interpretation theory situates the reader at theheart <strong>of</strong> the interpretive process, it does not legitimate any form <strong>of</strong> interpretationalsubjectivism; what it calls for is ‘instead a moment <strong>of</strong> dispossession <strong>of</strong> the narcissisticego’ ([9.15], 192). 65 However, by linking up the understanding <strong>of</strong> meaning with selfunderstanding,it does illustrate in a striking way Ricoeur’s basic philosophical motiveswhich derive from the tradition <strong>of</strong> reflective (or reflexive) philosophy and, more


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 269particularly, the concern for the ‘self that he inherits from existentialism. 66 In all textinterpretationwhat is ultimately at stake is a self in search <strong>of</strong> self-understanding, insearch <strong>of</strong> ‘the meaning <strong>of</strong> his own life’ ([9.15], 158). Thus Ricoeur writes: ‘By“appropriation”, I understand this: that the interpretation <strong>of</strong> a text culminates in the selfinterpretation<strong>of</strong> a subject who thenceforth understands himself better, understandshimself differently, or simply begins to understand himself ([9.15], 158). It is accordinglynot surprising that when in the course <strong>of</strong> a famous debate Lévi-Strauss asserted that forhim meaning is always phenomenal and that underneath meaning (conceived <strong>of</strong> asnothing more than the combination <strong>of</strong> elements meaningless in themselves) there is onlynon-meaning, Ricoeur should have insisted most strongly: ‘If meaning is not a segment inself-understanding, I don’t know what it is.’ 67 The position that Ricoeur adopts in hisconsideration <strong>of</strong> the human sciences and, in particular, the explanation/ understandingdebate is, as we shall see in what follows, dictated by this fundamental conviction.HERMENEUTICS AND THE HUMAN SCIENCES: FROM TEXT TOACTIONIf Gadamer’s major contribution to philosophical hermeneutics is to have provided it witha general theory <strong>of</strong> human understanding, Ricoeur’s vital contribution to the disciplinecould perhaps be said to consist in his having drawn from this ontology <strong>of</strong> understandingmethodological conclusions <strong>of</strong> direct relevance to the practice <strong>of</strong> the human sciences. Indoing so, he has also addressed the key problem in the philosophy <strong>of</strong> the human sciencesthat Gadamer’s hermeneutics tends to leave unresolved, namely, the problem <strong>of</strong> therelation between explanation and understanding.What is it about hermeneutics, one might ask, that makes it especially relevant to thehuman sciences? Or, again, what is it about the human sciences that allows one tomaintain that they themselves are most properly understood when viewed as a form <strong>of</strong>‘applied’ hermeneutics? The proper objects <strong>of</strong> these disciplines might seem, on the face<strong>of</strong> it, to have very little in common: the traditional concern <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics is texts,whereas the proper object <strong>of</strong> the human sciences is human action. The human sciencesare concerned with what people do, the meaning <strong>of</strong> what they do, why and how they doit, and the consequences <strong>of</strong> their doing what they do. Hermeneutics is concerned, at itscore, with the right reading <strong>of</strong> texts. But perhaps, to be understood properly, humanaction needs also to be read in the right way. Perhaps the common element here is thenotion <strong>of</strong> meaning.What indeed constitutes the specificity <strong>of</strong> the human sciences vis-à-vis the naturalsciences? The difference lies first and foremost in the respective objects <strong>of</strong> these sciences.What is unique about the objects <strong>of</strong> the human sciences is that these objects are alsosubjects. As three human scientists remark: ‘the objects studied are subjects, embedded incultural practices, who think, construe, understand, misunderstand, and interpret, as wellas reflect on the meanings they produce.’ 68 This difference in the objects (or subjectmatter) <strong>of</strong> the two kinds <strong>of</strong> science dictates a difference in method (it does, that is, if oneadheres to Aristotle’s injunction to the effect that a science should always adapt itsmethod to the nature <strong>of</strong> the object under consideration). From a methodological point <strong>of</strong>


Hermeneutics 270view, human action falls under a different category altogether than does mere physicalmotion. Motion can be ‘explained’ in purely mechanistic terms, in terms <strong>of</strong> physicalcause and effect relations, but action cannot properly be ‘understood’ except in terms <strong>of</strong>meaning. As the object <strong>of</strong> a science, human agents are not only interpreted objects (as inthe case <strong>of</strong> the natural sciences), they are also self-interpreting subjects.Phenomenologically speaking, what is unique about that entity called ‘man’ is that he is aself-interpreting animal (this is, <strong>of</strong> course, simply another way <strong>of</strong> saying that ‘man’ is the‘speaking animal’). What this all means is that (in the words <strong>of</strong> the hermeneuticalanthropologist Clifford Geertz) ‘man is an animal suspended in webs <strong>of</strong> significance hehimself has spun’ and that, accordingly, the analysis <strong>of</strong> human culture (understood asprecisely those ‘webs’) is not ‘an experimental science in search <strong>of</strong> [nomologicaldeductive]law but an interpretive one in search <strong>of</strong> meaning’. 69Human action is essentially meaningful (significative) in that action is, by definitionand in contrast to purely physical systems, intentional, teleological or purposeful.Humans act in order to bring into being states <strong>of</strong> affairs that would not, or would notlikely, prevail without their acting. If, for instance, humans engage in economic activities(the only species to do so), it is, as economist Ludwig von Mises has remarked, in orderto improve their material position, to make their lives more liveable, more meaningful. 70That human action is essentially meaningful can therefore be taken as an ontological (orphenomenological) fact. The crucial question, as concerns the human sciences, is amethodological one: if the human sciences cannot look to the natural sciences for theirmethod (since the concept <strong>of</strong> meaning or purpose is itself meaningless in a purelyphysicalistic or mechanistic context), where are they to look? This is where hermeneuticscomes in.In a famous article, ‘The Model <strong>of</strong> the Text: Meaningful Action Considered as a Text’,Ricoeur addressed the above mentioned question. Meaningful action, he said, can be theobject <strong>of</strong> a science only if the meaning <strong>of</strong> action is ‘objectified’ in a way equivalent tothat in which the meaning <strong>of</strong> discourse is ‘fixated’ by writing (see [9.15], 203)—only if,in other words, action can properly be viewed as a text-analogue (a ‘quasi text’). Ricoeurmaintains that this is indeed the case. He writes:In the same way that a text is detached from its author, an action is detachedfrom its agent and develops consequences <strong>of</strong> its own. This autonomisation <strong>of</strong>human action constitutes the social dimension <strong>of</strong> action. An action is a socialphenomenon…because our deeds escape us and have effects which we did notintend. One <strong>of</strong> the meanings <strong>of</strong> the notion <strong>of</strong> ‘inscription’ [‘fixation’] appearshere. The kind <strong>of</strong> distance which we found between the intention <strong>of</strong> the speakerand the verbal meaning <strong>of</strong> a text occurs also between the agent and its action.([9.15], 206)This is an important text, in that it specifies clearly that aspect <strong>of</strong> meaningful humanaction which makes <strong>of</strong> it the proper object <strong>of</strong> a social science: as in the case <strong>of</strong> texts, themeaning <strong>of</strong> action is not reducible to the psychological intentions <strong>of</strong> the agentsthemselves. The meaning <strong>of</strong> what people do displays an autonomy similar to that <strong>of</strong> textsin regard to their authors’ intentions. Thus here too the notion <strong>of</strong> meaning must be


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 271‘depsychologized’ or ‘desubjectivized’. The proper objects <strong>of</strong> the social sciences arevarious social orders (the equivalent <strong>of</strong> texts) which are the result <strong>of</strong> human action—theresult, it must be added, <strong>of</strong> human action but not necessarily <strong>of</strong> human design. 71 AsRicoeur remarks: ‘our deeds escape us and have effects which we did not intend.’ Ourdeeds escape us in the same way that the text’s career escapes the finite horizon <strong>of</strong> itsauthor. Strictly speaking, therefore, the meaningful action or, better expressed, themeaningful patterns <strong>of</strong> action that the social sciences seek to understand are neithersubjective nor objective (in the purely physicalistic sense <strong>of</strong> the term). As the Canadianhermeneuticist Charles Taylor has emphasized, we are dealing here with meanings whichare not subjective (residing in the heads <strong>of</strong> the actors) but rather intersubjective. ‘Themeanings and norms implicit in these practices’, Taylor observes, ‘are not just in theminds <strong>of</strong> the actors but are out there in the practices themselves, practices which cannotbe conceived as a set <strong>of</strong> individual actions, but which are essentially modes <strong>of</strong> socialrelation, <strong>of</strong> mutual action.’ 72 Although, as Ricoeur reminds us, it is only individuals whodo things, it is nevertheless also the case that human action is meaningful—and thusunderstandable—only in terms <strong>of</strong> a shared public world. 73 As one psychotherapistobserves:The meaning <strong>of</strong> action can be read from the directedness <strong>of</strong> the action seenwithin the pattern <strong>of</strong> practices that constitute the individual’s social milieu. It isthese practices, and not any representations in the individual’s head, thatdetermine the meanings attributable to the individual. The background <strong>of</strong> socialpractices and cultural institutions give specific objects and actions—and evenmental representations when they do occur—their meanings. 74Another way <strong>of</strong> expressing the matter would be to say that just as what constitutes a textis that it has a certain ‘logic’ which it is precisely the task <strong>of</strong> text-interpretation to laybare (Ricoeur speaks in this regard <strong>of</strong> ‘the internal dynamic which governs the structuring<strong>of</strong> the work’ (OI, 193)), so also there is a certain objective logic to human events orpractices which it is precisely the task <strong>of</strong> social science to explicate. The social orders or‘wholes’ that social scientists (anthropologists, economists, historians, etc.) seek to renderintelligible possess their own unique ontological status in that their mode <strong>of</strong> being isneither psychological nor physical; it is, as Merleau-Ponty would say, an ‘ambiguous’mode <strong>of</strong> being, neither that <strong>of</strong> the for-itself nor that <strong>of</strong> the in-itself. These wholes areindeed objective (or incarnate) logics, which exist as the sedimented results (in the form,ultimately, <strong>of</strong> sociocultural institutions) <strong>of</strong> the activities <strong>of</strong> a myriad <strong>of</strong> individual humanagents, each <strong>of</strong> whom was pursuing meaning in his or her own life. If this is indeed thecase, the crucial methodological question becomes: what method is most appropriate tothe task <strong>of</strong> explicating these logics?From what has been said, it should be evident that a purely descriptive approach (interms <strong>of</strong> mental states) is no more appropriate than would be a purely ‘explanatory’,cause-and-effect approach; in both cases the object to be understood—meaningembedded in intersubjective practices—would be lost sight <strong>of</strong>. Human agents are selfinterpretingbeings, but it is not the task <strong>of</strong> a social science simply to ‘describe’ theseinterpretations. It is not their task, if it is indeed the case that the meaning <strong>of</strong> action


Hermeneutics 272surpasses the intentions <strong>of</strong> the actors themselves. The function <strong>of</strong> interpretation cannotsimply be that <strong>of</strong> Verstehen in the classical sense <strong>of</strong> the term, i.e., that <strong>of</strong> articulating theself-understanding <strong>of</strong> human actors, in such a way as to achieve an empatheticunderstanding <strong>of</strong> them. The unavoidable fact <strong>of</strong> the matter is that the human sciences aredoubly interpretive; they are interpre-tations <strong>of</strong> the interpretations that people themselves<strong>of</strong>fer for their actions. As Clifford Geertz has observed: ‘what we call our data are reallyour own constructions <strong>of</strong> other people’s constructions <strong>of</strong> what they and their compatriotsare up to.’ 75 The fact that the proper object <strong>of</strong> social science is the logic <strong>of</strong> practices andnot merely the psychological intentions <strong>of</strong> actors means that social scientists <strong>of</strong>ten haveto discount the self-interpretations <strong>of</strong> the actors themselves. 76 Ricoeur has long insistedthat the consciousness that we have <strong>of</strong> ourselves is <strong>of</strong>ten a false consciousness, whichmeans that the hermeneutical enterprise must include as one <strong>of</strong> its moments, a‘hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> suspicion’.This amounts to saying that the role <strong>of</strong> an interpretive social science is necessarilycritical. The fact that there is inevitably a certain non-coincidence between theinterpretations worked out by the social scientist and the self-interpretations pr<strong>of</strong>fered bythe actors themselves means that there exists, in the words <strong>of</strong> John B.Thompson, a‘methodological space for…the critical potential <strong>of</strong> interpretation’. 77 Because there isalways, to one degree or another, a certain décalage or discrepancy between what peopledo and what they say they do, critique is in fact integral to interpretive understanding, andthis is why philosophical hermeneutics can, with Habermas in mind, insist on theemancipatory function <strong>of</strong> interpretive theory.In conceptualizing the interpretive function in a way such as this, Ricoeur is able, hebelieves, to resolve the long-standing conflict between ‘explanation’ and‘understanding’ (Gadamer had already portrayed Dilthey’s dichotomizing distinction as arelic <strong>of</strong> the Cartesian dualism which has infected all <strong>of</strong> modern thought). 78 From what hasbeen said, it is obvious that interpretation cannot be reduced to ‘understanding’, in thenarrow (empathetic) sense <strong>of</strong> the term. Indeed, precisely because the meaning <strong>of</strong> humanaction is not ‘subjective’, there is, Ricoeur maintains, a legitimate, albeit strictly limited,place for explanatory techniques <strong>of</strong> a purely objective nature in the overall interpretiveprocess. If (as in psychotherapy, for instance) meaningintentions are not open to, orcannot be exhaustively grasped by, direct inspection, and thus cannot simply be described‘from within’, but must be deciphered and interpreted, as it were, ‘from without’, itfollows that there is, by principle and <strong>of</strong> necessity, a rightful place for ‘explanation’ (inthe traditional sense <strong>of</strong> the term) in the human sciences.Just as, in the case <strong>of</strong> text-interpretation, it may be useful at the outset to approach atext in a purely objective way, in terms <strong>of</strong> an analysis <strong>of</strong> its formal structure or computeranalysis <strong>of</strong> word distribution, for instance, so also, in an attempt to understand humanaction, an objective approach, e.g., in terms <strong>of</strong> statistical analysis, may alert socialscientists to the existence <strong>of</strong> patterns they might otherwise over-look. What Ricoeurwishes nevertheless to emphasize is that the intelligibility provided by purely explanatorytechniques is essentially partial and one-sided. The phenomena themselves cannotproperly be understood, in the last analysis, until the results <strong>of</strong> the explanatory approachare integrated into a wider, interpretive understanding. For Ricoeur, ‘explanation’amounts to a methodological distantiation from what is ‘said’ in the text (the ‘world <strong>of</strong>


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 273the text’), but, unlike Gadamer (in Ricoeur’s view), he holds that this is a proper, andeven necessary, moment in the overall process <strong>of</strong> understanding, conceived <strong>of</strong>, in the lastanalysis, as ‘appropriation’. With Ricoeur there is, therefore, as one commentator says, a‘dialectic <strong>of</strong> an understanding which takes the detour <strong>of</strong> methodic distantiation so as toreturn to understanding’. 79Ricoeur’s strategy in this regard consists in locating ‘explanation and understanding attwo different stages <strong>of</strong> a unique hermeneutical arc’ ([9.15] 218), integrating thereby theopposed attitudes <strong>of</strong> explanation and understanding within an overall conception <strong>of</strong>interpretation as the recovery <strong>of</strong> meaning. In accordance with his hermeneuticalconviction that all understanding is ultimately a form <strong>of</strong> self-understanding, Ricoeurmaintains that, as he says, ‘the final brace <strong>of</strong> the bridge [is] anchorage <strong>of</strong> the arch in theground <strong>of</strong> lived experience’ ([9.15], 164). In accordance as well with his underlyingexistential motivations, Ricoeur also insists that social structures are ‘attempts to copewith existential perplexities, human predicaments and deep-rooted conflicts’ ([9.15],220). Thus, the ultimate goal <strong>of</strong> the social sciences is no different from that <strong>of</strong> textinterpretation,namely ‘appropriation’, a heightened understanding <strong>of</strong> the meaning <strong>of</strong> ourbeing-in-the-world. ‘We are not allowed’, Ricoeur insists, ‘to exclude the final act <strong>of</strong>personal commitment from the whole <strong>of</strong> objective and explanatory procedures whichmediate it’ ([9.15], 221). In applying Ricoeur’s notion <strong>of</strong> the ‘fixation’ or ‘inscription’ <strong>of</strong>meaning to the study <strong>of</strong> cultures, Clifford Geertz for his part insists that the ultimateconcern <strong>of</strong> the anthropologist is ‘the existential dilemmas <strong>of</strong> life’ and that the ‘essentialvocation’ <strong>of</strong> interpretive anthropology is that <strong>of</strong> making ‘available to us answers thatothers, guarding other sheep in other valleys, have given, and thus to include them in theconsultable record <strong>of</strong> what man has said’. 80Ricoeur has long maintained that human phenomena—texts, action—cannot properlybe understood until the results <strong>of</strong> the explanatory approach have been integrated into awider, interpretive understanding. In his latest work culminating in his three-volumestudy Time and Narrative (1983–8), he has argued that the attempt to understand thespecifically human must, in the final analysis, assume the form <strong>of</strong> a narrative. To theteleological nature <strong>of</strong> action, discussed above, corresponds the plot structure <strong>of</strong>narrative. 81 ‘Objective data’ (that is, the data that are produced as a result <strong>of</strong> theapplication <strong>of</strong> objective measuring techniques) achieve their maximum intelligibility notwhen, as is the goal <strong>of</strong> the natural sciences, they have been subsumed under (supposedly)binding and timeless ‘covering laws’ (whose putative purpose is that <strong>of</strong> ‘explanation’ and‘prediction’) but when, as in history or psychotherapy, they have been interrelated andintegrated into a narrative account, one which, precisely, confers meaning on themthrough narrative emplotment. For Ricoeur, the most primordial <strong>of</strong> all forms <strong>of</strong>understanding is thus that <strong>of</strong> story-telling. He writes:to follow a story is to understand the successive actions, thoughts and feelingsas displaying a particular directedness. By this I mean that we are pushed alongby the development and that we respond to this thrust with expectationsconcerning the outcome and culmination <strong>of</strong> the process. In this sense, the‘conclusion’ <strong>of</strong> the story is the pole <strong>of</strong> attraction <strong>of</strong> the whole process. But anarrative conclusion can be neither deduced nor predicted. There is no story


Hermeneutics 274unless our attention is held in suspense by a thousand contingencies. Hence wemust follow the story to its conclusion. So rather than being predictable, aconclusion must be acceptable. Looking back from the conclusion towards theepisodes which led up to it, we must be able to say that this end required thoseevents and that chain <strong>of</strong> action. But this retrospective glance is made possible bythe ideologically guided movement <strong>of</strong> our expectations when we follow thestory. Such is the paradox <strong>of</strong> the contingency, ‘acceptable after all’, whichcharacterises the understanding <strong>of</strong> any story.([9.I5], 277)As Kierkegaard pointed out, understanding comes always only after the event, and, asRicoeur has sought to show, the full measure <strong>of</strong> whatever understanding is available to usis made possible not by formalistic modes <strong>of</strong> explanation but by retrospective, narrativeemplotment. Ricoeur has developed his theory <strong>of</strong> the narrative function primarily withrespect to historiography, 82 but it can be, and has been, extended to other humansciences. 83 If Gadamer has argued for the universality <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics on the groundsthat hermeneutics is concerned with the entire range <strong>of</strong> human linguisticality—which, inturn, is coextensive with ‘being that can be understood’—Ricoeur advances this claimeven further when, in his later writings, he maintains that the object <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics istextuality, and that this notion is coextensive with human existence itself. As onecommentator remarks: ‘Hermeneutics is concerned with the interpretation <strong>of</strong> anyexpression <strong>of</strong> existence which can be preserved in a structure analogous to the struc-ture<strong>of</strong> the text…. Taking it to the limit, the entirety <strong>of</strong> human existence becomes a text to beinterpreted.’ 84As Ricoeur’s work on narrative clearly demonstrates, good history shares many <strong>of</strong> thesame traits as good fiction. In showing how understanding is ultimately a form <strong>of</strong> storytelling—andin undermining in this way the modernist opposition between the ‘real’ andthe ‘imaginary’—Ricoeur has also shown how hermeneutical truth is itself a result <strong>of</strong> theproductive imagination. 85 For Ricoeur the poetic imagination (the means whereby that‘higher order referent’ he calls the ‘world <strong>of</strong> the text’ is brought into being) is necessarilya ‘subversive force’ in regard to what is customarily (or traditionally) taken to be ‘real’. IfRicoeur stresses the role <strong>of</strong> the imagination in the overall understanding process, it isbecause he perceives this to be a strategic means <strong>of</strong> defending hermeneutics againstHabermas’s charge that it is inherently ‘conservative’. The hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> the textconceived <strong>of</strong> as a ‘hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> the power-to-be’ (and thus as a critique <strong>of</strong> the illusionsand false consciousness <strong>of</strong> the subject) would itself, he argues, provide the necessaryunderpinnings for a critique <strong>of</strong> ideology [9.15], 94). Of particular interest to Ricoeur is thetheme <strong>of</strong> the ‘social-imaginary’ (‘l’institution imaginaire de la société’, in the words <strong>of</strong>Cornelius Castoriadis), an interest which testifies to his overriding concern with socialand political, i.e., practical, philosophy—a concern shared by Gademer, as we shall see inwhat follows. 86HERMENEUTICS AND PRACTICAL PHILOSOPHY: ETHICAL ANDPOLITICAL IMPLICATIONS


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 275The ultimate task <strong>of</strong> hermeneutical reflection consists in explicating the values thatinform and guide hermeneutical practice itself. These are values that are inherent in the‘hermeneutical experience’ (as Gadamer calls it), i.e., in that most natural and universal<strong>of</strong> all human activities: the persistent attempt on the part <strong>of</strong> humans to achieveunderstanding, self-understanding, and, above all, mutual understanding. In articulatingthese values, hermeneutics seeks to do no more than to spell out the (practical)‘conditions <strong>of</strong> possibility’ <strong>of</strong> the interpretive-communicative process itself. It may benoted that the values arrived at in this way are the core values <strong>of</strong> traditional liberal theory:tolerance, reasonableness, the attempt to work out mutual agreements by means <strong>of</strong>discourse (‘conversation’) rather than by means <strong>of</strong> force. 87 The values in question areones that Gadamer would call ‘principles <strong>of</strong> reason’—in that they are integral tocommunicative understanding or rationality.Hermeneutical values are those having to do with respect for the freedom and dignity<strong>of</strong> one’s conversational partners, one’s fellow dialogical beings. A fundamental value inthis regard is that <strong>of</strong> equality. Since for an agreement to count as ‘true’—from theviewpoint <strong>of</strong> communicative rationality—it must be reached by non-coercive means, theright <strong>of</strong> dialogical partners to equal and fair consideration cannot rationally be denied.The hermeneutical notion <strong>of</strong> ‘good will’ 88 points to a core precept <strong>of</strong> democraticpluralism: the other may possibly be right over against oneself and thus must be accordeda freedom equal to one’s own. Of all the principles <strong>of</strong> reason, the highest is <strong>of</strong> coursefreedom itself. In the course <strong>of</strong> a discussion <strong>of</strong> Hegel, Gadamer asserts:There is no higher principle <strong>of</strong> reason than that <strong>of</strong> freedom. Thus the opinion <strong>of</strong>Hegel and thus our own opinion as well. No higher principle is thinkable thanthat <strong>of</strong> the freedom <strong>of</strong> all, and we understand actual history from the perspective<strong>of</strong> this principle: as the ever-to-be-renewed and the never-ending struggle forthis freedom.([9.6], 9)Freedom is the highest ‘principle <strong>of</strong> reason’ in that (as the theory <strong>of</strong> argumentation—the‘new rhetoric’—has shown) no one can claim to be ‘reasonable’ if he or she deniesfreedom <strong>of</strong> opinion and expression to others. No one, that is, can deny this freedomwithout undermining his or her own demand for due consideration (recognition) that isimplicit in the expressing <strong>of</strong> any opinion whatsoever, and without thereby ostracizinghimself or herself from collective or intersubjective deliberations as to what is true andright. For Gadamer freedom and reason are inseparable concepts; freedom is preciselythe freedom (the right) to possess a meaningful voice in the common dialogue, in that‘conversation’ which is constitutive <strong>of</strong> our humanity.In advocating the ‘freedom <strong>of</strong> all’ as the highest principle <strong>of</strong> reason, Gadamer, it willbe noted, is defending the universality <strong>of</strong> certain basic human values. Here again is anillustration <strong>of</strong> how hermeneutics differs in a most important way from other forms <strong>of</strong>anti-foundational postmodernism; unlike them, hermeneutics does not believe that arejection <strong>of</strong> objectivism need entail an anti-humanist relativism. To the universality <strong>of</strong>human linguisticality corresponds the universality <strong>of</strong> certain basic human rights. ‘It is nolonger possible’, Gadamer insists, ‘for anyone still to affirm the unfreedom <strong>of</strong>


Hermeneutics 276humanity’ ([9.6], 37). Unlike Heidegger and recent poststructuralists, both Gadamer andRicoeur defend the tradition <strong>of</strong> philosophical and political humanism. 89It may be noted as well that hermeneutics’ defence <strong>of</strong> normative universalism is whatallows for the possibility <strong>of</strong> a philosophical or rational critique <strong>of</strong> existing practices.‘The task <strong>of</strong> bringing people to a self-understanding <strong>of</strong> themselves’, Gadamer says, ‘mayhelp us to gain our freedom in relation to everything that has taken us inunquestioningly’ ([9.6], 149–50). To the degree that this or that form <strong>of</strong> humancommunity fails to embody the universal values <strong>of</strong> communicative rationality, it is alegitimate object <strong>of</strong> critique. To fail to expose various forms <strong>of</strong> ‘socialirrationality’ ([9.6], 74) for fear <strong>of</strong> being accused <strong>of</strong> ‘ethnocentrism’ and, morespecifically, <strong>of</strong> ‘Eurocentrism’ would, hermeneutics believes, amount to nothing less thana betrayal <strong>of</strong> reason. 90This is yet another reason why Gadamer’s own version <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics is improperlyunderstood when, as is <strong>of</strong>ten the case, it is thought to entail ‘an uncritical acceptance <strong>of</strong>tradition and sociopolitical conservatism’ (PHC, 108). Richard Bernstein is onecommentator who has clearly perceived the ‘radical’ element in Gadamer’s hermeneuticsthat follows from its stress on practical philosophy. Bernstein notes how, in attempting todraw out the practical consequences <strong>of</strong> philosophical hermeneutics, Gadamerappropriates from Hegel the principle <strong>of</strong> freedom (‘a freedom that is realized only whenthere is authentic mutual “recognition” among individuals’), and he remarks: ‘Thisradical strain is indicated in his emphasis—which has become more and more dominantin recent years—on freedom and solidarity that embrace all <strong>of</strong> humanity.’ 91Although he meant it as a criticism, Stanley Rosen was quite right when he said:‘Every hermeneutical program is at the same time a political manifesto or the corollary <strong>of</strong>a political manifesto.’ 92 Gadamer openly acknowledges this when he characterizeshermeneutics as scientia practica sive politica. 93 Hermeneutical philosophy is inevitablypolitical—to the degree, that is, that it is a form <strong>of</strong> practical philosophy, which is to say,to the degree that it privileges practical reason, phronesis, dialogue. In addition,hermeneutical politics inevitably assumes the form <strong>of</strong> what Ricoeur calls ‘politicalliberalism’. ‘This apologia <strong>of</strong> dialogue’, he says, ‘implies, in the context <strong>of</strong> politics, anunremitting censure <strong>of</strong> tyranny and authoritarian régimes, and a plea for discussion asalso for the free expression and unrestricted interplay <strong>of</strong> all shades <strong>of</strong> opinion.’ 94 In many<strong>of</strong> his shorter writings after Truth and Method Gadamer returns again and again to sociopoliticalissues, defending the values <strong>of</strong> communicative rationality and denouncing thesubtle forms <strong>of</strong> oppression that tend to subvert these values in an age dominated byscience and technology and a purely instrumentalist conception <strong>of</strong> reason. ‘It is thefunction <strong>of</strong> hermeneutical reflection, in this connection [the conservation <strong>of</strong> freedom],’Gadamer says, ‘to preserve us from naïve surrender to the experts <strong>of</strong> socialtechnology’ ([9.5], 40). 95The term used by Gadamer to refer to the normative ideal defended by hermeneutics issolidarity. What ‘practice’ means, Gadamer says, ‘is conducting oneself and acting insolidarity. Solidarity…is the decisive condition and basis <strong>of</strong> all social reason’ ([9.6], 87).The task incumbent upon hermeneutics is a universalist one; it is, as Gadamer might say,that <strong>of</strong> ‘reawakening consciousness <strong>of</strong> solidarity <strong>of</strong> a humanity that slowly begins toknow itself as humanity’ ([9.6], 86). The solidarity advocated by Gadamer is not, it


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 277should clearly be noted, one based solely on ethnic or cultural commonalities(Gemeinschaft, ‘culture’). What he means by solidarity is, rather, ‘rational identificationwith a universal interest’, with ‘the universals <strong>of</strong> law and justice’. 96 Unlike present-daycommunitarians <strong>of</strong> either the left or the right, Gadamer is not extolling the virtues <strong>of</strong> anyparticular ethos or way <strong>of</strong> life (‘community’), purely as such; he is arguing for the needfor a genuine, philosophical (and thus universalist) ethics. The relation here betweenethics (Moralität) and ethos (Sittlichkeit) parallels the more general relation between‘understanding’ (the universal) and ‘application’ (the particular) discussed above; theformer requires the latter, but is not reducible to it. 97 Practical reason is indeed a form <strong>of</strong>reason, which means that it makes a claim to universality. 98 In the final analysis, thesolidarity Gadamer defends is the solidarity <strong>of</strong> reason seeking ‘general agreement’; 99 it isthe solidarity <strong>of</strong> mutual recognition (Anerkennung) binding together the citizens <strong>of</strong> aliberal society (Gesellschaft), i.e., a polity, or what Kant called ‘a universal civicsociety’, 100 founded upon the rational idea <strong>of</strong> human rights and universal freedom. 101In opposition to anarchism in both its leftist and rightist versions (the latter sometimesreferred to as ‘anarcho-capitalism’), hermeneutics insists that for freedom and solidarityto prevail in practice liberal institutions are required (or what Gadamer refers to as ‘moraland human arrangements built on common norms’.) 102 As Merleau-Ponty had alreadypointed out, invoking the name <strong>of</strong> Hegel: ‘freedom requires something substantial; itrequires a State, which bears it and which it gives life to.’ The essential thing is theexistence <strong>of</strong> ‘institutions which implant this practice <strong>of</strong> freedom in our customs[moeurs]’. 103 Ricoeur reiterates this point. In the Hegelian view that Ricoeur adopts, an‘institution’ is the ‘whole <strong>of</strong> the rules relating to the acts <strong>of</strong> social life that allow thefreedom <strong>of</strong> each to be realized without harm to the freedom <strong>of</strong> others’. 104 Ricoeur refersto this institutional set-up as ‘un Etat de droit’, i.e., the liberal-democratic state or the rule<strong>of</strong> law. Such a state is democratic in that it ‘does not propose to eliminate conflicts but toinvent procedures permitting them to be expressed and to remain negotiable. The State <strong>of</strong>Law, in this sense,’ Ricoeur goes on to say, ‘is the State <strong>of</strong> organized free discussion.’Ricoeur refers in this connection to Hegel’s definition <strong>of</strong> the most rational state as ‘theState in which each would be recognized by all’. 105 In arguing for ‘a synthesis <strong>of</strong>freedom and institution’ Ricoeur is expressly arguing against those contemporaries <strong>of</strong>his—referred to by some as the ‘philosophers <strong>of</strong> ‘68’ 106 —who exalt a kind <strong>of</strong> ‘libertésauvage’ outside <strong>of</strong> any institutional framework and who denounce institutions as beingessentially coercive and repressive. And he insists that ‘it is only in the form <strong>of</strong> the liberalState that this synthesis [<strong>of</strong> freedom and institutions] can be seen at work in the depths <strong>of</strong>history’. 107 The liberal-democratic state defended by hermeneutics is, one could say,nothing other than the institutionalization <strong>of</strong> (dialogical) reason. In this connectionRichard Bernstein describes the practical task <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics as that <strong>of</strong> fostering ‘thetype <strong>of</strong> dialogical communities in which phronesis becomes a living reality and wherecitizens can actually assume what Gadamer tells us is their “noblest task”—“decisionmakingaccording to one’s own responsibility—instead <strong>of</strong> conceding that task to theexpert”’. 108 What democratic theory has long referred to as the ‘common good’ is in factnothing other than an order <strong>of</strong> social institutions binding people together, one whoseraison d’être is to facilitate and encourage in them the exercise <strong>of</strong> practical-dialogicalreason (‘solidarity’).


Hermeneutics 278In conclusion, it is apparent that philosophical or phenomenological hermeneutics notonly provides a general theory <strong>of</strong> human understanding in its various modes, it alsoprescribes very specific tasks in the realm <strong>of</strong> socio-political praxis. With the recentdemise <strong>of</strong> anti-liberal socialism and the triumph <strong>of</strong> democratic values throughout much <strong>of</strong>the world, ‘the end <strong>of</strong> history’ is said by some to have occurred. Although Gadamer toodoes not see any alternative to liberalism, he is under no illusions as to the ultimatetriumph <strong>of</strong> freedom and reason in history. He agrees with Hegel that it is no longerpossible for anyone (rationally) to deny the supreme value <strong>of</strong> the freedom <strong>of</strong> all. ‘Theprinciple that all are free never again can be shaken.’ It cannot be shaken to the degreethat the principle is, precisely, a principle <strong>of</strong> reason. However, he adds:But does this mean that on account <strong>of</strong> this, history has come to an end? Are allhuman beings actually free? Has not history since then [Hegel’s time] been amatter <strong>of</strong> just this, that the historical conduct <strong>of</strong> man has to translate theprinciple <strong>of</strong> freedom into reality? Obviously this points to the unending march<strong>of</strong> world history into the openness <strong>of</strong> its future tasks and gives no becalmingassurance that everything is already in order.([9.6], 37)The task <strong>of</strong> realizing freedom in history is like the task <strong>of</strong> understanding and selfunderstandingitself—it is an endless task. ‘To exist historically’, Gadamer says in replyto Hegel, ‘means that knowledge <strong>of</strong> oneself can never be complete’ ([9.7], 269). Likehumanism or the belief in the ‘subject’—the human subject in search <strong>of</strong> meaning in his orher own life and, as such, the bearer <strong>of</strong> basic human rights—hermeneutics or the belief inmeaning in history must recognize, as Ricoeur says, that it is without metaphysicalfoundations, that it is a wager, a cry. 109NOTES1 The term was apparently first used by J.C.Dannhauer in his Hermeneutica sacra sivemethodus exponendarum sacrarum litterarum (1654).2 F.Schleiermacher, Hermeneutics: The Handwritten Manuscripts, ed. H.Kimmerle, trans.J.Duke and J.Forstman (Missoula: Scholars Press, 1977), p. 93.3 Both Gadamer and Ricoeur concur in ascribing to Schleiermacher a ‘psychologistic’ view<strong>of</strong> understanding <strong>of</strong> the sort described here. This interpretation has been challenged,however, by Manfred Frank; see his What is Neostructuralism?, trans. S.Wilke and R.Gray(Minneapolis: University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Press, 1989), pp. 8–9.4 See C.G.Hempel, ‘The Function <strong>of</strong> General Laws in <strong>History</strong>’ (1942), reprinted in Theories<strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong>, ed. P.Gardiner (New York: Free Press <strong>of</strong> Glencoe, 1959), pp. 344–56.5 See P.Winch, The Idea <strong>of</strong> a Social Science and Its Relation to <strong>Philosophy</strong> (London:<strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1958), as well as his articles ‘The Idea <strong>of</strong> a Social Science’ and‘Understanding <strong>of</strong> a Primitive Society’, both in Rationality, ed. B.R.Wilson (New York:Harper Torchbooks, 1971).6 R.J.Bernstein [9.29], 30.7 ‘Phenomenological hermeneutics’ aptly designates the hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> Gadamer and


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 279Ricoeur since, as I shall indicate in more detail below, their thought is rooted in thephenomenology <strong>of</strong> Edmund Husserl and Martin Heidegger. Ricoeur has said <strong>of</strong> his ownposition: ‘it strives to be a hermeneutical variation <strong>of</strong> this [Husserl’s] phenomenology’ (‘OnInterpretation’ in A.Montefiore (ed.), <strong>Philosophy</strong> in France Today (Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press, 1983), p. 187; hereafter cited in the text as OI). On another occasionRicoeur stated: ‘I do not believe that hermeneutics replaces phenomenology. It is onlyopposed to the idealist interpretation <strong>of</strong> phenomenology’ (‘Response to My Friends andCritics’ in C.E.Reagan [9.25], no page no.).8 Tübingen: J.C.B.Mohr; see also his earlier encyclopaedic work, Theoria generale dellainterpretazione, 2 vols (Milan: Dott. A.Giuffrè, 1955).9 E.D.Hirsch, Jr, Validity in Interpretation (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1967).10 See Validity, p. 264: ‘The much-advertised cleavage between thinking in the sciences andthe humanities does not exist. The hypothetico-deductive process is fundamental in both <strong>of</strong>them, as it is in all thinking that aspires to knowledge.’11 A particularly mean-spirited attack against Gadamer along these lines was published byJ.Barnes: ‘A Kind <strong>of</strong> Integrity’, London Review <strong>of</strong> Books, 6 Nov. 1986, pp. 12–13.12 As Ricoeur recently pointed out in response to the Canadian hermeneuticist Jean Grondin,hermeneutic’s polemical opposition to objectivism is an integral part <strong>of</strong> hermeneutics as it is<strong>of</strong> the Husserlian phenomenology from which it derives. ‘L’herméneutique…estpolémique’, Ricoeur says, ‘parce que la compréhension dont elle s’autorise doit sans cessese reconquérir sur diverses figures de la méconnaissance’ (Ricoeur, ‘Réponses’ inC.Bouchindhomme and R.Rochlitz (eds), ‘Temps et récit’ de Paul Ricoeur: en débat (Paris:Editions du Cerf, 1990), pp. 201–2).13 Gadamer here refers in a note to Betti’s work.14 Hans-Georg Gadamer, Truth and Method [9.7], xvi.15 This was in fact the title given to an edited collection <strong>of</strong> essays by Gadamer published in1976: Philosophical Hermeneutics ([9.5]).16 For a detailed treatment <strong>of</strong> this issue see ‘Ricoeur and the Hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> the Subject’ inMadison [9.34]; forthcoming also in The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Paul Ricoeur (Library <strong>of</strong> LivingPhilosophers), ed. I.E.Hahn. For a good overview <strong>of</strong> the basic themes in Ricoeur’sphilosophizing, centred on the notion <strong>of</strong> the subject, see John W.Van Den Hengel [9.27].Van Den Hengel includes in his study a remarkably extensive bibliography (483 titles) <strong>of</strong>Ricoeur’s writings from 1935 to 1981.17 Husserl provides a historical reconstruction <strong>of</strong> the modernist tradition to which he isopposed in The Crisis <strong>of</strong> European Sciences and Transcendental Phenomenology: AnIntroduction to Phenomenological <strong>Philosophy</strong>, trans. D. Carr (Evanston: NorthwesternUniversity Press, 1970).18 See E.Husserl, The Idea <strong>of</strong> Phenomenology, trans. W.P.Alston and G. Nakhnikian (TheHague: Martinus Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1964), lecture I.19 The phrase is that <strong>of</strong> Ludwig Landgrebe, one <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s late assistants. See his ‘Husserl’sDeparture from Cartesianism’, in R.O.Elveton (ed.), The Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Husserl(Chicago: Quadrangle Books, 1970), p. 261.20 Cf. Ricoeur, ‘On Interpretation’ (see note 7), p. 190: ‘The theme <strong>of</strong> the Lebenswelt, a themewhich phenomenology came up against in spite <strong>of</strong> itself, one might say, is adopted by post-Heideggerian hermeneutics no longer as something left over, but as a prior condition.’21 See M.Merleau-Ponty, Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception, trans. C.Smith (London: <strong>Routledge</strong>& Kegan Paul, 1962), p. xiv: ‘Far from being, as has been thought, a procedure <strong>of</strong> idealisticphilosophy, phenomenological reduction belongs to existential philosophy: Heidegger’s


Hermeneutics 280“being-in-the-world” appears only against the background <strong>of</strong> the phenomenologicalreduction.’22 M.Heidegger, Being and Time, trans. J.Macquarrie and E.Robinson (New York: Harper &Row, 1962), p. 90: hereafter cited in the text as BT.23 Ricoeur, Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences [9.15], 87.24 ‘In it [interpretation] the understanding appropriates understandingly that which isunderstood by it’ (BT, 188).25 Ricoeur, ‘The Question <strong>of</strong> the Subject’, in D.Ihde (ed.), The Conflict <strong>of</strong>Interpretations:Essays in Hermeneutics (Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1974),p. 266 (translation corrected).26 Gadamer, ‘The Problem <strong>of</strong> Historical Consciousness’, in P.Rabinow and W. M.Sullivan(eds), Interpretive Social Science: A Reader (Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong> California Press,1979), p. 106; hereafter cited in the text as PHC. Ricoeur also bypasses Heidegger’sconcern for Being. Grounded as his thinking is in the French tradition <strong>of</strong> reflexivephilosophy, Ricoeur’s guiding question is not so much ‘What is the meaning <strong>of</strong> being?’ as‘Who am I?’ He writes: ‘L’herméneutique devenait pour moi le long détour d’unephilosophie de la réflexion, la médiation interminable de l’auto-compréhension…[M]aphilosophie s’est développée—grossièrement parlant—comme une anthropologiephilosophique, où la question de l’être se réduit à celle du mode d’être de cet être capable dese désigner comme sujet parlant, comme agent et patient de l’action, comme sujet moral etpolitique, porteur de responsabilité et de citoyenneté’ (‘Réponses’ in ‘Temps et récit’ dePaul Ricoeur (note 12), p. 211).27 Bernstein [9.29], 159.28 I owe this particular observation to Paul Fairfield.29 The parallel between the two was one <strong>of</strong> the principal objects <strong>of</strong> concern <strong>of</strong> Merleau-Ponty’s hermeneutical phenomenology.30 What Gadamer says here <strong>of</strong> historical understanding could be applied, mutatis mutandis, tointercultural or ethnological understanding and could be usefully contrasted with theposition defended by Peter Winch.31 For a good overview and discussion <strong>of</strong> the issues involved in this debate, see Bernstein[9.29].32 It would not be desirable, in that it is incompatible with the philosophical-political values towhich hermeneutics subscribes—a topic to be considered later in this chapter.33 Gadamer, ‘The Science <strong>of</strong> the Life-World’, Analecta Husserliana, 2 (1977): 185. It shouldbe noted that this text differs from the version published subsequently under the same titlein Philosophical Hermeneutics.34 Ricoeur makes a similar remark: ‘The truth is…the lighted place in which it is possible tocontinue to live and to think. And to think with our very opponents themselves, withoutallowing the totality which constrains us ever to become a knowledge about which we canoverestimate ourselves and become arrogant’ (‘Reply to My Friends and Critics’ [9.25], nopage no.). It could thus be said that for hermeneutics ‘truth’ is primarily not ‘cognitive’ buta ‘moral’ concept; it refers not so much to bits and pieces <strong>of</strong> ‘information’ we may possessas it does to a general mode <strong>of</strong> living (being-in-the-world). In this connection Ricoeurremarks, in a very Jamesian sort <strong>of</strong> way: ‘We wager on a certain set <strong>of</strong> values and then tryto be consistent with them; verification is therefore a question <strong>of</strong> our whole life. No one canescape this…. I do not see how we can say that our values are better than all others exceptthat by risking our whole life on them we expect to achieve a better life, to see and tounderstand things better than others’ (Lectures on Ideology and Utopia [9.16], 312).


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 28135 In La symbolique du mal (Philosophie de la volonté: Finitude et culpabilité, vol. II) (Paris:Aubier, 1960). English translation: The Symbolism <strong>of</strong> Evil [9.20].36 D.C.Hoy [9.33], 61.37 See T.M.Van Leeuwen [9.28] 1.38 Ricoeur, The Conflict <strong>of</strong> Interpretations [9.13], 411.39 In what is said, there is always, Gadamer insists, ‘an infinity <strong>of</strong> what is not said’ ([9.7],426).40 This point is developed by Sartre in La transcendance de l’ego: Esquisse d’une descriptionphénoménologique (Paris: J.Vrin, 1966).41 Merleau-Ponty, Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception (note 21): there is no inner man, man is inthe world, and only in the world does he know himself’ (p. xi).42 It should perhaps be noted that, from a Gadamerian point <strong>of</strong> view, conversation is not somuch an instance <strong>of</strong> language as it is what language essentially is.43 As Gadamer goes on to point out: ‘Where a person is concerned with the other asindividuality, e.g. in a therapeutical conversation or the examination <strong>of</strong> a man accused <strong>of</strong> acrime, this is not really a situation in which two people are trying to understand oneanother.’ (In a footnote Gadamer remarks that in such a situation the questions which ariseare ‘marked by insincerity’.) As we shall see later, this view <strong>of</strong> conversation has importantconsequences for the theory <strong>of</strong> text-interpretation.44 For a discussion <strong>of</strong> these issues see Ricoeur, ‘Structure, Word, Event’ in The Conflict <strong>of</strong>Interpretations [9.13].45 Ricoeur, ‘New Developments in Phenomenology in France: The Phenomenology <strong>of</strong>Language’, trans. P.Goodman, Social Research, 34:1 (spring 1967): 14.46 See J.Habermas, The Philosophical Discourse <strong>of</strong> Modernity, trans. F.Lawrence (Cambridge,Mass.: MIT Press, 1987), pp. 41–2.47 Gadamer, ‘Practical <strong>Philosophy</strong> as a Model <strong>of</strong> the Human Sciences’, Research inPhenomenology, 9 (1980):83.48 See Gadamer, ‘Reply to My Critics’ in G.L.Ormiston and A.D.Schrift, The HermeneuticTradition: From Ast to Ricoeur (Albany: State University <strong>of</strong> New York Press, 1990), pp.275–6.49 For Hirsch, in contrast, meaning is always willed meaning (see Validity (note 9), p. 51).50 See also pp. xix, 321, 336, 338, 353, 356.51 This point is developed in aesthetic response theory and reader reception theory byWolfgang Iser and Hans Robert Jauss, respectively (see Iser, The Act <strong>of</strong> Reading: A Theory<strong>of</strong> Aesthetic Response (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1978) and Jauss,Towards an Aesthetic <strong>of</strong> Reception, trans. T.Bahti (Minneapolis: University <strong>of</strong> MinnesotaPress, 1982). Ricoeur discusses the views <strong>of</strong> Iser and Jauss in Time and Narrative [9.21],vol. 3, pp. 166ff.52 Bernstein [9.29], 145.53 G.W.F.Hegel, The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong> (New York: Dover Publications, 1978), p. 106.54 Gadamer, ‘The Power <strong>of</strong> Reason’, Man and World, 3:1 (1970):15. In response toHabermas’s charge that ‘tradition’, as hermeneutics understands it, is not subject to acritique guided by an ‘emancipatory interest’, Gadamer makes the following countercharge:‘unconsciously the ultimate guiding image <strong>of</strong> emancipatory reflection in the socialsciences [i.e., Habermas’s position] must be an anarchistic utopia. Such an image, however,seems to me to reflect a hermeneutically false consciousness, the antitode for which canonly be a more universal hermeneutical reflection’ ([9.5], 42).Gadamer’s emphasis on tradition is not meant to deny either (1) the universality <strong>of</strong> certain


Hermeneutics 282values or (2) the critical function <strong>of</strong> reason. What it does deny is the existence <strong>of</strong> anahistorical reason (the kind <strong>of</strong> ‘transcendental’ reason appealed to by Habermas that canescape tradition altogether). In Truth and Method Gadamer states his position in thefollowing way: ‘Does the fact that one is set within various traditions mean really andprimarily that one is subject to prejudices and limited in one’s freedom? Is not, rather, allhuman experience, even the freest, limited and qualified in various ways? If this is true, thenthe idea <strong>of</strong> an absolute reason is impossible for historical humanity. Reason exists for usonly in concrete, historical terms, i.e., it is not its own master, but remains constantlydependent on the given circumstances in which it operates’ ([9.7], 245).We shall return to the question <strong>of</strong> values and rational critique in the concluding section <strong>of</strong>this chapter.55 Gadamer, ‘Reply to My Critics’ (note 48), p. 273.56 Gadamer, ‘Hermeneutics as Practical <strong>Philosophy</strong>’, in Reason in the Age <strong>of</strong> Science [9.6],111.57 For a detailed treatment <strong>of</strong> this issue see my ‘The New <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Rhetoric’, Texte:Revue de critique et de théorie littéraire, 8/9 (1989):247–77.58 See C.Perelman and L.Olbrechts-Tyteca, Traité de l’argumentation: la nouvelle rhétorique(Bruxelles: Editions de l’Institut de Sociologie, Université Libre de Bruxelles, 2nd edn,1970).59 R.Bernstein remarks in this regard: ‘Although the concept <strong>of</strong> truth is basic to Gadamer’sentire project <strong>of</strong> philosophic hermeneutics, it turns out to be one <strong>of</strong> the most elusiveconcepts in his work’ ([9.29], 151).60 Ricoeur, ‘Langage (Philosophie)’ Encyclopaedia Universalis, vol. 9 (1971), p. 780.61 See Ricoeur, ‘The Model <strong>of</strong> the Text’ in Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences [9.15],212–13.62 See also pp. 146–7, 203. Ricoeur also says that whereas Gadamer, with his reliance on themodel <strong>of</strong> conversation, places a great deal <strong>of</strong> confidence in Einverständnis—pr<strong>of</strong>oundagreement—he himself is ‘beaucoup plus sensible au caractère conflictuel du champd’interprétation’ (‘De la volonté à l’acte’ in ‘Temps et récit’ de Paul Ricoeur (note 12), p.19.63 ‘Distantiation is not the product <strong>of</strong> methodology and hence something superfluous andparasitical; rather it is constitutive <strong>of</strong> the phenomenon <strong>of</strong> the text as writing’ ([9.15] 139).Critics <strong>of</strong> Ricoeur might argue that his own critique <strong>of</strong> Gadamer is not entirely fair, in thatGadamer himself argues for a ‘positive’ notion <strong>of</strong> distantiation. See, inter alia, thefollowing remarks that Gadamer made in his lectures at the University <strong>of</strong> Louvain in 1957:‘Contrary to what we <strong>of</strong>ten imagine, time is not a chasm which we could bridge over inorder to recover the past: in reality, it is the ground which supports the arrival <strong>of</strong> the pastand where the present takes its roots. “Temporal distance” is not a distance in the sense <strong>of</strong> adistance to be overcome…. Actually, it is rather a matter <strong>of</strong> considering “temporal distance”as a fundament <strong>of</strong> positive and productive possibilities for understanding’ (PHC, 155–6).If it is the case that Ricoeur has misread Gadamer on this score, then it is also the case thathe concedes too much to Habermas in the latter’s criticism <strong>of</strong> Gadamer (for Ricoeur’sattempt to mediate the dispute between Habermas and Gadamer, see ‘Hermeneutics and theCritique <strong>of</strong> Ideology’ in Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences) [9.15]. If Ricoeur arguesfor a positive notion <strong>of</strong> distantiation, it is because he wants to maintain (against Habermas)that hermeneutics has to do not only with the transmission <strong>of</strong> the past (as Habermas portraysGadamer as saying) but that it can also incorporate a critical moment in the appropriationprocess. However, if Gadamer’s notion <strong>of</strong> distantiation is itself <strong>of</strong> a positive sort, then there


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 283is already a critical element in Gadamer’s hermeneutics (which therefore does not need tobe supplemented with borrowings from Habermas’s critical theory). As I have alreadyindicated, Gadamer does indeed make this claim.64 The ‘second order referentiality’ <strong>of</strong> metaphorical discourse was one <strong>of</strong> the main things thatRicoeur sought to demonstrate in La métaphore vive (Paris: Seuil, 1975); English trans.: TheRule <strong>of</strong> Metaphor [9.19].65 This highlights an important difference between Ricoeur’s theory <strong>of</strong> text-interpretation andother postmodern theories which indeed do legitimate ‘projecting oneself into the text’ inwhatever way, i.e., engaging in ‘strong misreadings’ <strong>of</strong> the text. An outstanding example <strong>of</strong>just how ‘strong’ misreadings <strong>of</strong> a deconstructionist sort may be is provided by theAmerican literary critic J. Hillis Miller. In a review <strong>of</strong> Ricoeur’s Time and Narrative, Millerasserts that ‘hermeneutic theories’, such as Ricoeur’s, assume ‘the existence <strong>of</strong> stablemonological texts <strong>of</strong> determinable meanings, meanings controlled in each case by theintentions <strong>of</strong> the author and by the text’s reference to a pre-linguistic “real world outthere”’. One’s astonishment over such a manifestly absurd remark (do deconstructionistseven bother any more to read the texts they pretend to ‘interpret’?) is compounded when afew paragraphs further on one reads: ‘his view <strong>of</strong> language remains a more or lessunambiguous copy theory. Language, for him, mirrors, represents or “expresses” the livedworld’ (‘But Are Things as We Say They Are?’, Times Literary Supplement, 9–15 October1987:1104).66 See in this regard ‘On Interpretation’ (see note 7), pp. 185ff. The subject <strong>of</strong> the ‘self’ wasthe topic <strong>of</strong> Ricoeur’s 1986 Gifford Lectures, ‘On Selfhood, The Question <strong>of</strong> PersonalIdentity’, published in book form under the title Soimême comme un autre (Paris: Seuil,1990), trans.: Oneself as Another [9.17].67 ‘Si le sens n’est pas un segment de la compréhension de soi, je ne sais pas ce quec’est’ (Esprit, November 1983:636).68 S.B.Messer, L.A.Sass, R.L.Woolfolk (eds), Hermeneutics and Psychological Theory:Interpretive Perspectives on Personality, Psychotherapy, and Psychopathology (NewBrunswick: Rutgers University Press, 1988), p. xiii.69 C.Geertz, The Interpretation <strong>of</strong> Cultures (New York: Basic Books, 1973), p. 5.70 By way <strong>of</strong> underscoring the purposive nature <strong>of</strong> human action, Mises writes: ‘There is nohuman being to whom the intent is foreign to substitute by appropriate conduct one state <strong>of</strong>affairs for another state <strong>of</strong> affairs that would prevail if he did not interfere’ (The UltimateFoundation <strong>of</strong> Economic Science: An Essay on Method (Kansas City: Sheed Andres &McMeel, 1978), p. 71).71 That various social orders are the result <strong>of</strong> human action but not necessarily <strong>of</strong> humandesign has been one <strong>of</strong> the major themes in the work <strong>of</strong> F.A. Hayek whose work anticipates,in many ways, that <strong>of</strong> Gadamer and Ricoeur. See in this regard my ‘Hayek and theInterpretive Turn’, Critical Review, 3:2 (spring 1989).72 C.Taylor, ‘Interpretation and the Sciences <strong>of</strong> Man’, in P.Rabinow and W. M.Sullivan (eds),Interpretive Social Science: A Reader (note 26), p. 48.73 See Ricoeur, ‘<strong>History</strong> as Narrative and Practice’, interview with P.Kemp, <strong>Philosophy</strong> Today(fall 1985):216.74 J.Wakefield, ‘Hermeneutics and Empiricism: Commentary on Donald Meichenbaum’ inMesser et al. (eds), Hermeneutics and Psychological Theory (note 68), p. 143.75 Geertz, The Interpretation <strong>of</strong> Cultures (note 69), p. 9.76 The interpretive economist D.Lavoie remarks in this regard: ‘The fact that the objects <strong>of</strong> ourstudy already have an interpretation <strong>of</strong> what is going on does not release the social scientist


Hermeneutics 284from the responsibility to develop and defend her own explication <strong>of</strong> what is going on. Theinterpreter should not try to rid herself <strong>of</strong> her own perspective in order to ‘adopt’ that <strong>of</strong> theinterpreted, but must try to find new ways to use her presuppositions to attain a betterunderstanding <strong>of</strong> the human activities under study…. Thus interpretation always meansadding to what is said through a mediation <strong>of</strong> the ‘horizons’ <strong>of</strong> the interpreter and theinterpreted’ (‘The Account <strong>of</strong> Interpretations and the Interpretation <strong>of</strong> Accounts: TheCommunicative Function <strong>of</strong> “The Language <strong>of</strong> Business”’, Accounting, Organizations andSociety, 12:6 (1987):594).77 J.B.Thompson, Ideology and Modern Culture: Critical Social Theory in the Era <strong>of</strong> MassCommunication (Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1990), p. 323. In his analysis <strong>of</strong>ideology Thompson draws extensively on suggestions put forward by Ricoeur. For acomparative study <strong>of</strong> Ricoeur’s hermeneutics and the critical theory <strong>of</strong> Jürgen Habermas,see his earlier work [9.26].78 See Gadamer’s discussion <strong>of</strong> Dilthey in ‘The Problem <strong>of</strong> Historical Consciousness’ (note26).79 Jean Grondin, ‘L’herméneutique positive de Paul Ricoeur’ in ‘Temps et récit’ de PaulRicoeur (note 12), p. 125.80 Geertz, The Interpretation <strong>of</strong> Cultures (note 69), p. 30.81 In Time and Narrative [9.21], vol. I, Ricoeur refers to ‘explanation’ and ‘understanding’ as‘a now obsolete vocabulary’; he prefers to speak instead <strong>of</strong> ‘nomological explanation andexplanation by emplotment’ (p. 181).82 Of Ricoeur’s work in this area historian H.White has said: ‘Ricoeur’s is surely the strongestclaim for the adequacy <strong>of</strong> narrative to the realization <strong>of</strong> the aims <strong>of</strong> historical studies madeby any recent theorist <strong>of</strong> historiography’ (‘The Question <strong>of</strong> Narrative in ContemporaryHistorical Theory’, <strong>History</strong> and Theory, 1 (1984):30).For a discussion <strong>of</strong> Ricoeur’s treatment <strong>of</strong> the imagination over the course <strong>of</strong> his writingssee Richard Kearney, ‘Paul Ricoeur and the Hermeneutic Imagination’, in T.P.Kemp andD.Rasmussen (eds) [9.24] (reprinted in Kearney, Poetics <strong>of</strong> Imaging: From Husserl toLyotard (London: Harper Collins Academic, 1991)). The thesis defended by Kearney is that‘a poetic hermeneutic <strong>of</strong> imagination’ represents ‘the ultimate, if discreet, agenda <strong>of</strong> hisphilosophical project’ (p. 2). The following remark <strong>of</strong> Ricoeur lends support to this thesis:‘Despite appearances the one problem that has interested me from the beginning <strong>of</strong> mywork as a philosopher is that <strong>of</strong> creativity. I worked from the angle <strong>of</strong> individual psychologyin my early work on the will, then on the cultural level with my studies on symbolisms. Mypresent work on narrative puts me right at the heart <strong>of</strong> this social, cultural,creativity’ (‘<strong>History</strong> as Narrative and Practice’, <strong>Philosophy</strong> Today (fall 1985):222).83 Thus, for example, economist D.Lavoie writes, with reference to Ricoeur: ‘<strong>History</strong> is in thisview not an attempt to find quantitative covering laws that fully determine a sequence <strong>of</strong>events, but an attempt to supply a qualitative interpretation <strong>of</strong> some part <strong>of</strong> mankind’s“story”. The whole purpose <strong>of</strong> the theoretical social sciences (including economics andaccounting research) is to equip people with the capacity to better distinguish acceptablefrom unacceptable historical narratives…. What we find ourselves doing in the socialsciences is not so much the testing <strong>of</strong> ex ante predictions but is more <strong>of</strong> the nature <strong>of</strong> whatthe Austrian economist F.A.Hayek calls an ex post explanation <strong>of</strong> principles. The only“test” any theory can receive is in the form <strong>of</strong> a qualitative judgment <strong>of</strong> the plausibility <strong>of</strong>the sequence <strong>of</strong> events that has been strung together by narrative’ (‘The Account <strong>of</strong>Interpretations and the Interpretation <strong>of</strong> Accounts’ (note 76), pp. 595–6).84 D.Pellauer, ‘The Significance <strong>of</strong> the Text in Paul Ricoeur’s Hermeneutical Theory’ in


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 285[9.25], 112, 109.85 Ricoeur’s interest in history and narrative can be seen to be the logical outgrowth <strong>of</strong> hisabiding concern over the issue <strong>of</strong> human action, since, in being ‘fixated’, action istransformed into institutionalized social patterns, which is to say that it generates historicalprocesses.86 Ricoeur deals at length with the issue <strong>of</strong> the ‘social imagination’ (<strong>of</strong> which ideology andUtopia are two basic modes) in Lectures on Ideology and Utopia [9.16].87 See Ricoeur’s remarks on violence and discourse in Main Trends in <strong>Philosophy</strong> (New York:Holmes & Meier, 1979), pp. 224–7. On p. 227 Ricoeur writes: ‘It is because we, as men,have chosen discourse—that is, discussion, seeking agreement by means <strong>of</strong> verbalconfrontation—that the defence <strong>of</strong> violence for violence’s sake is forever forbidden us.’88 ‘Reaching an understanding in conversation presupposes that both partners are ready for itand are trying to recognize the full value <strong>of</strong> what is alien and opposed to them’ ([9.7], 348).89 Speaking <strong>of</strong> the humanistic ideal <strong>of</strong> the German historical school, Gadamer says that it‘does not contain any particular content, but is based on the formal ideal <strong>of</strong> the greatestvariety. This kind <strong>of</strong> ideal is truly universal, for it cannot be shaken by any historicalevidence, any disturbing evidence <strong>of</strong> the transience <strong>of</strong> human things. <strong>History</strong> has a meaningin itself’ ([9.7], 178).The political motivation for Ricoeur’s defence <strong>of</strong> philosophical humanism is evident in thefollowing remark: ‘If anti-humanism is true, there is also no theoretical basis on which thelegal subject can oppose the abuse <strong>of</strong> political authority’ (Main Trends in <strong>Philosophy</strong>, p.369).90 The real ‘ethnocentrist’, hermeneutics maintains, is the person who denies the universalvalidity (‘applicability’) <strong>of</strong> the principles <strong>of</strong> freedom and reason and who asserts that anycriticism <strong>of</strong> non-western societies for failing to recognize these principles is an instance <strong>of</strong>‘Eurocentrism’. As a leading spokesperson for democratic values (‘such basic ideas asrepresentative government, human rights, and the rule <strong>of</strong> law’) in the ‘third world’, AungSan Suu Kyi, recipient in 1991 <strong>of</strong> the Nobel Peace Prize, has stated: ‘The proposition thatthe Burmese are not fit to enjoy as many rights and privileges as the citizens <strong>of</strong> democraticcountries is insulting’ (‘In Quest <strong>of</strong> Democracy’, Journal <strong>of</strong> Democracy, 2:1 (January1992):6 and 11). Anti-universalist ethnocentrism (‘reverse Eurocentrism’) is indeed anaffront to basic human dignity.91 Bernstein [9.29], p. 163.92 S.Rosen, Hermeneutics as Politics (New York: Oxford University Press, 1987), p. 141.93 Gadamer, ‘The Power <strong>of</strong> Reason’, Man and World, 3:1 (1970):8.94 Ricoeur, Main Trends in <strong>Philosophy</strong> (note 87), p. 315.95 In ‘Hermeneutics and Social Science’, Cultural Hermeneutics, 55 (1970), Gadamer writes:‘the chief task <strong>of</strong> philosophy is…to defend practical and political reason against thedomination <strong>of</strong> technology based on science. That is the point <strong>of</strong> philosophicalhermeneutic’ (p. 316).96 ‘The Power <strong>of</strong> Reason’ (note 93), p. 13.97 See in this regard Gadamer’s remarks on natural law in Truth and Method [9.7].98 Cf. Gadamer, ‘The Power <strong>of</strong> Reason’ (note 93): ‘Clearly reason has an immediateconnection with the universal’ (p. 6); ‘identification with the Universal—what is Reason ifnot that?’ (p. 12). Reason is ‘the self-realizing identification with the universal’ (p. 14). Onp. 13 <strong>of</strong> this text Gadamer identifies ‘loss <strong>of</strong> freedom’ with ‘lack <strong>of</strong> possibility <strong>of</strong>identifying with the universal’.99 See Gadamer. ‘Reply to My Critics’ (note 48), p. 289.


Hermeneutics 286100 I.Kant, ‘Ideas for a Universal <strong>History</strong> from a Cosmopolitan Point <strong>of</strong> View’, in On <strong>History</strong>,L.W.Beck (ed.) (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1963), p. 16. Kant goes on to characterizesuch a society as ‘the society with the greatest freedom. Such a society is one in which thereis a mutual opposition among the members, together with the most exact definition <strong>of</strong>freedom and fixing <strong>of</strong> its limits so that it may be consistent with the freedom <strong>of</strong> others’.101 The notion <strong>of</strong> human rights, as hermeneutics conceives <strong>of</strong> it, is not a metaphysical notionand does not appeal to essentialist or foundationalist modes <strong>of</strong> thinking. Human rights arenot ‘natural rights’ (as Gadamer’s critic, L.Strauss, would maintain); they are rationalrights, rights <strong>of</strong> reason. That is to say, they are injunctions as to how people ought to betreated, given what they in fact are, namely rational beings. That means: beings who havethe logos (as Isocrates said), i.e., are capable <strong>of</strong> engaging in dialogical or communicativerationality. Basic rights such as freedom <strong>of</strong> speech, <strong>of</strong> conscience, <strong>of</strong> association, and so on,are simply enumerations <strong>of</strong> the legal-institutional guarantees that are required for theunimpeded exercise <strong>of</strong> this form <strong>of</strong> rationality. Since, as Gadamer recognizes, the ‘power <strong>of</strong>reason’ is not a ‘natural faculty’ but a social attribute (‘This is not simply a capacity thatman has, but something <strong>of</strong> the sort that must be developed’ (‘The Power <strong>of</strong> Reason’ (note93), p. 7), people can be fully rational (and thus fully human) only when they have the goodfortune <strong>of</strong> living within the kind <strong>of</strong> institutional set-up that these rights make possible.Human rights are what those rational beings who are reflectively aware <strong>of</strong> what they arewill claim for themselves, in order to be recognized for what they are and in order tobecome what they are (cf. Tiananmen Square, 1989).102 ‘The Power <strong>of</strong> Reason’ (note 93), p. 8.103 M.Merleau-Ponty, Signs, trans. R.C.McCleary (Evanston: Northwestern University Press,1964), p. 349.104 Ricoeur, ‘Le Philosophe et la politique devant la question de la liberté’, in La liberté etl’ordre social (Neuchâtel: La Baconnière, 1969), p. 53.105 Ricoeur, Du texte à l’action (Paris: Seuil, 1986), p. 404.106 See L.Ferry and A.Renaut, French <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> the Sixties: An Essay on Antihumanism(Amherst: University <strong>of</strong> Massachusetts Press, 1990).107 Ricoeur, ‘La raison pratique’ in T.Gearets (ed.), La Rationalité aujourd’hui/ RationalityToday (Ottawa: Editions de l’Université d’Ottawa, 1979), p. 238.108 Bernstein [9.29], p. 159.109 See Ricoeur, Main Trends in <strong>Philosophy</strong> (note 87), p. 372. On another occasion, Ricoeursays that ‘the lament <strong>of</strong> modern philosophy [is] that we have to raise Hegelian problemswithout the Hegelian solutions.’ While rejecting the notion <strong>of</strong> absolute knowledge and allencompassingtheories <strong>of</strong> history, he nevertheless concedes: ‘Maybe we cannot havepassionate history without a certain expectation <strong>of</strong> what could be the global meaning <strong>of</strong>history, but that must remain at the level, I think, <strong>of</strong> hypothesis; that must remain a kind <strong>of</strong>working hypothesis’ (‘The Conflict <strong>of</strong> Interpretations’ in R.Bruzina and B.Wilshire (eds),Phenomenology: Dialogues and Bridges (Albany: State University <strong>of</strong> New York Press,1982), pp. 319–20).SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHYFor an exhaustive bibliography <strong>of</strong> both the primary and the secondary literature invarious languages, see Jean Grondin, Einführung in die Philosophische Hermeneutik


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 287(Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft, 1991).GadamerTranslations9.1 Dialogue and Dialectic: Eight Hermeneutical Studies on Plato, trans. P.C. Smith,New Haven: Yale University Press, 1980.9.2 Hegel’s Dialectic: Five Hermeneutical Studies, trans. P.C.Smith, New Haven: YaleUniversity Press, 1976.9.3 The Idea <strong>of</strong> the Good in Platonic-Aristotelian <strong>Philosophy</strong>, trans. P.C.Smith, NewHaven: Yale University Press, 1985.9.4 Philosophical Apprenticeships, trans. R.Sullivan, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press,1985.9.5 Philosophical Hermeneutics, trans. D.E.Linge, Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong> CaliforniaPress, 1976.9.6 Reason in the Age <strong>of</strong> Science, trans. F.Lawrence, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press,1981.9.7 Truth and Method, New York: Seabury Press, 1975, 2nd rev. edn, New York:Crossroad, 1990.Criticism9.8 Foster, M. Gadamer and Practical <strong>Philosophy</strong>: The Hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> MoralConfidence, Atlanta: Scholar’s Press, 1991.9.9 Michelfelder D., and Palmer, R. (eds) Dialogue and Deconstruction: The Gadamer-Derrida Encounter, Albany: State University <strong>of</strong> New York Press, 1989.9.10 Sullivan, R. Political Hermeneutics: The Early Thinking <strong>of</strong> Hans-Georg Gadamer,University Park: Pennsylvania State University Press, 1989.9.11 Warnke, G. Gadamer: Hermeneutics, Tradition and Reason, Stanford: StanfordUniversity Press, 1987.9.12 Weinsheimer, J. Gadamer’s Hermeneutics: A Reading <strong>of</strong> Truth and Method, NewHaven: Yale University Press, 1985.RicoeurTranslations9.13 The Conflict <strong>of</strong> Interpretations: Essays in Hermeneutics, ed. D.Ihde, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1974.9.14 Freud and <strong>Philosophy</strong>: An Essay on Interpretation, trans. D.Savage, New Haven:Yale University Press, 1970.9.15 Hermeneutics and the Human Sciences, trans. J.B.Thompson, Cambridge:Cambridge University Press, 1981.


Hermeneutics 2889.16 Lectures on Ideology and Utopia, ed. G.H.Taylor, New York: Columbia UniversityPress, 1986.9.17 Oneself as Another, trans. K.Blamey, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1992.9.18 Political and Social Essays, ed. D.Steward and J.Bien, Athens: Ohio UniversityPress, 1974.9.19 The Rule <strong>of</strong> Metaphor, trans. R.Czeny, K.McLaughlin and J.Costello, Toronto:University <strong>of</strong> Toronto Press, 1977.9.20 The Symbolism <strong>of</strong> Evil, trans. E.Buchanan, New York: Harper & Row, 1967.9.21 Time and Narrative, trans. K.McLaughlin and D.Pellauer, 3 vols, Chicago:University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1984, 1985, 1988.Criticism9.22 Clark, S.H. Paul Ricoeur, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1990.9.23 Ihde, D. Hermeneutic Phenomenology: The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Paul Ricoeur, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1971.9.24 Kemp, P. and Rasmussen, D. (eds) The Narrative Path: The Later Works <strong>of</strong> PaulRicoeur, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1989.9.25 Reagan, C.E. (ed.) Studies in the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Paul Ricoeur, Athens: OhioUniversity Press, 1979.9.26 Thompson, J.B. Critical Hermeneutics: A Study in the Thought <strong>of</strong> Paul Ricoeur andJürgen Habermas, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1981.9.27 Van Den Hengel, J.W. The Home <strong>of</strong> Meaning: The Hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> the Subject <strong>of</strong>Paul Ricoeur, Washington: University Press <strong>of</strong> America, 1982.9.28 Van Leeuwen, T.M. The Surplus <strong>of</strong> Meaning: Ontology and Eschatology in the<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Paul Ricoeur, Amsterdam: Rodopi, 1981.General commentaries and analysis9.29 Bernstein, R.J. Beyond Objectivism and Relativism: Science, Hermeneutics, andPraxis, Philadelphia: University <strong>of</strong> Pennsylvania Press, 1983.9.30 Bleicher, J. Contemporary Hermeneutics: Hermeneutics as Method, <strong>Philosophy</strong>, andCritique, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1980.9.31 Heckman, S.J. Hermeneutics and the Sociology <strong>of</strong> Knowledge, Notre Dame: NotreDame University Press, 1986.9.32 Hollinger, R. (ed.) Hermeneutics and Praxis, Notre Dame: University <strong>of</strong> NotreDame Press, 1985.9.33 Hoy, D. The Critical Circle: Literature and <strong>History</strong> in Contemporary Hermeneutics,Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong> California Press, 1978.9.34 Madison, G.B. The Hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> Postmodernity: Figures and Themes,Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1988.9.35 Palmer, R.E. Hermeneutics: Interpretation Theory in Schleiermacher, Dilthey,Heidegger, and Gadamer , Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1969.9.36 Weinsheimer, J. Philosophical Hermeneutics and Literary Theory, New Haven:Yale University Press, 1991.


CHAPTER 10Italian idealism and afterGentile, Croce and othersGiacomo RinaldiINTRODUCTIONThe history <strong>of</strong> twentieth-century Italian philosophy is strongly influenced both by thepeculiar character <strong>of</strong> its evolution in the preceding century and by widespread tendencies<strong>of</strong> contemporary continental (especially German) thought. In nineteenth-century Italianphilosophy we can distinguish four main trends: (1) St Augustine’s and Aquinas’straditional dualistic metaphysics, which was renewed with some originality by the priestAntonio Rosmini Serbati (1797–1855), and was regarded by the Roman Catholic churchas its ‘<strong>of</strong>ficial’ philosophical doctrine; (2) methodological empiricism, which wasdeveloped since the Renaissance especially by the founder <strong>of</strong> modern mathematicalphysics, Galileo Galilei, and which found its most prominent exponent in the positivistthinker Roberto Ardigò (1828–1920); (3) the speculative German tradition <strong>of</strong> Kantian-Hegelian idealism, according to its interpretation as a metafisica della mente, i.e. as aphilosophy <strong>of</strong> pure self-consciousness, outlined by the greatest nineteenth-century Italianthinker, Bertrando Spaventa (1817–83); and finally (4) Marx’s and Engels’s historicalmaterialism, which was spread and fostered especially by Antonio Labriola (1843–1904),who worked out a ‘humanistic’ (anti-naturalistic) interpretation <strong>of</strong> it.The influence <strong>of</strong> ‘classical German philosophy’ from Kant to Marx on twentiethcenturyItalian thought thus turns out to be strictly determined and ‘mediated’ by thepeculiar character <strong>of</strong> its interpretation and appropriation in the preceding century. Butother trends <strong>of</strong> German thought too are studied, interpreted and further developed bycontemporary Italian philosophers, thus exerting a direct, ‘immediate’ influence on them:e.g., the German tradition <strong>of</strong> ‘speculative mysticism’ (one might recall the philosophies<strong>of</strong> the later Fichte and the later Schelling, as well as Gadamer’s ‘hermeneutics’), the‘philosophy <strong>of</strong> immanence’ (Schuppe and Schubert-Soldern), the ‘empiriocriticism’ <strong>of</strong>Mach and Avenarius; Husserl’s ‘phenomenology’ and Heidegger’s ‘existentialism’, etc.The peculiar political-cultural context in which the above-mentioned trends <strong>of</strong>contemporary Italian thought arise and spread can be sketched as follows. Thephilosophy <strong>of</strong> German idealism, and especially its Hegelian version, owing both to itsorigin in Protestant theology and religiosity and to its insistence on the state’s ‘ethical’essence as the supreme moral law <strong>of</strong> the individual’s practical activity, met the spiritualexigencies <strong>of</strong> those ‘liberal-national’ movements <strong>of</strong> the Italian Risorgimento which aimedat the foundation <strong>of</strong> a unitary state, and which saw their major adversary in the Catholicchurch’s temporal power. 1 Augustine’s and Aquinas’s dualistic metaphysics, on the


Italian idealism and after 290contrary, prevailed in the most conservative classes and political trends in Italian society,and can be safely regarded, as it were, as the Roman Catholic church’s secular arm in itsintellectual and moral life. At the extreme opposite <strong>of</strong> the social-political array, Marx’shistorical materialism seemed able to <strong>of</strong>fer an ‘objective’, ‘scientific’ foundation to thepolitical aspirations <strong>of</strong> those who dreamt <strong>of</strong> radically transforming Italian society’straditional order, be it the more archaic one sanctioned by the Roman Catholic church orthe more recent one <strong>of</strong> the national unitary state. Finally, positivistic empiricism became,as it were, the ‘<strong>of</strong>ficial’ ideology <strong>of</strong> the rising Italian industrial bourgeoisie, concentratedespecially in the country’s northern regions.One can easily distinguish three fundamental evolutionary phases in twentieth-centuryItalian philosophy. In the first (c. 1900–45) we witness an indisputable prevalence <strong>of</strong> theidealistic trends, among them especially Giovanni Gentile’s thought. This is despite the<strong>of</strong>ten exaggerated cultural influence <strong>of</strong> his ‘actual idealism’, which from its first ‘<strong>of</strong>ficial’statement (1911) was strongly opposed by other no less famous representatives <strong>of</strong> Italianidealism such as Pietro Martinetti, Benedetto Croce and Pantaleo Carabellese. In thesecond phase (c. 1945–80), a widespread violent reaction against idealistic philosophy ingeneral, and ‘actual idealism’ in particular, occurred. Antonio Banfi, Nicola Abbagnano,etc. set against it not only the materialistic conception <strong>of</strong> history, but also later tendencies<strong>of</strong> German thought such as, e.g., Husserl’s phenomenology and Heidegger’sexistentialism. The distinction between the first and the second phase, however, must beunderstood not simply as a rigid separation, but as indicating a prevalence <strong>of</strong> theidealistic orientation in the first half <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century and <strong>of</strong> the anti-idealistic onein the second. In effect, the influence <strong>of</strong> nineteenth-century positivism does not disappearin the age dominatedby Croce’s and Gentile’s thought (it suffices to think, in this regard,<strong>of</strong> the writings <strong>of</strong> sociologists such as Vilfredo Pareto (1868–1923), <strong>of</strong> economists suchas Luigi Einaudi (1874–1961), and <strong>of</strong> methodologists <strong>of</strong> science such as Antonio Aliotta(1881–1964). Furthermore, many <strong>of</strong> the most prominent exponents <strong>of</strong> the reaction againstidealism in the second half <strong>of</strong> the century (e.g., Antonio Gramsci, Abbagnano and Banfi)had already worked out their fundamental conceptions before 1945. On the other hand,although in weakened and <strong>of</strong>ten speculatively unfruitful forms, the philosophicaltraditions <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s ‘actual idealism’ and <strong>of</strong> Croce’s ‘absolute historicism’ havesurvived up to today. 2 In the 1980s, the final phase, something like a widespread ‘decline<strong>of</strong> ideology’ (‘tramonto dell’ideologia’) has, as Lucio Colletti says, taken place. The mostremarkable consequence <strong>of</strong> it is likely to be the perhaps definitive dissolution <strong>of</strong> thecultural influence <strong>of</strong> the materialistic conception <strong>of</strong> history, which in the second half <strong>of</strong>the century has <strong>of</strong>ten represented one <strong>of</strong> the most powerful and unrelenting adversaries <strong>of</strong>any idealistic speculation. Although, then, the current situation <strong>of</strong> the ‘spirit’ <strong>of</strong> Italianculture is undoubtedly pervaded with a general feeling <strong>of</strong> bewilderment and creativeimpotence, yet it might also disclose new horizons and real possibilities for a criticalresumption and further original development <strong>of</strong> the most glorious and speculativelyfruitful trend in Italian thought—i.e., the Kantian-Hegelian tradition.‘ACTUAL IDEALISM’: GIOVANNI GENTILE


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 291Giovanni Gentile (1875–1944), who was rightly defined by Michele Federico Sciacca as‘the greatest Italian philosopher in our century’, 3 was the author <strong>of</strong> numerousphilosophical and historiographical works which are to be counted among themasterpieces <strong>of</strong> Italian thought in any age and have left an indelible trace also on thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> contemporary European philosophy. Here I can confine myself tomentioning the most relevant ones: La riforma della dialettica hegeliana (The Reform <strong>of</strong>Hegelian Dialectic) (1913 [10.32]), Sommario di pedagogia come scienza filos<strong>of</strong>ica (AnOutline <strong>of</strong> Pedagogy as a Philosophical Science), two volumes (1913–14 [10.33]), Teoriagenerate dello spirito come atto puro (General Theory <strong>of</strong> Mind as Pure Act) (1916[10.35]), I fondamenti della filos<strong>of</strong>ia del diritto (The Foundations <strong>of</strong> the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong>Law) (1916 [10.34]), Sistema di logica come teoria del conoscere (A System <strong>of</strong> Logic as aTheory <strong>of</strong> Knowledge), two volumes (1917–22 [10.36]), Le origini della filos<strong>of</strong>iacontemporanea in Italia (The Origins <strong>of</strong> Contemporary <strong>Philosophy</strong> in Italy), threevolumes (1917–23 [10.37]), Discorsi di religions (Speeches on Religion) (1920 [10.38]),La filos<strong>of</strong>ia dell’arte (The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Art) (1931 [10.42]), Introduzione alla filo-s<strong>of</strong>ia(An Introduction to <strong>Philosophy</strong>) (1933 [10.43]), and finally his posthumously publishedbook Genesi e struttura della società (Genesis and Structure <strong>of</strong> Society) (1946 [10.44]).Gentile’s works organically merge a vigorous theoretical development <strong>of</strong> his ownoriginal philosophical doctrine, ‘actual idealism’ (or ‘actualism’) with an immense,philologically very accurate, historiographical erudition, focusing especially upon thehistory <strong>of</strong> Italian philosophy and culture.The doctrine <strong>of</strong> ‘actual idealism’ can be safely regarded as an attempt to press to itsextreme consequences Spaventa’s interpretation <strong>of</strong> Hegelian philosophy as a metaphysics<strong>of</strong> pure self-consciousness. <strong>Philosophy</strong> is the search for truth—not for this or thatparticular ‘abstract’ truth, but for the unique ‘absolute’ truth (and reality). And such atruth cannot possibly ‘transcend’ thought’s self-conscious act which aspires to itspossession. For in such a case not only could the latter never be ‘certain’ <strong>of</strong> any truthwhatsoever, but as essentially ‘other’ than (absolute) truth it could not but turn into amere contingent phenomenon. This, however, is clearly disproved by the fact that, asDescartes had already pointed out, one can deny the ‘evidence’ <strong>of</strong> self-conscious thoughtonly by virtue <strong>of</strong> a further, more original act <strong>of</strong> thinking. Gentile can therefore assert:‘cogito ergo sum; sum substantia cogitans; quatenus substantia in me sum et per meconcipior; hoc est mei conceptus non indiget conceptum alterius rei, a quo formaridebeat’ (‘I think, therefore I am. I am a thinking substance. As a substance I am in myselfand can be thought <strong>of</strong> only through myself—i.e., the concept <strong>of</strong> myself need not anyconcept <strong>of</strong> another thing in order to be thought <strong>of</strong>’). 4 Yet according to Gentile, unlikeDescartes, not only is consciousness actual but the whole <strong>of</strong> reality turns intoconsciousness. For any possible objectivity, in the final analysis, turns out to beabsolutely enclosed in it, as its own immanent content, or rather ‘opposite’. Since the act<strong>of</strong> consciousness is one and ‘unmultiplicable’ (immoltiplicabile), 5 the object’s essence,then, will be radically manifold. On the other hand, as the object is but a negative content<strong>of</strong> knowing, that <strong>of</strong> which consciousness can be actually aware is only itself. As Hegelhad already maintained, the ‘truth’ <strong>of</strong> consciousness is therefore self-consciousness. ‘TheEgo’s act is consciousness as self-consciousness; the Ego’s object is the Ego itself. Anyconscious process is an act <strong>of</strong> self-consciousness.’ 6 In such an act, then, subject and


Italian idealism and after 292object coincide. But their identity is never ‘immediate’. For self-consciousness is everytruth only as the necessary consciousness <strong>of</strong> the error that essentially inheres to any‘immediate’ (i.e. sensuous, manifold, natural, etc.) being as such. As a consequence, its‘being’ can become actual only as the negation <strong>of</strong> a ‘not-being’ originally immanent toit—and thus is a dialectical unity <strong>of</strong> opposites. Now, as Hegel himself had shown by‘deducing’ Becoming from the opposite ‘abstractness’ <strong>of</strong> Being and Nothing, such aunity can be consistently conceived only as ‘movement’ or ‘process’: ‘The subject thatresolves the object into itself, at least when this object is a spiritual reality, is neither abeing nor a state <strong>of</strong> being: it is nothing immediate, as we said, but a constructingprocess—a process constructing the object as a process constructing the very subject.’ 7One <strong>of</strong> the deepest and most fascinating aspects <strong>of</strong> ‘actual idealism’ is certainlyGentile’s insightful distinction between his ‘transcendental’ concept <strong>of</strong> the self-consciousEgo and the ‘empirical Ego’ (the sensuous-finite individual), and consequently betweenthe former’s peculiar processuality and the form <strong>of</strong> ‘time’. In fact, both the empiricalEgos and time (which to Gentile, unlike Kant, is, like ‘space’, the essential form <strong>of</strong>nature, not <strong>of</strong> consciousness) imply a plurality <strong>of</strong> ‘facts’, or ‘points’, which exclude eachother, either in the simultaneity <strong>of</strong> spatial existence or in the succession <strong>of</strong> temporalbecoming. The transcendental Ego, on the contrary, as necessarily existing (cogito ergosum), is <strong>of</strong> necessity universal, and thus unique. The mutual transcendence (exclusion) <strong>of</strong>the empirical Egos as well as <strong>of</strong> the moments <strong>of</strong> sensuous time (past, present and future),therefore, is in the final analysis negated (in the Hegelian sense <strong>of</strong> ‘negation’, i.e. asAufhebung) in the timeless, ‘eternal’ process <strong>of</strong> the transcendental Ego—<strong>of</strong> the pensieropensante. ‘Thought as actual, or as the universal Ego, contains, and therefore overcomesnot only the spatiality <strong>of</strong> pure nature, but also the temporality <strong>of</strong> pure natural becoming.Thought is beyond time, is eternal.’ 8 ‘And therefore the moment [istante], the<strong>of</strong> thought, is not a moment among the moments, is not in time; it has no‘before’, and no ‘after’; it is eternal.’ 9Gentile deduces with admirable logical cogency the overall articulation <strong>of</strong> spirit’swhole life from his concept <strong>of</strong> human self-consciousness as ‘mediate’, dynamic unity <strong>of</strong>subject and object. If their unity cannot in principle be ‘immediate’, this means that theyare immediately different, and even opposite. Pure (‘abstract’) subject, pure (‘abstract’)object, and their (‘concrete’) mediation (identity <strong>of</strong> subject and object)—these are thethree fundamental ‘phases’ <strong>of</strong> self-conscious thought’s process, the three ‘absolute forms<strong>of</strong> spirit’. 10 The form <strong>of</strong> spirit’s abstract subjectivity coincides, according to Gentile, with‘pure feeling’ (sentimento puro), which constitutes the specific element <strong>of</strong> art. 11 It is notto be mistaken for the psychological sensations <strong>of</strong> pleasure and pain, although these latterdo constitute the opposite ‘poles’ <strong>of</strong> its immanent dialectic, for it is not conditioned byany alleged extramental reality, 12 and thus is ‘infinite’. Although acknowledging thatfeeling, art, beauty, etc. are the origin, and even the ‘root’ (radice), <strong>of</strong> spirit’s wholedevelopment, Gentile emphatically denies that they constitute something more than amerely ‘abstract’, ‘inactual’ moment <strong>of</strong> it. For in the act <strong>of</strong> thinking in which they arethought <strong>of</strong> as such, they necessarily negate themselves as ‘pure’ feeling, ‘pure’ beauty,etc., and rather identify themselves with the very (concrete) objectivity <strong>of</strong> pure thought.In fact, Gentile says, ‘[k]nowing is identifying, overcoming otherness as such’. 13 Thevery moment, then, the self-conscious subject becomes fully aware <strong>of</strong> the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 293‘intimacy’ (intimità) <strong>of</strong> its feelings, it cannot but objectify them, and thus transform theminto a thought-content. Not unlike Hegel, Gentile therefore denies any possibleautonomous development <strong>of</strong> art. 14The pure, ‘abstract’ object, we have seen, is the immanent negation <strong>of</strong> the act <strong>of</strong>thinking. Gentile can therefore proceed to set spirit’s unity, universality, necessity,activity, freedom, eternity, etc. over against the radical multiplicity, particularity,contingency, passivity, temporality, etc. <strong>of</strong> nature, which is just the object <strong>of</strong> thought as‘immediately’ other than it. He consequently holds to a rigidly deterministic andmechanical conception <strong>of</strong> nature. For him this is immanent to spirit, but the latter is notimmanent at all to it as such. To the extent that nature’s reality is (abstractly, andtherefore ‘erroneously’) posited, the actuality <strong>of</strong> the spiritual subject must be negated.This is also the case with the positive (both ‘natural’ and ‘historico-social’) sciences,since they describe or explain an essentially manifold object (the ‘phenomenal’ plurality<strong>of</strong> natural ‘facts’ or <strong>of</strong> historical ‘events’), and, moreover, abstract from its essentialrelation to the self-conscious act <strong>of</strong> thinking as its ultimate origin and condition <strong>of</strong>possibility. Yet no less abstractly objective, and therefore in the final analysis negativeand ‘erroneous’, than sensible nature and the positive sciences is the intelligiblemultiplicity <strong>of</strong> the concepts, principles, and logical laws that constitute the subject matter<strong>of</strong> traditional formal logic. Although the first volume <strong>of</strong> his Sistema di logica come teoriadel conoscere (A System <strong>of</strong> Logic as a Theory <strong>of</strong> Knowing) is devoted to a closeexamination <strong>of</strong> its fundamental structures, 15 such a logic, whose peculiar object hedefines in terms <strong>of</strong> logo astratto (abstract thought) or <strong>of</strong> pensiero pensato (thoughtthought <strong>of</strong>), is radically unable adequately to express the logical essence <strong>of</strong> thought’s selfconsciousprocess (or autoconcetto). Just as was the case with nature and the positivesciences, Gentile does recognize the necessity <strong>of</strong> the logo astratto but for no other reasonthan that in his dialectical conception <strong>of</strong> spirit’s becoming the negative, the ‘abstract’ isno less essential than the positive, the ‘concrete’, to its ‘self-positing’ (autoctisi).As an ‘abstractly’ objective form <strong>of</strong> spirit Gentile does not hesitate to consider religionitself, both as confessional religiosity 16 and as subjective mystical experience. This isbecause religion generally sets against pure self-consciousness, as the creating principle<strong>of</strong> its being, an absolutely transcendent personal God, who, as such, is obviously an‘other’ with respect to its ‘pure immanence’, and thus an ‘inactual’ abstraction. On theother hand, in mystical experience the subject does try to identify itself with theobjectivity <strong>of</strong> the ‘divine’, but at the cost <strong>of</strong> annihilating itself as consciousness, and, afortiori, as self-consciousness. 17 Not unlike spirit’s artistic form, then, to Gentile religiontoo remains incurably ‘abstract’. The ‘concrete’ unity <strong>of</strong> subject and object, therefore, canbe attained only by a higher spiritual form, in which the object is conceived as essentiallyimmanent to the subject, and this latter not as merely ‘subjective’ feeling but as the‘substantial’, ‘objective’ subjectivity <strong>of</strong> actual thought. And this, <strong>of</strong> course, can beexplicated only by philosophy, which for Gentile coincides without residue with spirit’sethico-political activity. For it is possible to distinguish them only by somehow opposingthought to action, theory to praxis, or, within the latter, the ‘morality’ <strong>of</strong> the individual tothe ‘ethicality’ <strong>of</strong> society (or <strong>of</strong> the state). Yet for him the very intrinsic absoluteness,creativity and actuality <strong>of</strong> the autoconcetto excludes in principle the possibility that itmay be conceived as mere theory, as a passive ‘reflection’ <strong>of</strong> a ‘given’ it does not itself


Italian idealism and after 294‘posit’. As a consequence, it does not lack that creative energy which traditionalphilosophy (before and after him) is rather inclined to ascribe to the will alone. On theother hand, to Gentile the only concrete effective moral life the human individual canrealize is that which unfolds in the organic, ‘spiritual’ unity <strong>of</strong> social institutions, fromthe family up to the state. 18 The very moment, then, speculative philosophy theoretically‘constructs’ absolute truth in the ‘pure act’ <strong>of</strong> self-consciousness, it also actualizes itselfin those ethico-political institutions which are the ‘kernel’, as it were, <strong>of</strong> humanity’sspiritual history.Despite the extremely summary character <strong>of</strong> this outline <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s idealism I believethat the reader can easily grasp its fundamental difference from Hegel’s, whose paternity,on the other hand (through the mediation <strong>of</strong> Spaventa’s interpretation), he openlyrecognizes. Whereas to Hegel there exists a dialectical movement <strong>of</strong> the logicalcategories and <strong>of</strong> natural reality which is not yet, as such, (explicitly) self-conscious, toGentile the only possible dialectical process, and then concrete actuality, is that <strong>of</strong> selfconsciousspirit. Whereas to Hegel an organic, ideological development <strong>of</strong> the Denken, <strong>of</strong>speculative reason, is immanent in nature (despite its being nothing more than theAbsolute Idea’s self-alienation), to Gentile (not unlike, at least in this regard, Kant andthe positivists old and new) it is nothing more than a dead mechanism determined bymerely quantitative and causal connections. Whereas to Hegel the identity <strong>of</strong> knowingand the will in the Absolute Idea does not exclude a no less substantial ‘logical’difference between them, which, in the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Spirit, renders possible the furtherdistinction between the ‘finite’ sphere <strong>of</strong> ethico-political life (‘objective’ Spirit) and thehigher one <strong>of</strong> the artistic, religious and philosophical contemplation <strong>of</strong> the Absolute(Absolute Spirit), to Gentile there is no other ‘Absolute’ than spirit’s ethico-politicalhistory, nor any other ‘spirit’ than the ‘infinite’ unity <strong>of</strong> the ‘Ego=Ego’ (i.e., AbsoluteSpirit).To these fundamental differences two others can be added, which seem to me no lessrelevant, although strictly logico-methodological in character. First <strong>of</strong> all, Hegeliandialectic unfolds in a succession <strong>of</strong> categories (Denkbestimmungen andBegriffsbestimmungen) in which the preceding are (relatively) more ‘abstract’ than thesubsequent ones, while the latter are (relatively) more ‘concrete’, and constitute the‘truth’ <strong>of</strong> the former, which are both ‘negated’ and ‘preserved’ (aufgehoben) in them. ToGentile, on the contrary, the ‘concrete’, the ‘Ego=Ego’ is the beginning <strong>of</strong> the dialecticalprocess not only in the ontological order <strong>of</strong> reality and truth, but also in themethodological one <strong>of</strong> its dialectical explication. Second, while to Hegel the speculativesynthesis <strong>of</strong> opposites constitutes itself as a Stufenfolge, a hierarchical succession <strong>of</strong>categories, or ‘spiritual forms’, more and more adequate to the Absolute’s concreteness,Gentile openly denies that spirit’s development unfolds ‘in a series <strong>of</strong> typical degrees’. 19For its self-identity is equally immanent in all ‘concrete’ moments in which itsevolutionary process is being articulated. In fact, if one should admit, with Hegel, ahierarchy <strong>of</strong> spiritual forms, the Absolute and the higher ones would turn out to be (atleast relatively) transcendent to the most elementary and inadequate ones. And thiswould undermine the fundamental methodological assumption <strong>of</strong> ‘actual idealism’: i.e.the ‘absolute immanence’ <strong>of</strong> truth to self-conscious thought.This is not the place to try to strike a balance (however summary) <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 295philosophy, 20 still less <strong>of</strong> his ‘reform <strong>of</strong> Hegelian dialectic’. As compared with thespeculative doctrine from which it stems, it might certainly be regarded as little morethan a mere ‘simplification’ 21 <strong>of</strong> it that risks mutilating, if not even irreparably distorting,the rich, systematic complexity <strong>of</strong> Hegel’s thought. Yet in such a case one would tooeasily forget that that concept <strong>of</strong> ‘spirit’ as ‘pure act’, on which all <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s theoreticalreflections and constructions hinge, does constitute the most living, pr<strong>of</strong>ound and up-todateaspect <strong>of</strong> the whole Hegelian system. Moreover, while Hegel distinguishes religionfrom philosophy only owing to their ‘form’, and emphatically asserts the identity <strong>of</strong> their‘content’, thus seeming to forget that according to his own logic 22 they on the contrarydetermine each other, Gentile’s distinction between religion as the ‘abstractly objective’form <strong>of</strong> spirit and philosophy as the fully ‘concrete’ and ‘actual’ one does bring to light adifference concerning their very content, and thus saves—against Hegel—the validity <strong>of</strong>his very principle <strong>of</strong> the mutual determination <strong>of</strong> the form and the content <strong>of</strong> thought.Finally, an undeniably original, creative development <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s thought with respectto Hegel’s is certainly to be found in his pedagogical theory. The dialectical oppositesthat are constitutive <strong>of</strong> the educational act, which he conceives as an essentially ‘spiritual’activity, are the subjectivity <strong>of</strong> the ‘pupil’ and the objectivity <strong>of</strong> ‘science’, which isembodied in the person <strong>of</strong> the ‘teacher’. As long as these two terms <strong>of</strong> the educationalrelation remain in the ‘immediate’ form <strong>of</strong> their mutual exclusion—which constitutes, assuch, the original ‘antinomy <strong>of</strong> education’ 23 —no real spiritual progress in the pupil’sself-consciousness can take place. For it to occur, indeed, it is necessary that the lattershould turn the teacher’s objectivity into his or her own self-consciousness, thusbecoming, in a sense, the ‘teacher <strong>of</strong> himself or herself. In the fullness <strong>of</strong> the educationalact, Gentile pr<strong>of</strong>oundly observes, the pupil ‘does learn, and throbs and lives in theteacher’s word, as if he heard a voice sound in it that bursts out from the inwardness <strong>of</strong>his own being’. 24 Any true knowing, therefore, is never mere passive learning <strong>of</strong> deadand fragmentary notions, but rather free spiritual creation <strong>of</strong> knowledge by the pupil’sinner personality. The spirit which ‘actually’ thinks, Gentile concludes, is always, in oneway or another, an ‘auto-didact’. From his deep-rooted conception <strong>of</strong> education as a‘spiritual’ process Gentile does not fail explicitly to draw a consequence that seems to meto be still today <strong>of</strong> the utmost cultural relevance and upto-dateness. True culture andeducation is only that in which the human mind knows and ‘creates’ itself. Hence it is anessentially humanistic (philosophical) culture and education. Any technological cognitionor ability (which as such constitutes the object <strong>of</strong> what he calls ‘realistic instruction’), 25therefore, can be legitimately ascribed some sort <strong>of</strong> meaning and value only to the extentthat it constitutes a useful (although <strong>of</strong> necessity always subordinate) means for thepupil’s spiritual formation, this being in one both philosophical and ethico-political. 26‘ABSOLUTE HISTORICISM’: BENEDETTO CROCEBoth to Hegel and to Gentile ‘the Absolute is Subject’, and as such it necessarilymanifests itself in humanity’s historical development. Yet this does not mean at all thatfor them historical reality, as a multiplicity <strong>of</strong> spiritual ‘facts’ or events, andhistoriography, as the subjective representation <strong>of</strong> such a reality, constitute, respectively,


Italian idealism and after 296the unique true actuality, and the only possible ‘objective’ knowledge <strong>of</strong> which thehuman mind could dispose. Any historico-factual manifestation <strong>of</strong> the Absolute, as such,is incurably ‘finite’, and thus inadequate to its pure ideal self-identity, whose fullconcreteness is actualized only in the process <strong>of</strong> ‘absolute knowing’ (Hegel) or <strong>of</strong> theautoconcetto (Gentile), as absolute identity <strong>of</strong> knowing and the will. The ‘absolutehistoricism’ <strong>of</strong> Benedetto Croce (1866–1952), on the contrary, aims at resolving withoutresidue any possible reality into historical facticity. The fundamental error <strong>of</strong> anymetaphysical speculation consist in the filos<strong>of</strong>ismo, 27 i.e., in the illegitimate claim that theconcept’s immanent development would <strong>of</strong> itself be able to <strong>of</strong>fer us an adequateknowledge <strong>of</strong> objective reality. Croce appeals to Kant’s famous dictum that ‘conceptswithout intuitions are empty, and intuitions without concepts are blind’, in order tovindicate the element <strong>of</strong> the intuitive, individual, ‘historical’ representation as anessential condition for any possible knowing. Actual knowledge, then, is neither the pureconcept (as metaphysics, and especially Hegel’s ‘panlogism’, maintains), 28 nor thesingular sensuous representation (as empiricism generally holds), but rather the logicalactivity <strong>of</strong> the ‘individual judgment’, 29 in which the human mind predicates <strong>of</strong> anhistorico-individual ‘fact’ four fundamental ‘categories’ (the Beautiful, the True, theUseful, the Good), to which Croce ascribes universal, necessary and thus a priori validity.But is not nature’s reality itself constituted by a multiplicity <strong>of</strong> individual ‘facts’, anddo not the natural ‘laws’ which the positive sciences discover in such facts imply somesort <strong>of</strong> a priori cognitive ‘forms’ (e.g., space and time) or ‘categories’ (causality,substance, etc.) either? Why, then, restrict the area <strong>of</strong> application <strong>of</strong> the ‘individualjudgments’ to historical reality alone? Croce resorts to the idealistic principle <strong>of</strong> theidentity <strong>of</strong> being and consciousness in order to deny in principle the actuality <strong>of</strong> anyalleged natural, and then extra-mental, facts. On the other hand, he borrows from one <strong>of</strong>the most fashionable Wissenschaftstheorien (theories <strong>of</strong> science) <strong>of</strong> the early 1900s,Mach’s and Avenarius’s ‘empiriocriticism’, the idea that the concepts and laws <strong>of</strong> thepositive sciences are devoid <strong>of</strong> intrinsic universality and necessity, and are rather‘abbreviations’ <strong>of</strong> a contingent plurality <strong>of</strong> sensuous, particular representations, which areworked out only in view <strong>of</strong> their practical utility, this consisting in the ‘economy’ <strong>of</strong>mental ‘effort’ which their employment would allow to the scientists. 30Having denied the reality <strong>of</strong> the Absolute and <strong>of</strong> nature, and consequently the truth <strong>of</strong>metaphysics and the positive sciences, Croce can easily identify the whole theoreticalactivity <strong>of</strong> the human mind with historiography. Philosophical knowledge differs from itonly as the reflective explication <strong>of</strong> the conditions for the possibility <strong>of</strong> those ‘logical apriori syntheses’ (the ‘individual judgments’) which the actual historiographical praxismostly carries out in an unconscious way. Contrary to what all great metaphysicians hadconcordantly maintained, then, philosophy can no longer be regarded as an ‘autonomous’science but as the mere ‘methodological moment <strong>of</strong> historiography’. 31 Its specific subjectmatter would consist, in substance, in a clarification <strong>of</strong> the contents and mutual relations<strong>of</strong> those a priori categories which constitute, as we have seen, an essential moment <strong>of</strong> the‘individual judgments’. The category <strong>of</strong> the Beautiful coincides with spirit’s artisticactivity, or sense-perception, and its essential products are just those individual intuitiverepresentations which become the subject <strong>of</strong> the judgments laid down by spirit’s logicalactivity. 32 This latter, then, does not exhaust as such the essence <strong>of</strong> the category <strong>of</strong> the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 297True, whose concrete content, rather, turns into the multiplicity <strong>of</strong> the individualjudgments historical knowledge consists <strong>of</strong>. As to the category <strong>of</strong> the Useful, accordingto Croce it defines a form <strong>of</strong> spirit’s activity no less concrete and ‘autonomous’ than art,knowledge or morality. In this regard, the influence <strong>of</strong> Marx’s thought on Croce, throughthe mediation <strong>of</strong> its ‘humanistic’ interpretation worked out by Labriola at the end <strong>of</strong> thenineteenth century (see p. 350), is undeniable. 33 Unlike Hegel and Gentile, whoemphasize the fact that the economic activity <strong>of</strong> the human mind is but the ‘phenomenal’,‘negative’, ‘abstract’ side <strong>of</strong> the only true practical activity, i.e., moral activity as socialmorality (Sittlichkeit, eticità) or ethico-political praxis, to Croce the world <strong>of</strong> economicprocesses and relations instead constitutes a fully actual and autonomous factor in humanhistory. Of course, since Croce identifies being in general with history, and defines thislatter in terms <strong>of</strong> ‘spirit’, he can acknowledge the actual reality <strong>of</strong> economy only byinterpreting the latter as a human activity no less ‘spiritual’ than, e.g., aestheticcontemplation or historical knowledge. As to the category <strong>of</strong> the Good, finally, Crocedecidedly rejects Hegel and Gentile’s contention that it can be concretely embodied onlyin social institutions. As was already the case with Kant, he confines moral activity to theprivate sphere <strong>of</strong> individual conscience, or, at best, to those social relations which anindividual can freely join.These are the main lines <strong>of</strong> the ‘philosophy <strong>of</strong> spirit’ set forth by Croce in his four‘systematic’ works: Estetica come scienza dell’espressione e linguistica generale(Aesthetics as the Science <strong>of</strong> Expression and General Linguistics) (1902 [10.15]), Logicacome scienza del concetto puro (Logic as the Science <strong>of</strong> the Pure Concept) (1905[10.16]), Filos<strong>of</strong>ia della pratica (The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Practice) (1908 [10.18]), and Teoriae storia della storiografia (A Theory and <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Historiography) (1917 [10.19]). Inthe later years <strong>of</strong> his long literary, philosophical and political career, he seemed deeply tomodify such a conception, at least with respect to two fundamental issues. On the onehand, in his Storia d’Europa nel secolo decimonono (A <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Europe in theNineteenth Century) (1932 [10.20]), 34 he sees at the root <strong>of</strong> the progressive historicalrealization <strong>of</strong> the ethico-political ideal <strong>of</strong> ‘liberalism’ the spiritual energy <strong>of</strong> a new‘religion’, although non-confessional in character: the so-called ‘religion <strong>of</strong> freedom’. Inthe systematic exposition <strong>of</strong> his ‘philosophy <strong>of</strong> spirit’, on the contrary, religion is notregarded as a peculiar form <strong>of</strong> spirit’s activity. On the other hand, in his La storia comepensiero e come azione (<strong>History</strong> as Thought and as Action) (1938 [10.22]), 35 he deniesthat the category <strong>of</strong> the Good constitutes, as such, a ‘distinct’ and autonomous form <strong>of</strong>spirit’s life. Now morality seems to him to turn without residue into each <strong>of</strong> the threeprevious categories: the True, the Beautiful, and the Useful. Furthermore, in an essaycollected in his last book, Indagini sullo Hegel e schiarimenti filos<strong>of</strong>ici (Inquiries intoHegel and Philosophical Explanations) (1952 [10.23]), 36 he stresses the spiritual form <strong>of</strong>‘vitality’ (vitalità)—which coincides, at least prima facie, with the category <strong>of</strong> theUseful—as the unique, common origin and ‘root’ <strong>of</strong> all the ‘distinct’ forms <strong>of</strong> spirit,whose ‘autonomy’, on the contrary, he had once so emphatically vindicated.Despite the wide influence exerted by Croce’s ‘historicism’ on twentieth-centuryItalian and European culture, I do not believe that he was actually able to <strong>of</strong>fer aspeculatively relevant contribution to the development <strong>of</strong> philosophical thought in ourage. Elsewhere I have pointed out those which seem to me to be the fundamental


Italian idealism and after 298shortcomings both <strong>of</strong> his general conception <strong>of</strong> history and, in particular, <strong>of</strong> his logic. 37Here I can confine myself to remarking that Croce’s negation <strong>of</strong> the possibility <strong>of</strong>metaphysics is based upon the uncritical ontological presupposition <strong>of</strong> the actual reality<strong>of</strong> the ‘finite’ (as ‘historical fact’). As soon as its intrinsic negativity becomes evident toself-conscious reflection, the radical inconsistency <strong>of</strong> such a presupposition can easily beunmasked. Second, the empiriocriticistic and Crocean denial <strong>of</strong> the universality <strong>of</strong> theconcepts and laws <strong>of</strong> the positive sciences turns out to be possible only by surreptitiouslypresupposing the immediate evidence <strong>of</strong> sense-perception, which in truth is no lessnegative and contradictory than the ‘finite’ as such. Third, Croce declares that the four‘categories’ in which he articulates the essence <strong>of</strong> spirit’s development are a priori, i.e.,‘universal’ or absolute (and this is just the reason why, as against historical relativism, hedefines his own philosophy as ‘absolute historicism’). A merely historico-inductivejustification <strong>of</strong> their peculiar content and relations, then, is clearly out <strong>of</strong> place. The onlypossible foundation <strong>of</strong> their objective validity would obviously be their‘deduction’ (however this may be conceived). Now, in no passage <strong>of</strong> his extensivewritings does Croce appear to be able to provide us with the least ‘deduction’ <strong>of</strong> thespecific categorial content <strong>of</strong> his ‘theory <strong>of</strong> the distincts’, and still less with any coherentconception <strong>of</strong> their mutual ‘dialectical’ relations. On the other hand, the groundlessness<strong>of</strong> his claim that they are a priori is proved ad oculos by his subsequent reduction <strong>of</strong> theirnumber through the suppression <strong>of</strong> the category <strong>of</strong> the Good as an autonomous form <strong>of</strong>spirit’s life as well as by his conclusive resolution <strong>of</strong> the whole categorial order into thesensuous immediacy <strong>of</strong> the vitalità. Fourth, how is it possible meaningfully to speak <strong>of</strong> analleged ‘religion <strong>of</strong> freedom’ while at the same time openly denying (unlike Gentile andHegel!) that religion as such is a specific form <strong>of</strong> spirit’s dialectical development?Finally, Croce’s vindication <strong>of</strong> the a priori character <strong>of</strong> the category <strong>of</strong> the Useful and,correlatively, <strong>of</strong> the ‘spiritual’ value and meaning <strong>of</strong> man’s economic activity as suchclearly implies the absurd transmogrification <strong>of</strong> a merely external and finite categorialrelation such as that <strong>of</strong> ‘utility’ 38 into a self-contained, ‘infinite’ concept, since anyauthentic ‘spiritual’ category must necessarily be such. The final outcome <strong>of</strong> Croce’scritical destruction <strong>of</strong> metaphysics in general, and especially <strong>of</strong> his sometimes veryvirulent polemic against Hegel’s and Gentile’s thought, then, appears to be, on the onehand, the sanctification <strong>of</strong> the most immediate, arbitrary and egoistic utilitarian interests<strong>of</strong> the ‘private’ individuals, and, on the other, the replacement <strong>of</strong> the living pr<strong>of</strong>undity <strong>of</strong>speculative thought with the dead superficiality <strong>of</strong> the most trivial and fragmentaryhistorical erudition.HISTORICAL RELATIVISM AND SCEPTICISMDespite his polemic against Hegel and Gentile, Croce’s historicism nevertheless holds totwo fundamental assumptions <strong>of</strong> any idealistic philosophy: i.e., the identification <strong>of</strong> beingwith consciousness and the distinction, within the latter, between a system <strong>of</strong> universal(absolute) categories (or ‘values’) and the multiplicity <strong>of</strong> the particular, contingentrepresentations which they somehow determine and qualify. A widespread theoreticaland historiographical trend in twentieth-century Italian philosophy, represented especially


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 299by former fellows <strong>of</strong> Croce and Gentile, although holding fast to the first assumption,decidedly rejects the second. It is a ‘dogmatic’ prejudice, they acknowledge, to assert theactuality <strong>of</strong> a reality different from, and transcendent to, human consciousness—broadlyspeaking, <strong>of</strong> an ‘external world’ (however this may be conceived). Yet this would notimply at all that there exists something like a Universal Consciousness or an AbsoluteSubject, or a mere plurality <strong>of</strong> a priori concepts, unifying the multiplicity <strong>of</strong> individualconsciousnesses and <strong>of</strong> their historical, temporal and subjective contents in a universallyvalid objective experience. The very idea <strong>of</strong> ‘truth’ as an absolute norm and principle <strong>of</strong>human knowledge is regarded as nothing more than a ‘metaphysical prejudice’. Not onlydo they deny the existence <strong>of</strong> a unique, universal truth, <strong>of</strong> which the manifold determinatetruths would be but internal, organic manifestations, but human knowing could not evencome to any intrinsic, ‘apodeictic’ certainty <strong>of</strong> the specific content <strong>of</strong> a mere plurality <strong>of</strong>finite, particular truths. Any judgments that can be actually stated, indeed, are alwaysmerely ‘problematic’. According to the problematicismo <strong>of</strong> Ugo Spirito (1896–1979),such a relativistic, and in the final analysis sceptical, conception <strong>of</strong> knowing would be theunavoidable outcome <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s dialectical logic itself. This, as we have seen, identifiesthe essence <strong>of</strong> spirit with its becoming. Yet as a ‘theory <strong>of</strong> spirit as pure act’ it cannot butnegate itself as becoming to the very extent that it claims a priori, and thus immutableand eternal, validity for its own theoretical tenets. As a consequence, one can do justice toreality’s intimate processuality only by denying, in principle, the possibility <strong>of</strong> anythinglike a ‘general theory <strong>of</strong> spirit’—more generally, <strong>of</strong> metaphysics as such. 39 Reality wouldthus turn into a ‘historical’ flux <strong>of</strong> states <strong>of</strong> consciousness, in which any alleged universalor absolute truth and reality dissolves, as a follower <strong>of</strong> Spirito puts it, into ‘anunrestrainable rhapsody <strong>of</strong> sensations’. 40 Any human knowledge would consist <strong>of</strong>nothing other than mere ‘[probabilistic assertions, hypotheses and conjectures’, and these‘are propositions which reality itself, in its daily or even hourly becoming, undertakes tocompromise in their objectivity and to defeat in their claim to universality’. 41 Accordingto Raffaello Franchini (1920–90), metaphysics and (historical) becoming ‘cannot getalong with each other’, 42 and the former’s claim to an ‘absolute unification’ and to‘conclusiveness’ must give place to the ‘infinity <strong>of</strong> particular researches’. 43 ‘Thesurvival…<strong>of</strong> the metaphysical conception <strong>of</strong> philosophy is very harmful to philosophyitself.’ 44 Although not hesitating to see in Croce’s historicism the epilogue andculmination <strong>of</strong> the whole history <strong>of</strong> western dialectic, 45 Franchini declares that not evenCroce ‘can avoid paying a tribute to the archaic philosophy <strong>of</strong> Being, despite his effectivepolemic against it’. 46 Such a tribute would obviously consist in his ‘systematic’conception <strong>of</strong> spirit’s forms as ‘distinct’ a priori categories, whereas they too would benothing else than the product <strong>of</strong> ‘a distinguishing activity, which in the final analysis isthe judgement which Croce himself did not by chance call “historical”’, 47 i.e. merelycontingent and relative.It is out <strong>of</strong> place to go deeply here into a more detailed exposition and critique <strong>of</strong> the‘problematistic’ and ‘relativistic’ outcomes <strong>of</strong> Italian idealism. In this context it willsuffice to point out that, first <strong>of</strong> all, there is no actual contradiction between spirit’sessential becoming and its reflective self-comprehension in a (metaphysical) ‘theory’provided that the former is conceived (as with Gentile no less than with Hegel) not asmere temporal change but as ‘eternal process’: not as a simple negation <strong>of</strong> the eternal’s


Italian idealism and after 300self-identity, but as a self-identity which eternally ‘returns-into-itself from its ‘selfalienation’.48 Second, ‘problematicism’ and ‘historical relativism’, like any more or lessradically sceptical sort <strong>of</strong> relativistic subjectivism, is plainly a self-refuting philosophicalconception. For on the one hand it denies the metaphysical ideal <strong>of</strong> an absolute,‘definitive’ truth; on the other, it undeniably ascribes absolute, ‘definitive’ value to itsunjustified and unjustifiable, and therefore ‘dogmatic’, 49 denial <strong>of</strong> truth.‘CRITICAL ONTOLOGY’: PANTALEO CARABELLESENot unlike Croce’s ‘historicism’ or Spirito’s ‘problematicism’, the philosophy <strong>of</strong>Pantaleo Carabellese (1877–1948) can itself be safely regarded as a critical reaction to‘actual idealism’. Yet what he sets against Gentile’s metaphysics <strong>of</strong> the ‘pure act’ is not asubjectivistic and relativistic conception <strong>of</strong> historical becoming so much as an ‘ontology’<strong>of</strong> the ‘pure Object’, <strong>of</strong> absolute Being. In any case, such an ontology is still based uponan idealistic conception <strong>of</strong> reality (unlike all the other trends <strong>of</strong> twentieth-century‘metaphysics <strong>of</strong> Being’, which I shall examine below) in that Carabellese shares withGentile and Croce the fundamental epistemological assumption that ‘being is inconsciousness’. 50 Hence he explicitly disallows any attempt to ‘overcome’ 51consciousness and to make the latter dependent, in the manner either <strong>of</strong> naturalisticempiricism or <strong>of</strong> traditional dualistic metaphysics, on a reality radically alien to it. Anypossible actuality is either an act, or an object (a content), <strong>of</strong> consciousness. The peculiarproblematic <strong>of</strong> metaphysics thus comes to coincide, for Carabellese, with a ‘critical’analysis <strong>of</strong> the immanent formal-general structures <strong>of</strong> consciousness as the only‘concrete’ reality. He distinguishes in it two ‘transcendental conditions’ mutuallyconnected: the ‘subject’ and the ‘object’; and three ‘determinate forms’ <strong>of</strong> its activity,which also imply one another: ‘feeling’, ‘knowledge’ and the ‘will’. In each <strong>of</strong> the latterit is possible to bring out a peculiar configuration <strong>of</strong> the subject-object relation.Carabellese’s whole polemic against Gentile is rooted in a different, and even alternative,conception <strong>of</strong> such a relation. Setting out from Kant’s famous contention that the‘objectivity’ <strong>of</strong> a perception coincides with its intersubjective validity, i.e. with its‘universality’, he identifies the very essence <strong>of</strong> the object as such with the most‘universal’ concept, i.e. the indeterminate ‘idea <strong>of</strong> Being’. Yet this latter, as Rosmini (seep. 350) had already pointed out against Kant, 52 is not to be regarded as the product <strong>of</strong> anact <strong>of</strong> the knowing subject. Rather, it is passively ‘given’ to it. But what about the‘singular’ objects, e.g. ‘this’ pen ‘here’? Carabellese appeals in this regard to Berkeley’simmaterialism, and emphatically denies that consciousness can actually refer to anextended, material, bodily, etc. object. 53 The only objective actuality it can become aware<strong>of</strong> is a ‘spiritual reality’, and this coincides with the universal idea <strong>of</strong> Being. The subject<strong>of</strong> the act <strong>of</strong> consciousness, on the contrary, must necessarily be merely ‘singular’: ‘oneamong many’, a ‘monad’ 54 bearing a relation <strong>of</strong> ‘mutual otherness’ 55 to infinite otherpossible singular subjects. As a consequence, contrary to what Kant, Hegel and Gentileheld, the unity <strong>of</strong> conscious experience cannot be the result <strong>of</strong> a spontaneous ‘synthesis’by the subject (for this is ‘in itself’ merely passive and manifold). It will therefore berendered possible by the object alone, which, as universal, is also <strong>of</strong> necessity unique. 56


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 301The universal uniqueness <strong>of</strong> the object, then, unifies the singular plurality <strong>of</strong> thesubjects; these latter, conversely, individuate the indeterminate universality <strong>of</strong> idealBeing. As we have already said, this takes place in three ‘determinate forms <strong>of</strong>consciousness’, to which three distinct ideal objectivities correspond: to feeling the idea<strong>of</strong> the Beautiful, to knowing the idea <strong>of</strong> the True, to willing the idea <strong>of</strong> the Good. Inpolemic with Gentile, who held ‘pure feeling’ to be ‘inactual’, and identified knowingwith the will in the concrete actuality <strong>of</strong> the transcendental Ego (see p. 356), Carabellesevindicates, no less emphatically than Croce, the mutual autonomy <strong>of</strong> such concepts (and,<strong>of</strong> course, <strong>of</strong> the corresponding forms <strong>of</strong> consciousness). Hence it turns out to beimpossible to raise any <strong>of</strong> them to the unconditioned principle <strong>of</strong> the others. Yet, unlikeCroce, he not only excludes economic activity (and the corresponding category <strong>of</strong> theUseful) from his ‘table’ <strong>of</strong> the ‘determinate forms <strong>of</strong> consciousness’, but also tries to<strong>of</strong>fer something like a ‘deduction’ <strong>of</strong> their specific content, which should bestow on themthat necessity <strong>of</strong> which Croce’s ‘theory <strong>of</strong> the distincts’, as we have seen, is devoid. Inthis regard, Carabellese appeals to consciousness’s temporal form. While Kant regardedtime as the mere form <strong>of</strong> ‘inner sense’, according to Carabellese it expresses rather theinmost essence <strong>of</strong> the whole life <strong>of</strong> consciousness. 57 Hence he thinks it possible to‘deduce’ from the three ‘moments’ involved in the essence <strong>of</strong> time—past, present andfuture—the concepts <strong>of</strong> the True, <strong>of</strong> the Beautiful, and <strong>of</strong> the Good in the following way:In the certainty <strong>of</strong> having already been, the subjects are said intellect, the objectis said true, and the concrete act is said knowledge; therefore knowledge isconsciousness <strong>of</strong> the being that was, is consciousness <strong>of</strong> the past. In thecertainty <strong>of</strong> being now, instead, the subjects are said feeling; the object is saidbeautiful, and the concrete act is said intuition; this therefore is consciousness <strong>of</strong>the being that is, is consciousness <strong>of</strong> the present. Finally, in the certainty <strong>of</strong>having to be [dover essere], the subject is said the will, the object is said good,and the concrete act is said action. This therefore is consciousness <strong>of</strong> the beingthat will be, consciousness <strong>of</strong> the future. 58Unlike Gentile (and Hegel), Carabellese refuses to deduce from the idealisticprinciple <strong>of</strong> the identity <strong>of</strong> being and consciousness the further consequence thatthe truth <strong>of</strong> immediate consciousness is the pure act <strong>of</strong> self-consciousness. Forin such an act the Ego should be the object <strong>of</strong> itself; but to Carabellese, as weknow, the object is essentially distinct from the subject (although beingimmanent in, and inseparable from, it). I therefore can be conscious <strong>of</strong> an objectdifferent from me (i.e., the idea <strong>of</strong> Being), but cannot possibly become aware <strong>of</strong>my own conscious act. The resolution <strong>of</strong> the objectifying act <strong>of</strong> consciousnessinto pure self-consciousness thus appears to Carabellese to be nothing less than‘the fundamental falsehood’ <strong>of</strong> ‘post-Kantian idealism’. 59A summary critical examination <strong>of</strong> Carabellese’s ontology suffices to showthat it is certainly not preferable to Croce’s ‘historicism’ as a plausiblealternative to ‘actual idealism’. 60 First <strong>of</strong> all, his attempt to deduce the‘determinate forms <strong>of</strong> consciousness’ from the essence <strong>of</strong> temporality is quiteunsuccessful. His raising <strong>of</strong> temporality from a mere form <strong>of</strong> ‘inner sense’ to theconstitutive structure <strong>of</strong> consciousness as such appears to be wholly arbitrary


Italian idealism and after 302and unjustified. He does not seem to realize the intrinsic negativity(contradictoriness) <strong>of</strong> temporality, <strong>of</strong> whose ‘moments’ the past and the future,as such, are not, and the (sensuous) present is but an abstract, unreal limitbetween them. Moreover, if the origin <strong>of</strong> the concept <strong>of</strong> the True (and <strong>of</strong>knowing) lay in the temporal moment <strong>of</strong> the past, not only would the knowledge<strong>of</strong> the present and the future be obviously impossible, but also any logical andmetaphysical knowing whatsoever (for this as such transcends the whole sphere<strong>of</strong> temporality). No less inconsistent is Carabellese’s identification <strong>of</strong> thesubject’s essence with the ‘plural singularity’, and <strong>of</strong> that <strong>of</strong> the object with theunique universality <strong>of</strong> the idea <strong>of</strong> Being. As Kant himself, to whose authorityCarabellese so <strong>of</strong>ten resorts, had already shown, I can become aware <strong>of</strong> amultiplicity (be it objective or subjective, and, in the latter case, be it the‘manifold’ <strong>of</strong> the states <strong>of</strong> consciousness within the single subject or an‘intersubjective’ plurality <strong>of</strong> individual subjects) only if I keep self-identicalduring the whole process <strong>of</strong> knowing in which I become aware <strong>of</strong> such amultiplicity. It is, then, the absolute identity <strong>of</strong> the self-conscious Ego, and notthat <strong>of</strong> the object, which renders possible, in the final analysis, the ‘syntheticunity’ <strong>of</strong> concrete experience. Moreover, on what grounds can I assert that theobject is ‘in itself’ unique? In effect, apart from the fact that sense-perceptionmanifests an indefinite plurality <strong>of</strong> singular objects (‘this’ pen ‘here’, etc.), allobjective concepts too, as determined, are essentially manifold. Only theindeterminate idea <strong>of</strong> Being is likely to be actually ‘unique’. Yet, just asindeterminate, it is, in truth, but a mere ‘abstraction’, an empty nothing. How,then, can it render possible the objective unity <strong>of</strong> the ‘concrete’ as consciousness?Finally, Carabellese does not realize that his denial <strong>of</strong> the possibility <strong>of</strong>self-consciousness undermines nothing less than the most original conditions forthe possibility <strong>of</strong> his own idea <strong>of</strong> philosophy as a ‘critique <strong>of</strong> the concrete’. Forwe already know that to Carabellese the ‘concrete’ coincides withconsciousness, and that his ‘critique <strong>of</strong> the concrete’ consequently turns into areflective explication <strong>of</strong> consciousness’s formal-general structures. Such anexplication is obviously an act <strong>of</strong> consciousness. But its object, unlike that <strong>of</strong>‘immediate’ consciousness, is by no means the indeterminate idea <strong>of</strong> Being, butthe very concrete actuality <strong>of</strong> knowledge, so that it clearly takes the shape <strong>of</strong> adeterminate form <strong>of</strong> pure self-consciousness, whose real possibility, then, it assuch proves, as it were, ad oculos.‘MYSTICAL IDEALISM’: PIETRO MARTINETTIWhen outlining the historical genesis <strong>of</strong> ‘actual idealism’ I have remarked that it stemsfrom Hegel’s idealism through the mediation <strong>of</strong> its interpretation by Spaventa in thenineteenth century. And the conceptions <strong>of</strong> thinkers such as Croce, Carabellese, Spirito,etc., can to a great extent be regarded as a mere reaction to Gentile’s philosophy. Thethought <strong>of</strong> Pietro Martinetti (1872–1943), on the contrary, derives both its concreteproblematic and its fundamental speculative inspiration from a direct, and very detailed,


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 303acquaintance with the German idealistic tradition from Kant 61 to the neo-Kantianism <strong>of</strong>Riehl, Wundt and others. Not unlike the other exponents <strong>of</strong> Italian idealism, however, forhim too the term ‘idealism’ fundamentally means an epistemological conception <strong>of</strong> thesubject-object relationship according to which the latter is nothing more (nor less) than apure immanent content <strong>of</strong> consciousness. The entire world-becoming thus turns withoutresidue into that <strong>of</strong> consciousness. ‘[T]he reality which is given us in perception isconscious reality itself, and nothing other than it.’ 62 If consciousness is considered fromthe standpoint <strong>of</strong> its immanent multiplicity, it constitutes the object. If, conversely, it isconsidered from the viewpoint <strong>of</strong> its active, unifying function, it constitutes the subject orthe ‘Ego’ stricto sensu. The peculiar orientation <strong>of</strong> Martinetti’s philosophical idealismwith respect to that <strong>of</strong> Croce, Gentile or Carabellese is revealed, in my opinion, by tw<strong>of</strong>undamental aspects <strong>of</strong> his thought. On the one hand, he seems to hold that a clearunderstanding <strong>of</strong> consciousness’s process can be <strong>of</strong>fered us rather by a psychologicalanalysis <strong>of</strong> our inner experience than by a purely logical deduction <strong>of</strong> its a priori forms(Fichte, Hegel). Indeed, he does not hesitate to define his own position in terms <strong>of</strong>‘psychological idealism’, 63 and to lay down a very favourable judgment about the‘idealistic empiricism flourishing in contemporary philosophy’ 64 —for exampleSchopenhauer’s theory <strong>of</strong> ‘representation’ or Schuppe’s and Schubert-Soldern’s‘philosophy <strong>of</strong> immanence’. But, on the other hand, no less crucial than the influence <strong>of</strong>that ‘psychologism’ which held sway over German thought at the end <strong>of</strong> the nineteenthcentury is that <strong>of</strong> pantheistic mysticism—from the Indian philosophy <strong>of</strong> the ‘system’Sankhya (to which he devoted his doctoral dissertation) to the metaphysics <strong>of</strong> Plotinus,Spinoza 65 and the later Fichte. In substance, according to Martinetti, the analysis <strong>of</strong>psychological experience is a necessary moment <strong>of</strong> the process <strong>of</strong> knowing, but only asthe groundwork for the construction <strong>of</strong> an ‘idealistic metaphysics’ 66 <strong>of</strong> the Absolute as animmanent Whole.The fundamental philosophical principle bestowing unity and coherence onMartinetti’s thought, in fact, has little or nothing to do, in my opinion, with psychologicalexperience, but seems rather to coincide with the chief speculative assumption <strong>of</strong>Plotinus’s metaphysics. 67 The most universal categories on the basis <strong>of</strong> which it ispossible to interpret to totality <strong>of</strong> experience are Unity and Multiplicity. Contrary to whatHegel (and, before him, Plato himself at least in the Parmenides) maintained, they are, assuch, mutually exclusive. This means that in an entity, experience or concrete spiritualactivity, the more the moment <strong>of</strong> unity prevails, the less relevant the role played bymultiplicity becomes, and conversely. The implications <strong>of</strong> such an assumption are notonly ontological but also axiological and ethical in character. Unity is the principle <strong>of</strong> theintelligibility and ‘perfection’ <strong>of</strong> an entity; multiplicity, on the contrary, that <strong>of</strong> itsirrationality and ‘imperfection’. As a consequence, the differences revealed by ourexperience <strong>of</strong> the world and the Ego are ordered in a hierarchical succession, at the lowerlevels <strong>of</strong> which the moment <strong>of</strong> multiplicity predominates, while unity is the peculiarfeature <strong>of</strong> the higher ones. Absolute Reality, therefore, is to be identified with anabsolutely ‘formal’, ‘indeterminate’ Unity, devoid <strong>of</strong> any content, properties, relations,etc., since these are all clearly unthinkable apart from the manifold. Any other form <strong>of</strong>unity, even the ‘concrete unity’ <strong>of</strong> the system <strong>of</strong> Plato’s ‘ideas’ or <strong>of</strong> Hegel’s ‘categories’,is but mere appearance. Since intelligent activity too involves a manifold content (the


Italian idealism and after 304plurality <strong>of</strong> the concepts which it distinguishes and/or unifies), the Absolute Unitynecessarily transcends intelligence itself. ‘But also this intelligible world is nothing elsethan a relative expression <strong>of</strong> a unity which in itself transcends intelligence.’ 68 This latter,Martinetti rightly points out, is but a ‘development’ (potenziamento) <strong>of</strong> ‘consciousness’.As a consequence, the Absolute Unity will transcend the totality <strong>of</strong> conscious experienceas well: ‘the highest constructions <strong>of</strong> logical thought are imperfect expressions <strong>of</strong> aReality whose absolute unity transcends any consciousness’. 69 Although, then, all <strong>of</strong> ourworld-experience turns without residue into a dynamic, hierarchical succession <strong>of</strong> formsand states <strong>of</strong> consciousness, the ultimate aim (which to Martinetti, just as to Hegel, is atthe same time the ‘absolute foundation’ <strong>of</strong> the whole cosmic becoming) <strong>of</strong> its evolution isnot a possible act or content <strong>of</strong> consciousness.It should be noted, however, that Martinetti’s insistence on the absoluteepistemological transcendence <strong>of</strong> Unity to consciousness does not exclude anunambiguous vindication <strong>of</strong> its substantial ontological immanence to the multiplicity <strong>of</strong>phenomenal experience. Perhaps the most intriguing aspect <strong>of</strong> Martinetti’s metaphysicsseems to me to be precisely his unrelenting polemic against the traditional theisticconception <strong>of</strong> God as an absolutely transcendent, ‘otherworldly’ entity. For him, on thecontrary, the absolute, ‘divine’ unity is immanent even in the most negligible details <strong>of</strong>world-becoming.And therefore, as Leibniz already saw, every single phenomenon alwaysexpresses in the unity it realizes the unity <strong>of</strong> the world to which it belongs;every most simple unity reflects, owing to the infinite multiplicity <strong>of</strong> its factors,the universal order <strong>of</strong> existences; every most trifling being encloses in themystery <strong>of</strong> its laws the secret <strong>of</strong> the world. 70The vulgar conception <strong>of</strong> the (first) cause as external to its effects (causa transiens) is tobe rejected in toto. For the a priori necessity <strong>of</strong> their connection can be accounted foronly by presupposing the intrinsic identity <strong>of</strong> them as their common foundation. But thecause, in truth, is not only identical with its effects: rather, it ‘potentiates’, ‘reveals’ itselfin them. 71 In polemic with Aquinas and, more generally, with the whole scholasticontology, Martinetti therefore declares: ‘The whole system <strong>of</strong> the forms in re and postrem dissolves in such a case as an unhelpful complication. The world is but the verysystem <strong>of</strong> the divine thoughts, <strong>of</strong> the forms ante rem, that, before the obscure power <strong>of</strong>sense, as it were breaks and is refracted in the indefinite multiplicity <strong>of</strong> sensuousappearances.’ 72Martinetti’s reference to the ‘obscure power <strong>of</strong> sense’ in this passage is critical for theinterpretation and evaluation <strong>of</strong> his whole philosophy. For his doctrine <strong>of</strong> sensibleknowledge is perhaps that which gives rise to the greatest difficulties in his theoreticalperspective. I have said that to Martinetti the manifold is a principle <strong>of</strong> unreality andimperfection, and that the more the process <strong>of</strong> consciousness approximates the AbsoluteUnity, the less relevant the former’s actuality becomes. ‘Sensible intuition’ is obviouslythe most rudimentary phase in consciousness’s development, since its content coincideswith the heterogeneous, unreal multiplicity <strong>of</strong> material things and <strong>of</strong> sensuous qualities. Aloose unification <strong>of</strong> the manifold is rendered possible, within the sphere <strong>of</strong> sense, by the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 305(relatively) a priori functions 73 <strong>of</strong> ‘space’ and ‘time’. The whole sphere <strong>of</strong> spatiotemporalreality, then, becomes the content <strong>of</strong> further, higher-order logical unificationsby virtue <strong>of</strong> the fundamental categories <strong>of</strong> ‘causality’ 74 and ‘logical identity’. 75 Now, notunlike Hegel, Martinetti explicitly declares that in the evolution <strong>of</strong> a lower form <strong>of</strong> spiritinto a higher one the latter represents the ‘truth’, the ‘actual reality’ <strong>of</strong> the former, whichwith respect to it turns out to be ‘virtually negated’: ‘the logical unity is not a realitycoexisting with pure sensuous multiplicity, is not a reality <strong>of</strong> the same degree, but is aqualitatively higher reality, which virtually denies sensuous reality.’ 76 Yet, on the otherhand, he tries to differentiate his own position in this regard from Hegel’s ‘panlogism’ byasserting that the logical unification <strong>of</strong> the sensuous ‘given’ does not undermine itsautonomous, independent reality: ‘An abyss subsists between the logical world <strong>of</strong>panlogism and sensuous reality.’ ‘The sensible and the logical order are two absolutelydistinct orders, and their forced overlapping only succeeds in bringing out—here betterthan elsewhere—the absolute impossibility <strong>of</strong> making them coincide.’ 77 The sharpcontradiction in which Martinetti’s thought here gets entangled is self-evident. In effect,in the final passage <strong>of</strong> his major work he himself somehow tries to solve it by declaringthat ‘if from the logical viewpoint the distinction between logical and sensuous realityturns into the distinction between being and not-being…from the absolute viewpoint bothare but two subsequent forms <strong>of</strong> one reality, which in its absolute form is neither the onenor the other’. 78 Yet we know that for Martinetti the ‘absolute viewpoint’ is that <strong>of</strong> theabsolutely ‘formal’ Unity, which as such radically transcends any consciousness andintelligence. How, then, can we take up such an alleged ‘absolute viewpoint’? The‘logical’ viewpoint therefore remains the only one we can legitimately resort to (and,strictly speaking, not only ‘we’, but also a possible infinite ‘divine’ intelligence). Hencehis vindication <strong>of</strong> the original autonomy <strong>of</strong> sensuous reality is clearly self-refuting, andconsequently his attempt to differentiate his own position from Hegel’s ‘panlogism’ turnsout to be, at least in this regard, quite unsuccessful.The other fundamental objections that Martinetti’s idealistic monism raises againstHegel’s philosophy concern the dialectical method; his doctrine <strong>of</strong> the immanentbecoming <strong>of</strong> the logical Idea; his identification <strong>of</strong> the latter with the very AbsoluteReality; and finally his ‘realistic’ admission <strong>of</strong> the possibility <strong>of</strong> a philosophy <strong>of</strong> ‘nature’as the process <strong>of</strong> the Idea in a still ‘unconscious form’. Given the validity <strong>of</strong> the idealisticprinciple <strong>of</strong> the identity <strong>of</strong> being and consciousness, how can one still deem it possible toconstruct a priori a succession <strong>of</strong> natural categories that is not, at the same time, thecontent <strong>of</strong> a series <strong>of</strong> subjective ‘syntheses’ <strong>of</strong> consciousness? Martinetti’s reproach toHegel’s thought, in this regard, is clearly that it is not yet sufficiently ‘idealistic’. It seemsto me to be historically enlightening to point out that the gist <strong>of</strong> this Martinetti objectioncoincides in toto with one <strong>of</strong> the fundamental results <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s ‘reform <strong>of</strong> Hegeliandialectic’: i.e., the denial <strong>of</strong> the possibility <strong>of</strong> any dialectical process which is not the purebecoming <strong>of</strong> the pensiero pensante, i.e. <strong>of</strong> the self-conscious Ego (p. 356).As for the relation between the Hegelian Idea and Absolute Reality, it is undeniablethat, if the latter really is, as Martinetti maintains, a Unity which transcends anymultiplicity, and therefore the very element <strong>of</strong> consciousness and intelligence, it cannotpossibly coincide with Hegel’s Absolute Idea, which is indeed the pure selfconsciousness<strong>of</strong> a systematic totality <strong>of</strong> thought-determinations. Moreover, any


Italian idealism and after 306becoming (be it temporal or logical) is clearly possible and thinkable only as a synthesis<strong>of</strong> unity (continuity) and multiplicity (discretion, as the plurality <strong>of</strong> the successive‘phases’ discernible in it). If, then, Absolute Reality is actually devoid <strong>of</strong> any multiplicitywhatsoever, becoming must certainly be nothing more than a mere ‘phenomenon’. TheAbsolute Unity, therefore, is eo ipso absolutely motionless and static. Finally, accordingto Martinetti (who strangely seems to share, in this regard, some <strong>of</strong> the most populartenets <strong>of</strong> contemporary logical empiricism), there are only two scientifically valid‘logical’ methods: ‘analysis’, which is merely formal and reconstructive in character; and‘synthesis’, or ‘induction’, which consequently is the only method actually able originallyto constitute, and then to extend, our knowledge. The latter’s ‘genetic order’, he says, ‘isinvariably inductive, and springs forth from a unique source which is experience’. 79 As aconsequence, induction is the proper method not only <strong>of</strong> the positive sciences but also <strong>of</strong>philosophy itself. As a consequence, the only real difference between them is that, whilethe positive sciences limit themselves to a more or less ‘relative’ unification <strong>of</strong> themultiplicity <strong>of</strong> the immediate ‘given’, philosophy on the contrary essentially aspires to a‘total’, ‘absolute’ unification. The undeniable non-inductive character <strong>of</strong> Hegel’sdialectical method, then, would ineluctably undermine the ‘scientificity’ <strong>of</strong> his‘panlogistic’ conception <strong>of</strong> the Absolute. In Martinetti’s critique <strong>of</strong> Hegelianism, then,(psychological) empiricism and (immanentistic) mysticism work hand in hand in asomewhat surprising way. While, indeed, his rejection <strong>of</strong> the dialectical method (like histheory <strong>of</strong> sensible intuition I have outlined above) relies on arguments <strong>of</strong> clear empiricistorigin, his polemic against Hegel’s Absolute Reason has no other ground, nor any otheraim (so at least I believe), than the vindication <strong>of</strong> the ontological and ethical primacy <strong>of</strong>mystical-religious experience over rational-philosophical thought. In fact, on oneoccasion he does not hesitate openly to define in terms <strong>of</strong> ‘mysticism’ the deepestpossible form <strong>of</strong> unity between the Absolute and the human mind: ‘our knowing…is anact <strong>of</strong> mystical union with the eternal Logos which is the absolute ground <strong>of</strong> ournature.’ 80The plausibility <strong>of</strong> Martinetti’s anti-Hegelian polemic thus appears to depend in totoupon two decisive speculative assumptions: (1) the epistemological validity <strong>of</strong> induction;and (2) the ontological reality <strong>of</strong> an absolute Unity absolutely devoid <strong>of</strong> any moment <strong>of</strong>difference or multiplicity. But, in truth, Aristotle and Kant had insightfully pointed outalready in the antinomy <strong>of</strong> ‘complete induction’ the irremediable shortcoming <strong>of</strong> theinductive method; and Plato, in his Parmenides, had already brilliantly shown that thestatement ‘The One is’ actually means the very opposite <strong>of</strong> what it purports to mean, i.e.the unreality <strong>of</strong> the One as One. For the existential predicate ‘is’ constitutes <strong>of</strong> itself anelement different from it, and thus immediately posits an original manifold in the allegedpure ‘unity’ <strong>of</strong> the One itself.METAPHYSICS OF BEINGThe peremptory rejection <strong>of</strong> the ‘idealistic’ identification <strong>of</strong> being and consciousness andthe unrelenting polemic against all the logical, metaphysical and ethical consequencesdrawn from it by both Croce and Gentile constitute the fundamental and historically most


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 307relevant features <strong>of</strong> a widespread tendency in twentieth-century Italian philosophy whichone could generally define in terms <strong>of</strong> ‘metaphysics <strong>of</strong> Being’. 81 The divergences amongthe spiritual traditions <strong>of</strong> (1) Thomism, (2) Augustine’s and Rosmini’s ‘spiritualism’, and(3) Kierkegaard’s mystical irrationalism—to which thinkers such as (1) Armando Carlini(1878–1959), Augusto Guzzo (1894–1986), Gustavo Bontadini (1903–90), and MicheleFederico Sciacca (1908–79), (2) Francesco Olgiati (1886–1968) and (3) Luigi Pareyson(1918–91) respectively go back—turn out to be negligible as compared with thesubstantial affinity <strong>of</strong> both the theoretical content and the historico-cultural finalities <strong>of</strong>their philosophical activity. Being, Truth, the Absolute, God, they maintain, radicallytranscend the whole sphere <strong>of</strong> self-consciousness, and especially the activity <strong>of</strong> rationalthought. Even those who are most willing to acknowledge the actuality and value <strong>of</strong>speculative reason, i.e. the neo-Thomists, hold nevertheless that this is a function <strong>of</strong> spiritwhich is in the final analysis subordinate (or rather: ‘subaltern’) to an alleged moreoriginal immediate intuition <strong>of</strong> the ‘idea <strong>of</strong> Being’—and, a fortiori, to religious revelationsuch as is sanctioned by the authority <strong>of</strong> the Roman Catholic church, and to mysticalexperience. ‘The absolute objective truth’, Sciacca declares, ‘is before its being known,and it would remain such even though no thinking subject ever knew, or sought for, it.’ 82‘[T]he ratio is a cognitive power inferior to the intellectus, on which it depends.’ 83 ‘Whatcounts,’ Pareyson echoes him, ‘is not reason, but truth.’ 84 The vindication <strong>of</strong> the absoluteepistemological transcendence <strong>of</strong> truth to human self-consciousness finds a closecounterpart, at the ontological level, in their common intent to ‘restore’, as Bontadiniopenly says, in contemporary philosophy and culture a decidedly ‘dualistic’ conception 85<strong>of</strong> the relations between God and man, process and eternity, spirit and nature, the Oneand the Many, etc. ‘[Transcendence means duality, immanence means monism’, Sciaccaasserts. ‘The condition <strong>of</strong> culture turns out to us still to be the dualistic conception <strong>of</strong> thereality <strong>of</strong> “this” world and <strong>of</strong> that <strong>of</strong> the “other” world, <strong>of</strong> the world <strong>of</strong> man and <strong>of</strong> theworld <strong>of</strong> God.’ 86 ‘Hegel’s Gottin-Werden [God-in-becoming] is a nonsense, in that oneuses the term “God”, but one ascribes to him a predicate that denies him, that is contraryto his nature.’ 87 From this dualistic ontological perspective the reality <strong>of</strong> nature, <strong>of</strong> life, <strong>of</strong>the ‘cosmos’ cannot obviously but be regarded as something quite alien to spirit, and assuch even unworthy <strong>of</strong> philosophical consideration. ‘Analogy’, Guzzo maintains, ‘can beheld to be the only means truly fit to dispel any temptation <strong>of</strong> identifying nature and man,either in the naturalistic sense <strong>of</strong> a reabsorption <strong>of</strong> man into nature or in the sense <strong>of</strong> anidealistic epistemology which aims at drawing back and dissolving “nature” into“spirit”’, 88 In his polemic against the metaphysical reality <strong>of</strong> nature, Carlini goes as far asto accuse <strong>of</strong> cosmologismo, i.e. <strong>of</strong> naturalism, the very ‘Christian Neoplatonism with itsEns Realissimum’! 89According to Olgiati, ‘if there were no realities there would be no relations, for it is notthe relations which create reality, but it is reality which gives rise to the relations’. 90 InBradley’s terminology one could say that the fundamental ontological point this neo-Thomist intends to make is that the only actual relations are the ‘external’ ones occurringamong an original plurality <strong>of</strong> logically indifferent entities that are irreducible to anyhigher, more concrete Unity or organic Totality. No surprise, then, that in the light <strong>of</strong>such an ontological conception <strong>of</strong> reality as mere plurality the only concept <strong>of</strong> man’spersonality that appears to be tenable to the upholders <strong>of</strong> the metaphysics <strong>of</strong> Being is still


Italian idealism and after 308that <strong>of</strong> the traditional ‘soul-substance’, i.e. <strong>of</strong> a self-contained, finite and contingententity. ‘[T]he concept <strong>of</strong> person’, a follower <strong>of</strong> Sciacca observes, ‘cannot avoid thatindividualistic-intimistic closure which seems to be wholly peculiar to the level <strong>of</strong>singularity.’ 91 Its only possibility <strong>of</strong>, and hope for, ‘immortality’, consequently, far fromconsisting in its absolute identity with the Totality <strong>of</strong> the cosmos and human history, willrather coincide with its alleged indefinite duration ‘after death’ in the temporal dimension<strong>of</strong> the future: i.e., as Sciacca openly declares, with its ‘ultramundane [ultraterreno]destiny’. 92If it is an indisputable merit <strong>of</strong> the upholders <strong>of</strong> the metaphysics <strong>of</strong> Being to haverevived interest in the metaphysical problem in contemporary philosophy, one must alsoacknowledge that its statement and solution in the ambit <strong>of</strong> their philosophicalperspective does appear to be wholly unsatisfying. The fundamental concept <strong>of</strong> ‘Being’they concordantly resort to as the first and most original truth <strong>of</strong> the human ‘intellect’,indeed, is but a dead, unfruitful, unthinkable abstraction—both because it is devoid <strong>of</strong>any determinate content whatsoever and because it presupposes the actual abstractionfrom the concrete becoming <strong>of</strong> the ‘act <strong>of</strong> thinking’, <strong>of</strong> which, in truth, such a concept is amere product, and which is thus necessarily presupposed by any alleged categorialnegation <strong>of</strong> it. In other words, the self-conscious (‘subjective’) process <strong>of</strong> thinking cannotpossibly be transcended, and consequently the object is originally and substantiallyidentical with the subject. The dualistic conception <strong>of</strong> reality, which is on the contrarybased on the original opposition <strong>of</strong> subject and object, is therefore inconsistent anduntenable, and any attempt to ‘restore’ it in the spiritual life <strong>of</strong> contemporary humanityappears to be ineluctably destined to failure. 93MARXISM AND PHENOMENOLOGYWhile for the upholders <strong>of</strong> the metaphysics <strong>of</strong> Being the fundamental shortcoming <strong>of</strong>Croce’s and Gentile’s idealism consists in its rigorously ‘immanentistic’ and/or‘historicistic’ orientation, most theorists <strong>of</strong> twentieth-century Italian Marxism, on thecontrary, regard it as the most ‘living’ and up-to-date legacy <strong>of</strong> the idealistic-Hegeliantradition (if not even <strong>of</strong> the whole history <strong>of</strong> ‘bourgeois’ philosophy). One can distinguishthree main trends in Italian Marxism just on the basis <strong>of</strong> their different relation to thattradition. According to Antonio Gramsci (1890–1937), ‘in a sense…the philosophy <strong>of</strong>praxis [i.e., Marxism] is a reform and development <strong>of</strong> Hegelianism’. 94 Croce’s andGentile’s Hegelian idealism is therefore the only twentieth-century ‘bourgeois’philosophy which he holds to be able to furnish a helpful conceptual contribution to thetheoretical elaboration <strong>of</strong> historical materialism. Not unlike Croce’s ‘absolutehistoricism’, indeed, ‘the philosophy <strong>of</strong> praxis has been the translation <strong>of</strong> Hegelianisminto a historicistic language’. 95 And not unlike ‘actualism’, it is itself a philosophy <strong>of</strong> the‘act’—even though not <strong>of</strong> the ‘pure’, but <strong>of</strong> the ‘“impure” (impuro), real act, in the mostpr<strong>of</strong>ane and mundane sense <strong>of</strong> this word’. 96 The possibility and necessity <strong>of</strong> an‘integration’ <strong>of</strong> historical materialism with any other contemporary philosophical-culturaltendency whatsoever is emphatically rejected by Gramsci. ‘Marxist orthodoxy’, he says,consists ‘in the fundamental concept that the philosophy <strong>of</strong> praxis is “self-sufficient”, i.e.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 309contains in itself all the fundamental concepts needed to build up a total, integralconception <strong>of</strong> the world’. 97Quite opposed to the ‘subjective’ 98 conception <strong>of</strong> historical materialism worked out byGramsci is the interpretation <strong>of</strong> Marx’s thought as a ‘logic <strong>of</strong> existence’, or <strong>of</strong> ‘contingentreality’, put forward by Galvano Della Volpe (1895–1968). 99 In his opinion, Marx’smethodology would bear a close resemblance to the ‘kind <strong>of</strong> critical instances fromwhich modem experimental science originates’. 100 In open polemic against Hegelianism,and, more generally, against any ‘metaphysics’ or ‘mysticism’, the school <strong>of</strong> Della Volpe(Mario Rossi, 101 Lucio Colletti, 102 etc.) stresses the radical difference between thoughtand being, vindicates the ‘positive reality’, the objectivity <strong>of</strong> the ‘instance <strong>of</strong> matter, orthe manifold, or the discrete’, 103 and reduces Hegel’s concept <strong>of</strong> ‘reason’ as a unity <strong>of</strong>opposites (an ‘identità tauto-eterologica’, as Della Volpe also says) to a merely logicalideal devoid <strong>of</strong> concrete actuality.The interpretation <strong>of</strong> Marxism put forward by the ‘Milan phenomenological school’founded by Antonio Banfi (1896–1957), whose most prominent exponent was probablyEnzo Paci (1911–76), shares with Gramsci’s the insistence on the ‘subjective’,‘humanistic’ character <strong>of</strong> historical materialism, and on its consequent substantialdivergence from any kind <strong>of</strong> traditional naturalistic and deterministic materialism. But themost radical, and up-to-date, understanding <strong>of</strong> human subjectivity would certainly not bethe excessively ‘speculative’ and ‘metaphysical’ one worked out by Hegel’s philosophy,so much as the ‘descriptive’ and ‘intuitive’ explication <strong>of</strong> its ‘formal-general structures’rendered possible by Husserl’s ‘phenomenological’ method. Whereas, then, for GramsciMarxism is a ‘self-sufficient’ world-view, for Paci it needs to be ‘integrated’, and in somerespects even ‘rectified’, by the most original theoretical achievements <strong>of</strong> ‘transcendentalphenomenology’.The fundamental shortcomings <strong>of</strong> traditional idealistic philosophy, according toGramsci, consist, on the one hand, in its being an ‘abstractly’ theoretical, or‘speculative’, conception <strong>of</strong> the world which unduly ignores the essential practical, orrather ‘political’, origin and finality <strong>of</strong> any alleged ‘autonomous’ spiritual or rationalactivity; and, on the other, in its more or less explicit ‘solipsism’. ‘The history <strong>of</strong>philosophy’, he asserts, is nothing more than ‘the history <strong>of</strong> the attempts…to modifypractical activity as a whole’. 104 ‘One can believe in solipsism, and indeed any form <strong>of</strong>idealism necessarily falls into solipsism.’ 105 Gramsci therefore goes on to set against theidealistic (rationalistic) principle <strong>of</strong> ‘coherence’ as truth criterion the more triviallyquantitative one <strong>of</strong> the wideness <strong>of</strong> the consent which a philosophy (or rather, as he says,an ‘ideology’) enjoys in the ‘masses’. The truth <strong>of</strong> a philosophy, he declares, ‘iswitnessed by the fact that it is appropriated, and permanently appropriated, by themajority [gran numero], so as to become a culture’. 106 ‘One can say that a philosophy’shistorical value can be “calculated” by the “practical” effectiveness it has won.’ 107 AlsoGramsci’s polemic against ‘vulgar’ materialism and positivism, which reduce in one wayor another humanity’s spiritual reality to the passive and ineffective ‘superstructure’ or‘epiphenomenon’ <strong>of</strong> its material life, is based, in the last analysis, on grounds that arestrictly practical-political in character. Idealistic philosophy is right to insist on the‘reality’ <strong>of</strong> ‘ideologies’—but not because they would express an ‘eternal’ or‘autonomous’ being or truth so much as because the ‘cultural factor’ would constitute an


Italian idealism and after 310essential ‘instrument <strong>of</strong> practical action’ 108 in view <strong>of</strong> the establishment <strong>of</strong> the ‘politicaldomination’, <strong>of</strong> the ‘hegemony’ (egemonia), 109 <strong>of</strong> one social class over another.‘According to the philosophy <strong>of</strong> praxis, ideologies are not arbitrary at all; they are realhistorical facts.’ 110Far more akin to traditional materialism and positivism is Della Volpe’s interpretation<strong>of</strong> historical materialism. In his opinion, Marx’s Hegel critique would have renderedpossible the foundation <strong>of</strong> philosophy ‘as a scientific ontology, this being a materialontology and no longer a formal ontology or metaphysics as the traditional one from Platoand Aristotle up to Hegel’. 111 It would thus allow us to replace Hegel’s ‘metaphysics <strong>of</strong>the state’ with a far more realistic ‘sociology <strong>of</strong> the state’, whose peculiar inspirationwould be ‘experimental’ or ‘Galileian’. 112 Its fundamental epistemological assumptionsconsist, according to Della Volpe, in the vindication <strong>of</strong> the original reality <strong>of</strong> thesensuous-contingent ‘facts’ (<strong>of</strong> the ‘manifold’) as well as <strong>of</strong> the objective validity <strong>of</strong> theprinciple <strong>of</strong> non-contradiction, <strong>of</strong> the ‘finite understanding’, <strong>of</strong> experiment, and <strong>of</strong> formalor ‘classificatory’ logic. Della Volpe decidedly denies the authentically ‘scientific’character <strong>of</strong> Engels’s ‘laws <strong>of</strong> dialectic’, 113 and against any activistic or pragmatisticinterpretation <strong>of</strong> historical materialism insists on the fact that it is Marxism as a ‘science’that grounds practical activity, and not conversely. 114In open polemic against ‘naturalistic’ materialism, and the very logico-experimentalmethod <strong>of</strong> the positive sciences which would be but a peculiar form <strong>of</strong> the ‘alienation’typical <strong>of</strong> ‘bourgeois’ society, Paci emphasizes no less than Gramsci the ‘subjective’,‘historical’ character <strong>of</strong> Marx’s concept <strong>of</strong> ‘matter’. Yet, unlike Gramsci, he holds that itat least virtually finds a close counterpart in Husserl’s conception <strong>of</strong> ‘transcendentalconsciousness’ as ‘virtual intentional life’ (vita intenzionale fungente), or as a ‘world-<strong>of</strong>life’(mondo-della-vita). ‘Inert matter is in some way subjective. Materialism is not ametaphysics <strong>of</strong> a substance [sostanzialismo] alien to the subject: I am the world, I am thewhole world.’ 115 The plausibility <strong>of</strong> an ‘idealistic’ interpretation <strong>of</strong> such a fundamentalphenomenological conception is ineluctably undermined, according to Paci, by the factthat to Husserl consciousness is always originally and radically sensuous, passive, andtemporal, even when it is regarded as a ‘pure’ transcendental ‘function’. ‘The errorfraught with the worst consequences in the interpretation <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s phenomenology isthat <strong>of</strong> those who see in [Husserl’s] Ego the consciousness or self-consciousness in thecreative [creativistico] sense <strong>of</strong> idealism.’ 116 The phenomenological analysis <strong>of</strong> the‘world-<strong>of</strong>-life’ would thus render it possible to ‘correct’ the erroneous ‘naturalistic’tendencies or interpretations <strong>of</strong> historical materialism without falling once again into thealleged ‘categorial’ abstractness <strong>of</strong> the ‘idealistic’ metaphysical tradition. Thephenomenological point <strong>of</strong> view, Paci maintains, ‘allows us…to stress the necessity andthe conditioning <strong>of</strong> the material structure or <strong>of</strong> the structure <strong>of</strong> the needs on humanhistoricalpraxis, but forbids us, at the same time, to apply to history a scientific dialecticin the sense in which physics is scientific’. 117Except for the school <strong>of</strong> Della Volpe, then, Italian Marxism generally tends toemphasize the decisive role played by human subjectivity in the self-constructing process<strong>of</strong> history—and even <strong>of</strong> universal reality itself. Yet its uncritical allegiance to theassumption <strong>of</strong> the original reality and truth <strong>of</strong> sensible perception and praxis, <strong>of</strong> time andfinitude, as fundamental constitutive structures <strong>of</strong> ‘history’, or even <strong>of</strong> the ‘transcendental


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 311consciousness’, does not allow either Gramsci or Banfi and Paci to realize the‘abstractness’ (in the sense <strong>of</strong> ‘mutilated’ one-sidedness) and thus contradictoriness <strong>of</strong> a‘subjectivity’ that is not at the same time ‘objective’ (infinite), since the ‘eternal’ reality<strong>of</strong> the Absolute is not held to be immanent in it. 118 Furthermore, they do not seem to besufficiently aware that their denial <strong>of</strong> the unconditional autonomy <strong>of</strong> logico-speculativereason (<strong>of</strong> the philosophical ‘categories’) in the final analysis undermines the‘coherence’, and then objective validity, <strong>of</strong> any conception or interpretation (be itphilosophical or scientific) <strong>of</strong> the very evolutionary process <strong>of</strong> human social history.EXISTENTIALISM AND EMPIRICISMThe reaction against the speculative tradition <strong>of</strong> Italian idealism does reach a climax inthe philosophical perspective <strong>of</strong> Nicola Abbagnano (1901–90) and his followers, whichhe defines in terms <strong>of</strong> both ‘positive existentialism’ and ‘methodological empiricism’ or‘neo-illuminism’. His interpretation <strong>of</strong> Heidegger’s existential ontology, indeed,emphatically disallows any possible ‘metaphysical stiffening’ 119 <strong>of</strong> it, and reduces themethod <strong>of</strong> ‘existential analysis’ to a mere empirical and contingent description ‘<strong>of</strong> thosehuman situations which can be regarded as “fundamental” or “essential” or “decisive” oras “limit-situations” [situazioni-limite], etc.’. 120 On the other hand, as the Americanpragmatists had already pointed out, that ‘experimental method’ which any empiricistphilosophy is used to appealing to cannot and must not be conceived in a strictly‘theoretical’ or ‘objective’ sense, 121 but as ‘the structure <strong>of</strong> action par excellence, in thatit is destined to modify such [human] situations’. 122 This is because to Abbagnano, justas to all existentialists, the ‘being-in-the-world’ <strong>of</strong> man is a ‘relation to being’ which isoriginally ‘emotional’ and ‘practical’ in character (something like a series <strong>of</strong> ‘decisions’),and as such is absolutely alien and impenetrable to rational, theoretical consciousness.‘Existence cannot be enlightened by knowledge or by reason, but can throw light onthem.’ 123The originally ‘irrational’ nature <strong>of</strong> ‘existence’, according to Abbagnano, excludes thepossibility that it might be adequately qualified by those ontological categories whichmost typically express the essence <strong>of</strong> pure rationality, such as universality, necessity,infinity, ‘progress’. The only ‘really existing man’, he declares, is neither the AbsoluteSubject <strong>of</strong> the idealistic systems, nor the ideal <strong>of</strong> ‘humanity’, nor world-history, butnothing else than the ‘singular individuality’. 124 This would be determined by a particularfactual ‘situation’ which radically distinguishes it from any other human individual, andwhich one-sidedly conditions any possible ‘activity’—or ‘project’—<strong>of</strong> its own. Humanexistence, then, is by its nature ‘contingent’, ‘uncertain’, ‘risky’, and the most generalontological category needed to understand its fundamental structures is therefore that <strong>of</strong>‘possibility’. Indeed, the essence <strong>of</strong> ‘freedom’ itself would turn into the mere possibility<strong>of</strong> ‘choosing’ among a range <strong>of</strong> ‘given’ alternatives (or ‘choices’), and therefore is not,nor can it in principle ever be, infinite or absolute. ‘Existentialism asserts that man is afinite reality, that he exists and operates at his own risk and danger.’ 125According to Abbagnano, then, the only object <strong>of</strong> which philosophy and the sciencescan meaningfully speak is ‘finite’ (temporal, contingent, relative, etc.) reality. The


Italian idealism and after 312fundamental idealistic, or ‘romantic’, assumption that the finite as such is not actuallyreal, but is rather the mere manifestation <strong>of</strong> a ‘superior Reality’ 126 (the Totality <strong>of</strong> theUniverse, Spirit, Absolute Reason, etc.), is purely ‘mythological’ in character. But notonly is a unique, infinite Reality or Totality quite inexistent, but it does not even makesense to speak <strong>of</strong> ‘absolute’ moral, or ‘spiritual’, values. Also the faith in the objectivity<strong>of</strong> such values would be but a mere ‘romantic’ prejudice, and it is just the task <strong>of</strong>‘existential analysis’ to show its inconsistency.Romanticism always has a certain spiritualistic bent. It tends to extol theimportance <strong>of</strong> inwardness, <strong>of</strong> spirituality, as well as <strong>of</strong> the values that are called‘spiritual’, at the cost <strong>of</strong> what is earthly, material, mundane, etc. Existentialismshamelessly recognizes the importance and value for man <strong>of</strong> externality, <strong>of</strong>materiality, and <strong>of</strong> ‘mundanity’ in general, and thus <strong>of</strong> the conditions <strong>of</strong> humanreality that are included under these terms: the needs, the use and production <strong>of</strong>things, sex, etc. 127[F]rom the empirical standpoint, the moral problem cannot obviously becoped with by resorting to an apology for morals, or by claiming to be able toestablish hierarchies <strong>of</strong> ‘absolute’ values, which ought to provide us withnecessary criteria for evaluation. 128The fundamental philosophical error that undermines the ‘positive existentialism’ <strong>of</strong>Abbagnano and his followers throughout is the absurd claim that the human subject maybecome ‘immediately’ aware <strong>of</strong> its own ‘existence’ as a ‘structure’ originally ‘other’ thanrational self-conscious thought. In truth, any reliance on the ‘evidence’ <strong>of</strong> ‘immediate’,sensible, ‘pre-logical’ perception, intuition, praxis, etc. is purely illusory, since it does notaccount for the intrinsically ‘mediate’ character <strong>of</strong> any subject-object relation, and,furthermore, for the fact that any ‘mediation’, connection or ‘relation’, in the lastanalysis, is nothing more (as Kant had already stressed) than a product <strong>of</strong> the ‘synthetic’activity <strong>of</strong> the pure self-conscious Ego. And even the most elementary act by which this‘posits itself necessarily involves (as the ‘dialectical’ development <strong>of</strong> its pure immanentcontent could easily show) the objective validity <strong>of</strong> those very categories <strong>of</strong> ‘necessity’,‘universality’, ‘infinity’, etc., which Abbagnano’s ‘positive existentialism’ dogmaticallydenies, or rather is simply unable to account for. In face <strong>of</strong> the luminous ‘self-evidence’<strong>of</strong> the thinking concept’s immanent self-explication, then, all the too <strong>of</strong>ten banal, trivial,and worn-out arguments <strong>of</strong> his polemic against ‘romanticism’ and ‘idealism’ cannot but‘dissolve as fog in the sun’.CONCLUSIONIf now, having come to the conclusion <strong>of</strong> this brief outline <strong>of</strong> twentieth-century Italianphilosophy, we take a fleeting retrospective glance at its most significant vicissitudes andachievements, we can first <strong>of</strong> all remark that the debate between the upholders and theadversaries <strong>of</strong> idealist-speculative thought does constitute the crux <strong>of</strong> its wholedevelopment. It is undeniable that in the second half <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century the anti-


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 313idealistic trends—empiricism, existentialism, phenomenology, Marxism, dualisticmetaphysics, etc.—have somehow prevailed. Yet this does not mean at all that theircontributions to the progress <strong>of</strong> Italian philosophical culture have eo ipso turned out to bemore convincing, valuable, or lasting. On the contrary, our summary analysis <strong>of</strong> theirfundamental assumptions outlined above seems to have clearly brought out theirindisputable theoretical inferiority with respect to both the content and the method <strong>of</strong> theidealistic perspective.As far as the latter is concerned, then, we have witnessed the polemic between therigorously dialectical, monistic, and ‘speculative’ development <strong>of</strong> the philosophicalprinciple <strong>of</strong> idealism carried out by Gentile’s ‘actualism’ and other antidialectical,pluralistic or historicistic forms <strong>of</strong> idealism such as Martinetti’s mystical monism,Carabellese’s ‘critical ontology’, and Croce’s ‘absolute historicism’. Despite the sharpcritiques to Gentile’s thought put forward by the latter, none <strong>of</strong> their speculativeconstructions can bear comparison—as to coherence, lucidity and intimate force <strong>of</strong>persuasion—with the theoretical perspective <strong>of</strong> ‘actual idealism’. Hence this is andremains up to the present the essential reference point for any further development andprogress <strong>of</strong> philosophical research in Italy.This, however, is not tantamount at all to saying that a fair evaluation <strong>of</strong> the actualspeculative achievements <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s thought cannot and must not bring to light in itmore than one fundamental limit. 129 In this context I can confine myself to remarkingthat the actual result <strong>of</strong> his ‘reform <strong>of</strong> Hegelian dialectic’ appears to consist, in more thanone respect, rather in a one-sided formalistic ‘simplification’ <strong>of</strong> the very complex totality<strong>of</strong> Hegel’s Absolute Idea than in the positive explication <strong>of</strong> a speculative truth which inthe Hegelian system would still be merely implicit. After all, Bosanquet’s famousobjection to Gentile’s philosophy—that it would be a sort <strong>of</strong> ‘narrow humanism’ which,unlike the Hegelian one, does no justice to the intrinsic ‘dialectical’ nature both <strong>of</strong> thelogical categories and <strong>of</strong> the processes <strong>of</strong> natural reality—is likely to be sound andtenable. The speculative task which the critical reflection on the theoretical limits <strong>of</strong>‘actual idealism’ proposes to contemporary philosophy thus seems to be the integration <strong>of</strong>the brightest and most fruitful idea <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s thought—i.e., that Absolute Reality is thetotality-in-becoming <strong>of</strong> self-conscious, active ‘spirit’—with a ‘holistic’ and ‘systematic’interpretation <strong>of</strong> the fundamental achievements <strong>of</strong> scientific and methodological researchin our century such as is being developed, for example, by the latest and most significanttrends <strong>of</strong> the philosophical tradition <strong>of</strong> Anglo-Saxon Hegelianism. 130NOTES1 Cf. H.Marcuse, Reason and Revolution: Hegel and the Rise <strong>of</strong> Social Theory, 2nd edn, NewYork: The Humanities Press, 1954, pp. 402–9.2 For a detailed, although somewhat uncritical, reconstruction <strong>of</strong> the ‘external’ events <strong>of</strong> thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> twentieth-century Italian philosophical culture, see E.Garin [10.31] Asummary overview <strong>of</strong> the fundamental trends <strong>of</strong> Italian thought from 1945 up to 1980 is<strong>of</strong>fered by the collection <strong>of</strong> essays, ed. E. Garin [10.53].3 M.F.Sciacca [10.86], vol. 3, p. 214.4 G.Gentile, ‘L’atto del pensare come atto puro’, 1911; in Gentile, La riforma della dialettica


Italian idealism and after 314hegeliana [10.32], 193.5 G.Gentile, Teoria generale dello spirito come atto puro [10.35]; in Gentile [10.45], p. 491.6 ‘L’atto del pensare come atto puro’ [10.32], 194.7 Teoria generale dello spirito come atto puro [10.35], 475.8 ‘L’atto del pensare come atto puro’ [10.32], 190.9 Ibid., p. 191.10 G.Gentile, Il modernismo e i rapporti tra religions e filos<strong>of</strong>ia, 1909, ch. 10: ‘Le formeassolute dello spirito’, in Gentile, La religione, [10.38], pp. 259–65.11 Cf. G.Gentile, La filos<strong>of</strong>ia dell’arte [10.42], 144–70. See also Gentile, Introduzione allafilos<strong>of</strong>ia [10.43], 34–60.12 Cf. La filos<strong>of</strong>ia dell’arte [10.42], 150–2.13 Cf. Teoria générale dello spirito come atto puro [10.35], 470.14 Cf. La filos<strong>of</strong>ia dell’arte [10.42], 117ff.15 Cf. G.Gentile, Sistema di logica come teoria del conoscere [10.36], vol. 1.16 The most developed and accomplished form <strong>of</strong> which remains, in his opinion, Catholicism:cf. G.Gentile, ‘La mia religione’ [10.40], 405–26.17 Cf., e.g., G.Gentile, Discorsi di religione [10.38], 382: ‘The most deeply religious (=mystical) element <strong>of</strong> religion is not the affirmation <strong>of</strong> the abstract object so much as thenegation <strong>of</strong> the subject’ (my italics).18 In Gentile’s terminology: in the ‘societas in interiore homine’. Cf. Gentile, I fondamentidella filos<strong>of</strong>ia del diritto [10.34], 75–6; and Genesi e struttura della società [10.44], ch. 4,pp. 33–43.19 Cf. G.Gentile, Sommario di pedagogia come scienza filos<strong>of</strong>ica [10.33], vol. 1, p. 25.20 For a more detailed critical examination <strong>of</strong> his fundamental logical and epistemologicaldoctrines, see my paper [10.83] and my book [10.82], part 3, ch. 2, no. 51.21 H.S.Harris [10.52], 274. A careful outline <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s philosophy is <strong>of</strong>fered by the sameauthor in his essay [10.51]. Nothing more than a somewhat grotesque distortion <strong>of</strong> Gentile’sthought in a relativistic-materialistic sense is the ‘interpretation’ put forward by A.Negri inhis book [10.64] and by V.A. Bellezza in his papers [10.7] and [10.8].22 Cf., e.g., Hegel, Enzyklopädie der philosophischen Wissenschaften, Frankfurt: Suhrkamp,1970, vol. I, no. 133, Zusatz.23 G.Gentile, La riforma dell’educazione [10.41], 32–47,24 Sommario di pedagogia [10.33], 127.25 Ibid., p. 253.26 La riforma dell’educazione [10.41], 176.27 Cf. B.Croce, Logica come scienza del concetto puro [10.16], 249–54.28 Cf. B.Croce, Saggio sullo Hegel seguito da altri scritti di storia delta filos<strong>of</strong>ia, [10.17],126ff.29 Cf. Logica [10.16], 91ff.30 Cf. ibid., pp. 323–5.31 Cf. Teoria e storia della storiografia [10.19], 140.32 In an essay <strong>of</strong> 1936, however, Croce, explicitly contradicting a fundamental assumption <strong>of</strong>the aesthetic theory outlined by him in 1902, asserts that one <strong>of</strong> the essential features <strong>of</strong>‘poetry’ is the ‘cosmicità’, i.e. its ‘universality’ (cf. B.Croce, La poesia [10.21], 11–14).33 Croce’s critical discussion and (partial) appropriation <strong>of</strong> the theory <strong>of</strong> Marx’s historicalmaterialism is documented especially by his book Materialismo storico ed economiamarxistica [10.14].34 Cf. B.Croce, Storia d’Europa nel secolo decimonono [10.20], 7–21.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 31535 Cf. B.Croce, La storia come pensiero e come azione [10.22], 44.36 B.Croce, Indagini sullo Hegel e schiarimenti filos<strong>of</strong>ici [10.23], 29–55.37 Cf. my paper [10.81], and my book [10.82], part 3, ch. 2, no. 52.38 Cf. ibid., part 2, ch. 4, note 19, p. 280.39 Cf. U.Spirito [10.89]. For an outline <strong>of</strong> the development <strong>of</strong> Spirito’s thought see A.Negri[10.64], vol. 2, pp. 65–73.40 A.Negri [10.65], 58.41 Ibid., p. 57.42 R.Franchini [10.30], 167.43 Ibid., p. 57.44 Ibid., p. 172.45 R.Franchini [10.29], 347.46 R.Franchini [10.30], 167.47 Ibid.48 ‘Relativistic historicism’ is also the final outcome <strong>of</strong> the spiritual itinerary <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> themajor Italian historians <strong>of</strong> philosophy, Guido de Ruggiero (1888–1948). See especially[10.25]. For a critique <strong>of</strong> his misguided polemic against Hegel’s absolute idealism, which heaccuses <strong>of</strong> ‘theologism’ and even <strong>of</strong> ‘fetishism’, cf. G.Rinaldi [10.82], part 3, ch. 2, note 87.The denial <strong>of</strong> the constitutive immanence <strong>of</strong> the logical universal in individualconsciousness led Julius Evola (1898–1974) to identify the essence <strong>of</strong> the human subjectwith Nietzsche’s ‘will to power’: cf. J.Evola, Teoria dell’Individuo Assoluto [10.27].49 In fact, Franchini (not unlike, in this regard, the contemporary empiricists) denies theepistemological value <strong>of</strong> any possible logical ‘foundation’ or ‘demonstration’, as merely‘tautological’ (cf. [10.30], 171). His very denial <strong>of</strong> the possibility <strong>of</strong> metaphysics, then, is tobe held to be ungrounded—more the expression <strong>of</strong> individual subjective impotence than theascertainment <strong>of</strong> human reason’s objective, insuperable ‘limits’.50 P.Carabellese, Critica del concreto [10.11], 23. The second edition <strong>of</strong> this workconsiderably differs from the first, and can be legitimately regarded as the definitive version<strong>of</strong> Carabellese’s ‘critical ontology’.51 Ibid., pp. 101, 184.52 And, after him, Bernardino Varisco (1850–1933), a spiritualistic and theistic Italian thinkerwho has remarkably influenced the development <strong>of</strong> Carabellese’s thought.53 In Carabellese’s ontological perspective the very concept <strong>of</strong> ‘nature’ turns out to be simplynonsensical. As a consequence, he cannot but deny in toto the theoretical value <strong>of</strong> thepositive sciences. Cf., e.g., Critica del concrete [10.11], 189.54 Ibid., p. 109.55 Ibid., p. 199.56 In more than one context Carabellese does not even hesitate to identify the objective unity<strong>of</strong> the idea <strong>of</strong> Being with God himself (cf., e.g. ibid., p. 7, note). In any case, since such anidea, as we know, is but an abstract ‘transcendental condition’ <strong>of</strong> knowing, radicallydifferent from the subject which is its other essential condition, he is bound to conclude,somewhat absurdly, that God as such does not exist actually, nor is he ‘subject’, ‘person’,‘self-consciousness’, ‘spirit’ (cf. ibid., pp. 151–2, 171, 194).57 Cf. ibid., pp. 113–15 and 181. Note the analogy <strong>of</strong> this Carabellese doctrine with Husserl’sand Heidegger’s more known ‘phenomenological’ conceptions <strong>of</strong> ‘temporality’.58 Ibid., p. 24.59 Cf. ibid., pp. 126–39.60 Garin rightly stresses the ‘obscurity’ and ‘haziness <strong>of</strong> expression’ <strong>of</strong> Carabellese’s thought


Italian idealism and after 316(cf. [10.31], vol. 2, pp. 357, note 16, and 455). And R.Donnici suitably observes that ‘ascompared with Gentile and Croce’s idealism, his most immediate polemical targets,Carabellese’s critical ontology appears to be very frail’ (R.Donnici [10.26], 7). In myopinion, this holds good more for his critique <strong>of</strong> Gentile than for that <strong>of</strong> Croce.61 His book Kant [10.61] is devoted to a decidedly ‘spiritualistic’ interpretation <strong>of</strong> Kant’swhole ‘critical philosophy’.62 P.Martinetti, Introduzione alla metafisica [10.55], 45.63 Ibid., p. 40.64 Ibid., p. 259.65 To Spinoza’s thought, which Martinetti interprets and criticizes from a substantially neo-Platonic point <strong>of</strong> view, he devoted numerous insightful essays. Cf. P.Martinetti, ‘La dottrinadella conoscenza e del metodo nella filos<strong>of</strong>ia di Spinoza’ [10.56], 289–324; ‘La dottrinadella libertà in Benedetto Spinoza’ [10.57], (reprinted in his book La libertà [10.59]); ‘Modiprimitivi e derivati, infiniti e finiti’ [10.58]; ‘Problemi religiosi nella filos<strong>of</strong>ia diB.Spinoza’ [10.60]. For a general critical evaluation <strong>of</strong> Martinetti’s Spinoza interpretationsee my ‘Introduction’ to my Italian translation <strong>of</strong> E.E.Harris’s book Salvezza dalladisperazione. Rivalutazione della filos<strong>of</strong>ia di Spinoza, Milano: Guerini, 1991, pp. 29–31.66 Introduzione alla metafisica [10.55], 261.67 Cf., e.g., Plotinus, Enneads VI, 9.68 Introduzione alla metafisica [10.55], 471.69 Ibid., p. 476.70 Ibid., p. 478.71 Cf. ibid., pp. 435–43.72 Ibid., p. 273.73 I say ‘relatively’, because for Martinetti their ultimate psychological origin is itself merelyempirical. They are a priori only with respect to experience’s sensible qualities, which theyunify in a ‘unique’, ‘absolute’ order. Cf. ibid., pp. 423ff.74 Cf. ibid., pp. 434–43.75 Cf. ibid., pp. 443–55.76 Ibid., p. 468.77 Ibid., p. 403. Such a vindication <strong>of</strong> the autonomy <strong>of</strong> sensible intuition seems to find a closecounterpart in Martinetti’s critique <strong>of</strong> Kant’s doctrine that the ‘manifold’ <strong>of</strong> sensuousimpressions is merely subjective, and the objective unity is introduced in it only by theunderstanding’s ‘synthetic’ activity. In his opinion, on the contrary, sense-perception is aninseparable unity <strong>of</strong> subject and object before, and independently <strong>of</strong>, its subsequentunification in the logical forms <strong>of</strong> thought (cf. ibid., pp. 241–2).78 Ibid., p. 472.79 Ibid., p. 18.80 Ibid., p. 433.81 Among the numerous, although <strong>of</strong>ten speculatively mediocre, writings <strong>of</strong> today’s upholders<strong>of</strong> the metaphysics <strong>of</strong> Being, I confine myself to mentioning: F.Olgiati [10.66]; A.Carlini[10.12]; A.Guzzo [10.49]; V.La Via [10.54]; C. Mazzantini [10.63]; F.Olgiati [10.67];V.A.Padovani [10.73]; M.F.Sciacca [10.87]; L.Stefanini [10.90]; F.Olgiati [10.68];V.Mathieu [10.62]; M.F. Sciacca [10.88]; P.Prini [10.77]; G.Bontadini [10.10]; C.Arata[10.4]; C. Arata [10.5]; M.Gentile [10.46]; D.Pesce [10.76]; C.Fabro [10.28]; A.Guzzo[10.50]; L.Pareyson [10.74]. Guzzo’s broad essay [10.48] is devoted to an excellentexposition <strong>of</strong> Spinoza’s thought and to a lucid critique <strong>of</strong> it from a still ‘actualistic’ (and byno means ‘spiritualistic’ or ‘neo-Thomistic’) point <strong>of</strong> view. The reductive ‘irrationalistic’


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 317interpretation <strong>of</strong> Fichte’s thought put forward by L.Pareyson [10.75] is, on the contrary,wholly questionable.82 M.F.Sciacca [10.88], 36.83 Ibid., p. 163.84 L.Pareyson [10.74], 147.85 Cf. G.Bontadini [10.10], 4.86 M.F.Sciacca [10.88], 241.87 Ibid., p. 206.88 A.Guzzo [10.50], 77.89 A.Carlini [10.12], 192.90 F.Olgiati [10.68], 27.91 C.Arata [10.5], 18.92 M.F.Sciacca [10.88], 66–7.93 A lucid, thoroughgoing critique <strong>of</strong> Thomism from the standpoint <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s ‘actualidealism’ is carried out by Giuseppe Saitta (1881–1965) in his admirable essay [10.85].94 A.Gramsci [10.47], 115.95 Ibid., p. 244 (my italics).96 Ibid., p. 54.97 Ibid., p. 195.98 Ibid., p 238.99 G.Della Volpe [10.24], 36.100 Ibid., p. 123.101 Cf. especially M.Rossi [10.84].102 Cf. especially L.Colletti [10.13].103 G.Della Volpe [10.24], 103.104 A.Gramsci [10.47], 26.105 Ibid., p. 27.106 Ibid.107 Ibid., p. 28.108 Ibid., p. 52.109 Ibid., p. 219.110 Ibid., p. 292. For a critique <strong>of</strong> Gramsci’s Hegel interpretation see my book [10.79], vol.1,pp. 14f., 24f., 136f., 201f.111 G.Della Volpe [10.24], 169.112 Ibid., p. 121.113 Ibid., p. 201.114 Ibid., p. 184.115 E.Paci [10.71], 222.116 E.Paci [10.69], 3. For his critique <strong>of</strong> Gentile’s idealism see especially Paci [10.72]), 62–6.Husserl’s theory <strong>of</strong> consciousness’s ‘original temporality’ is developed by Paci especially inhis essay [10.70].117 [10.71], 226.118 Banfi’s open denial <strong>of</strong> the original truth and reality <strong>of</strong> the Absolute is unambiguouslywitnessed, for example, by the following passage: ‘in general one must say that according tophenomenological thought an absolute reality is as absurd as a round quadrilateral, for thereis nothing absolute but the ideal moment <strong>of</strong> pure immanence’ (A.Banfi [10.6], 94–5). For amore detailed exposition and critique at Banfi’s and Paci’s ‘phenomenological Marxism’see my book [10.78], Appendices, pp. 214–31.


Italian idealism and after 318119 N.Abbagnano [10.2], 157.120 Ibid., p. 156.121 Cf. Abbagnano [10.3], 45–9.122 [10.2], 156.123 [10.3], 48.124 Ibid., p. 47.125 [10.2], 26f.126 Ibid. p. 26.127 Ibid., p. 27. The stiff opposition between the philosophical-cultural perspectives <strong>of</strong>‘Illuminism’ (or ‘existentialism’) and <strong>of</strong> ‘Romanticism’ (or ‘idealism’) constitutes thefundamental historiographical criterion by which Abbagnano interprets and judges thewhole development <strong>of</strong> contemporary philosophy. Cf., e.g., Abbagnano [10.1], vol. 3, partsVI and VII.128 [10.2], 157.129 Cf. above, note 20.130 Errol Harris’s epistemological researches appear especially interesting in this regard. For asummary exposition and interpretation <strong>of</strong> his philosophy see my books [10.80] and [10.82],part 3, ch. 3 no. 61.SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHYPrimary texts and criticism10.1 Abbagnano, N. Storia della filos<strong>of</strong>ia, 3 vols, 1946; 3rd edn, Torino: UTET, 1974.10.2 Abbagnano, N. Possibilità e libertà, Torino: Taylor, 1956.10.3 Abbagnano, N. Introduzione all’esistenzialismo, 1965; 4th edn, Milano: IlSaggiatore, 1972.10.4 Arata, C. Lineamenti di un ontologismo personalistico, Milano: Marzorati 1955.10.5 Arata, C. Principi di un’interpretazione trascendentalistica e personalistica dellametafisica classica, Milano, 1955.10.6 Banfi, A. Filos<strong>of</strong>i contemporanei, ed. R.Cantoni, Milano: Parenti, 1961.10.7 Bellezza, V.A. ‘La riforma spaventiano-gentiliana della dialettica hegeliana’, inIncidenza di Hegel, ed. F.Tessitore, Napoli: Morano, 1970, pp. 5–74.10.8 Bellezza, V.A. ‘La razionalità del reale: Hegel, Marx, Gentile’, in Enciclopedia ’76–’77: Il pensiero di Giovanni Gentile, Roma, 1977, pp. 59–75.10.9 Bellezza, V.A. La problematica gentiliana della storia, Roma: Bulzoni, 1983.10.10 Bontadini, G. ‘L’attualità della metafisica classica’, Rivista di filos<strong>of</strong>ianeoscolastica, 45:1 (1953):1–18.10.11 Carabellese, P. Critica del concreto, 1921; 2nd edn, Roma: A.Signorelli, 1940.10.12 Carlini, A. ‘Lineamenti di una concezione realistica dello spirito umano’, inFilos<strong>of</strong>i italiani contemporanei, ed. M.F.Sciacca, Como: Marzorati, 1944, pp. 189–97.10.13 Colletti, L. Il marxismo e Hegel, 2 vols, Bari: Laterza, 1976.10.14 Croce, B. Materialismo storico ed economia marxistica, 1900; 3rd edn, Bari:Laterza, 1978.10.15 Croce, B. Estetica come scienza dell’espressione e linguistica generale, 1902; 11th


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 319edn, Bari: Laterza, 1965.10.16 Croce, B. Logica come scienza del concetto puro, 1905; 2nd edn, Bari: Laterza,1971.10.17 Croce, B. Saggio sullo Hegel seguito da altri scritti di storia della filos<strong>of</strong>ia, 1906;5th edn, Bari: Laterza, 1967.10.18 Croce, B. Filos<strong>of</strong>ia della pratica, 1908; 9th edn, Bari: Laterza, 1973.10.19 Croce, B. Teoria e storia della storiografia, 1917; 11th edn, Bari: Laterza, 1976.10.20 Croce, B. Storia d’Europa nel secolo decimonono, 1932; 3rd edn, Bari: Laterza,1972.10.21 Croce, B. La poesia, 1936; 3rd edn, Bari: Laterza, 1971.10.22 Croce, B. La. storia come pensiero e come azione, 1938; 3rd edn, Bari: Laterza,1973.10.23 Croce, B. Indagini sullo Hegel e schiarimenti filos<strong>of</strong>ici, 1952; 2nd edn, Bari:Laterza, 1967.10.24 Della Volpe, G. Logica come scienza positiva, 1950; 2nd edn, MessinaFirenze:D’Anna, 1965.10.25 De Ruggiero, G. Storia della filos<strong>of</strong>ia, 12 vols, Bari: Laterza, 1918–47.10.26 Donnici, R. Comunità e valori in Pantaleo Carabellese, Venezia: Marsilio, 1982.10.27 Evola, J. Teoria dell’Individuo Assoluto, 1927; 2nd edn, Roma: EdizioniMediterranee, 1973.10.28 Fabro, C. Dall’essere all’esistente, Brescia: Morcelliana, 1957.10.29 Franchini, R. Le origini delta dialettica, Napoli: Giannini, 1961.10.30 Franchini, R. ‘Che cos’è la metafisica’, Criteria, 7 (1990):165–73.10.31 Garin, E. Cronache di filos<strong>of</strong>ia italiana 1900/1943. Quindici anni dopo. 1945/1960, 2 vols, Bari: Laterza, 1966.10.32 Gentile, G. La riforma delta dialettica hegeliana, 1913; 4th edn, Firenze: Sansoni,1975.10.33 Gentile, G. Sommario di pedagogia come scienza filos<strong>of</strong>ica, 2 vols, 1913–14; 4thedn, Firenze: Sansoni, 1959.10.34 Gentile, G. I fondamenti della filos<strong>of</strong>ia del diritto, Pisa: Mariotti, 1916.10.35 Gentile, G. Teoria generate dello spirito come atto puro, 1916; 6th edn, Firenze:Sansoni, 1959.10.36 Gentile, G. Sistema di logica come teoria del conoscere, 2 vols, 1917–1922; Bari:Laterza, 1922.10.37 Gentile, G. Le origini della filos<strong>of</strong>ia contemporanea in Italia, 3 vols, Messina:Principato, 1917–23.10.38 Gentile, G. Discorsi di religione, 1920; in Gentile, La religione, Firenze: Sansoni,1965, pp. 281–389.10.39 Gentile, G. Il modernismo e i rapporti tra religione e filos<strong>of</strong>ia, in Gentile, Lareligione [10.38], 1–275.10.40 Gentile, G. ‘La mia religione’, in Gentile, La religione [10.38], 405–26.10.41 Gentile, G. La riforma dell’educazione, 1920; 6th edn, Firenze: Sansoni, 1975.10.42 Gentile, G. La filos<strong>of</strong>ia dell’arte, 1931; 3rd edn, Firenze: Sansoni, 1975.10.43 Gentile, G. Introduzione alla filos<strong>of</strong>ia, 1933; 2nd edn, Firenze: Sansoni, 1981.10.44 Gentile, G. Genesi e struttura della società, 1946; 2nd edn, Firenze: Sansoni, 1975.


Italian idealism and after 32010.45 Gentile, G. Opere filos<strong>of</strong>iche, ed. E.Garin, Milano: Garzanti, 1991.10.46 Gentile, M. Come si pone il problema metafisico, Padova, 1955.10.47 Gramsci, A. Il materialismo storico e la filos<strong>of</strong>ia di Benedetto Croce, 1929–35,Roma: Editori Riuniti, 1977.10.48 Guzzo, A. Il pensiero di Spinoza, Firenze: Vallecchi, 1924.10.49 Guzzo, A. ‘L’Uomo’, in Filos<strong>of</strong>i italiani contemporanei [10.12], 243–53.10.50 Guzzo, A. ‘Idealismo 1963’, Filos<strong>of</strong>ia, 14 (1963):25–84.10.51 Harris, H.S. The Social <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Giovanni Gentile, Urbana & London:University <strong>of</strong> Illinois Press, 1966.10.52 Harris, H.S. ‘Gentile’s Reform <strong>of</strong> Hegel’s Dialectic’, in Enciclopedia 76–77: Ilpensiero di Giovanni Gentile, Roma, 1977.10.53 La filos<strong>of</strong>ia italiana dal dopoguerra ad oggi, ed. E.Garin, Bari: Laterza, 1985.10.54 La Via, V. ‘La restituzione del realismo’, in Filos<strong>of</strong>i italiani contemporanei[10.12], 255–72.10.55 Martinetti, P. Introduzione alla metafisica, 1st edn, Torino, 1904; 2nd edn, Milano:Libreria Editrice Lombarda, 1929; 3rd edn, Milano, 1987.10.56 Martinetti, P. ‘La dottrina della conoscenza e del metodo nella filos<strong>of</strong>ia diSpinoza’, Rivista di filos<strong>of</strong>ia 8:3 (1916):289–324.10.57 Martinetti, P. ‘La dottrina della libertà in Benedetto Spinoza’, ChroniconSpinozanum, 4 (1926):58–67.10.58 Martinetti, P. ‘Modi primitivi e derivati, infiniti e finiti’, Rivista di filos<strong>of</strong>ia, 18:3(1927):248–61.10.59 Martinetti, P. La libertà, Milano: Libreria Editrice Lombarda, 1928.10.60 Martinetti, P. ‘Problemi religiosi nella filos<strong>of</strong>ia di B.Spinoza’, Rivista di filos<strong>of</strong>ia,30:4 (1939):289–311.10.61 Martinetti, P. Kant, posthumously published in 1946; 2nd edn, Milano: Feltrinelli,1974.10.62 Mathieu, V. Limitazione qualitativa della conoscenza umana, Torino, 1949.10.63 Mazzantini, C. ‘Linee di metafisica spiritualistica come filos<strong>of</strong>ia della virtualitàontologica’, in Filos<strong>of</strong>i italiani contemporanei [10.12].10.64 Negri, A. Giovanni Gentile, 2 vols, Firenze: La Nuova Italia, 1975.10.65 Negri, A. ‘Modernity as Crisis and Permanent Criticism’, Idealistic Studies, 21:1(1991):48–65.10.66 Olgiati, F. ‘Come si pone oggi il problema della metafisica’, Rivista di filos<strong>of</strong>ianeoscolastica, 14 (1922):14–28.10.67 Olgiati, F. ‘La filos<strong>of</strong>ia cristiana e i suoi indirizzi storiografici’, in Filos<strong>of</strong>i italianicontemporanei [10.12], 183–197.10.68 Olgiati, F. Il concetto di metafisica, Milano, 1945.10.69 Paci, E. ‘Coscienza fenomenologica e coscienza idealistica’ Il Verri, 4 (1960): 3–15.10.70 Paci, E. Tempo e verità nella fenomenologia di Husserl, Bari: Laterza, 1961.10.71 Paci, E. Funzione delle scienze e significato dell’uomo, 1963; 4th edn, Milano: IlSaggiatore, 1970.10.72 Paci, E. La filos<strong>of</strong>ia contemporanea, Milano: Garzanti, 1974.10.73 Padovani, V.A. ‘Filos<strong>of</strong>ia e religione’, in Filos<strong>of</strong>i italiani contemporanei [10.12],


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 321319–31.10.74 Pareyson, L. Verità e interpretazione, 1971; 3rd edn, Milano: Mursia, 1982.10.75 Pareyson, L. Fichte: Il sistema della libertà, Milano: Mursia, 1976.10.76 Pesce, D. Saggio sulla metafisica, Firenze, 1957.10.77 Prini, P. Itinerari del platonismo perenne, Torino, 1950.10.78 Rinaldi, G. Critica della gnoseologia fenomenologica, Napoli: Giannini, 1979.10.79 Rinaldi, G. Dalla dialettica della materia alla dialettica dell’Idea. Critica delmaterialismo storico, vol. 1, Napoli: SEN, 1981.10.80 Rinaldi, G. Saggio sulla metafisica di Harris, Bologna: Li Causi, 1984.10.81 Rinaldi, G. ‘A Few Critical Remarks on Croce’s Historicism’, Idealistic Studies,17:1 (1987):52–69.10.82 Rinaldi, G. A <strong>History</strong> and Interpretation <strong>of</strong> the Logic <strong>of</strong> Hegel, Lewiston: TheEdwin Mellen Press, 1992.10.83 Rinaldi, G. ‘Attualità di Hegel: Autocoscienza, concretezza, e processo in Gentile ein Christensen’, Studi filos<strong>of</strong>ici, 12–13 (1989–90):63–104.10.84 Rossi, M. Marx e la dialettica hegeliana, 4 vols, Roma: Editori Riuniti, 1960–3.10.85 Saitta, G. Il carattere delta filos<strong>of</strong>ia tomistica, Firenze: Sansoni, 1934.10.86 Sciacca, M.F. La filos<strong>of</strong>ia nel suo sviluppo storico, 3 vols, 1940; 12th edn, Roma:Cremonese, 1976.10.87 Sciacca, M.F. ‘Spiritualismo cristiano’, in Filos<strong>of</strong>i italiani contemporanei [10.12],365–74.10.88 Sciacca, M.F. Filos<strong>of</strong>ia e metafisica, Brescia: Morcelliana, 1950.10.89 Spirito, U. ‘Finito e infinite’, in Filos<strong>of</strong>i italiani contemporanei [10.12], 375–83.10.90 Stefanini, L. ‘Spiritualismo cristiano’, in Filos<strong>of</strong>i italiani contemporanei [10.12],385–93.TranslationsSee also 10.51 above.10.91 Croce, B. What is Living and What is Dead in the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Hegel, trans.D.Ainslie, London, 1915.10.92 Croce, B. My <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Other Essays on the Moral and Political Problem <strong>of</strong>our Time, selected by R.Klibansky, trans. E.F.Carritt, London: Allen & Unwin, 1951.10.93 Croce, B. <strong>History</strong>—As the Story <strong>of</strong> Liberty, trans. S.Sprigge, London: Allen &Unwin, 1951.10.94 Gentile, G. The Theory <strong>of</strong> Mind as Pure Act, trans. from the third edition with anintroduction by H.W.Carr, London: Macmillan, 1922.10.95 Gentile, G. The Reform <strong>of</strong> Education, trans. D.Bigongiari, with an introduction byB.Croce, New York: Harcourt, Brace, 1922.10.96 Gentile, G. Fragments From La filos<strong>of</strong>ia dell’arte, trans. E.F.Carritt, Oxford, 1931.10.97 Gentile, G. Genesis and Structure <strong>of</strong> Society, trans. H.S.Harris, Urbana: University<strong>of</strong> Illinois Press, 1960.10.98 Gentile, G. The <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Art, trans. and with an introduction by G. Gullace,Ithaca and London: Cornell University Press, 1972.


CHAPTER 11French structuralism and afterDe Saussure, Lévi-Strauss, Barthes, Lacan, FoucaultHugh J.SilvermanFERDINAND DE SAUSSUREThe history <strong>of</strong> structuralism cannot be thought without Ferdinand de Saussure (1857–1913). The Swiss linguist lecturing in Geneva in the early twentieth century set the scenefor what in the two and a half decades following the Second World War came to beknown as structuralism. The figures who dominated the development <strong>of</strong> the movement inthe 1940s and 1950s were Claude Lévi-Strauss (b. 1908), Jacques Lacan (1901–82), andRoland Barthes (1915–80). By the 1960s Michel Foucault’s (1926–84) reformulationsand even rejections <strong>of</strong> structuralism indicated the new directions for what becamepoststructuralism.Curiously, the parallel development <strong>of</strong> existential phenomenology in France ran adifferent course. With the possible exception <strong>of</strong> Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s (1908–61)interests in the structuralist alternative, structuralism had little or no effect upon thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> phenomenology as a philosophical movement. With poststructuralism,however, the confluence <strong>of</strong> these two different philosophical methods marked theappearance <strong>of</strong> an entirely new mode <strong>of</strong> thinking—one which is exemplified in Foucault’sarchaeology <strong>of</strong> knowledge on the one hand and Jacques Derrida’s (b. 1930)deconstruction on the other. For the purposes <strong>of</strong> the present chapter however, I shall takeFoucault as exemplary <strong>of</strong> this new development. 1Structuralism—and especially French structuralism—cannot be understood apart fromde Saussure’s semiology. According to de Saussure—as articulated clearly in theposthumously published Course in General Linguistics (1916), a compilation <strong>of</strong> severalyears <strong>of</strong> the Swiss linguist’s Geneva lectures [11.1]—semiology is ‘the general science <strong>of</strong>signs’. De Saussure proposed a new understanding <strong>of</strong> the notion <strong>of</strong> ‘sign’. He argued thatthe sign is not just a word but rather that a sign is both a word and concept. He namedthese two components <strong>of</strong> the sign the ‘signifier’ [signifiant] and the ‘signified’ [signifié].The signifier is the word, that which does the signifying. The signified is the concept, thatwhich is signified. Together these two components constitute a binary pair called thesign. The standard example which de Saussure <strong>of</strong>fers for this binary relation is the wordtree and the concept ‘tree’.A sign, however, is not yet a sign until it is distinguished from other signs in the samesystem, or language [langue]. A sign cannot be on its own—apart from all other elements<strong>of</strong> the language. Indeed, de Saussure defines a sign as determined by its difference fromall other signs in the sign system. Hence the sign tree is the sign tree by its difference


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 323from other signs such as house, bird and sky. Now the sign tree is also different from thesign arbre or the sign Baum, arbor or arbol. Each <strong>of</strong> these other signs is part <strong>of</strong> adifferent sign system: arbre, the French language, Baum, the German language, arbol,the Spanish language. Because they are not part <strong>of</strong> the same sign system, they are signsonly in their respective sign systems.De Saussure also remarks that the relation between a signifier and a signified isentirely ‘arbitrary’. That the concept or signified ‘tree’ is designated by the word tree inEnglish is simply arbitrary. It could have been called arbre, Baum or arbol—and indeedin different languages it does acquire such signifiers. Only in the limited instances <strong>of</strong>onomatopoeia in which a signifier corresponds in a motivated way to a particularsignified is the arbitrary nature compromised. Hence bow-wow for a dog’s bark, orsmooth, for something s<strong>of</strong>t and gentle, or Being-in-the-world for the extensiveness <strong>of</strong> ourexistence are connected in a more related way than most words with their correspondingconcepts.A sign—a signifier [un signifiant] and a signified [un signifié]—is one among manysigns in a language [langue]. A langue can be English, French, German, Japanese,Russian, etc. In the account <strong>of</strong> a langue nothing need be spoken as such. Hence, deSaussure <strong>of</strong>fers a correlative concept called the speaking <strong>of</strong> the language or parole. Whilelangue is constituted by elements that make up a particular language, parole is thespeaking <strong>of</strong> that language in a determinate context and at a determinate time. Hence whenI say: ‘Tall evergreen trees inspire a sense <strong>of</strong> grandeur’, I am saying [parole] these words(with their corresponding concepts) in English. Were I to say: ‘Ces grands arbres vertssont magnifiques’, I am saying something else in French but I am enacting the Frenchlanguage in a particular context and at a specific time—the saying is parole.Another binary pair (or binary opposition), as Saussure sometimes calls them, is therelation between ‘syntagm’ and ‘system’ (or ‘paradigm’). The sentence ‘Tall evergreentrees inspire a sense <strong>of</strong> grandeur’ is a sequence <strong>of</strong> signs; one follows the other. As asequence, the signs follow a syntagmatic line. Each sign is contiguous with the next, andthere is a meaning produced by the sequence. By contrast, were one to substitute alternatesigns such as ‘short’, ‘broad’, or ‘imposing’ for ‘tall’, for instance, the sentence wouldread: ‘Short (or broad, or imposing) evergreen trees inspire a sense <strong>of</strong> grandeur.’ The newsentence with the substituted term still makes sense, but the sense is <strong>of</strong> course different—and even in the first two instances a bit curious. What does not quite fit with ‘tall’,‘short’, and ‘broad’ is ‘imposing’. The first three are all signs <strong>of</strong> size. ‘Imposing’ is <strong>of</strong>another order, yet it is also substitutable for ‘tall’. All <strong>of</strong> these substitutable terms are part<strong>of</strong> the same system (or paradigm) if broadly interpreted. If more narrowly interpreted, thesystem could be restricted to signs <strong>of</strong> size and not just signs that are substitutable. Each <strong>of</strong>the elements <strong>of</strong> the sentence could be examined in terms <strong>of</strong> substitutable signs, and eachwould be part <strong>of</strong> a different system.A fourth binary opposition is that between diachrony and synchrony. A diachronicstudy <strong>of</strong> the Greek sign <strong>of</strong> excellence aretē would follow it through its Latin version invirtus, its Italian reformulation as virtú, its French usage as vertu, a term which is alsorepeated in English (virtue). To study the same work over time, chronologically, allowsfor the consideration <strong>of</strong> a development over time, historically, as it were. However, sucha study isolates what is studied from its context and framework. It takes the element and


French structuralism and after 324reviews the whole development independently <strong>of</strong> related concerns. A synchronic study,by contrast, is ultimately concerned with the set <strong>of</strong> relations among a whole complex <strong>of</strong>signs and elements that arise at the same time and in the same context. The sign aretē isstudied in relation to other signs at the time: paideia (education and the ideals <strong>of</strong> theculture), sophrosyne (moderation or temperance), and so forth. In this respect a givennotion is understood in a broad context—in this case, a cultural context. Once thesynchronic study has been accomplished for a given time-slice, it will be possible tocompare that time-slice with other periods <strong>of</strong> time—in order to show similarities and/ordifferences across a number <strong>of</strong> different time-slices.As a linguist, de Saussure was ultimately concerned with language. Indeed, the wholeproject <strong>of</strong> structuralism is framed according to a linguistic model. This model presumesthat what is outside language is not relevant to the linguist’s task. Hence the earliestforms <strong>of</strong> structuralism were restricted to the formulations <strong>of</strong> a semiology based onlanguage study. Roland Barthes, by contrast, in his Elements <strong>of</strong> Semiology (1964 [11.7]),remarks that while de Saussure believed that linguistics is a part <strong>of</strong> semiology—that thereare domains <strong>of</strong> semiology that are not relevant for the linguist—in his view, semiology isa part <strong>of</strong> linguistics. Barthes’s formulation presumes that all sign systems are alreadylanguage systems <strong>of</strong> one sort or another—I shall return to Barthes later.CLAUDE LÉVI-STRAUSSWhat is significant here is that when Lévi-Strauss in the late 1940s began to applystructuralist principles to anthropological concerns, he was already extending thelinguistic model far beyond language study. This meant that although Lévi-Strauss as ananthropologist was concerned with structures <strong>of</strong> thought, he had already made the shiftthat Barthes articulates: ethnology is already a language which can be studied by thestructuralist.Although de Saussure was lecturing on structural linguistics in the first decades <strong>of</strong> thecentury, it took until the 1930s for his work to become noticed and accessible to abroader context. This was the fate <strong>of</strong> his Course in General Linguistics. When Lévi-Strauss travelled to the United States during the Second World War, it was out <strong>of</strong>political and personal necessity as he narrates in considerable detail in Tristes tropiques[11.3]. When he arrived in New York, he began teaching at the University in Exile(which has subsequently come to be called The New School for Social Research). Duringthat time, he met and conferred <strong>of</strong>ten with Roman Jakobson (1896–1982) (whose ownitinerary had taken him from Russia to Prague to Paris to New York). Jacobson was alinguist whose development <strong>of</strong> Russian formalism was an important contribution to theconcept <strong>of</strong> structure. Indeed both Lévi-Strauss and Jakobson worked together on agroundbreaking reading <strong>of</strong> a Baudelaire poem, ‘Les Chats’. The idea was to <strong>of</strong>fer astructural study <strong>of</strong> the poem. Their reading was careful and meticulous. They wereinterested in how the poem exhibits structural, stylistic and syntactic features in order toconstitute the work as a whole. Jakobson’s further interest in metaphor and metonymywas worked out in his Fundamentals <strong>of</strong> Language [11.50] in terms <strong>of</strong> two types <strong>of</strong>aphasia: metaphor as replacement by substitution, metonymy as replacement by


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 325contiguity. 2After the war, Lévi-Strauss served as cultural adviser to the French ambassador to theUnited States (1946–7). Then he returned to France where he took up his position at theEcole Pratique des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales (the ‘Pratique’ has subsequentlybeen dropped) and resumed his research in structural anthropology. In 1949, he producedhis major contribution, The Elementary Structures <strong>of</strong> Kinship [11.2]. Here the concept <strong>of</strong>kinship was developed in connection with Lévi-Strauss’s understanding <strong>of</strong> structuralismand his collation <strong>of</strong> many different ethnographic accounts <strong>of</strong> kinship throughout theworld. His view was that despite many significant differences in kinship practice indifferent cultures, common structures are repeated underneath these multiple instances <strong>of</strong>kinship practices. These structures have a basic form according to a determinate set <strong>of</strong>relations. The actual character <strong>of</strong> the relation might change from one context to another,but what does not change is the relation itself. Each relation is part <strong>of</strong> a whole structure <strong>of</strong>relations, where no element is strictly independent <strong>of</strong> any <strong>of</strong> the others. Thus a one-to-onecorrespondence <strong>of</strong> one part <strong>of</strong> a structure with one part <strong>of</strong> another cannot be made. Thewhole structure must be compared with another whole structure in order to provide anappropriate analysis. For instance, Lévi-Strauss is particularly interested in the‘avunculate’ or uncle-relation. He finds from his extensive research <strong>of</strong> many differentcultures, societies and social groups that the role <strong>of</strong> the uncle is critical. Hence there is themother-father relation, the mother-father and son relations, the son-maternal unclerelation, and the mother-brother relation.Understood independently, each <strong>of</strong> these relations has a particular content: positive andsocially supported in one case, negative and outcast in another. Lévi-Strauss determinedthat by assigning a positive or negative value to each <strong>of</strong> these relations in a particularcontext, he could determine the nature <strong>of</strong> the whole structure. For three hypotheticalsocieties, it might look like Fig. 11.1.Figure 11.1In each <strong>of</strong> these societies, the mother and father, the mother’s brother and the brother’s


French structuralism and after 326sister’s son constitute the key kinship relations. While the structure recurs, the nature <strong>of</strong>the relations change from one society to the next. The repetition <strong>of</strong> the same structure ismatched with the differences in the nature <strong>of</strong> the relations among the social roles in eachsociety.This concept <strong>of</strong> structure indicates a latent set <strong>of</strong> relations that underlie the actual,particular and real relations <strong>of</strong> specific individuals in a determinate context. Lévi-Straussbroadens his reading <strong>of</strong> kinship relations to the account <strong>of</strong> totems and taboos in differentsocieties as well as to the detailed study <strong>of</strong> myths. These further explorations <strong>of</strong> theapplication <strong>of</strong> structural method resurface in a variety <strong>of</strong> essays written between 1944 and1957 and are collected together in the first volume <strong>of</strong> Structural Anthropology (1958[11.4]). The appearance <strong>of</strong> Structural Anthropology marked a significant phase in thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> structuralism. Elementary Structures (1949, [11.2]) was highly detailedand technical. The new book solidified the role <strong>of</strong> structuralism in France. It indicatedthat there was now an alternative research programme that would ultimately match that <strong>of</strong>existentialism and the existential phenomenology that had reigned unopposed since theearly 1940s. While it would take another decade for structuralism to establish its footholdfirmly, Lévi-Strauss’s new book was an important link between the growing interest in deSaussure’s semiology and the full-fledged structural studies that Barthes, Lacan andFoucault would carry on into the 1960s. This is not to say that Lévi-Strauss has not beena continuing and dominant force in the development <strong>of</strong> structuralism even today. At thebeginning <strong>of</strong> the 1970s, when I attended his lectures at the Collège de France where heoccupies the Chair <strong>of</strong> Social Anthropology, he was still defending his position against thecomments and criticisms <strong>of</strong> the British anthropologist Rodney Needham. And manybooks have followed the appearance <strong>of</strong> Structural Anthropology. His four-volume study<strong>of</strong> world mythologies, his second volume <strong>of</strong> Structural Anthropology, hisautobiographical Tristes tropiques, his many essays on masks and race all add up to amajor contribution to late twentieth-century French thought.Louis Marin (1931–92) used to comment that when he was a young man in the early1950s, he and his wife Françoise were invited to the apartment <strong>of</strong> M. and Mme MauriceMerleau-Ponty for what was then described as a ‘dîner intime’. When he and his wifearrived, he discovered that it was indeed a small diner party: M. and Mme Merleau-Ponty, M. and Mme Lévi-Strauss, and M. and Mme Lacan. That these three were allfriends indicates a certain collaboration and dialogue that was highly charged in the earlyperiod in which structuralism was gaining hold. Although Merleau-Ponty is known forhis groundbreaking work as a phenomenologist <strong>of</strong> perception (1945), only a year later hewas lecturing on de Saussure at the Ecole Normale Supérieure in Paris. Merleau-Ponty’sturn to semiology as a topic <strong>of</strong> interest began to blend with his commitment to theachievements <strong>of</strong> Gestalt psychology, but even more with those <strong>of</strong> phenomenology whichhe saw as superior even to the Gestalt theories <strong>of</strong> Köhler and K<strong>of</strong>fka, Gelb and Goldstein.Yet with his growing interest in language, Merleau-Ponty found real value in theSaussurian theory <strong>of</strong> the sign. 3 His courses on ‘Language and Communication’ (1946–7)stressed his new commitment to language—a topic which he had only broached inPhenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception (1945), notably in the chapter on ‘The Body as Speech andExpression’. Hence concurrently with Lévi-Strauss’s return to France and his intensework on kinship relations, his friend Merleau-Ponty, who was by then Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Child


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 327Psychology and Pedagogy at the Institut de Psychologie in Paris, was also developing aserious interest in the implications <strong>of</strong> Saussure’s structural linguistics.When Merleau-Ponty set himself the task <strong>of</strong> writing a kind <strong>of</strong> literary theory whichwas to have seen the light <strong>of</strong> day in the early 1950s, he was setting the stage for animportant debate that would take shape throughout the 1950s and 1960s—even long afterhis death in 1961. What became The Prose <strong>of</strong> the World (published posthumously in1969) [11.64]) , was to have been completed in 1952. However, Merleau-Ponty waselected to the Collège de France that year and his research took him in other directions,most notably in his critique <strong>of</strong> ‘dialectic’ and towards his theory <strong>of</strong> visibility in TheVisible and the Invisible (1964). There were two companion pieces that have beenincluded in Signs (1960 [11.62]) which addressed the question <strong>of</strong> language: ‘ThePhenomenology <strong>of</strong> Language’ and ‘Indirect Language and the Voices <strong>of</strong> Silence’. Thesetwo essays, written in 1951–2, indicate the convergence between phenomenology andstructuralism as it was under development in the French context. While Sartre continuedto reject structuralism vigorously, 4 Merleau-Ponty continued to be intrigued. While Sartrepublished his own theory <strong>of</strong> literature in Qu’est-ce que la littérature? in 1947, he orientedthis theory toward the act <strong>of</strong> communicating the freedom <strong>of</strong> a writer to the freedom <strong>of</strong> areader. Writing, for Sartre, was both an act <strong>of</strong> commitment and an expression <strong>of</strong> freedom.Merleau-Ponty’s response came in 1952 with The Prose <strong>of</strong> the World: there are manyaspects <strong>of</strong> language and expression that are simply not direct, that do not give analgorithmic reading <strong>of</strong> experience—literature and painting are prime examples. Herethere is language but indirectly expressed—even silence for Merleau-Ponty speaks.ROLAND BARTHESLike Merleau-Ponty, the second major figure <strong>of</strong> French structuralism, Roland Barthes,was also preparing in 1952 a response to Sartre’s literary theory: Writing Degree Zero[11.5] was <strong>of</strong> mould-breaking merit. It <strong>of</strong>fered an entirely different way <strong>of</strong> understandingthe role and status <strong>of</strong> writing. Writing was no longer an act <strong>of</strong> communication, but ratheran articulation that links up both style and language. The writer’s style (whetherromantic, or surrealist or existentialist) is matched with the writer’s langue or language.This language is not simply idiosyncratic. For Barthes, language partakes <strong>of</strong> a socialcontext and experience. Language and style at the intersection <strong>of</strong> the two marks the locus<strong>of</strong> writing (écriture). Hence revolutionary writing or bourgeois writing or romanticwriting occur in terms <strong>of</strong> a particular language and a determinate style. And suchrevolutionary writing can be found equally in the times <strong>of</strong> Thomas Jefferson, Robespierreand Brecht. Though the times are radically different, even the language and style aredifferent, the writing can be called ‘the same’. Although Barthes found that different textscould be characterized in terms <strong>of</strong> these repeatable forms <strong>of</strong> writing, he was als<strong>of</strong>ascinated with the new writing <strong>of</strong> Alain Robbe-Grillet. Barthes is credited with having‘discovered’ Robbe-Grillet, whose style <strong>of</strong> writing is <strong>of</strong>ficially a radical break with thenineteenth-century novel, but whose writing itself marks the beginning <strong>of</strong> animpassionate language where the subject is decentred and the discursive proliferations arestructurally identifiable. Le Voyeur and La Jalousie are excellent examples <strong>of</strong> a language


French structuralism and after 328stripped <strong>of</strong> emotion—or at least emotion as described by the typical nineteenth-centuryomniscient author. There is still emotion, but it is described through the surfaces and theways in which surfaces are affected.With the 1964 publication <strong>of</strong> Elements <strong>of</strong> Semiology [11.7], Barthes at last linked uphis critical practice with the theoretical writings <strong>of</strong> de Saussure. In this short piece, whichwas originally published in Communications, the <strong>of</strong>ficial journal <strong>of</strong> the Ecole Pratiquedes Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales, Barthes outlines the theory <strong>of</strong> the sign: thesignifier/signified relation, the langue/parole link, the connection between diachrony andsynchrony, and the opposition between denotation and connotation. But the critical yearwas 1966, which saw the publication <strong>of</strong> his own Criticism and Truth [11.8], Lacan’sEcrits, [11.15] and Foucault’s The Order <strong>of</strong> Things [11.17]. Hence over a decade afterBarthes produced Writing Degree Zero, structuralism finally came <strong>of</strong> age. Elements <strong>of</strong>Semiology set the stage for that crowning moment. In his seminar at the Ecole Pratiquedes Hautes Etudes which I attended for the whole year in 1971–2, Barthes focused onwhat he called ‘The Last Decade <strong>of</strong> Semiology’. He considered 1966 as the watershedyear. In the following year, Jean-Luc Godard produced his revolutionary film LaChinoise (which prefigured the student-worker revolts <strong>of</strong> 1968) and Derrida publishedSpeech and Phenomena [11.30], Of Grammatology [11.29], and Writing and Difference[11.31]. Hence by 1967, a whole new phase had begun—for lack <strong>of</strong> a more precise termit was called poststructuralism. Of course, there were still many who were committed tostructuralism for another decade and many <strong>of</strong> the so-called poststructuralist theoriescontinued to build upon the languages and lessons <strong>of</strong> structuralism.Once the scene was set and the terminology clarified in The Elements <strong>of</strong> Semiology[11.7], Barthes himself began to develop his own position further. He rejected thosecritical theories that gave special place to the author and authorial presence. And in hisfamous essay ‘From Work to Text’ (1971 [11.10]), he outlined very clearly thedistinction between the traditional notion <strong>of</strong> the ‘work’ and his notion <strong>of</strong> the ‘text’. The‘work’ (oeuvre, opera, Werk) results from an act <strong>of</strong> filiation: an author produces orcreates a work which is then a ‘fragment <strong>of</strong> substance, occupying a part <strong>of</strong> the space <strong>of</strong>books (in a library for example)’. 5 The author requires authority over the meaning <strong>of</strong> thework. And the critic seeks to understand the author’s meaning. This hermeneutic concernpervades work-centred studies. And it was also a dominant feature <strong>of</strong> the Sartrian theoryas well. Barthes proposes to place the emphasis on the text, which he describes as a‘methodological field’. He elaborates: ‘The Text can be approached, experienced, inreaction to the sign. The work closes on a signified’ (p. 158). This means that the text canbe read in terms <strong>of</strong> the sign system which participates in it, while the work focuses onwhat is meant by it. The plurality <strong>of</strong> the text permits a full and elaborate network <strong>of</strong>intertextuality which is closed <strong>of</strong>f by the work. ‘The Text’, he says, ‘is bound tojouissance, that is to a pleasure without separation’ (p. 164).Two years later, Barthes published The Pleasure <strong>of</strong> the Text (1973, [11.11]). ForBarthes, the Text is not an object <strong>of</strong> desire or even a result <strong>of</strong> a creative act. Rather theText is a site—a locus for a reading, a place in which jouissance occurs. Somethinghappens in the critical reading <strong>of</strong> a Text. The Text’s network <strong>of</strong> signifying dynamic isbrought out. In the Introduction to S/Z (1970), Barthes had already shown how thedistinction between the ‘readerly’ (lisible) and ‘writerly’ (scriptible) text marks the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 329difference between a text which is simply read through for the pleasure <strong>of</strong> it and the textwhich is read as a methodological field—one in which the codes and sign systems areelaborated in detail and available for careful decoding. The ‘writerly text is not a thing,’Barthes writes, ‘we would have a hard time finding it in a bookstore.’ 6 The ‘writerly isthe novelistic without the novel, poetry without the poem, the essay without thedissertation, writing without style, pro-duction without product, structuration withoutstructure’ (p. 5). The writerly occupies only a methodological and theoretical space, it isnot a product like the readerly text.In this frame, Barthes outlined five different codes which constitute what he calls ‘theplural text’, and the plural text is the writerly text critically disclosed. The five codesinclude: the semic code (the elaboration <strong>of</strong> the signifier), the hermeneutic code(disclosure <strong>of</strong> the enigma), the symbolic code (one element stands for another), theactantial code (the action code), and the reference code (the cultural indicators marked inthe text). These codes are only possible codes for the reading <strong>of</strong> a text. Although Barthesdoes not dwell upon the alternatives, it is only plausible that alternative sets <strong>of</strong> codesfunction as well as those Barthes invokes.Barthes was at his most daring when he took up an age-old topic, namelyautobiography, but in a radically new way. Roland Barthes (1975, [11.12]) by RolandBarthes is certainly a break with the traditional diachronic mode <strong>of</strong> writing one’s ownlife. He organizes his life not according to the succession <strong>of</strong> years, but according to thealphabetical arrangement <strong>of</strong> topics, themes and oppositions that played an important rolein his life. And as to the typical chronology, that can be found in two pages at the back <strong>of</strong>the essay. Barthes should not have died so early. He was run over by a milk truck outsidethe Collège de France where he had been elected to the Chair <strong>of</strong> Semiology in 1977. Hewas only sixty-five when he died in 1980.JACQUES LACANJacques Lacan, by contrast, born in 1901 only one year after Hans-Georg Gadamer, livedto a ripe old age <strong>of</strong> eighty-one. There is a wonderful cartoon which Barthes includes inhis Roland Barthes <strong>of</strong> Lévi-Strauss, Lacan, Barthes, Foucault and Michel Leiris all sittingtogether in Tahitian skirts. Although reflecting different ages, they all came togetheraround the structuralist enterprise. Lacan provided the basis for a structuralpsychoanalysis. His early 1936 study <strong>of</strong> the mirror stage was first presented in Marienbad(later made famous by Robbe-Grillet in the film Last Year at Marienbad). Lacan’s theoryis rather simple: the child at first does not detect any difference between it and its mother.The sensory world around it is all integrated. It begins to notice a difference between itand the mother. This becomes clear when it looks into the mirror and sees no longer justmotion or another person, but recognizes an identity between what it sees and itself. Itwaves an arm and the image waves its arm, etc. It notices then that the mirror image isitself. But then the father intercedes: the nom du père/ non du père/non-dupe erre are allforms <strong>of</strong> interdiction. The father with his name and his prohibition—after all, he issomewhat jealous <strong>of</strong> the close relationship that his child has with his wife—attempts tobreak the harmony, introduces a negation, his paternal law, his ‘No’. The father is no


French structuralism and after 330fool. He knows what he wants and he knows what he does not want. By intercedingbetween the child and the mother, he imposes his authority, his will, his name. Now thechild cannot but recognize difference. The Verneinung is effective. The father imposeshis will and the child learns to affirm its own identity. Thus the mirror stage is the criticalmoment at which the child takes on an identity <strong>of</strong> its own.The inclusion <strong>of</strong> the revised version <strong>of</strong> the ‘Mirror Stage’ in Ecrits (1966 [11.15])correlates with a number <strong>of</strong> other essays <strong>of</strong> major importance. In 1966 there was aconference held at Johns Hopkins University subsequently entitled The StructuralistControversy. While Richard Macksey and Eugenio Donato edited the volume, theleadership <strong>of</strong> René Girard was crucial. At Stanford, for instance, in the late 1960s oneheard <strong>of</strong> the Johns Hopkins experiment and those pr<strong>of</strong>essors <strong>of</strong> literature committed to anearlier model <strong>of</strong> literary study were deeply opposed to the Johns Hopkins scene.Curiously, René Girard is now Pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> Humanities at that very same StanfordUniversity after trying out the State University <strong>of</strong> New York at Buffalo for a brief period.Lacan was one <strong>of</strong> the speakers at the 1966 Hopkins conference. Also presenting paperswere Jean Hyppolite and Jacques Derrida. It was an important moment. And Lacan’sessay was no less important. His paper was entitled ‘The Insistence <strong>of</strong> the Letter in theUnconscious’, an essay which also appears in Ecrits. The question is, how does the chain<strong>of</strong> signifiers mark <strong>of</strong>f and bar the range <strong>of</strong> the signified? The signified especially in themetonymic line is barred from access by the signifier. This exclusion <strong>of</strong> the signifiedleads to a veering <strong>of</strong>f <strong>of</strong> the signifier from one sign to the next. The signified howeverremains unaccessible. The line between the signifier and the signified is strong andresistant. In such cases in which the signifier has no access to the signified, it must act interms <strong>of</strong> that repression.In the case <strong>of</strong> metaphor, there is an overdetermination <strong>of</strong> signifieds for a particularsignifier. In such a case, the bar is weak and a multiplicity <strong>of</strong> meanings intrude.Throughout Lacan’s account, ‘the unconscious is structured like a language’. Where thereis resistance in language, there would be resistance in the unconscious. But for Lacanwhatever there is <strong>of</strong> an unconscious is read in terms <strong>of</strong> the play <strong>of</strong> signifiers. Repressionresults when the letter is unable to insist in the signified. Meaning is kept at bay. Astream <strong>of</strong> words and utterances follows but the relation to the signified is repressed. WithLacan, as later with Derrida, the self is decentred, the subject is dispersed throughoutlanguage. The language <strong>of</strong> the self is the language <strong>of</strong> the chain <strong>of</strong> signifiers. The subjectper se remains absent.MICHEL FOUCAULTThe theme <strong>of</strong> the absent subject is especially notable in the philosophy <strong>of</strong> MichelFoucault, who met an untimely AIDS-related death at the early age <strong>of</strong> fifty-eight. In hismagnum opus, The Order <strong>of</strong> Things (Les Mots et les choses) [11.17] also published in1966—the theme <strong>of</strong> the absent subject pervades not only his reading <strong>of</strong> Velázquez butalso his account <strong>of</strong> the contemporary human sciences. For contemporary(poststructuralist, or what would now be called ‘postmodern’) thought, there is no centredorigin, no unique place <strong>of</strong> focus, no present subject as there once was for the modern age.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 331Foucault’s reading <strong>of</strong> origins is marked <strong>of</strong>f by his reading <strong>of</strong> discursive practices. Ashe demonstrates in The Order <strong>of</strong> Things, history does not begin at a certain moment andthen continue—in linear fashion—from then on. Rather, moments <strong>of</strong> dominance <strong>of</strong>certain discursive practices prevail for a time and are then succeeded by a new set <strong>of</strong>discursive practices. Where a discursive practice ends, a new one is about to begin.Origin then will occur where a new discursive practice starts to take place. But where andwhen do such new practices begin to take place? They clearly do not occur at adetermined moment in time such as a date or year. Certain discursive practices pertinentto a particular epistemological space, as Foucault calls it, continue into a newepistemological space, while others die out.But what is a discursive practice? For Foucault, a discursive practice is a whole set <strong>of</strong>documents produced within a broadly general period <strong>of</strong> time in which common themes orideas occur across that period in a wide variety <strong>of</strong> disciplines and areas <strong>of</strong> humanknowledge production. For instance, in the nineteenth century the relations betweenbiology, economics and philology would seem to be entirely unrelated. HoweverFoucault has shown that they all consolidate in terms <strong>of</strong> a relatively singular conceptualunity, or what Foucault calls an epistemé. For the broad space <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century,Foucault identifies the theme in question with what he calls an ‘anthropology’, that is, thetheory <strong>of</strong> ‘man’ as defined by the ‘empirico-transcendental doublet’, 7 the particularKantian idea that empirical (objective) considerations must always be understood inconnection with a transcendental (subjective) set <strong>of</strong> conditions that permeates thediscursive practices <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century. The theme <strong>of</strong> subjectivity in relation toobjectivity pervades the nineteenth-century understanding <strong>of</strong> life, labour and language.Thus the discursive practices <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century repeat themselves in a variety <strong>of</strong>contexts—all explicitly unrelated to each other. These differences then form an epistemé.The epistemé <strong>of</strong> the nineteenth century succeeds the epistemé <strong>of</strong> the ‘classical age’.This prior epistemological space is marked by another set <strong>of</strong> discursive practices. Theseinclude the classification <strong>of</strong> species, the analysis <strong>of</strong> wealth and natural grammar. Whatone would take to be entirely unrelated concerns are here brought into relation to oneanother in that they each exhibit features <strong>of</strong> the ‘classical age’ epistemé, namely‘representation’. As Foucault reads the general period <strong>of</strong> the seventeenth century and firsthalf <strong>of</strong> the eighteenth century, the idea <strong>of</strong> ‘representation’—the projection or postulate <strong>of</strong>ideas before the mind—formed the frame for a distinctly ‘classical’ way <strong>of</strong> thinking. Therelation between this classical epistemé and the nineteenth-century epistemé is much lesssignificant than the relation between the various practices at each <strong>of</strong> these respectivetime-slices.The origin <strong>of</strong> the epistemé is not the beginning <strong>of</strong> the epistemé. A particular epistemé ismarked by a certain dominance. The place where the epistemé dominates is the place <strong>of</strong>its origin. The place <strong>of</strong> dominance for the empirico-transcendental doublet is the place <strong>of</strong>origin within that epistemological framework. Similarly the place <strong>of</strong> dominance <strong>of</strong>representation in the classical age is the place <strong>of</strong> origin within that epistemologicalframework. However, where is this place <strong>of</strong> origin in each case? Dispersed throughoutthe epistemological space, the place <strong>of</strong> origin occurs wherever there is a discursivepractice that exhibits it. Hence the origin is in many places: reappearing in manylocations throughout the epistemological space itself. In the nineteenth century, one can


French structuralism and after 332find the empirico-transcendental doublet not only in Hegel and Hölderlin but also inbiologists such as Cuvier (whose ‘fixism’ is set <strong>of</strong>f against the backdrop <strong>of</strong> humanhistoricity), economists such as Ricardo (for whom history is a vast compensatingmechanism) and philologists such as Schlegel (with his 1808 essay on the language andphilosophy <strong>of</strong> the Indians), and philologists such as Grimm (most notably in the 1818Deutsche Grammatik) and Bopp (whose 1816 study <strong>of</strong> the Sanskrit conjugation systembecame an object <strong>of</strong> study).Each <strong>of</strong> these places constitutes itself as an origin, as a locus in which the concept <strong>of</strong>‘man’ as a subject-object is brought into discourse production itself. No longer doeslanguage, for instance, operate between words and things resulting in an operation <strong>of</strong>representation. And in the nineteenth century, words are objects themselves, objects forscrutiny and study by a scientific practice that hopes to judge them and theirinterrelationships. Origin, then, for Foucault is not a source from which all historicalevents follow. Origin is not the beginning from which history begins to unfold. Origin isnot the inception from which development ensues. Origin does not establish the momentbefore which nothing else will have occurred. Rather origin springs up in many placeswithin a broad, general, historical time-frame. Origins occur in various discourses,scarring them with marks <strong>of</strong> a common practice that is unaware <strong>of</strong> its own commonality.Foucault’s enterprise disperses origin throughout a kind <strong>of</strong> methodological field (asBarthes would have called it). And his appeal to the English reader to ignore those ‘tinylittle minds that persist in calling him a structuralist’, indicates that he is already beyondthe mere repetition <strong>of</strong> structuralist methods. Although his own archaeology <strong>of</strong> knowledgecould be characterized as largely synchronic, it also relies upon the assessment <strong>of</strong> periodsor time-slices in order to compare one time-slice with another. What Foucault rejects isthe necessity <strong>of</strong> a concept <strong>of</strong> continuity in favour <strong>of</strong> discontinuity. Structuralists werealready concerned with a discourse <strong>of</strong> the past. Nietzsche and Mallarmé are invoked asthreshold figures marking the break with the older empirico-transcendental doublet <strong>of</strong> themodern age. They mark the beginning <strong>of</strong> a new mode <strong>of</strong> thought in which dissemination,dispersal, metonymy and decentring <strong>of</strong> the subject are the dominant frames <strong>of</strong> knowledgeproduction.Where Sartre had announced in his 1936 Transcendence <strong>of</strong> the Ego that the self or egocould not be located in consciousness but is at best an object <strong>of</strong> consciousness, Foucaultin 1966 places that claim in a historical context. He situates the end <strong>of</strong> the age <strong>of</strong>modernism with the end <strong>of</strong> the centred subject, the dominant self, the focal ‘I’. LikeNietzsche’s madman who ran through the streets proclaiming the ‘death <strong>of</strong> god’, Sartrehad already proclaimed ‘the end <strong>of</strong> man’, but in a sense that would not be fullyunderstood for another thirty years. The linguistic turn in continental philosophy took ona different shape from that in the analytic tradition. It did not fully take place until theSaussurian epistemology became the principle according to which language, culture andknowledge production would be understood. The structural analysis <strong>of</strong> kinship, totemsand myths in Lévi-Strauss, the speaking subject’s chain <strong>of</strong> signifiers in Lacan, thesemiological analysis <strong>of</strong> text and culture in Barthes were themselves placed in context byFoucault. In this respect, Foucault is indeed already after structuralism, for he is able tosituate it as a movement in a period <strong>of</strong> time. The subsequent development <strong>of</strong> Foucault’sown genealogy, Derrida’s deconstruction, Deleuze’s nomadologies, Kristeva’s


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 333semanalysis and Lyotard’s postmodernist sublimities are all themes for another story inthe history <strong>of</strong> continental thought. Suffice it to say that structuralism played a critical rolein <strong>of</strong>fering an alternative to existential phenomenology and at the same time acomplement to it. What comes after structuralism (and after the age <strong>of</strong> the modernsubject) is identified by those such as Foucault who were themselves marked by bothphenomenology and structuralism and who were in a position to succeed them as well.NOTES1 Derrida’s deconstruction is left aside here for the simple reason that it is taken up in anothercontribution to this same volume. A portion <strong>of</strong> the discussion <strong>of</strong> Foucault is taken fromH.J.Silverman, Textualities: Between Hermeneutics and Deconstruction (New York andLondon: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1993).2 The role <strong>of</strong> metaphor and metonymy have been subsequently linked with what Freud calls‘condensation’ and ‘displacement’ in dream interpretation. Hence metaphor as substitutionand condensation implies the replacement <strong>of</strong> a father by a big bear (for instance) in a youngboy’s dream, while metonymy as contiguity and displacement results in a dream about aneighbour’s garden hose (for instance) instead <strong>of</strong> her passion for him. In structural politicaltheory, developed most notably by Louis Althusser—in an essay called ‘Freud and Lacan’from Lenin and <strong>Philosophy</strong> [11.23] metaphor is associated with overdetermination in areading <strong>of</strong> a political text or context, while metonymy is represented as underdetermination.In making this point, Althusser is building on the account <strong>of</strong> metaphor and metonymy <strong>of</strong>feredby Lacan in his famous essay ‘The Insistence <strong>of</strong> the Letter in the Unconscious’ (included inEcrits [11.15]) and H.J.Silverman [11.72], especially the chapter on ‘Merleau-Ponty onLanguage and Communication (1946–47)’.3 See Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Consciousness and the Acquisition <strong>of</strong> Language [11.65].4 See H.J.Silverman [11.72], esp. chapters on ‘Sartre and the Structuralists’ and ‘Sartre versusStructuralism’.5 R.Barthes, ‘From Work to Text’ [11.10], 155–64.6 R.Barthes, S/Z [11.9], 5.7 See Silverman [11.72], esp. chapter 18 on ‘Foucault and the Anthropological Sleep’.BIBLIOGRAPHYde Saussure11.1 Course in General Linguistics (1916), trans. W.Baskin, New York: McGraw-Hill,1959.Lévi-Strauss11.2 The Elementary Structures <strong>of</strong> Kinship (1949), trans. from the revised edition byJ.H.Bell and J.von Sturmer, and ed. R.Needham, Boston: Beacon, 1969.11.3 Tristes tropiques (1955), trans. J. and D.Weightman. New York: Atheneum, 1974.


French structuralism and after 33411.4 Structural Anthropology (1958), trans. C.Jacobson and B.G.Schoepf, New York:Basic Books, 1963.Barthes11.5 Writing Degree Zero (1953), trans. A.Lavers and C.Smith, New York: Hill & Wang,1968.11.6 Michelet, Paris: Seuil, 1954.11.7 Elements <strong>of</strong> Semiology (1964), trans. A Lavers and C.Smith, New York: Hill &Wang, 1968.11.8 Criticism and Truth (1966), trans. K.P.Kenneman, Minneapolis: University <strong>of</strong>Minnesota Press, 1987.11.9 S/Z (1970), trans. R.Miller, New York: Hill & Wang, 1974.11.10 ‘From Work to Text’, in [11.13], 155–64.11.11 The Pleasure <strong>of</strong> the Text (1973), trans. R.Miller, New York: Hill & Wang, 1975.11.12 Roland Barthes (1975), trans. R.Howard, New York: Hill & Wang, 1977.11.13 Image-Music-Text, trans. S.Heath, New York: Hill & Wang, 1977.11.14 Recherche de Proust, Paris: Seuil, 1980.Lacan11.15 Ecrits (1966), trans. A.Sheridan, New York: Norton, 1977.11.16 ‘Seminar on “The Purloined Letter”’, trans. J.Mehlman, French Freud: StructuralStudies in Psychoanalysis, Yale French Studies 48 (1972): 38–72.Foucault11.17 The Order <strong>of</strong> Things: An Archeology <strong>of</strong> the Human Sciences (1966), trans. anon.,New York: Vintage, 1970.11.18 The Archeology <strong>of</strong> Knowledge (1969), trans. A.Smith, New York: Pantheon, 1972.11.19 ‘Nietzsche, Genealogy, <strong>History</strong>’, in Language, Counter-Memory, Practice (1971),trans. D.Bouchard and S.Simon, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1977, pp. 139–64.11.20 Discipline and Punish (1975), trans. A.Sheridan, New York: Vintage, 1979.Other works and criticism11.21 Allison, D.B. (ed.) The New Nietzsche, Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1977, 1985.11.22 Allison, D.B. ‘Destruction/Deconstruction in the Text <strong>of</strong> Nietzsche’, Boundary 2,8:1 (fall 1979):197–222.11.23 Althusser, L. Lenin and <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Other Essays, trans. B.Brewster, NewYork: Monthly Review Press, 1971.11.24 Blanchot, M. ‘Discours Philosophique’ in L’Arc: Merleau-Ponty, 46 (1971): 1–4.11.25 Blanchot, M. Death Sentence, trans. L.Davis, New York: Station Hill, 1978.11.26 Culler, J. Structuralist Poetics, Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1975.11.27 Culler, J. On Deconstruction: Theory and Criticism After Structuralism, Ithaca:


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 335Cornell University Press, 1982.11.28 Derrida, J. Edmund Husserl’s Origin <strong>of</strong> Geometry: An Introduction (1962), trans.J.Leavey, Lincoln: University <strong>of</strong> Nebraska Press, 1989.11.29 Derrida, J. Of Grammatology (1967), trans. G.C.Spivak, Baltimore: Johns HopkinsUniversity Press, 1975.11.30 Derrida, J. Speech and Phenomena, and Other Essays on Husserl’s Theory <strong>of</strong> Signs(1967), trans. D.B.Allison, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1973.11.31 Derrida, J. Writing and Difference (1967), trans. A.Bass, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong>Chicago Press and London: <strong>Routledge</strong> & Kegan Paul, 1978.11.32 Derrida, J. Dissemination (1972), trans. B.Johnson, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong>Chicago Press and London: Athlone Press, 1981.11.33 Derrida, J. Margins <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> (1972), trans. A.Bass, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong>Chicago Press and Hassocks: Harvester Press, 1982.11.34 Derrida, J. Positions (1972), trans. A.Bass, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Pressand London: Athlone, 1982.11.35 Derrida, J. ‘The Deaths <strong>of</strong> Roland Barthes’ (1981), trans. P.A.Brault andM.B.Naas, in H.J.Silverman (ed.) <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Non-<strong>Philosophy</strong> since Merleau-Ponty (Continental <strong>Philosophy</strong>-I) , London and New York: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1988, pp. 259–96.11.36 Derrida, J. ‘The Time <strong>of</strong> a Thesis: Punctuations’, in Alan Montefiore (ed.)<strong>Philosophy</strong> in France Today, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982.11.37 Derrida, J. Signéponge/Signsponge, trans. R.Rand, New York: ColumbiaUniversity Press, 1984. (Parallel French and English translation.)11.38 Descombes, V. Modern French <strong>Philosophy</strong>, trans. L.Scott-Fox and J.M. Harding,Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1980.11.39 Donate, E. and Macksey, R. (eds) The Structuralist Controversy, Baltimore: JohnsHopkins University Press, 1972.11.40 Eco, U. A Theory <strong>of</strong> Semiotics, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1976.11.41 Fekete, J. (ed.) The Structural Allegory: Reconstructive Encounters with the NewFrench Thought, Minneapolis: University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Press, 1984.11.42 Felman, S. (ed.) Literature and Psychoanalysis: The Question <strong>of</strong> Reading—Otherwise, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982.11.43 Gasché, R. ‘Deconstruction as Criticism’, Glyph 7 (1979):177–216.11.44 Gasché, R. The Tain <strong>of</strong> the Mirror: Deconstruction and the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong>Reflection, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1986.11.45 Hartman, G. Beyond Formalism, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1970.11.46 Hartman, G. The Fate <strong>of</strong> Reading, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1975.11.47 Hartman, G. Criticism in the Wilderness, New Haven: Yale University Press, 1980.11.48 Hartman, G. Saving the Text: <strong>Philosophy</strong>/Derrida/Literature, Baltimore: JohnsHopkins University Press, 1981.11.49 Hawkes, T. Structuralism and Semiotics, Berkeley and Los Angeles: University <strong>of</strong>California Press, 1977.11.50 Jakobson, R. ‘Two Aspects <strong>of</strong> Language and Two Types <strong>of</strong> Aphasia’, inFundamentals <strong>of</strong> Language, The Hague: Mouton, 1971.11.51 Kearney, R. Dialogues with Contemporary Continental Thinkers: The


French structuralism and after 336Phenomenological Heritage, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1984.11.52 Kearney, R. Modern Movements in European <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Manchester: ManchesterUniversity Press, 1986.11.53 Kristeva, J. Desire in Language, trans. T.Gora, A.Jardine and L.Roudiez, NewYork: Columbia University Press, 1980.11.54 Kristeva, J. Revolution in Poetic Language, trans. M.Waller with an introductionby L.S.Roudiez, New York: Columbia University Press, 1984.11.55 Kristeva, J. The Kristeva Reader, ed. Toril Moi, New York: Columbia UniversityPress, 1986.11.56 Kristeva, J. Black Sun, New York: Columbia University Press, 1989.11.57 Lacoue-Labarthe, P. ‘Fable (Literature and <strong>Philosophy</strong>)’, trans. H.J.Silverman,Research in phenomenology, 15 (1985):43–60.11.58 Lyotard, J.-F. The Postmodern Condition, trans. G.Bennington, Minneapolis:University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Press, 1984.11.59 Marin, L. Utopics: The Semiological Play <strong>of</strong> Textual Spaces, trans. R. Vollrath,Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1990.11.60 Merleau-Ponty, M. Sense and Non-Sense (1947), trans. H.L.Dreyfus andP.A.Dreyfus, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1964.11.61 Merleau-Ponty, M. L’Oeil et l’esprit (1960), Paris: Gallimard, 1964.11.62 Merleau-Ponty, M. Signs (1960), trans. R.C.McCleary, Evanston: NorthwesternUniversity Press, 1964.11.63 Merleau-Ponty, M. The Primacy <strong>of</strong> Perception, ed. J.M.Edie, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1964.11.64 Merleau-Ponty, M. Prose <strong>of</strong> the World (1969), trans. J.O’Neill, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1973.11.65 Merleau-Ponty, M. Consciousness and the Acquisition <strong>of</strong> Language, trans.H.J.Silverman, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1973.11.66 Merleau-Ponty, M. Texts and Dialogues, ed. H.J.Silverman and J.Barry, Jr.,Atlantic Highlands: Humanities Press, 1992.11.67 Montefiori, A, (ed.) <strong>Philosophy</strong> in France Today, Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press, 1982.11.68 Peirce, C.S. Philosophical Writings <strong>of</strong> Peirce, ed. J.Buchler, New York: Dover,1940/1955.11.69 Said, E. The World, the Text, and the Critic, London: Faber & Faber, 1984.11.70 Silverman, H.J. ‘Phenomenology’, Social Research, 47:4 (winter 1980): 704–20.11.71 Silverman, H.J. ‘Phenomenology: From Hermeneutics to Deconstruction’,Research in phenomenology, 14 (1984):19–34. Reprinted, with ‘After-thoughts’, inA.Giorgi (ed.) Phenomenology: Descriptive or Hermeneutic?, Pittsburgh: DuquesneUniversity Phenomenology Centre, 1987, pp. 19–34 and 85–92.11.72 Silverman, H.J. Inscriptions: Between Phenomenology and Structuralism, Londonand New York: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1987.11.73 Silverman, H.J. (ed.) <strong>Philosophy</strong> and Non-<strong>Philosophy</strong> since Merleau-Ponty(Continental <strong>Philosophy</strong>—I), London and New York: <strong>Routledge</strong> 1988.11.74 Silverman, H.J. (ed.) Derrida and Deconstruction (Continental <strong>Philosophy</strong>— II),London and New York: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1989.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 33711.75 Silverman, H.J. (ed.) Postmodernism—<strong>Philosophy</strong> and the Arts (Continental<strong>Philosophy</strong>—III), New York and London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1990.11.76 Silverman, H.J. (ed.) Gadamer and Hermeneutics (Continental <strong>Philosophy</strong> —IV),New York and London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1991.11.77 Silverman, H.J. (ed.) Writing the Politics <strong>of</strong> Difference, Albany: SUNY Press ,1991.11.78 Silverman, H.J. and Aylesworth, G.E. (eds) The Textual Sublime: Deconstructionand its Differences, Albany: SUNY Press, 1989.11.79 Sini, C. Semiotica e filos<strong>of</strong>ia: Segno e linguaggio in Peirce, Heidegger e Foucault,Bologna: Il Mulino, 1978.11.80 Sini, C. Images <strong>of</strong> Truth, trans. M.Verdicchio, Atlantic Highlands: HumanitiesPress, 1993.11.81 Sturrock, J. (ed.) Structuralism and Since: From Lévi-Strauss to Derrida, London:Oxford University Press, 1979.11.82 Wurzer, W.S. ‘Heidegger and Lacan: On the Occlusion <strong>of</strong> the Subject’, inH.J.Silverman et al. (eds) The Horizons <strong>of</strong> Continental <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Dordrecht: Nijh<strong>of</strong>f-Kluwer, 1988, pp. 168–89.


CHAPTER 12French feminist philosophyDe Beauvoir, Kristeva, Irigaray, Le Doeuff, CixousAlison AinleyINTRODUCTIONAlthough women have been active philosophers for many centuries, 1 the development <strong>of</strong>a specifically feminist viewpoint in the context <strong>of</strong> philosophy has gained credence onlycomparatively recently; partly as a result <strong>of</strong> more widespread debates about sexualpolitics in recent years, and partly as a result <strong>of</strong> social changes in the status <strong>of</strong> women.While recognizing that feminism did not spring fully formed and fully armed from thelast twenty years like Athena from the brow <strong>of</strong> Zeus, 2 for reasons <strong>of</strong> brevity I will discussin this chapter only a few <strong>of</strong> the better-known contemporary contributors to feministphilosophy, and focus particularly on those feminists whose work overlaps with or drawsupon continental philosophy.At the outset, it should be stressed that the strands <strong>of</strong> feminist thinking in relation tophilosophy have been and continue to be diverse and do not necessarily present a unifiedpoint <strong>of</strong> view. Feminist thinking in relation to philosophy can take place at a number <strong>of</strong>levels and from different perspectives, and indeed this has been one <strong>of</strong> the strengths <strong>of</strong> itsposition(s). In general terms, it can take the form <strong>of</strong> a critique <strong>of</strong> philosophers’ images <strong>of</strong>women (for example, criticisms <strong>of</strong> Schopenhauer’s description <strong>of</strong> women as ‘defective,trivial, silly and shortsighted’, 3 or Kant’s account <strong>of</strong> women as more sentimental andmore ‘delicate in judgment’ than men). 4 It can be historical research into past womenphilosophers whose work may have been unjustly disregarded. 5 It can be a politicalcritique <strong>of</strong> the organization <strong>of</strong> the discipline <strong>of</strong> philosophy, or a critique <strong>of</strong> the whole <strong>of</strong>philosophy as ‘male’ or ‘masculine’. 6 Or it can be positive contributions to philosophyfrom a feminist perspective. 7 Feminist philosophy may take all or some <strong>of</strong> theseapproaches to be important. However, as a general guide, feminist philosophy willassume the question <strong>of</strong> sexual difference to be a philosophical issue at some level and,depending on the point <strong>of</strong> departure, produce very different ways <strong>of</strong> theorizing thisquestion. Having said this, not all women philosophers are necessarily feministphilosophers (although there may be feminist implications in their work); for exampleHannah Arendt and Simone Weil are twentieth-century thinkers whose work I will notdiscuss here; 8 and not all feminists accept the relevance <strong>of</strong> philosophy to their work.Despite these qualifications, a notable amount <strong>of</strong> feminist thinking has been greatlyinfluenced and aided by developments in recent continental philosophy, borrowing fromthinkers such as Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Jean-Paul Sartre and Jacques Lacan,and earlier figures such as Hegel, Freud and Heidegger. 9 Such borrowings have furnished


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 339many different aspects <strong>of</strong> feminist approaches to questions <strong>of</strong> sexual difference,subjectivity and selfhood, ethics and epistemology. Because the above thinkers have beenconcerned to raise questions about the discipline <strong>of</strong> philosophy itself—for example, whatthey see as philosophy’s tendency to organize its enquiries in particular ways aroundnotions <strong>of</strong> truth or knowledge, the use <strong>of</strong> binary oppositions or dualisms <strong>of</strong> mind/body,spirit/matter, order/chaos and hierarchical structures, and the issues <strong>of</strong> power andpolitics—they have been helpful in the search for ways <strong>of</strong> theorizing sexual difference forfeminists.However, feminist theorists have also been highly critical <strong>of</strong> the above thinkers,sometimes finding their work reduplicating some <strong>of</strong> the problems they had alreadyidentified with the discipline <strong>of</strong> philosophy in general, i.e. the exclusion <strong>of</strong> women asphilosophers, the use <strong>of</strong> such symbolic values as ‘the feminine’ to indicate chaos andplurality without considering how such values relate to women, or the tendency to speak‘on behalf <strong>of</strong>’ women. 10 In other words, feminists have been concerned about theapparent loss or lack <strong>of</strong> political agency which seems to accompany critiques <strong>of</strong> identityin recent postmodernist theory. Postmodernists such as Jean Baudrillard respond that‘there is a strange, fierce complicity between the feminist movement and the order <strong>of</strong>truth’ 11 and women would do better to recognize that ‘woman is but appearance. And it isthe feminine as appearance that thwarts masculine depth. Instead <strong>of</strong> rising up against suchinsulting counsel, women would do well to let themselves be seduced by its truth, forhere lies the secret <strong>of</strong> their strength.’ 12The critiques <strong>of</strong> identity which thinkers such as Derrida, Baudrillard and GillesDeleuze advance mean that women, characteristically stereotyped as lacking agency inthe past, are ironically now ‘already’ in an enviable position. 13 But feminists have beenalarmed or suspicious <strong>of</strong> the passivity implied in such characterizations <strong>of</strong> the feminine.Such disagreements have <strong>of</strong>ten been placed in the context <strong>of</strong> themodernism/postmodernism debate, where feminist theorists are seen to be holding on tonotions <strong>of</strong> emancipatory Enlightenment projects and ‘essentialist’ notions <strong>of</strong> identity inthe face <strong>of</strong>, and in opposition to, unassimilatable heterogeneity and the feminine as‘mere’ surface. However, the feminist thinkers I discuss below have, I believe, a subtleand complex approach to political questions and are not easily placed into this either/ordebate. In addition to raising questions <strong>of</strong> sexual difference in the context <strong>of</strong> philosophy,they also raise questions about the connection (or lack <strong>of</strong> it) between theory andpractice/lived experience—women are the ones (amongst others) over whose heads thisdiscussion <strong>of</strong>ten seems to take place, and deserve to be able to make their owncontribution.SIMONE DE BEAUVOIRSimone de Beauvoir is perhaps the best-known feminist philosopher <strong>of</strong> the twentiethcentury. Her lifelong association with Jean-Paul Sartre seems to have been on the wholeone <strong>of</strong> mutual intellectual inspiration and companionship. 14 De Beauvoir’s work on themoral implications and the social context <strong>of</strong> existentialism, for example in her 1947 workPour une morale de l’ambiguité (translated as The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Ambiguity) 15 was influential


French feminist philosophy 340upon Sartre, an influence discernible in his shift <strong>of</strong> focus from the individualconsciousness in Being and Nothingness 16 to the more collective or situated concerns <strong>of</strong>his later work. The publication in 1949 <strong>of</strong> de Beauvoir’s best-known work, The SecondSex, 17 continued her interest in these themes, a work which provoked reviewers toexpress outrage at a book which was seen to herald the breakdown <strong>of</strong> social relations.However, given that de Gaulle had granted French women the vote only five yearsearlier, the radical impact <strong>of</strong> this book should not be underestimated.The Second Sex is a rich and complex work which draws upon literature, myth andreligion, theories <strong>of</strong> biology, accounts <strong>of</strong> social and economic development (Marxism andpsychoanalysis), but also existentialist philosophy. De Beauvoir’s aim is to address thequestion ‘What is a woman?’ 18 It is because her painstaking analysis uncovers andaddresses the nature <strong>of</strong> the oppression and exclusion <strong>of</strong> women that it has been significantin the history <strong>of</strong> feminist thought. But de Beauvoir is also responsible for the promotion<strong>of</strong> questions <strong>of</strong> sexual difference on to the philosophical agenda, and for probingquestions about the social context <strong>of</strong> the existentially free individual. Sartre, Merleau-Ponty and other existentialist thinkers agreed that sexuality was an issue that had beenlargely disregarded in philosophy, but de Beauvoir’s work most insistently asks questions<strong>of</strong> the relevance <strong>of</strong> sexual difference to philosophical notions <strong>of</strong> identity, an insistenceMichèle Le Doeuff has called ‘a characteristic genius for the inappropriate’. 19 DeBeauvoir points out that sexuality is not just ‘added on’ to human beings but plays afundamental role in the meaning <strong>of</strong> an individual’s existence: that we are ‘embodied’.However, she rejects the accounts <strong>of</strong> sexual difference which subscribe to an‘essential’ notion <strong>of</strong> identity, whether this is found in the biological differentiation <strong>of</strong> thesexes (male/female) or in the ‘eternal feminine’, an ideal ‘essence’ <strong>of</strong> femininequalities. 20 She rejects these accounts first because she sees individuals as dynamic,engaged in struggles towards freedom, and second because she fears that to suggest an‘essential’ nature <strong>of</strong> woman will allow women to be imprisoned back in the problematicidentity <strong>of</strong> the oppressed. This identity is unacceptable for ideals <strong>of</strong> existential freedom,and for feminist claims that women should have equal opportunities to engage freely inprojects in the world. Her overwhelming historical evidence points to the fact that, ingeneral, men possess such freedom and women do not.De Beauvoir takes up the concerns <strong>of</strong> existentialist thinking with the freedom <strong>of</strong> theindividual, the capacity <strong>of</strong> the individual to make choices and the conflicts which arisebetween individuals in the context <strong>of</strong> social relations. She claims that The Second Sex is‘an existentialist ethics’, 21 and hence agrees with Sartre about the need for individuals ‘toengage in freely chosen projects’. 22 The Sartrean individual, striving to maximizefreedom, becomes aware that he or she exists as an object in the consciousness <strong>of</strong> others,a compromising objectification for an individual striving towards freedom. Individualsmay become locked into opposing the determinations that others, with their own projectsand their capacity to objectify an individual, present. This means that social relations areinherently conflictual, basically relations <strong>of</strong> dominance and submission. For de Beauvoir,it is important that freedom be maintained as an open horizon, since this is what givesmeaning to an individual’s existence. However, she immediately questions the apparentneutrality <strong>of</strong> the individual and the equal starting point <strong>of</strong> human freedom and autonomythat existentialist individuals are supposed to possess. She points out that, rather than


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 341beginning from a neutral and autonomous point, women are already in the position <strong>of</strong> thedetermined and objectified, as the Other. ‘She is defined and differentiated with referenceto man and he not with reference to her; she is the incidental, the inessential as opposedto the essential. He is the Subject, he is the Absolute—she is the Other.’ 23The freedom <strong>of</strong> the existential individual is immediately compro-mised by the sociallyconstructed roles for men and women; rather than various neutral possibilities presentedto equal individuals, women are unable to exercise their freedom, because they inherit apre-given set <strong>of</strong> assumptions shaping the range <strong>of</strong> possibilities available to them.This seems to suggest that women are doomed to be inauthentic because <strong>of</strong> their sex, ifinauthenticity is the failure to maximize one’s freedom. Women are in the position <strong>of</strong>being the second sex. Their existence is constantly conflated with their gender in a waythat men’s is not, and they seem to be more confined to being bodies or objects.De Beauvoir accepts that biology plays an important part in one’s identity (we live ourbodies), but argues that it cannot be used to determine one’s destiny. Women’s role inreproduction has caused her to be exclusively identified with this role, but with adequatesocial changes such as childcare and medical advances, there is no reason whyreproduction should limit a woman’s capacity for freedom. The problem with a biologicalaccount <strong>of</strong> sexual difference, she argues, is that it may attribute essences to men andwomen, splitting human beings into two types or essential identities. 24 There may beperceptible differences (in physical strength for example), but there is no intrinsic reasonwhy strength should be given a superior value. Such values depend on social context, andare therefore open to revision.De Beauvoir may wish to dissociate herself from the ‘biology is destiny’ position, butshe <strong>of</strong>ten seems to come close to rejecting biology altogether. If women are restrictivelydefined as ‘mere’ bodies or as mothers then such restrictions must be overcome, to ensurethat women are able to realize their choices consciously. But de Beauvoir does notalways consider the extent to which she may be echoing a misogynistic distaste for thefemale body in trying to overturn such determinations. ‘It has been well said that womenhave “infirmity in the abdomen”, and it is true that they have within them a hostileelement—it is the species gnawing at their vitals.’ 25These aspects <strong>of</strong> her argument are an attempt to escape from essentialism or biologismand to affirm the demand for self-determination. But de Beauvoir has also argued thatwomen’s own experience is important and should be validated, even if such experience is<strong>of</strong> a less independent nature than men’s. After sex, she suggests, men are free to take uptheir individuality once again, whereas women feel themselves to be more ‘connected’ tobiology and more embodied, with responsibility for reproduction within themselves—anexperience <strong>of</strong> their own ‘immanence’. 26 De Beauvoir’s commitment to projects <strong>of</strong>transcendence and freedom on the one hand, and her argument that women are moreimmanently ‘in’ their bodies on the other, seems to suggest that women are placed in theimpossible position <strong>of</strong> having to transcend their own bodies. It suggests that if women donot seektranscendence they are ‘inauthentic’ or guilty <strong>of</strong> bad faith, but if they do seektranscendence it will be a project <strong>of</strong> self-defeat, an attempt to escape from the immanentrealm which is ‘feminine’. 27 This contradiction has led some feminists to interpret deBeauvoir either as essentialist or as suggesting that sexual identity is culturallyconstructed. In fact she seems to be in both positions, and the tension here can be


French feminist philosophy 342interpreted as part <strong>of</strong> the contradictions in her existentialist framework.In keeping with her initial socialist perspective on oppression, de Beauvoir does seemto locate inequalities between the sexes in a social or cultural context. Such declarationsas ‘One is not born a woman, one becomes one’ 28 or ‘the body is not a thing, it is asituation’ 29 would tend to support this interpretation. Her concern is to ensure thatinequalities can be diagnosed, and so combated, at this level. She refuses to accept thatany biological or essentialist reason could be given to prevent women overcoming their‘secondary’ position. Sheer effort <strong>of</strong> will, the widespread recognition <strong>of</strong> women’sfreedom and choices (which must also be recognized by men) and the fuller availability<strong>of</strong> choices will bring about greater equality <strong>of</strong> the sexes. This uncompromising stance<strong>of</strong>ten leads her to be stern about the efforts women must make to transcend determinationfor themselves, in effect to ‘stop colluding’ in becoming the other for men. Her objectiveis to galvanize women into asserting their autonomy and formulating projects which willallow them to develop their own identity. She has been criticized for apparentlysuggesting that it is only if women become more like men that equality will be attained,partly because the kinds <strong>of</strong> projects she values as important are derived from a frameworkwhich itself could still be described as masculine—emphasizing fewer domestic ties, theneed for recognized (and paid) labour, perhaps specifically the work <strong>of</strong> individualcreative artists. However, she does suggest that even complete equality in this spherewould not cancel out all differences between the sexes, and women would still maintain aspecific understanding <strong>of</strong> their own sexuality. 30AFTER DE BEAUVOIRThe increasingly complex account <strong>of</strong> otherness that feminist theory in France hasdeveloped owes a clear debt to de Beauvoir’s analysis <strong>of</strong> Woman as Other. Feministshave sought to combine the forceful political critique provided by drawing attention tosexual difference, with an analysis <strong>of</strong> identity drawn from developments inpoststructuralist and psychoanalytic theory. Such an analysis draws attention to the self’svulnerability to the displacing effects <strong>of</strong> desire, as well as to the socially and culturallyconstructed nature <strong>of</strong> identity, implicating systems <strong>of</strong> language and meaning in such acritique. 31Rather than situating projects for change and emancipation within existing political andcultural practices, many feminists have subjected such practices to a sustained critique,asking questions about the very constitution <strong>of</strong> meaning and the concepts <strong>of</strong> power andpolitics as such. Whereas de Beauvoir stressed the strong will and self-control required instruggling for equality and autonomy, subsequent theories have raised questions about thevery nature <strong>of</strong> equality and the extent to which such self-control can be practised. In thisrespect, feminist critiques <strong>of</strong> identity as rational or masculine coincide withpsychoanalytic theory regarding the displacement <strong>of</strong> consciousness by forces which callinto question the epistemological privilege <strong>of</strong> the subject. Such forces are seen as allpervasiveand unsettling, manifest in systems <strong>of</strong> representation and language and areunderstood as corresponding linguistically to the processes <strong>of</strong> desire. This theory, shapedin part by Lacan’s work in structuralism and psychoanalysis, looks at difference as a


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 343relation operating not only intersubjectively between self and other, but also as sets <strong>of</strong>relations <strong>of</strong> differences within the very systems <strong>of</strong> signification which order and createmeaning. This expanded version <strong>of</strong> difference means that apparently unified or singularterms are seen to operate by processes <strong>of</strong> exclusion or suppression, occluding theirrelation to, or reliance upon, other terms. Discrete or autonomous identities are shown tobe disrupted or undermined by ‘otherness’ and concepts such as ‘truth’ or ‘knowledge’are put into question.Hence the maintenance <strong>of</strong> identity as rational and autonomous and the notion <strong>of</strong> truthas objective and independent are viewed as a defence <strong>of</strong> territory by the exclusion <strong>of</strong> thatwhich is other. Anything which lies outside the ‘normal’ circuits <strong>of</strong> knowledge or identitygets classified as madness, chaos, darkness or ignorance, and the borders between the tworealms are characterized as the site <strong>of</strong> constant power struggles. Many thinkers also drawattention to a symbolic equation between the excluded otherness and the feminine.Whether this connection is made explicitly or implicitly, the feminine as otherness is seenas multiple, dissembling and excluded, yet capable <strong>of</strong> disrupting limits and disturbing thestatus quo.Thus a connection is established between sexual difference (male/ female ormasculine/feminine) and polarized oppositions such as self/ other, knowledge/ignorance,spirit/body. De Beauvoir makes it possible to draw these parallels from a feministviewpoint, and to politicize the hierarchical arrangement <strong>of</strong> such oppositions. Apparentneutrality is thus opened up for analysis as an imbalance <strong>of</strong> power. But de Beauvoirretains her existentialist/humanist framework when discussing a possible feministpractice, whereas other feminist thinkers take up thecritique <strong>of</strong> the humanist subject asbesieged and intersected by unruly forces <strong>of</strong> desire and structures <strong>of</strong> power. Thinkerssuch as Julia Kristeva, Hélène Cixous or Luce Irigaray are influenced by understandings<strong>of</strong> otherness inherited from Hegel, Sartre and Heidegger, as well as by Derrida’s account<strong>of</strong> western thinking as phallo-logo-centric, unduly centred on a particular account <strong>of</strong> truthwhich is infused with masculine values, and Foucault’s analyses <strong>of</strong> the connectionsbetween power and knowledge. They are also influenced by Lacanian theory concerningsexuality, language and identity. 32Psychoanalytic theory has proved useful to feminist theory, in that it can show theextent to which identity and sexuality are constructed by conflicting and quasideterministicforces, as well as indicating the penetration <strong>of</strong> such forces to psychicstructures. 33 At the same time there is an acknowledgement <strong>of</strong> the implicitly sexualnature <strong>of</strong> structures and economies which are ostensibly neutral. Hence on one level itprovides a generalizable account <strong>of</strong> identity construction, cross-culturally and transhistorically.Despite the danger <strong>of</strong> universalizing identity which such an analysis courts, itdoes give a certain force to the analysis <strong>of</strong> sexual difference: the dominant structureswhich divide sexuality into two essential types may need to be challenged and addressedat precisely this level. However, the determinism implied by such internalizedconstructions is <strong>of</strong>fset somewhat by the notion <strong>of</strong> the unconscious. The unconscious canact as a constant reminder <strong>of</strong> the overall failure <strong>of</strong> the internalization process: ‘aresistance to identity at the very heart <strong>of</strong> psychic life’, 34 as Jacqueline Rose puts it. Thesplits, forcings and divisions <strong>of</strong> psychic life place pressure against the notion <strong>of</strong> coherentidentity, a widespread replay <strong>of</strong> an incomplete adjustment to the norm. This moment <strong>of</strong>


French feminist philosophy 344failure, negativity, fluidity or formlessness is symbolically bound up with the feminine.As Rose suggests, feminists may recognize certain similarities with their own projects—a‘symbolic failure to adjust to normality’ 35 and the resistance this implies.Lacan suggests that the whole social and cultural context <strong>of</strong> meaning, the SymbolicOrder, is premised on a suppression or repression <strong>of</strong> the symbolically feminine/maternal.Symbolically otherness stands as excessive, ex-centric and ecstatic, beyond or outside thedominant order <strong>of</strong> meanings, which allows Lacan to state ‘the woman does not exist’. 36Whether this is the pre-Oedipal mother or the quintessentially feminine, the Ideal womanor the dark absence <strong>of</strong> negativity, it is the process by which such a realm is designated asOther or otherness which allows the dominant meanings to retain their hold on truth,singularity and power, although paradoxically such otherness is the hidden ground orunacknowledged axis <strong>of</strong> such an economy.In its very construction the Lacanian framework is emphatically unfeminist.Nevertheless, Lacan accords women, or the feminine, a kind <strong>of</strong> power, the possibility <strong>of</strong>disrupting signifying systems, albeit without the agency to do anything other thanconstantly disrupt, efface, move on. ‘I believe in the jouissance <strong>of</strong> the woman in so far asit is something more, on condition that you screen <strong>of</strong>f that something more until I haveproperly explained it.’ 37 The force <strong>of</strong> feminist theory influenced by Lacan may beunderstood as a kind <strong>of</strong> ‘return <strong>of</strong> the repressed’. 38 The unnameable and unrepresentablefeminine jouissance Lacan has proscribed is taken up as the power <strong>of</strong> disruption anddestabilization, and works to unsettle fixation, particularly in the realm <strong>of</strong> sexualstereotypes.JULIA KRISTEVAThe interdisciplinary nature <strong>of</strong> Julia Kristeva’s work, drawing from linguistic theory,Marxism, philosophy and psychoanalysis, makes her a versatile and wide-rangingthinker. She sees herself as a cultural critic and analyst rather than particularly as afeminist thinker, although many feminists see potentials in her work for developingcritiques <strong>of</strong> western thinking and for understanding problems <strong>of</strong> identity, and shecertainly deals with questions about ‘the feminine’, cultural representations <strong>of</strong> figuressuch as ‘the mother’, or topics such as Chinese women. Coming to Paris from Bulgaria inthe mid-1960s, she brought with her a mixture <strong>of</strong> left-wing politics and an approach toliterary criticism influenced by Russian formalism: in brief, a materialist approach tosignification and social structures, tempered by her commitment to aesthetic and culturalpractices and her desire to change oppressive conditions. 39 The common themes runningthrough her work are an interest in language, politics and sexual identity, themes initiallybroached in her doctoral thesis Revolution in Poetic Language (1974), 40 where sheattempts to develop a theory <strong>of</strong> identity formation in the context <strong>of</strong> Lacanianpsychoanalysis and structuralism. Her main concern in this book is to understand thestructuring effects <strong>of</strong> language without relinquishing the creative, poetic and marginalaspects. She then links her theory to a political account <strong>of</strong> marginalized but revolutionaryforces, exemplified in the figure <strong>of</strong> the avant-garde poet.Through a complex intersection <strong>of</strong> theoretical perspectives, Kristeva develops her


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 345account <strong>of</strong> the material/linguistic forces which constantly disrupt identity, but are stilllocated within the corporeal body. She suggests that identity is forged in a precarious anddynamic relation between various positionalities which can be taken up according to thesocial and cultural meanings in the Symbolic, and a force <strong>of</strong> negativity which ispersistently engaged in undermining such positions. Her analysis has proved intriguingfor many feminist theorists for a number <strong>of</strong>reasons. First, she emphasizes the critique <strong>of</strong>identity as a fixed or essential notion. Second, she identifies the constructed nature <strong>of</strong>meaning and sexuality, and the determining or restrictive effect which existingdefinitions, stereotypes and cultural roles can have in shaping identity. Third, sheidentifies a transgressive force which, if activated, can have a disruptive orrevolutionizing effect on the social/cultural context in question. Her account <strong>of</strong> ‘thesubject-in-process’ 41 analyses the cost involved in subject formation, but it also hints atways <strong>of</strong> subverting the dominant forms <strong>of</strong> understanding sexual difference. For feministtheorists, she seems to negotiate essentialism on the one hand by suggesting that subject‘positions’ are being created and destroyed in the ongoing dialectic <strong>of</strong> signification, andyet she refuses to diffuse subjectivity into merely an effect <strong>of</strong> language.For Kristeva, Lacan’s ‘return to Freud’ (his reworking <strong>of</strong> Freud) 42 is important in thatit shifts the focus from biology to a linguistic shaping <strong>of</strong> sexuality and identity. This shift,she thinks, will allow for a different way <strong>of</strong> understanding identity. If sexual difference isimplicated in the conceptual framework itself, Kristeva’s characterization <strong>of</strong> language asa shifting process <strong>of</strong> the production and decay <strong>of</strong> meaning allows her a potential formobility on the question <strong>of</strong> identity formation. The Freudian focus on a visible/biologicalstructure seems very limiting in the light <strong>of</strong> the fluid freeing <strong>of</strong> sexual difference into theSymbolic arena (many potential positionalities or social roles to be fulfilled). But in someways all that has happened is a shifting <strong>of</strong> the terms <strong>of</strong> formation. Lacan’s point that aframework <strong>of</strong> cultural reference is the only place from which any account <strong>of</strong> sexualdifference can be produced, is meant to negate any simplistic biological starting point.Now that difference is seen as being produced by systems <strong>of</strong> meaning, there is no directaccess to a pure biological understanding <strong>of</strong> physical bodies, since it would be impossibleto recognize such bodies outside <strong>of</strong> the system <strong>of</strong> meaning. This is the basis <strong>of</strong> thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> the imaginary, the realm which severs full cognisance <strong>of</strong> the body andrenders its relation metaphorical or ‘morphological’. If identity is seen as structurationrather than as psycho-physical development through time, the issue shifts from questions<strong>of</strong> anatomical difference (at what point in development do differences appear?) toquestions as to what such differences mean within the symbolic, and the extent to whichthey are open to subversion. But because Lacan denies any access to an ‘other’ realm, forhim there can only be the conceptions <strong>of</strong> sexual difference which already exist, but whichare inherently ‘masculine’ (because created in the Symbolic). 43For Lacan, the primary relation with the mother’s body, which he had characterized asfluid and plural, the realm <strong>of</strong> unmediated jouissance, was what had to be overcome sothat identity could be established. Successfully relinquishing this realm <strong>of</strong> non-separationallows for successful entry into the Symbolic and identification with the masculine orpatriarchal values <strong>of</strong> social/cultural meaning. The price to be paid for attaining linguisticcompetence and a place in the Symbolic is the loss <strong>of</strong> the blissful, unselfconsciouspleasure before the entry into language. However, Kristeva argues that the overcoming <strong>of</strong>


French feminist philosophy 346this ‘other’ realm can never be wholly successful, and it will continue to break through orirrupt into the Symbolic Order, where its effects will be felt bodily as pleasurabledisturbances. Symbolically, such disruptions will connote the pre-Oedipal and thefeminine.The focus <strong>of</strong> Kristeva’s work on femininity is governed by this understanding. If thestructuration <strong>of</strong> identity is at the level <strong>of</strong> language, but this process is constantly invadedby the ‘language’ <strong>of</strong> the other realm, then its stability is called into question. Perhaps byinsisting upon the disruptive rather than the constitutive elements <strong>of</strong> language, asufficiently transgressive notion <strong>of</strong> the subject can be produced to allow it to reformulateitself, ‘more or less’ masculine or feminine?Kristeva is critical <strong>of</strong> theorists who focus on language as a homogeneous, logicalsystem with internal coherence. It would seem she has in mind the prioritizing <strong>of</strong>communication, consensus and competence she finds in the work <strong>of</strong> Saussure andChomsky and in Lacan’s symbolic. In contrast, Kristeva focuses on the ‘edges’ <strong>of</strong>language, the points at which language appears to break down: the ‘pathologies’ <strong>of</strong>madness and schizophrenia, the hermetic and difficult poetries <strong>of</strong> the avant-garde, and the‘hysteria’ <strong>of</strong> women. She theorizes these aspects in a different way from other linguists,who had seen these forms <strong>of</strong> language as continuous with conventional signification, butless successful. If the formal practice <strong>of</strong> language uses is emphasized, these deviantpractices are judged according to their conformity or deliberate flouting <strong>of</strong> the rules.Structuralist linguists minimized reference to ‘subjective’ elements. Kristeva seeks toidentify a connection, but, as she makes clear, it is a productive and dynamic relation sheis interested in, not a relation <strong>of</strong> stasis or a revival <strong>of</strong> a humanist subject.Focusing on rhythm, repetition, elision and displacement reinforces a notion <strong>of</strong> thesubject-in-process, rather than an ideal enunciator, since it concerns the apparent failuresrather than the successes <strong>of</strong> the struggle to maintain a coherent identity. It is alsoindicating the points at which the ‘other’ realm is discernible through its effects.Kristeva’s notions <strong>of</strong> ‘the semiotic’ and the ‘chora’ present an attempt to theorize thisuntheorizable, pre-discursive realm which is described in terms <strong>of</strong> ‘space’ or a locus toavoid pinning it to a stage <strong>of</strong> development. She writes <strong>of</strong> the semiotic as a kind <strong>of</strong>primordial writing or signifying <strong>of</strong> the body, although this is not strictly an accuratedescription, since it is concerned with ‘the body <strong>of</strong> a subject who is not yet constituted assuch’. 44 Still, this pre-signifying signification is a textuality <strong>of</strong> the body which is moreexperiential than meaningful. ‘We understand the term semiotic in its Greek sense;=distinctive mark, trace, index, precursory sign, pro<strong>of</strong> engraved or writtensign, imprint, trace, figuration.’ 45 It is an ordering <strong>of</strong> energies which initiates theinscription and conditions for representation. Hypothesized as both the material rhythmsand forces underlying the possibility <strong>of</strong> textuality, and the imprinting <strong>of</strong> psychicalenergies to connect sensation to movement, it acts as a preparation for entry intolanguage. This space is as yet undifferentiated but it cannot be described ashomogeneous, shot through with ‘psychical marks’ and in a state <strong>of</strong> motility. Kristevanames it as ‘the chora…an essentially mobile and extremely provisional articulationconstituted by movements and their ephemeral stases’. 46That this notion is positioned ‘prior’ to signification should not be taken to indicate anecessary chronology in time, since this realm is symbolically ‘other’ to temporal order


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 347as well as topographical space. Therefore although it is given an apparently archaic andoriginary status, it does not constitute a reified origin divided from the subject in thesymbolic. This would replicate a duality which Kristeva is concerned to resist; the termsare not equal and the notion <strong>of</strong> origin is reconstructed only in retrospect from positionsalready in language. In fact, Kristeva is explicitly critical <strong>of</strong> Lacan for making therepression <strong>of</strong> the mother the condition <strong>of</strong> subjectivity. As she draws attention to thesymbolic connection <strong>of</strong> the chora with feminine or maternal notions, she is taking up prefiguredconnections which identify the notion <strong>of</strong> an origin with a primordial mother:‘This place which has no thesis and no position, the process by which significance isconstituted. Plato himself leads us to such a process when he call this receptacle or choranourishing or maternal.’ 47 However, the semiotic is in one important sense opposed tothe Symbolic: it is a site <strong>of</strong> resistance and disruption against which the organization <strong>of</strong> theSymbolic is to be compared. Kristeva takes up the equation <strong>of</strong> otherness with thefeminine or maternal, in order to demonstrate the sacrificial process involved in identityconstruction, and to suggest how the inherent violence might be made less painful orchannelled in more creative ways.Despite the alignment <strong>of</strong> otherness and the feminine, for Kristeva it does not constitutean alternative identity for women, nor does it allow a specifically female or femininelanguage. However, there are ways <strong>of</strong> maximizing its disruptive effects in order tocombat the restrictive impact <strong>of</strong> the Symbolic. The figures <strong>of</strong> the avant-garde poet andthe political dissident are focal points in Kristeva’s earlier work, while later on sheconsiders women as potential disruptive figures.What the father doesn’t say about the unconscious, what sign and time repressin their impulses, appears as their truth (if there is no absolute, what is truth, ifnot the unspoken <strong>of</strong> the spoken?) and this truth can be imagined only as awoman. A curious truth: outside time, with neither past nor future, neither truenor false; buried underground, it neither postulates nor judges. It refuses,displaces, breaks the symbolic order before it can re-establish itself. 48Kristeva suggests three ways in which this curious truth may be understood: ‘Jouissance,pregnancy, and marginal speech: the means by which this “truth”, cloaked and hidden bythe symbolic order and its companion, time, functions through women’. 49 Here Kristevais linking ‘a vigilance, call it ethical’, 50 with the figuration <strong>of</strong> the feminine and thematernal as ‘other’. It is a critical and disruptive kind <strong>of</strong> ethicality, linked to a capacity toresist the fixation <strong>of</strong> subjectivity and to remain critical, but also seeking a means toexpress such ‘otherness’.To refuse all roles, in order, on the contrary, to summon this timeless ‘truth’—formless, neither true nor false, echo <strong>of</strong> our jouissance, <strong>of</strong> our madness, <strong>of</strong> ourpregnancies—into the order <strong>of</strong> speech and social symbolism. But how? Bylistening; by recognising the unspoken in speech; by calling attention at alltimes to whatever remains unsatisfied, repressed, new, eccentric,incomprehensible, disturbing the status quo. 51


French feminist philosophy 348Here she seems to be suggesting that the location <strong>of</strong> ethicality is no longer adequatelysituated in the reformulation and attempted perfection <strong>of</strong> codes <strong>of</strong> behaviour, rules andlaws. Unless the disruptive traces <strong>of</strong> the subject, constantly being rewritten in itsprocesses, can also be accounted for, these projects are destined to keep retreading thesame ground. The constant transgression and renewal <strong>of</strong> positioning in relation to theprocess <strong>of</strong> signification leads to the possibility <strong>of</strong> new practices, forged at the veryboundaries <strong>of</strong> thinking.Kristeva finds in maternity the metaphoric expression <strong>of</strong> the above boundary location<strong>of</strong> ethicality, which is given the force <strong>of</strong> subversion but still embodied. Maternityconnotes a possible irruption and interruption <strong>of</strong> the Symbolic, centrally placed, yetdisruptive, a disturbance between stasis and dynamism, cyclical/monumental time anddiscursive/grammatical time. In her essay ‘Stabat Mater’, 52 the poetic, left-hand(sinister?) ‘other’ side <strong>of</strong> the text irrupts into the historical and chronological mapping <strong>of</strong>motherhood. Textually this corresponds to a writing <strong>of</strong> the metaphoric mother, positionedas a body in signification and yet already split, separated, pleasuring; ‘the heterogeneitynot subsumed under any law’. A space is opened for different subjective possibilities, yetretaining the specificity <strong>of</strong> women. This ‘heretical ethics’ (her-ethics) is based not uponavoiding the law, but upon enriching it. ‘Now, if a contemporary ethics is no longer seenas being the same as morality; if ethics amounts to not avoiding the embarrassing andinevitable problematics <strong>of</strong> the law but giving it flesh, language, jouissance—in that caseits reformulation demands the contribution <strong>of</strong> women.’ 53 A similar position is taken inKristeva’s analysis <strong>of</strong> the role <strong>of</strong> the Virgin Mary. In ‘Stabat Mater’ she draws heavilyupon Marina Warner’s book Alone <strong>of</strong> All Her Sex; the Myth and Cult <strong>of</strong> the VirginMary 54 to indicate how the Virgin Mary becomes a symbolic axis <strong>of</strong> the conjunctionbetween hebraic and hellenic; and as a conjunction between virginity and maternity. As amoment <strong>of</strong> undecidability, the figure presents a potential site <strong>of</strong> ambivalence, for the twotraditions as well as for understandings <strong>of</strong> women. There is a potential disruption <strong>of</strong> theGreek logos and Jewish monotheism in the presence <strong>of</strong> a divine feminine figure, centralto religion but neither one thing nor another. But this dangerous ambivalence isconscripted for control and synthesis, in that the virginal aspect becomes a pure and holyasceticism, and maternity becomes the continuity <strong>of</strong> the community via reproduction. Thefreezing <strong>of</strong> undecidability sets up an ideal, fusing with the existing ideal <strong>of</strong> virginity incourtly love and the ideal <strong>of</strong> devoted maternal love. The impossible totality <strong>of</strong> the virginmother is not only disseminated within patriarchal cultures but becomes the prototype forwestern love relations. In Kristeva’s terms, the dangerous moment <strong>of</strong> rupture is containedby erasing jouissance, in virginity, and channelling it, in maternal reproduction, to sustainthe deathless ideal <strong>of</strong> the masculine, whether this is the law, the community or thesubject.This maternal figure, the epitome <strong>of</strong> romantic sentimentality and utterly serene icon,ideal and untroubled, functions as a sublimating vessel for various cultures. And yetKristeva indicates that its ‘cleverly balanced architecture today appears to be crumbling’,the ‘psychotic sore <strong>of</strong> modernity’ is ‘the incapacity <strong>of</strong> contemporary codes to tame thematernal’. 55 Thus it reveals that which it cannot contain even in trying to cover over thisslippage.Despite Kristeva’s characterization <strong>of</strong> the subject as ‘an open system’, I don’t think she


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 349is committed to the denial <strong>of</strong> sexual difference or the ‘erasure’ <strong>of</strong> the subject. However,she does argue that the positionality which may lead to a metaphysical hypostatization <strong>of</strong>identity is to be found in feminist discourse too. This is perhaps what leads her to beunnecessarily harsh on the variety <strong>of</strong> feminist positions which do not coincide with herown; a fear <strong>of</strong> the reintroduction <strong>of</strong> the essentialist subject which has led women to‘sacrifice or violence’. If this is a challenge to feminist theory, is it the kind <strong>of</strong> critiquewhich feminist theory needs? Many feminist writers on Kristeva find her attacks onfeminism uncomfortable, especially when they seem to emanate from an apparentlypowerful position as the ‘queen <strong>of</strong> theory’. But on occasion her work is compatible withfeminist approaches to the body, <strong>of</strong>fering a potential rethinking <strong>of</strong> corporeality in keepingwith a radical perspective on difference. As Rosi Braidotti puts it:the body thus defined cannot be reduced to the biological, nor can it be confinedto social conditioning. In a new form <strong>of</strong> ‘corporeal materialism’, the body isseen as an inter-face, a threshold, a field <strong>of</strong> intersection <strong>of</strong> material andsymbolic forces; it is a surface where multiple codes <strong>of</strong> power and knowledgeare inscribed; it is a construction that transforms and capitalises on energies <strong>of</strong> aheteronomous and discontinuous nature. The body is not an essence, andtherefore not an anatomical destiny. 56LUCE IRIGARAYLike Kristeva, Irigaray has a background in linguistics, psychoanalysis, philosophy andfeminist theory, and is currently practising therapy or analysis. However, she takes a set<strong>of</strong> premises very different from Kristeva’s from these areas, and produces markedlydifferent conclusions.Born in 1930 in Belgium, Luce Irigaray began her work with research intopsycholinguistics, specifically the language <strong>of</strong> patients diagnosed schizophrenic orsuffering from senile dementia (see some <strong>of</strong> the essays in Speaking/Language is NeverNeutral/Neuter first published in 1986). 57 Her conclusions concerning the loss or lack <strong>of</strong>identity <strong>of</strong> such patients who seem ‘overwhelmed’ by language led her to drawcomparisons with the position <strong>of</strong> women in relation to language. In the process <strong>of</strong> theanalytic session, understood as a dialogue between two speakers, Irigaray noted a number<strong>of</strong> factors which continue to be important throughout her work. First, the emergence <strong>of</strong>identity formulated as possible positions in such locutionary exchanges. Second, thedifferences (specifically sexual difference) dramatized or enacted in speech. Third, thepoints at which grammatical formulations <strong>of</strong> language begin to break down, and theexperience <strong>of</strong> speakers caught in this position. Her focus is the vulnerability <strong>of</strong>subjectivity and the attempts to secure a place for it against the destructivetechnologization <strong>of</strong> communication in the present age. However, her concern is not theresurrection <strong>of</strong> a humanist subject but a critique <strong>of</strong> the language and thinking whichpresents itself as neutral or neuter.Irigaray combines this research with her understanding <strong>of</strong> Lacanian psychoanalysis andstructuralism concerning the construction <strong>of</strong> identity, to throw light on what she sees as a


French feminist philosophy 350sacrificial culture and the position <strong>of</strong> women in such a culture. One <strong>of</strong> her concerns,which has been extensively misinterpreted, is her attempt to develop an alternativestrategy to allow ‘feminine identity’ to take (a) place. Although she has <strong>of</strong>ten beenunderstood to be positing a language <strong>of</strong> the female body, the level <strong>of</strong> her intervention ismarkedly that <strong>of</strong> cultural and social formations. She does suggest that the dominant form<strong>of</strong> discourse has been ‘isomorphic’ with masculine sexuality, and it is this relation whichhas been difficult to understand or translate. It is not simply a representational model buta relation itself to be understood as metaphoric or metonymic. If this relation hasdominated in the past, perhaps there could be a form <strong>of</strong> discourse which hasmorphological suggestions <strong>of</strong> images <strong>of</strong> the female body? It is this ‘hypothetical’ styleshe deploys in the essay This Sex Which is Not One’ (first published in 1977), 58 andwhich has led to the assumption that she is ‘writing the body’. Rather, it appears that thisstylistic deployment is a strategic intervention in what she feels has been a monologic or‘phallo-logo-centric’ approach to questions <strong>of</strong> sexuality and language. In her later work itappears that she is concerned more with existing social formations and linguisticpractices than with developing a completely alternative female language, and her recentempirical studies into language use and sexual difference would seem, with hindsight, tosupport this analysis <strong>of</strong> her early writings. However, this does not lessen her attempts torestore, or rather to create, a less damaged and damaging understanding <strong>of</strong> sexualdifference.At the beginning <strong>of</strong> her book The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Sexual Difference, (first published in1984), 59 she states her belief that sexual difference is the burning issue <strong>of</strong> our age, theissue <strong>of</strong> difference which potentially could be ‘our salvation on an intellectual level…theproduction <strong>of</strong> a new age <strong>of</strong> thought, art, poetry and language; the creation <strong>of</strong> a newpoetics’. However, she suggests that the development <strong>of</strong> this event is hampered andconstrained by the systematic repetition <strong>of</strong> sameness being compulsively reiterated in thespheres <strong>of</strong> philosophy, politics, religion and science. This repetition, or reworking <strong>of</strong> thesame ground, is evident in many contexts, which Irigaray lists as ‘the consumer society,the circular nature <strong>of</strong> discourse, the more or less cancerous diseases <strong>of</strong> our age, theunreliable nature <strong>of</strong> words, the end <strong>of</strong> philosophy, religious despair or the regressivereturn to religion, scientistic imperialism or a technique that does not take the humansubject into account, and so on’. 60 According to Irigaray, this repetition works to concealor efface a possible way <strong>of</strong> articulating otherness. This articulation, she thinks, can besttake place in the context <strong>of</strong> questions <strong>of</strong> sexual difference. Apart from the explicitfeminist perspective, her reasons for privileging sexual difference lie in her specificappropriation <strong>of</strong> psychoanalytic discourse, particularly the work <strong>of</strong> Lacan. Despite heruse <strong>of</strong> a psychoanalytic framework, her work is also a strategic departure from it, or anattempt to subvert it from within. She suggests that psychoanalysis has enabled atheoretical treatment <strong>of</strong> sexuality and identity to take place via the (generalizable)analysis <strong>of</strong> forms <strong>of</strong> patriarchal identity as constructions. Her focus on the constructednature <strong>of</strong> such notions as identity, philosophical discourse and its concepts has a number<strong>of</strong> implications. She is able to diagnose a bias running through the history <strong>of</strong> such notionsand to point to the permeation <strong>of</strong> such forces to psychic levels. She is also able to conducta sustained critique <strong>of</strong> the damaging nature <strong>of</strong> such constructions as exclusion orsuppression. She thus sees her work as ‘jamming the machinery’ 61 <strong>of</strong> western theory, a


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 351process <strong>of</strong> analysing and uncovering the fantasies, projections and repressions which aretaken to be normal or necessary. The nature <strong>of</strong> this work is extensive and radical.For the work <strong>of</strong> sexual difference to take place, a revolution in thought andethics is needed. We must re-interpret the whole relationship between thesubject and discourse, the subject and the world, the subject and the cosmic, themicrocosmic and the macrocosmic…. In order to think and live through thisdifference, we must reconsider the whole question <strong>of</strong> space and time. 62If such apparently foundational notions are shown to be constructions, then there is apossibility that they may be modified or changed in the future. For Irigaray, theusefulness <strong>of</strong> psychoanalytic theory rests in some part on its capacity to analyse thesymbolism <strong>of</strong> masculine and feminine as a pair <strong>of</strong> terms which pervade wide and varioussets <strong>of</strong> relations, such that the symbolization becomes tangled up in the very process <strong>of</strong>conceptualization. The common oppositions <strong>of</strong> the Pythagorean table <strong>of</strong> oppositesbecome aligned with a symbolic interpretation <strong>of</strong> anatomical difference, and,significantly, the unified, non-contradictory and homogenous terms come to dominate.Across a range <strong>of</strong> systems and at different levels, exclusion and censorship operate toprioritize the masculine term at the expense <strong>of</strong> the feminine, such that the very operationitself is obscured from view. The status quo is maintained at the price <strong>of</strong> a peculiarviolence—the exclusion <strong>of</strong> the feminine, or its characterization as object, matter, inferiorterm. As regards subjectivity, masculine/feminine forces or values may become alignedwith male and female sexes, but, she suggests, the very notion <strong>of</strong> subjectivity itself has‘already been appropriated to the masculine’, despite the way that such a notion ispresented as neutral. It is because such structures are built upon repression and denial thatinevitably the tension <strong>of</strong> maintaining such a territory begins to show and the cracks,failures and breakdowns indicate the spaces through which the potentiality <strong>of</strong> thefeminine may begin to be built. It is through her under-standing and seizure <strong>of</strong> a certainlack <strong>of</strong> synchronization, therefore, that Irigaray situates her project.Irigaray’s engagement with philosophy has been extensive. If she sees philosophicaldiscourse as ‘the master discourse…the discourse on discourses’ 63 —adding, ‘thephilosophical order is indeed the one that has to be questioned, and disturbed, inasmuchas it covers over sexual difference 64 —she has also identified philosophy’s resources ascrucial in reinterpreting questions <strong>of</strong> sexual difference. She sees her focus asphilosophical, but her work is a dramatic testimony to the ambivalence she feels as awoman in philosophy, and as such displays an equivocation between her critique <strong>of</strong>philosophy and her more positive reconstructions <strong>of</strong> female subjectivity.In the context <strong>of</strong> philosophy, she announces her desire to ‘have a fling with thephilosophers’, 65 paradoxically to indicate the seriousness <strong>of</strong> her engagement withphilosophical questions. This means ‘going back through the male imaginary’, and givesrise to ‘the necessity <strong>of</strong> “reopening” the figures <strong>of</strong> philosophical discourse—idea,substance, subject, transcendental subjectivity, absolute knowledge—in order to pry out<strong>of</strong> them what they have borrowed that is feminine, from the feminine, to make them“render up” and give back what they owe the feminine.’ 66She means to be as intimate and familiar with philosophical history as possible, but


French feminist philosophy 352also to challenge it from the position <strong>of</strong> a woman; that is, one who is symbolicallypositioned outside or other to philosophy, one who can only ‘flirt’ with ideas, orconversely, deflate them by being too playful, refusing to take them seriously. Thispositioning allows Irigaray to follow through some <strong>of</strong> the main canonical texts <strong>of</strong> westernphilosophy; in Speculum <strong>of</strong> the Other Woman (first published in 1974), she takes onPlato, Aristotle, Meister Eckhart, Descartes, Hegel, Spinoza, Plotinus, Kant, Marx, Freud,and in The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Sexual Difference she adds Hegel, Merleau-Ponty and Levinas,while other texts deal with Nietzsche and Heidegger, for example, 67 reconstructing theirlogic carefully in order to show how it interrupts itself. What she calls ‘the blind spot inan old dream <strong>of</strong> symmetry’, 68 the hidden assumption so necessary to the symmetry andso necessarily hidden, will entail analysing philosophy’s unconscious.For Irigaray, what is repressed is ‘the feminine’, that which allows philosophy to get<strong>of</strong>f the ground, but must remain essentially unspoken, as the ground. The negativity <strong>of</strong>symbolically occupying this groundless ground constantly places women in animpossible position. As primal matter or ‘mother-matter’, the feminine or maternal actsan archaic past, the ‘nature’ placed in opposition to culture. ‘The mother-woman remainsthe place separated from its “own place”, a place deprived <strong>of</strong> a place <strong>of</strong> its own. She is, orceaselessly becomes, the place <strong>of</strong> the other who cannot separate himself from it.’ 69 One<strong>of</strong> Irigaray’s concerns is to explore the suppressed or superseded nature <strong>of</strong> this element or‘the elemental’ space, partly to remind philosophy <strong>of</strong> its debt to this unexplored ‘prerational’world-view and partly to try to develop a vocabulary which could articulate thisotherness. Irigaray writes: ‘I wanted to go back to this natural material which makes upour bodies, in which our lives and our environment are grounded; the flesh <strong>of</strong> ourpassions.’ 70 Her ‘elemental’ texts deal with air, earth, water and fire, her ‘re-invention’ <strong>of</strong>the material origins <strong>of</strong> philosophical thinking and its elision with maternal or femininesymbolism (for example in Marine Lover <strong>of</strong> Friedrich Nietzsche (first published in 1980)she shows a certain aversion in Nietzsche’s writing to water, which is symbolicallyfeminine). In trying to imagine this ‘other region’ she employs a strategic syntacticalstyle, an interplay <strong>of</strong> weaving in the writing <strong>of</strong> the body as she had expressed it—multiplicity and plurality, with frequent changes <strong>of</strong> tense, and questions disurpting herwork and interrupting whichever position she was speaking from. Speaking (as) womanis a tactical means <strong>of</strong> restoring specificity to a non-specific discourse, and alsocorresponds to her aim to put the philosophical subject back into a material context—thebody and the materiality <strong>of</strong> its surroundings.Irigaray’s strategy in reading these canonical texts is to imitate their movements, amimicry which is, in its very exaggerated miming, in excess <strong>of</strong> the limits and definitionswhich had been set.There is in an initial phase, perhaps only one ‘path’, the one historicallyassigned to the feminine: that <strong>of</strong> mimicry. One must assume the feminine roledeliberately. Which means already to convert a form <strong>of</strong> subordination into anaffirmation and thus to begin to thwart it…. To play with mimesis is thus, for awoman, to try to recover the place <strong>of</strong> her exploitation by discourse, withoutallowing herself to be simply reduced to it. 71


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 353Her strategy <strong>of</strong> mimicry is directly related to the notion <strong>of</strong> ‘mirroring’ which runsthroughout her texts. This notion is part <strong>of</strong> a complex set <strong>of</strong> interwoven strands whichexplore the preoccupation <strong>of</strong> western thinking with accurate ‘reflection’, illumination,and clarity. Not only do metaphors <strong>of</strong> the ‘ocular’ and ‘specular’ seem to dominate, but,she suggests, they are essential for the establishing <strong>of</strong> the self-reflexive subject, and theapparent autonomy <strong>of</strong> the philosopher. The narcissism <strong>of</strong> the subject that results is, forIrigaray, part <strong>of</strong> the logic <strong>of</strong> ‘the same’. However, she also suggests that the speculationswhich privilege this version <strong>of</strong> the epistemological subject are based upon a (hidden)reliance upon women or the feminine to act as a mirror for such a subject, at the expense<strong>of</strong> their own identity. Women are either frozeninto static representations dictated by thelogic <strong>of</strong> the same, or they are positioned wholly outside the system as a conceptual ‘blackhole’; the elsewhere and otherwise without a status <strong>of</strong> its own. In Speculum Irigaraysuggests equivalencies with Freud’s dark continent or Plato’s cave, the exploration <strong>of</strong>which is deemed essential and yet produces, according to Irigaray, theory still caughtwithin its own expectations, more <strong>of</strong> the same. In order to broach the question <strong>of</strong> sexualdifference, Irigaray produces a critique <strong>of</strong> the ‘flat mirror’ <strong>of</strong> ‘the processes <strong>of</strong> specula(riza)tion that subtend our social and cultural organisations’ 72 and suggests, through sucha critique, another mode <strong>of</strong> approach which will allow for feminine subjectivity: ‘acurved mirror, but also one that is folded back on itself, with its impossible appropriation“on the inside” <strong>of</strong> the mind, <strong>of</strong> thought, <strong>of</strong> subjectivity. Whence the intervention <strong>of</strong> thespeculum and the concave mirror, which disturb the staging <strong>of</strong> representation.’ 73 Ifmimesis is no longer direct and accurate ‘reflection’, then the distorting mirror in whichwomen have been confined can throw back ‘disturbed’ and disturbing reflections, therebybeginning the process <strong>of</strong> allowing the feminine to take (a) place. This is a mimicry whichnot only twists and parodies, but effects a change in the process.Irigaray proposes a particular conception <strong>of</strong> psychic health to counteract the crisis andfragmentation <strong>of</strong> the present age, which would involve the adequate conceptualization <strong>of</strong>both masculine and feminine elements in a non-hierarchical exchange and process.However, we are far from this stage. The feminine is still inadequately conceptualized. Itis only by intervening on the destructive circuit that another age <strong>of</strong> difference might bebroached, an intervention which Irigaray describes as ethical. The revaluation <strong>of</strong>‘passion’ and ‘wonder’ (admiration) 74 could lead to relations which, while retaining theradical otherness <strong>of</strong> the other, allow for an ethical encounter to take place.Irigaray’s more explicitly political proposals include interventions in the legal, civiland representional status <strong>of</strong> women 75 and her own work with various women’s groups inItaly for example. But she has also explored more ‘mystical’ approaches; lyrical poeticexpressions <strong>of</strong> love between women, between mothers and daughters and lovers, and herwork on ‘the divine’, which is an attempt to explore the forms <strong>of</strong> sacred meaning whichhave also acted to exclude women, and to revalue divisions between sacred/pr<strong>of</strong>ane,carnal/celestial, matter/spirit. 76Irigaray’s equivocations may strike her critics as contradictory or difficult to place.How are we to understand what seem to be utopic projections <strong>of</strong> ‘amatory exchanges’and a new fertile dialogue <strong>of</strong> sexual difference in the light <strong>of</strong> her sustained critique <strong>of</strong>subjectivity and philosophy, the ‘sacrificial culture’? Is she writing for all women? Fromwhere? However, at present she is perceived to be a thinker who manages to negotiate the


French feminist philosophy 354minefields and sustain the tensions with acuity, a position which itself invites furtherresponses and engagements with her writings. 77MICHÈLE LE DOEUFFMichèle Le Doeuff was born in 1948, taught philosophy at the Ecole Normale Supérieureand is currently doing research at the CRNS. Her focus on the apparently innocuousillustrative devices used in philosophy (and she shows that ‘the feminine’ is a constantlyrecurring item) uncovers a tension at the heart <strong>of</strong> such texts which has repercussions forwomen’s relation to philosophy. Although metaphors and images may appear to beharmless, especially when they are explicitly given a secondary status, one <strong>of</strong> LeDoeuff’s concerns is to expose such an assumption. Her reading <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong>philosophy shows how philosophy draws upon a very specific set <strong>of</strong> such devices whichfunction in quite particular ways in the texts, even as ‘philosophical discourse…labelsitself as philosophical by means <strong>of</strong> a deviation from the mythic, the poetic and all that isimage making’. 78 For Le Doeuff, these images point to tensions or stress lines in theorganization <strong>of</strong> the philosophical enterprise, the ‘sensitive nerve endings’ which say moreabout philosophical discourse than it would prefer to speak. For not only do they providecontinuity markers in the history <strong>of</strong> philosophy, but they also indicate the ‘obsessions,neuroses and dangers’, or the more uncontrollable elements intrinsically bound up in theprogress <strong>of</strong> reason. In her book The Philosophical Imaginary (first published in 1986) sheanalyses such images and figures in Kant, Rousseau, Plato, Moore, Bacon and Descartes.She argues that philosophy sets up the feminine as an internal enemy: ‘a hostile principle,all the more hostile because there is no question <strong>of</strong> dispensing with it…the feminine, asupport and signifier <strong>of</strong> something that, having been engendered by philosophy whilstbeing rejected by it, operates within as an indispensable deadweight’. 79Despite the psychoanalytic tones <strong>of</strong> this analysis, Le Doeuff rejects any notion <strong>of</strong> theunconscious at work. For her, the metaphors <strong>of</strong> ‘the feminine’ are expressed as part <strong>of</strong> thephilosophical imaginary (which at times seems to resemble a bestiary), but she uses thisterm more in the sense <strong>of</strong> ‘a collection <strong>of</strong> images’ than in the sense which Lacan, orIrigaray, employ it. She argues that greater awareness <strong>of</strong> this process will have certainimplications for changes in the practice <strong>of</strong> philosophy, but she rejects overarchingframeworks such as Marxism or psychoanalysis, partly because <strong>of</strong> her concern thatwomen in philosophy will exchange one set <strong>of</strong> orthodoxies for another, sitting at the feet<strong>of</strong> ‘new masters’ (Lacan and Derrick, amongst others), a process which sets up newforms <strong>of</strong> political correctness.This is why she is careful to examine the specific relation <strong>of</strong> student and teacher in hermore recent book Hipparchia’s Choice (first published in 1989). 80 She conducts ananalysis <strong>of</strong> the way an apprenticeship is served in philosophy, considering whattechniques <strong>of</strong> assessment, training and control are used. Seeing this relation in terms <strong>of</strong>influence and power or lack <strong>of</strong> it, she locates it within a wider set <strong>of</strong> relations, the relation<strong>of</strong> the academic institution to the particular social setting and historical inheritance, withconnections between knowledge and power being made in a manner reminiscent <strong>of</strong>Foucault. Her ‘case study’ for this analysis is the relationship between Sartre and Simone


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 355de Beauvoir, a complex site <strong>of</strong> tensions between male/female, teacher/ disciple (deBeauvoir’s own description), philosophy/feminism.Rather than concentrate upon the exclusion <strong>of</strong> women from philosophy, Le Doeuffemphasizes their incorporation into the very centre. Far from them appearing as victims<strong>of</strong> rigid expulsion, she points out, women have been philosophers all along, learning,corresponding, discussing and writing. However, the terms <strong>of</strong> their admission intophilosophy have been, she suggests, quite strictly controlled, presenting a more complexand subtle picture <strong>of</strong> philosophy’s process <strong>of</strong> self-legitimation.Despite the cheerful optimism which Le Doeuff seems to display about the possibility<strong>of</strong> ‘retraining’ philosophy to be more open and tolerant, she doesn’t underestimate thedifficulties which such a demand presents. Rather, I would see her strategy as ‘entrism’,borrowing scholarly techniques in order to gain a legitimate foothold in philosophy, andfrom there developing the feminist challenges and provoking the changes which shebelieves the discipline must address. She wishes to redeem, restore and rehabilitatephilosophy, arguing for a pluralistic ‘contest <strong>of</strong> faculties’, or ‘constrained disagreement’in academia, which could allow for uncertainty and resisting closure, and preventdomination <strong>of</strong> any one viewpoint at the expense <strong>of</strong> other, more hesitant viewpoints. Thisapproach, which Rosi Braidotti calls ‘a reasoned critique <strong>of</strong> reason’, 81 comparing it withthe work <strong>of</strong> Lorraine Code or Genevieve Lloyd, 82 means that her work does not indict thewhole <strong>of</strong> western philosophy for ‘masculinism’. Her work is not really compatible withthat <strong>of</strong>, for example, Irigaray’s, because Le Doeuff does not subscribe to the discourse <strong>of</strong>radicality or revolution. Her ‘commonsense’ approach contrasts with the ‘poetic-hysteric’style <strong>of</strong> other French feminists, but some critics find her occasionally too cautious.HÉLÈNE CIXOUSHélène Cixous was born in Algeria in 1937, and has been pr<strong>of</strong>essor <strong>of</strong> English literatureat the University <strong>of</strong> Paris <strong>VIII</strong> at Vincennes, located in Saint-Denis, since 1968. It is withCixous that the notion <strong>of</strong> écriture féminine (feminine, or female, writing) is most readilyassociated. Through her explorations <strong>of</strong> the relationship between sexuality and writing,mostly in her texts <strong>of</strong> the 1970s (which deliberately defy classification as poetry ortheory), she tries to encourage the scripting <strong>of</strong> Lacan’s forbidden feminine jouissance.While she seems to pay even less heed to the theoretical demands <strong>of</strong> philosophical rigourand clarity than Kristeva and Irigaray, she elaborates on the construction and uncovering<strong>of</strong> feminine sexual pleasure as it might be given shape in a subversive practice <strong>of</strong> writing,but the implicit background is Derrida’s analysis <strong>of</strong> différance and the poststructuralistproblematizing <strong>of</strong> logos, power and knowledge. Cixous takes up the notion <strong>of</strong> thefeminine as symbolically other, plural and multivocal, positioned as such by the classicaloppositions which classify and divide values. Her texts may be said to work at the knotswhich tie such an economy in place, loosening the rigidity <strong>of</strong> dualisms to free theexpression <strong>of</strong> heterogeneity. Through the exploration <strong>of</strong> this more open and fluid form <strong>of</strong>difference, from the strategic standpoint <strong>of</strong> a woman ‘lost’ in her corporeal sexuality, herdreams <strong>of</strong> her marginalized, inessential nature, Cixous believes that the fixity <strong>of</strong> ourpresent conceptual schema will be shaken. Her work initiates and celebrates the


French feminist philosophy 356experiential dimensions <strong>of</strong> feminine desire. She raids classical literature to uncover ‘lostvoices’ through reinvesting in powerful figures—mothers, mythical heroines, goddessesand the ecstatic and excessive aspects <strong>of</strong> a sexual ‘dark continent’. It is also an attempt toenrich a particular vocabulary coextensive with ‘the feminine’; poetic and allusive,metaphorical and ‘incandescent’. Rather than merely replicating the static, fragmented orsilenced position she has diagnosed women as occupying, her texts attempt to transgressthese positions by ‘overloading’ them, and lyrically exploding them. The notions <strong>of</strong>‘spending’ and ‘the gift’ are significant in her piece ‘Sorties’: 83 showing up an economy<strong>of</strong> exchange to be one <strong>of</strong> exploitation by miming its carefully monitored limits to thepoint <strong>of</strong> parody is for Cixous a political and transgressive activity.There are many problematic aspects <strong>of</strong> Cixous’ work—she may seem to lapse into theversions <strong>of</strong> women’s bodies she was critical <strong>of</strong>, or into a fascination with her ownfabulous textual labyrinths at the expense <strong>of</strong> more explicit political engagement. She doesextricate herself from any collective feminism which she believes to be a quest forrecognition and legitimation in an inadequately interrogated patriarchal economy and so a‘reactionary ideology’. It is also unclear whether Cixous is celebrating and uncoveringthe quintessential ‘feminine’ in her work, or if she is demonstrating a strategy which allwomen are invited to explore for themselves. The use <strong>of</strong> ‘we’ for women in her texts isan ambivalent point in this regard. However, the celebratory tone <strong>of</strong> her texts isinspirational and creative: ‘a laughter that breaks out, overflows, a humour no one wouldexpect to find in a woman… she who laughs last. And her first laugh is at herself.’ 84CONCLUSIONThe philosophical paradox <strong>of</strong> scepticism bears, I think, many similarities to feminist workin philosophy. ‘Scepticism may be understood as an expression <strong>of</strong> an extreme form <strong>of</strong>dissatisfaction with the logos in its philosophical form. Scepticism tries to evadephilosophy; but is there any logos-free space where it could settle to enjoy a humanlife?’ 85 If thinking is continually involved in movements <strong>of</strong> imprisonment, encompassingand repulsing, ‘Which experiences, adventures <strong>of</strong> the mind, or events <strong>of</strong> history do notpermit the gathering <strong>of</strong> logos to enclose them within its horizons?’ 86 How are we to finda strategy <strong>of</strong> critique which is not merely repetition <strong>of</strong> the same, but manages to avoid theinfinite regress <strong>of</strong> a scepticism forced to be sceptical <strong>of</strong> its own position? This is theproblematic which faces those thinkers who seek to reproach philosophy for what it hasrepressed or left out, and to reproach it in the name <strong>of</strong> a legitimate cause, and yet thisreproach contaminates the basis <strong>of</strong> an appeal to legitimation in reproaching philosophy.How to dodge philosophical containment while at the same time utilizing its resources toarticulate otherness? Engaging in this ‘impossible’ enterprise is to <strong>of</strong>fer an ethicalreproach to philosophy, the conditions <strong>of</strong> this reproach being a determination to avoidquietism.The questioning <strong>of</strong> identity belongs to an immense volume <strong>of</strong> work which aims touncover the conflation <strong>of</strong> singularity, ontology and presence, and the connection to thepower structures which not only create such formations but maintain them as the mostsuccessful means <strong>of</strong> sustaining the status quo. The totalitarian thinking which occludes


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 357difference in the name <strong>of</strong> a more coherent theorization <strong>of</strong> unity is not confined to thosepolitical regimes more immediately identifiable as repressive, but also to the liberalframework which argues for equality at the expense <strong>of</strong> celebrating difference. If feministtheory has been concerned to question identity in the context <strong>of</strong> postmodernist thinking, itis in order to analyse the alignment <strong>of</strong> presence and power. But the recent ‘return to thesubject’ in philosophical theory, which is heralded as the chance to reconsider questions<strong>of</strong> ethics and political responsibility now that subjectivity has been unsettled from itscomplacent fixity, is not really new to feminist theory, in that feminism is in generalseeking an effective version <strong>of</strong> agency to be able to conduct a struggle, whether reformistor revolutionary.NOTES1 See M.E.Waite (ed.) [12.87].2 In [12.85], 169, G.Spivak suggests that the pr<strong>of</strong>essional woman philosopher may becomparable to Athena: ‘Women armed with deconstruction must be aware <strong>of</strong> becomingAthenas, uncontaminated by the womb, sprung in armour from the father’s forehead’.3 A.Schopenhauer, ‘On Women’, in [12.84], 102–13.4 I.Kant [12.69].5 See some <strong>of</strong> the contributors to [12.87].6 Many feminists have drawn attention to masculine traits in philosophy (see [12.73, 12–80]for examples) although this does not <strong>of</strong>ten extend so far as to see philosophy as all andirredeemably ‘male’.7 I have tried to include a representative sample <strong>of</strong> feminist philosophers in the Bibliography.8 See E.Young-Bruehl [12.93], and C.Herman, ‘Women in Space and Time’, in E.Marks andI.de Courtivron (eds), New French Feminisms, an Anthology (Brighton: Harvester, 1980), pp.168–74, for just two examples <strong>of</strong> feminist readings <strong>of</strong> Arendt and Weil.9 See A.Jardine [12.68], R.Braidotti [12.50] or E.Grosz [12.65] for a mapping <strong>of</strong> the influence<strong>of</strong> such thinkers on contemporary feminist theory.10 The works cited in note 9 also give examples <strong>of</strong> critiques <strong>of</strong> these thinkers. See also A.Nye[12.79].11 J.Baudrillard [12.46], 8.12 Ibid., p. 9.13 See J.Derrida [12.57], J.-F.Lyotard, ‘One <strong>of</strong> the Things at Stake in Women’s Struggles’, inA.Benjamin (ed.), The Lyotard Reader (Oxford: Blackwell, 1989), pp. 111–21, or G.Deleuze[12.57] for examples <strong>of</strong> the fragmentation and dispersal <strong>of</strong> identity being linked to thefeminine.14 Texts dealing with Sartre’s and de Beauvoir’s relationship are extensive: see for exampleM.Le Doeuff’s discussion in Hipparchia’s Choice [12.43]. Many <strong>of</strong> the themes discussedabove are given shape in de Beauvoir’s novels, for example in The Woman Destroyed, or inher short stories, When the Things <strong>of</strong> the Spirit Come First. Portraits <strong>of</strong> women strugglingwith social contradictions and moral dilemmas and attempting, succeeding or failing to asserttheir freedom, complement her more theoretical work on this topic. Such themes are alsogiven poignant expression in her autobiography, from ‘dutiful daughter’ to ‘old age’.15 S.de Beauvoir [12.27].16 J.-P.Sartre, Being and Nothingness, trans. H.Barnes (London: Methuen, 1968).


French feminist philosophy 35817 S.de Beauvoir The Second Sex [12.28].18 Ibid., p. 13.19 M.Le Doeuff, Hipparchia’s Choice [12.43], 58.20 De Beauvoir, The Second Sex [12.28], 15.21 Ibid., p. 28.22 Ibid., p. 29.23 Ibid., p. 16.24 Ibid., pp. 35–69.25 Ibid., p. 62.26 Ibid., p. 57.27 See G.Lloyd [12.73], 102, for a discussion <strong>of</strong> this paradox in relation to de Beauvoir.28 De Beauvoir, The Second Sex [12.28], 249.29 Ibid., p. 66. De Beauvoir also considers a Marxist analysis <strong>of</strong> sexual difference, whichattributes inequalities to economic conditions and the historical development andtransmission <strong>of</strong> such conditions. The division <strong>of</strong> labour which leads to the unequaldistribution <strong>of</strong> property and wealth still does not explain why women should be seen assecondary, confined to the home and themselves valued as part <strong>of</strong> property. Sexual differencecuts across all class distinctions, yet in each class women are seen as subordinate. Althoughshe agrees that at some indeterminate moment in history women became the other for men,and, once occupying a secondary role, continued to perpetuate such conditions through thecenturies, she rejects the idea that the abolition <strong>of</strong> the family will resolve women’ssubordination, since without a fuller account <strong>of</strong> interpersonal relations (how dominant andsubordinate roles between individuals come about), she argues, the inequalities may continueto exist.30 See J.Pilardi, ‘Female Eroticism in the Works <strong>of</strong> Simone de Beauvoir’, in J. Allen andI.M.Young (eds) [12.44], 18–34. Another aspect <strong>of</strong> sexuality which de Beauvoir explores isthe psycho-physical development <strong>of</strong> an individual in the context <strong>of</strong> the family. She agreeswith Freud that women’s positioning as subordinate is a consequence <strong>of</strong> her own emotionaland sexual development, as a woman she identifies with or reacts against certain models <strong>of</strong>sexuality and incorporates such attitudes into her own self-understanding. But she alsoquestions the universality <strong>of</strong> the Freudian scheme, being suspicious <strong>of</strong> the apparentinevitability with which men and women achieve their sexual identity in Freud’s view,motivated by drives and prohibitions into particular socially determined roles, mainlybecause it represents an encroachment on her valorization <strong>of</strong> freedom.31 See C.Duchen [12.61] for a clear historical perspective on the shifts in thinking.32 See E.Grosz [12.66].33 See J.Mitchell and J.Rose (eds) [12.76], or J.Gallop [12.63], for discussions <strong>of</strong> this influence.Feminist theory influenced by ego-psychology and object relations psychoanalysis, such asthe work <strong>of</strong> Jessica Benjamin or Nancy Chodorow ([12.48], [12.54]) differs, in that it tends toanalyse patterns <strong>of</strong> identification and difference or relations <strong>of</strong> dominance and submissionbetween individuals, rather than the fragmented individual <strong>of</strong> Lacanian theory.34 J.Rose, cited in G.C.Spivak, ‘Feminism and Deconstruction, Again: NegotiatingUnacknowledged Maculinism’, in T.Brennan (ed.) [12.51], 206–24.35 Ibid.36 J.Mitchell and J.Rose (eds) [12.76], 166.37 Ibid., p. 147.38 Although this is Freud’s phrase, it is <strong>of</strong>ten used to describe feminist theory influenced bypsychoanalysis.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 35939 See J.Lechte [12.72] for an account <strong>of</strong> Kristeva’s work and influences upon her.40 J.Kristeva, Revolution in Poetic Language [12.35], Only the first part is translated. The poetsshe discusses in the later section are Lautréamont and Mallarmé.41 Ibid., p. 22.42 See Lechte [12.72], 32, where he writes: ‘On 7 November 1955, Jacques Lacan—doctor <strong>of</strong>medicine, psychoanalyst, friend <strong>of</strong> surrealism—“<strong>of</strong>ficially” announced his famous “return toFreud” in a paper given at a neuro-psychiatric clinic in Vienna.’ See J.Lacan, The FreudianThing, or the Meaning <strong>of</strong> the Return to Freud in Psychoanalysis’ in [12.71], 114–45.43 Lacan writes: ‘It is the name-<strong>of</strong>-the-father that we must recognize as the support <strong>of</strong> thesymbolic function, which from the dawn <strong>of</strong> history has identified his person with the figure<strong>of</strong> the law’ [12.71], 67.44 Kristeva, Revolution in Poetic Language [12.35], 25.45 Ibid.46 Ibid.47 Ibid., p. 26.48 Kristeva, About Chinese Women [12.36], 35.49 Ibid., p. 36.50 Ibid., p. 16.51 Ibid., p. 35.52 Kristeva ‘Stabat Mater’ in Tales <strong>of</strong> Love [12.40], and in The Kristeva Reader [12.41].Quotations from The Kristeva Reader.53 Ibid., p. 185.54 M.Warner [12.88].55 Kristeva ‘Stabat Mater’, in [12.40], 162.56 R.Braidotti [12.50], 219. In contrast to the so-called ‘feminists <strong>of</strong> difference’ stand thosethinkers who see all identity as social construction, and as a consequence see the notion <strong>of</strong>sexual difference as constructed. Such thinkers as Monique Plaza and Christine Delphyreturn to the ground <strong>of</strong> materialist/ humanist thinking because they see the adoption <strong>of</strong> sexualdifference and ‘the language <strong>of</strong> the female body’ as too hasty or naive, in the face <strong>of</strong> thematerial and social oppression which women face. While it may be timely to remindphilosophy <strong>of</strong> such concerns, overall the rejection <strong>of</strong> difference may lead once again to themarginalization or postponement <strong>of</strong> issues about sexual difference, or to very specific orlocalized areas <strong>of</strong> concern. Monique Wittig is perhaps an example <strong>of</strong> this approach. Sherejects all binarisms <strong>of</strong> male/female or masculine/ feminine, and opts for a ‘third’ category,the lesbian, which, in her terms, involves advancing a strategic utopia and utilizing guerrillatypetactics <strong>of</strong> subversion. Opting out or refusing any given terms may ultimately render thistactic less than effective.57 L.Irigaray, Parler n’est jamais neutre [12.12].58 L.Irigaray ‘This Sex Which is Not One’, in This Sex Which is Not One [12.34], 23–33.Reprinted from Marks and de Courtivron (eds) (note 8), pp. 99–106.59 L.Irigaray, Ethique de la différence sexuelle [12.11]. First part translated in T. Moi (ed)[12.78] as ‘Sexual difference’, pp. 118–32. Quotes from translation.60 Ibid., p. 118.61 Irigaray, This Sex [12.34], 78.62 Irigaray, ‘Sexual difference’ (note 59), p. 119.63 Irigaray, This Sex [12.34], 149.64 Ibid., p. 159.65 Ibid., p. 150.


French feminist philosophy 36066 Ibid., p. 74.67 L.Irigaray, Speculum <strong>of</strong> the Other Woman [12.33]. See also Marine Lover <strong>of</strong> FriedrichNietzsche [12.31] and L’oubli de l’air chez Martin Heidegger [12.10].68 The title <strong>of</strong> the first section <strong>of</strong> Speculum <strong>of</strong> the Other Woman.69 Irigaray, ‘Sexual difference’ (note 59), p. 122.70 L.Irigaray, ‘Divine Women’, Sydney: Local Consumption Occasional Papers 8, trans.S.Muecke, from Sexes et parentés [12.13].71 Irigaray, This Sex [12.34], 76.72 Ibid., p. 154.73 Ibid., p. 155.74 Irigaray takes this notion from Descartes, The Passions <strong>of</strong> the Soul, article 53 in ThePhilosophical Writings <strong>of</strong> Descartes, vol I, trans. J.Cottingham et al., Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press, 1985, p. 350.75 See L.Irigaray, Sexes et parentés [12.13], Je, Tu, Nous, pour une culture de la différence[12.15] and Le Temps de la différence: pour une révolution pacifique [12.14] for examples <strong>of</strong>Irigaray’s recent concerns. See The Irigaray Reader [12.32] for representative translations,particularly pp. 157–218.76 See Ethique de la difference sexuelle [12.11] or Elemental Passions [12.29] for examples.77 See M.Whitford’s excellent and comprehensive study [12.90] and her introduction to TheIrigaray Reader [12.32] where she writes: ‘Holding the tension here, walking this particulartightrope, is what makes her work so challenging and so insistent’ (p. 13). See alsoR.Braidotti [12.50], 262–3.78 M.Le Doeuff, ‘Women and <strong>Philosophy</strong>’ in T.Moi (ed.) [12.78], 195, revised from versionprinted in Radical <strong>Philosophy</strong>, 17 (summer 1977):2–11. Originally from The PhilosophicalImaginary [12.42].79 Ibid., p. 196.80 M.Le Doeuff, Hipparchia’s Choice [12.43].81 R.Braidotti [12.50], 197.82 See G.Lloyd [12.73] and L.Code, ‘Experience, Knowledge and Responsibility’, inM.Griffiths and M.Whitford (eds) [12.64], 187–204.83 H.Cixous, ‘Sorties’ in Marks and de Courtivron (eds) (note 8), pp. 90–8.84 H.Cixous, ‘Castration or Decapitation?’ [12.24], 55.85 A.Peperzak, ‘Presentation’, in R.Bernasconi and S.Critchley (eds) [12.49], 51–66 (p. 54).86 Ibid., p. 53.SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHYPrimary texts by de Beauvoir, Kristeva, Irigaray, Le Doeuff, Cixous12.1 Cixous, H. ‘Le Rire de la Méduse’, L’Arc (Simone de Beauvoir), 61 (1975): 39–54.12.2 Cixous, H. ‘Le Sexe ou la tête?’ Cahiers du GRIF, 13 (1976):5–15.12.3 Cixous, H. La Jeune Née (en collaboration avec C.Clément), Paris: Union Généraled’Editions, 10/18, 1975.12.4 de Beauvoir, S. Pour une morale de l’ambiguité, Paris: Gallimard, 1948.12.5 de Beauvoir, S. Le Deuxième sexe, Paris: Gallimard, 1949.12.6 Irigaray, L. Speculum de l’autre femme, Paris, Editions de Minuit, 1974.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 36112.7 Irigaray, L. Ce Sexe qui n’en est pas un, Paris, Editions de Minuit, 1977.12.8 Irigaray, L. Amante marine, de Friedrich Nietzsche, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1980.12.9 Irigaray, L. Passions élémentaires, Paris: Editions de minuit, 1982.12.10 Irigaray, L. L’oubli de l’air chez Martin Heidegger, Paris: Editions de Minuit,1983.12.11 Irigaray, L. Ethique de la différence sexuelle, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1984.12.12 Irigaray, L. Parler n’est jamais neutre, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1986.12.13 Irigaray, L. Sexes et parentés, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1987.12.14 Irigaray, L. Le Temps de la différence: pour une révolution pacifique, Paris:Librairie Générale Française/Livre de Poche, 1989.12.15 Irigaray, L. Je, Tu, Nous, pour une culture de la différence, Paris: Grasset, 1990.12.16 Kristeva, J. La révolution du langage poétique; l’avant-garde à la fin du XIXesiècle, Lautréamont et Mallarmé, Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1974.12.17 Kristeva, J. Des chinoises, Paris: Editions des Femmes, 1974.12.18 Kristeva, J. Polylogue, Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1977.12.19 Kristeva, J. ‘Le Temps des femmes’, 33/44, Cahiers de recherche des sciencestextes et documents, 5 (winter 1979):5–19.12.20 Kristeva, J. Histoires d’amour, Paris: Denoel, 1983 and Gallimard, 1985.12.21 Le Doeuff, M. L’Imaginaire philosophique, Paris: Payot, 1980.12.22 Le Doeuff, M. L’Etude et le rouet, Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1989.Translations12.23 Cixous, H. ‘The Laugh <strong>of</strong> the Medusa’, trans. K. and P.Cohn, in E. Marks and I.deCourtivron (eds) New French Feminisms, Brighton: Harvester, 1980, pp. 254–64.Reprinted from Signs, 1 (summer 1976): 875–99.12.24 Cixous, H. ‘Castration or Decapitation?’, trans. A.Kuhn, Signs, 7 (1981): 36–55.12.25 Cixous, H. (with C.Clément) The Newly Born Woman, trans. B.Wing, Theory and<strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Literature Series 24, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1986.12.26 Extract from ‘Sorties’ in E.Marks and I.de Courtivron (eds) New FrenchFeminisms, Brighton: Harvester, 1980, pp. 90–8.12.27 de Beauvoir, S. Ethics <strong>of</strong> Ambiguity, trans. B.Frechtman, Secancus: Citadel Press1980.12.28 de Beauvoir, S. The Second Sex, trans. H.M.Parshley, Harmondsworth: Penguin,1978.12.29 Irigaray L. Elemental Passions, trans. J.Collie and J.Still, London: Athlone Press,1992.12.30 Irigaray, L. The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Sexual Difference, trans. C.Burke, Ithaca: CornellUniversity Press, forthcoming.12.31 Irigaray, L. Marine Lover <strong>of</strong> Friedrich Nietzsche, trans. G.C.Gill, New York:Columbia University Press, 1991.12.32 Irigaray, L. The Irigaray Reader, ed. M.Whitford, trans. D.Macey et al., Oxford:Blackwell, 1992.12.33 Irigaray, L. Speculum <strong>of</strong> the Other Woman, trans. G.C.Gill, Ithaca: CornellUniversity Press, 1985.


French feminist philosophy 36212.34 Irigaray, L. This Sex Which is Not One, trans. C.Porter and C.Burke, Ithaca:Cornell University Press, 1985.12.35 Kristeva, J. Revolution in Poetic Language, trans. M.Waller, New York: ColumbiaUniversity Press, 1984 (first part translated only).12.36 Kristeva, J. About Chinese Women, trans. A.Barrows, New York and London:Marion Boyars, 1977.12.37 Kristeva, J. Desire in Language: a Semiotic Approach to Literature and Art, trans.S.Gora, A.Jardine, and L.Roudiez, Oxford: Blackwell, 1984 (8 essays <strong>of</strong> 20 translated).12.38 Kristeva, J. ‘Women’s Time’, Signs 7: 1 (autumn 1981): 13–55. Reprinted inN.O.Keohane, M.Z.Rosaldo, and B.G.Gelpi (eds), Feminist Theory: A Critique <strong>of</strong>Ideology, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1982 and in [12.41], pp. 187–214.12.39 Kristeva, J. ‘Julia Kristeva in Conversation with Rosalind Coward’, in ICADocument: Desire, London: ICA, 1984, pp. 22–7.12.40 Kristeva, J. Tales <strong>of</strong> Love, trans. L.S.Roudiez, New York: Columbia UniversityPress, 1987.12.41 Kristeva, J. The Kristeva Reader, ed. with an introduction by T.Moi, Oxford:Blackwell, 1986.12.42 Le Doeuff, M. The Philosophical Imaginary, trans. C.Gordon, London: Athlone,1986.12.43 Le Doeuff, M. Hipparchia’s Choice: An Essay Concerning Women, <strong>Philosophy</strong>etc., trans. T.Selous, Oxford: Blackwell, 1991.Other works and criticisms12.44 Allen, J. and Young, I.M. (eds) The Thinking Muse: Feminism and Modern French<strong>Philosophy</strong>, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1989.12.45 Atack, M. ‘The Other; Feminist’, Paragraph, 8 (Oct. 1986):25–39.12.46 Baudrillard, J. Seduction, trans. B.Singer, London: Macmillan, 1990 (De laseduction, Paris: Galilée, 1979).12.47 Benhabib, S. and Cornell, D. (eds) Feminism as Critique, Oxford: Blackwell, 1987.12.48 Benjamin, J. The Bonds <strong>of</strong> Love: Psychoanalysis, Feminism and the Problem <strong>of</strong>Domination, London: Virago, 1990.12.49 Bernasconi, R. and Critchley, S. (eds) Re-reading Levinas, Bloomington: IndianaUniversity Press, 1991.12.50 Braidotti, R. Patterns <strong>of</strong> Dissonance: A Study <strong>of</strong> Women in Contemporary<strong>Philosophy</strong>, London: Polity Press, 1991.12.51 Brennan, T. (ed.) Between Feminism and Psychoanalysis, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>,1989.12.52 Burke, C. ‘Romancing the Philosophers: Luce Irigaray’, in D.Hunter (ed.)Seduction and Theory; Feminist Readings on Representation and Rhetoric, Chicago:University <strong>of</strong> Illinois Press, 1981, pp. 226–40.12.53 Butler, J. Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion <strong>of</strong> Identity, London:<strong>Routledge</strong>, 1990.12.54 Chodorow, N. The Reproduction <strong>of</strong> Mothering: Psychoanalysis and the Sociology<strong>of</strong> Gender, Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong> California Press, 1978.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 36312.55 Conley, V.A. Hélène Cixous: Writing the Feminine, Lincoln: University <strong>of</strong>Nebraska Press, 1984.12.56 Deleuze, G. Différence et répétition, Paris: PUF, 1969.12.57 Derrida, J. Eperons/Spurs, the styles <strong>of</strong> Nietzsche, trans. B.Harlow, Chicago:University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1978.12.58 Derrida, J. ‘Women in the Beehive: An Interview with Jacques Derrida’,Subjects/Objects, 2 (1984). Reprinted in A.Jardine and P.Smith (eds) Men inFeminism, London: Methuen, 1987.12.59 Derrida, J. and Conley, V.A. ‘Voice ii’, Boundary 2, 12:2 (1984):180–6.12.60 Derrida, J. and McDonald, C.V. ‘Choreographies’, Diacritics, 12 (summer,1982):66–76.12.61 Duchen, C. Feminism in France from May ’68 to Mitterand, London: <strong>Routledge</strong> &Kegan Paul, 1986.12.62 Eisenstein, H. and Jardine, A. (eds) The Future <strong>of</strong> Difference Boston: G.K. Hall,1980.12.63 Gallop, J. Feminism and Psychoanalysis: The Daughter’s Seduction, London:Macmillan, 1982.12.64 Griffiths, M., and Whitford, M. (eds) Feminist Perspectives in <strong>Philosophy</strong>,London: Macmillan, 1988.12.65 Grosz, E. Sexual Subversions, Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 1989.12.66 Grosz, E. Jacques Lacan: A Feminist Introduction, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1990.12.67 Harding, S. and Hintikka, M. Discovering Reality: Feminist Perspectives onEpistemology, Metaphysics, Methodology and the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Science, Dordrecht:Reidel, 1983.12.68 Jardine, A. Gynesis. Configurations <strong>of</strong> Women and Modernity, Ithaca: CornellUniversity Press, 1985.12.69 Kant, I. ‘Of the Distinction <strong>of</strong> the Beautiful and the Sublime in the Inter-relations<strong>of</strong> the Sexes’, in Observations on the Feeling <strong>of</strong> the Beautiful and the Sublime, trans.J.T.Goldthwaite (1763) Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong> California Press, 1960.12.70 K<strong>of</strong>man, S. The Enigma <strong>of</strong> Woman: Women in Freud’s Writing, Ithaca: CornellUniversity Press, 1985.12.71 Lacan, J. Ecrits: A Selection, trans. A.Sheridan, London: Tavistock, 1977.12.72 Lechte, J. Julia Kristeva, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1991.12.73 Lloyd, G. The Man <strong>of</strong> Reason. ‘Male’ and ‘Female’ in Western <strong>Philosophy</strong>,London: Macmillan, 1984.12.74 Miller, N.K. (ed.) The Poetics <strong>of</strong> Gender, New York, Columbia University Press,1986.12.75 Mitchell, J. Psychoanalysis and Feminism, Harmondsworth: Pelican, 1974.12.76 Mitchell, J. and Rose, J. (eds) Feminine Sexuality: Jacques Lacan and the EcoleFreudienne, trans. J.Rose, London: Macmillan, 1985.12.77 Moi, T. Sexual/Textual Politics: Feminist Literary Theory, London: Methuen,1985.12.78 Moi, T. (ed.) French Feminist Thought: A Reader, Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1988.12.79 Nye, A. Feminist Theory and the Philosophies <strong>of</strong> Man, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1988.12.80 Okin, S.M. Women in Western Political Thought, Princeton: Princeton University


French feminist philosophy 364Press, 1979.12.81 Pateman, C. The Sexual Contract, Cambridge: Polity Press, 1988.12.82 Pateman, C. The Disorder <strong>of</strong> Women: Democracy, Feminism and Political Theory,Cambridge: Polity Press, 1990.12.83 Schiach, M. Hélène Cixous: A Politics <strong>of</strong> Writing, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1991.12.84 Schopenhauer, A. The Essential Schopenhauer, London: Unwin Books, 1962.12.85 Spivak, G.C. ‘Displacement and the Discourse <strong>of</strong> Woman’, in M.Krupnick (ed.)Displacement: Derrida and After, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1983, pp.169–91.12.86 Vetterling-Braggin, M., Elliston, F., and English, J. (eds) Feminism and<strong>Philosophy</strong>, Totowa: Littlefield, Adams & Co., 1977.12.87 Waite, M.E. (ed.) A <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Women Philosophers, 4 volumes, The Hague:Martinus Nijh<strong>of</strong>f, 1987.12.88 Warner, M. Alone <strong>of</strong> All Her Sex, London: Picador, 1981.12.89 White, A. ‘L’Eclatement du sujet: The Theoretical Work <strong>of</strong> Julia Kristeva’,Birmingham Centre for Contemporary Cultural Studies, Stencilled Occasional Paper49, 1977.12.90 Whitford, M. Luce Irigaray: <strong>Philosophy</strong> in the Feminine, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>,1991.12.91 Wilcox, H., McWatters, K., Thompson, A. and Williams, R. (eds) The Body andthe Text: Hélène Cixous, Reading and Teaching, London: Harvester, 1990.12.92 Wittig, M. The Lesbian Body, trans. Peter Owen, New York: Avon, 1986 [LeCorps lesbien, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1973].12.93 Young-Bruehl, E. Mind and the Body Politic, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1988.


CHAPTER 13Deconstruction and DerridaSimon Critchley and Timothy MooneyDERRIDIAN DECONSTRUCTION 1In the last twenty-five years or so, particularly in the English-speaking world, nophilosopher has attracted more notoriety, controversy and misunderstanding than JacquesDerrida. Caricatural summaries <strong>of</strong> deconstruction and ‘deconstructionism’ abound inintroductory textbooks, newspaper articles, radio and television programmes. The word‘deconstruction’ has found a home in everyday language, and positions pro and contraDerrida are taken up and held with a vehemence that is difficult for the uninitiated tograsp. ‘Derrida’ and ‘deconstruction’ have become integral terms in the debate on themeaning <strong>of</strong> western culture in the late twentieth century. However, in this chapter I wouldlike to take a step back from the sound and fury <strong>of</strong> the cultural debate around Derrida andsketch, as clearly and simply as possible, what appears to take place in deconstruction,that is to say, what is the method <strong>of</strong> reading employed by Derrida and what, in brief, arethe consequences <strong>of</strong> the latter for the philosophical tradition.What is deconstruction? Or, as it is perhaps initially easier to give a negative responseto this question, what is not deconstruction? Employing a short text <strong>of</strong> Derrida written in1983 and published in 1985, ‘Letter to a Japanese Friend’, which was specifically writtenin order to aid the possible translation <strong>of</strong> the word déconstruction into Japanese, one canquickly sketch some important caveats. First, Derrida insists that deconstruction is notnegative; it is not a process <strong>of</strong> demolition (which does not automatically entail thatdeconstruction is positive—[13.17], 390). Furthermore, deconstruction needs to besharply distinguished from analysis, which presupposes a reduction <strong>of</strong> entities to theirsimple or essential elements, elements which themselves would stand in need <strong>of</strong>deconstruction. Crucially, deconstruction is not critique, either in the general or Kantiansense; Derrida writes, ‘The instance <strong>of</strong> the krinein or <strong>of</strong> krisis (decision, choice,judgement, discernment) is itself, as is moreover the entire apparatus <strong>of</strong> transcendentalcritique, one <strong>of</strong> the essential “themes” or “objects” <strong>of</strong> deconstruction’ ([13.17], 390).Similarly, deconstruction is not a method or way that can be followed in the activity <strong>of</strong>interpretation. This is also to say that deconstruction cannot be reduced to being amethodology (amongst competing methodologies) in the human or natural sciences, orbecoming a technical procedure assimilable by academics and taught in educationalinstitutions ([13.17], 390–1). In addition, deconstruction is not an act produced andcommanded by a subject, nor is it an operation that sets to work on a text or aninstitution. Derrida concludes the ‘Letter’ characteristically by writing, ‘Whatdeconstruction is not? But everything! What is deconstruction? But nothing!’ ([13.17],392). All ontological statements <strong>of</strong> the form ‘deconstruction is x’ miss the point a priori,


Deconstruction and derrida 366for it is precisely the ontological presuppositions <strong>of</strong> the copula that provide one <strong>of</strong> theenduring ‘themes’ <strong>of</strong> deconstruction. Rather, carefully avoiding the verb ‘to be’, Derridaclaims that deconstruction takes place (‘a lieu’), and that it does so wherever there ‘is’something (‘où il y a quelque chose’). Such is the enigma (Derrida’s word—[13.17], 391)<strong>of</strong> deconstruction: it cannot be defined and therefore resists translation; it is not an entityor a thing, it is not univocal or unitary. Derrida writes, paying careful attention toreflexivity <strong>of</strong> the statement, ‘Ça se déconstruit’ (‘It deconstructs itself, the Ça being botha translation <strong>of</strong> Es—the id, the unconscious—and a homophone for Sa—‘Savoir Absolu’,Absolute Knowing—[13.17], 391). It deconstructs itself wherever something takes place.However, such a formulation, although subtle and faithful, risks being unhelpfulbecause <strong>of</strong> its generality. Having taken on board the negative caveats in the problem <strong>of</strong>defining deconstruction, I should now like to assemble a more ‘constructivist’ account <strong>of</strong>deconstruction by asking the question: how does deconstruction take place? Derridaaddressed this question concisely and lucidly in Of Grammatology (1967) [13.4, 13.29],in a chapter entitled, ‘The Exorbitant. Question <strong>of</strong> Method’. The first essential point tomake, however, trivial it may seem, is that deconstruction is always the deconstruction <strong>of</strong>a text. Derrida’s thinking is always thinking about a text, from which flows the obviouscorollary that deconstruction is always engaged in a reading <strong>of</strong> a text. The way <strong>of</strong>deconstruction is always opened through reading, what Derrida calls ‘a first task, themost elementary <strong>of</strong> tasks’ ([13.21], 35; [13.43], 41). Any thinking that is primarilyconcerned with reading will clearly be dependent upon the text that is being read. Thus,Derrida’s readings are parasitic because they are close readings <strong>of</strong> texts that draw theirsustenance from within the flesh <strong>of</strong> the host. What takes place in deconstruction isreading, and, I shall argue, what distinguishes deconstruction as a textual practice isdouble reading. That is to say, a reading that interlaces at least two motifs or layers <strong>of</strong>reading, most <strong>of</strong>ten by first repeating what Derrida calls ‘the dominantinterpretation’ ([13.22], 265; [13.44], 143) <strong>of</strong> a text in the guise <strong>of</strong> a commentary, andsecond, within and through this repetition, by leaving the order <strong>of</strong> commentary andopening a text up to the blind spots or ellipses within the dominant interpretation.Now, when Derrida reads Rousseau, he organizes his reading around the wordsupplément. It is claimed that this word is the ‘blind spot’ (tâche aveugle [13.4], 234;[13.29], 163) in Rousseau’s text, a word which he employs but whose logic is veiled tohim. 2 Derrida’s reading <strong>of</strong> Rousseau traces the logic <strong>of</strong> this supplement, a logic whichallows Rousseau’s text to slip from the grip <strong>of</strong> its intentions and achieve a textualposition that is other than the logocentric conceptuality that Rousseau intended to affirm.Thus, Derrida’s reading <strong>of</strong> Rousseau occupies the space between the writer’s intentionsand the text, or between what a writer commands and fails to command in a language. Itis into this space between intentions and text that Derrida inserts what he calls the‘signifying structure’ ([13.4], 227; [13.29], 158) <strong>of</strong> the reading that constitutes part two <strong>of</strong>Of Grammatology.How does one perform a deconstructive reading? In ‘The Exorbitant. Question <strong>of</strong>Method’, Derrida pauses in his reading <strong>of</strong> Rousseau in order to justify his ownmethodological principles. The signifying structure <strong>of</strong> a deconstructive reading cannot, heclaims, simply be produced through the ‘respectful doubling <strong>of</strong> commentary’ ([13.4],227; [13.29], 158). Although Derrida is acutely aware <strong>of</strong> the exigencies <strong>of</strong> the traditional


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 367instruments <strong>of</strong> commentary as an ‘indispensable guardrail’ in critical production, heclaims that commentary ‘has always only protected, it has never opened, areading’ (ibid.).Here I would like to pause for a moment to consider what Derrida could possibly meanby the word ‘commentary’ in this context: is he claiming, oblivious to the achievements<strong>of</strong> Heideggerian and especially Gadamerian hermeneutics, that there can be a purecommentary or literal repetition <strong>of</strong> a text that is not already an interpretation? Derridacorrects and clarifies the above remarks from Of Grammatology in one <strong>of</strong> his responsesto Gerald Graff in the ‘Afterword’ to Limited Inc. Derrida writes that ‘the moment <strong>of</strong>what I called, perhaps clumsily, “doubling commentary” does not suppose the selfidentity<strong>of</strong> “meaning”, but a relative stability <strong>of</strong> the dominant interpretation (including theauto-interpretation) <strong>of</strong> the text being commented upon’. He continues, ‘perhaps I shouldnot have called it commentary’ ([13.22], 265; [13.44], 143). Thus, for Derrida, themoment <strong>of</strong> commentary refers to the reproducibility and stability <strong>of</strong> the dominantinterpretation <strong>of</strong> a text, for example the traditional logocentric reading (or misreading) <strong>of</strong>Rousseau. Commentary is always already interpretation and Derrida does not believe inthe possibility <strong>of</strong> a pure and simple repetition <strong>of</strong> a text. However, and this is a crucialcaveat, there is an unavoidable need for a competence in reading and writing such that thedominant interpretation <strong>of</strong> a text can be reconstructed as a necessary and indispensablelayer or moment <strong>of</strong> reading. ‘Otherwise’, Derrida writes, echoing a sentence from OfGrammatology effectively ignored by many <strong>of</strong> its opponents and proponents alike, ‘onecould indeed say just anything at all and I have never accepted saying, or beingencouraged to say, just anything at all’ ([13.22], 267; [13.44], 144–5; cf. [13.4], 227;[13.29], 158).Derrida goes on to argue that the moment <strong>of</strong> ‘commentary’ or <strong>of</strong> the dominantinterpretation reflects a minimal consensus concerning the intelligibility <strong>of</strong> texts,establishing what a given text means for a community <strong>of</strong> readers. Although such a searchfor consensus is ‘actively interpretive’, Derrida adds, ‘I believe that no research ispossible in a community (for example, academic) without the prior search for thisminimal consensus’ ([13.22], 269; [13.44], 146). Thus, although ‘commentary’ alonedoes not open a genuine reading, the latter is not possible without the moment <strong>of</strong>commentary, without a scholarly competence in reading, understanding and writing,without a knowledge <strong>of</strong> texts in their original languages (for example, Rousseau’s orDerrida’s French), without knowing the corpus <strong>of</strong> an author as a whole, without knowingthe multiple contexts—political, literary, philosophical, historical and so forth—whichdetermine a given text or are determined by that text. This is what one might call thedeconstructive duty <strong>of</strong> scholarship. I would go further and claim that there is ahermeneutic principle <strong>of</strong> fidelity—one might even say ‘an “ethico-political duty”’ (‘un“devoir éthico-politique”’) ([13.22], 249; [13.44], 135)—and a minimal working notion<strong>of</strong> truth as adaequatio underlying deconstructive reading, as its primary layer <strong>of</strong> reading.If deconstructive reading is to possess any demonstrative necessity, it is initially in virtue<strong>of</strong> how faithfully it reconstructs the dominant interpretation <strong>of</strong> a text in a layer <strong>of</strong>‘commentary’.To choose an extreme example, in Limited Inc. every word <strong>of</strong> Searle’s ‘Reiterating theDifferences: A Reply to Derrida’ is repeated or re-reiterated. Derrida clearly views this as


Deconstruction and derrida 368a way <strong>of</strong> responding responsibly to the brutality <strong>of</strong> Searle’s essay, which decides to‘insult’ ([13.22], 257; [13.44], 139) Derrida’s work—for example Searle writes <strong>of</strong>‘Derrida’s distressing penchant for saying things that are obviously false’ 3 rather thanengaging in the necessary critical demonstration. Thus, bearing the above qualificationsin mind, one might say a reading is true in the first instance to the extent that it faithfullyrepeats or corresponds to what is said in the text that is being commented upon. This isperhaps the reason why Derrida quotes at such length and with such regularity in hiswritings, and it is also the basis for his accusation <strong>of</strong> falsity against Habermas’s critique<strong>of</strong> his work in ‘Excursus on Leveling the Genre Distinction between <strong>Philosophy</strong> andLiterature’, where Derrida is not cited a single time ([13.22], 244; [13.44], 156). 4Returning to Of Grammatology, it is clear that although the respectful repetition <strong>of</strong> thetext which ‘commentary’ produces fails to open a reading, this in no way entails that oneshould then transgress the text by reductively relating it to some referent or signifiedoutside <strong>of</strong> textuality (i.e. historical material or the psychobiography <strong>of</strong> the author). Todetermine textual signifiers by referring them to a governing signified—for example, toread A la recherche in terms <strong>of</strong> Proust’s asthma—would be to give what Derrida calls atranscendent reading. The axial proposition <strong>of</strong> Of Grammatology is ‘il n’y a pas dehorstexte’ (‘there is no outside text’ [13.4], 227; [13.29], 158), or again, ‘il n’y a rien horsdu texte’ (‘there is nothing outside <strong>of</strong> the text’ [13.4], 233; [13.29], 163). One should beattentive to the nuanced difference between these two sentences: the first claims thatthere is no ‘outside-text’, no text outside; whilst the second claims that there is nothingoutside <strong>of</strong> the text, the text outside is nothing), implying by this that any reading thatrefers the text to some signified outside <strong>of</strong> textuality is illusory. Within the logocentricepoch, the textual signifier (and writing, inscription, the mark and the trace in general)has always been determined as secondary, as a fallen exteriority preceded by a signified.A deconstructive reading must, therefore, remain within the limits <strong>of</strong> textuality, hatchingits eggs within the flesh <strong>of</strong> the host.Thus, the ‘methodological’ problem for deconstruction becomes one <strong>of</strong> discoveringhow a reading can remain internal to the text and within the limits <strong>of</strong> textuality withoutmerely repeating the text in the manner <strong>of</strong> a ‘commentary’. To borrow the adverbialphrase with which Derrida describes his reading <strong>of</strong> Husserl, deconstructive reading mustmove à travers the text, traversing the space between a repetitive commentary and ametatextual interpretation, ‘Traversing [à travers] Husserl’s text, that is to say, in areading which cannot simply be that <strong>of</strong> commentary nor that <strong>of</strong> interpretation’ ([13.2],98; [13.27], 88). By opening up this textual space that is other to ‘commentary’ orinterpretation, a certain distance is created between deconstructive reading andlogocentric conceptuality. The signifying structure <strong>of</strong> a deconstructive reading traverses aspace that is other to logocentrism and which attempts eccentrically to exceed the orbit <strong>of</strong>its conceptual totality. In an important and explicit reference to the ‘goal’ or ‘aim’ <strong>of</strong>deconstruc-tion, Derrida writes, ‘We wanted to attain the point <strong>of</strong> a certain exterioritywith respect to the totality <strong>of</strong> the logocentric epoch. From this point <strong>of</strong> exteriority acertain deconstruction <strong>of</strong> this totality… could be broached [entamée]’ ([13–4], 231;[13.29], 161–2). It is from such a point <strong>of</strong> exteriority that deconstruction could cut into orpenetrate the totality, thereby displacing it. The goal <strong>of</strong> deconstruction, therefore, is tolocate a point <strong>of</strong> otherness within philosophical or logocentric conceptuality and then to


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 369deconstruct this conceptuality from that position <strong>of</strong> alterity.It is at this point that the concept <strong>of</strong> double reading can be properly understood. If thefirst moment <strong>of</strong> reading is the rigorous and scholarly reconstruction <strong>of</strong> the dominantinterpretation <strong>of</strong> a text, its vouloir-dire, its intended meaning, in the guise <strong>of</strong> acommentary, then the second moment <strong>of</strong> reading, in virtue <strong>of</strong> which deconstruction obeysa double necessity, is the destabilization <strong>of</strong> the stability <strong>of</strong> the dominant interpretation([13.22], 271; [13.44], 147). It is the movement <strong>of</strong> traversing the text which enables thereading to obtain a position <strong>of</strong> alterity or exteriority from where the text can bedeconstructed. The second moment brings the text into contradiction with itself, openingits intended meaning, its vouloir-dire, onto an alterity which goes against what the textwants to say or mean (‘ce que le texte veut dire’). Derrida <strong>of</strong>ten articulates this doublereading around a semantic ambivalence in the usage <strong>of</strong> a particular word, like supplémentin Rousseau, pharmakon in Plato or Geist in Heidegger. It is <strong>of</strong> absolutely crucialimportance that this second moment, that <strong>of</strong> alterity, should be shown to arise necessarilyout <strong>of</strong> the first moment <strong>of</strong> repetitive commentary. Derrida ventriloquizes this doublestructure through the mouth <strong>of</strong> Heidegger in De l’esprit: ‘That is why, without opposingmyself to that <strong>of</strong> which I am trying to think the most matinal possibility, without evenusing words other than those <strong>of</strong> the tradition, I follow the path <strong>of</strong> a repetition whichcrosses the path <strong>of</strong> the wholly other. The wholly other announces itself within the mostrigorous repetition ([13.18], 184).’ Thus, by following the path <strong>of</strong> a repetition, theWiederholung <strong>of</strong> a text or a tradition, one inevitably crosses the path <strong>of</strong> something whollyother, something that cannot be reduced to what the text or tradition wants to say. It is atthis point that the similarities between Derridian deconstruction and HeideggerianDestruktion become apparent. Indeed, Derrida initially employed the term déconstructionas an attempt to render into French the Heideggerian notions <strong>of</strong> Destruktion (de-struction,or non-negative de-structuring) and Abbau (demolition or, better, dismantling—[13.17],388). For the Heidegger <strong>of</strong> Being and Time, the working out or elaboration(Ausarbeitung) <strong>of</strong> the question <strong>of</strong> the meaning <strong>of</strong> Being does not become truly concreteuntil the ontological tradition—that is, the tradition that has forgotten the question <strong>of</strong>Being, and more precisely the temporal dimension <strong>of</strong> this question—has been completelyrepeated (wiederholen) and deconstructed. 5 In the 1962 lecture ‘Time and Being’, Abbauis presented (and presented, moreover, as a synonym for Destruktion) as the progressiveremoval <strong>of</strong> the concealing layers that have covered over the first Greek rending <strong>of</strong> Beingas presence (Anwesenheit). The repetition <strong>of</strong> the metaphysical tradition is a dismantlingthat reveals its unsaid as unsaid. 6 Returning to Derrida, it is the belonging together orinterlacing <strong>of</strong> these two moments or paths <strong>of</strong> reading—repetition and alterity—that bestdescribes the double gesture <strong>of</strong> deconstructive reading: the figure <strong>of</strong> the chiasmus.What takes place in deconstruction is double reading, that is, a form <strong>of</strong> reading thatobeys the double injunction for both repetition and the alterity that arises within thatrepetition. Deconstruction opens a reading by locating a moment <strong>of</strong> alterity within a text.In Derrida’s reading <strong>of</strong> Rousseau, the concept <strong>of</strong> the supplement is the lever that isemployed to show how Rousseau’s discourse is inscribed within the general text, adomain <strong>of</strong> textuality irreducible to logocentric conceptuality. In this way one can see howa moment <strong>of</strong> blindness in a logocentric text grants insight into an alterity that exceedslogocentrism. As Derrida remarks in an interview with Richard Kearney, ‘deconstruction


Deconstruction and derrida 370is not an enclosure in nothingness, but an openness towards the other’. 7 What takes placein deconstruction is a highly determinate form <strong>of</strong> double reading which pursues alteritieswithin texts, primarily philosophical texts. In this way, deconstruction opens a discourseon the other to philosophy, an otherness that has been dissimulated or appropriated by thelogocentric tradition. <strong>Philosophy</strong>, particularly in its Hegelian moment, has alwaysinsisted on thinking its other (art, religion, nature, etc.) as its proper other and therebyappropriating it and losing sight <strong>of</strong> its otherness. The philosophical text has alwaysbelieved itself to be in control <strong>of</strong> the margin <strong>of</strong> its own volume ([13.5], 1; [13.30], x). AsEmmanuel Levinas points out in ‘Transcendence and Height’, philosophy might bedefined as the activity <strong>of</strong> assimilating all otherness into the Same. 8 Such a definitionwould seem to be accurate in so far as the philosophical tradition has always attempted tounderstand and think the plurality and alterity <strong>of</strong> a manifold <strong>of</strong> entities through areduction <strong>of</strong> plurality to unity and alterity to sameness. The same gesture is repeatedthroughout the philosophical tradition, whether it be in Plato, where the plurality <strong>of</strong> theinstances <strong>of</strong> an entity (phainomena) are understood in relation to a unifying form (eidos).Or whether it be Aristotle, where philosophia protē (that is to say, metaphysics) is theattempt to understand the Being <strong>of</strong> a plurality <strong>of</strong> entities in relation to a unifyingsubstance (ousia), and, ultimately, a divine ousia: the god (to theion). Or, indeed,whether it be in terms <strong>of</strong> Kantian epistemology, where the manifold or plurality <strong>of</strong>intuitions are brought into unity and sameness by being placed under concepts which areregulated by the categories <strong>of</strong> the understanding (and other examples could be cited).The very activity <strong>of</strong> thinking, which lies at the basis <strong>of</strong> epistemological, ontologicaland veridical comprehension, is the reduction <strong>of</strong> plurality to unity and alterity tosameness. The activity <strong>of</strong> philosophy, the very task <strong>of</strong> thinking, is the reduction anddomestication <strong>of</strong> otherness. In seeking to think the other, its otherness is reduced orappropriated to our understanding. To think philosophically is to comprehend—comprendre, comprehendere, begreifen, to comprehend, to include, to seize, to grasp—and master the other, thereby reducing its alterity. As Rodolphe Gasché points out,‘Western philosophy is in essence the attempt to domesticate Otherness, since what weunderstand by thought is nothing but such a project.’ 9 As the attempt to attain a point <strong>of</strong>exteriority to logocentrism, deconstruction may therefore be ‘understood’ as the desire tokeep open a dimension <strong>of</strong> alterity which can neither be reduced, comprehended, nor,strictly speaking, even thought by philosophy. To say that the goal <strong>of</strong> Derridiandeconstruction is not simply the unthought <strong>of</strong> the tradition, but rather ‘that-which-cannotbe-thought’is to engage neither in sophistical rhetoric nor negative theology. It is ratherto point towards that which philosophy is unable to say.Derridian deconstruction attempts to situate, ‘a non-site, or a non-philosophical site,from which to question philosophy’. 10 It seeks a place <strong>of</strong> exteriority, alterity ormarginality irreducible to philosophy. Deconstruction is the writing <strong>of</strong> a margin thatcannot be represented by philosophy. In question is an other to philosophy that has neverbeen and cannot become philosophy’s other, but an other within which philosophybecomes inscribed.However (and this is crucial), the paradox that haunts Derrida’s and all deconstructivediscourse is that the only language that is available to deconstruction is that <strong>of</strong> philosophyor logocentrism. Thus to take up a position exterior to logocentrism, if such a thing were


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 371possible, would be to risk starving oneself <strong>of</strong> the very linguistic resources with which onemust deconstruct logocentrism. The deconstructive reader is like a tightrope walker whorisks ‘ceaselessly falling back inside that which he deconstructs’ ([13.4], 25; [13.29], 14).Deconstruction is a double reading that operates within a double bind <strong>of</strong> both belongingto a tradition, a language and a philosophical discourse, and at the same time beingunable to belong to the latter. This ambiguous situation <strong>of</strong> belonging and not-belongingdescribes the problem <strong>of</strong> closure.Broadly stated, 11 the problem <strong>of</strong> closure describes the duplicitous historical moment—now—when language, conceptuality, institutions and philosophy itself show themselvesto belong to a logocentric tradition which is theoretically exhausted whilst at the sametime searching for the breakthrough from that tradition. The problem <strong>of</strong> closure describesthe liminal situation <strong>of</strong> modernity out <strong>of</strong> which the deconstructive problematic arises andwhich Derrida inherits from Heidegger. Closure is the double refusal both <strong>of</strong> remainingwithin the limits <strong>of</strong> the tradition and <strong>of</strong> the possibility <strong>of</strong> transgressing that limit withinphilosophical language. At the moment <strong>of</strong> historical and philosophical closure,deconstructive reading takes place as the disturbance, disruption or interruption <strong>of</strong> thelimit that divides the inside from the outside <strong>of</strong> the tradition. A deconstructive readingshows how a text is dependent upon the presuppositions <strong>of</strong> a metaphysics <strong>of</strong> presence <strong>of</strong>logocentrism, which that text might attempt either to champion or dissimulate, whilst atthe same time showing how that text radically questions the metaphysics it presupposes,entering into contradiction with itself, and pointing the way towards a thinking that wouldbe other to logocentrism. Closure is the hinge that articulates this double and strictlyundecidable movement between logocentrism and its other. Deconstruction(s) take(s)place as the articulation <strong>of</strong> this hinge.Simon CritchleyPHILOSOPHICAL ROOTS AND BIBLIOGRAPHICAL HISTORYThroughout the history <strong>of</strong> thought new philosophies have unfolded as reactions to ordevelopments <strong>of</strong> previous ones, and in this way have shown their indebtedness to theirforebears. There is no field outside the philosophical tradition from which a completelynew thinking could spring into being. Starting from the recognition <strong>of</strong> this fact, the firstpart <strong>of</strong> this section seeks to show how some <strong>of</strong> Jacques Derrida’s central ideas developout <strong>of</strong> his encounters with the work <strong>of</strong> Edmund Husserl. Charting the ground <strong>of</strong> anindividual’s thought with any fidelity is always a difficult exercise, the more so inDerrida’s case. He has cited and displayed evidence <strong>of</strong> numerous influences, includingHeidegger, Hegel, Levinas, Nietzsche, Freud and Saussure, and his own arguments havecast doubt on the possibility <strong>of</strong> uncovering simple origins or foundations. All this beingsaid, however, the crucial importance <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s phenomenology can still be clearlydemonstrated. Outlining Derrida’s readings <strong>of</strong> Husserl also shows that he has engaged inphilosophical argumentation rather than in some esoteric anarchism that is supposedlyclosed <strong>of</strong>f from all criticism.The second part <strong>of</strong> this section attempts to give a concise overview <strong>of</strong> Derrida’sphilosophical career within the broad framework <strong>of</strong> a bibliographical history. Reference


Deconstruction and derrida 372will be made to his most important works and to the way in which they follow on fromcertain questions articulated in the early texts. This is also a difficult task. From the close<strong>of</strong> the 1950s Derrida has published twenty-six books and innumerable articles, many <strong>of</strong>them extending into the associated regions <strong>of</strong> literary criticism, aesthetics and politics.These factors alone militate against the adequacy <strong>of</strong> short summaries and chronologicalsurveys, quite apart from specifically theoretical objections. Perhaps the best combination<strong>of</strong> clarity and continuity lies in confining one’s attention to those philosophical concernsthat stand out most strongly in the Derridian constellation. It is this approach that hasbeen adopted here.It was as a teenager in Algeria that Derrida first became interested in philosophy. Heread Sartre copiously, and was spurred into enrolling for pre-university classes afterhearing a radio broadcast by Albert Camus. In 1949 Derrida went to Paris, where hecommenced his studies under Jean Hyppolite at the Ecole Normale Supérieure. As far ascan be ascertained, Derrida’s interest in Sartre waned from the moment he becameacquainted with the work <strong>of</strong> Husserl. The latter’s phenomenology, as opposed to theversion propounded by Sartre, appeared to Derrida as an inescapable method <strong>of</strong> analysis.As recently as 1980, Derrida has remarked that he still sees it, although in a differentway, as a discipline <strong>of</strong> incomparable rigour. 12Derrida’s first article was entitled ‘“Genesis and Structure” and Phenomenology’.Published in 1959, this was a development <strong>of</strong> part <strong>of</strong> his master’s thesis. The problem <strong>of</strong>genesis or origin and structure had emerged as a result <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s insistence that themeanings <strong>of</strong> those objects and states <strong>of</strong> affairs taken as irreducible to what we call theconscious self are never immediately given from outside. There are no transparentlyintelligible meanings in phenomena which would fall like manna from a heavenly place(topos ouranios) and strike the mind ready-made. In all these cases meaning demands notjust a subject but a complex subjective contribution. All <strong>of</strong> the objects or states <strong>of</strong> affairsthat we can entertain must be taken as more than an amorphous fuzz <strong>of</strong> unceasingmutation. Without at least a relative constancy in phenomena, recognition anddiscrimination would be impossible. Yet these constancies themselves presuppose awider horizonal structure within which we ourselves place every appearance. Recognitionand discrimination point to a surround <strong>of</strong> expectations which phenomenology seeks tomake explicit. We expect physical objects, for instance, to have currently invisibleaspects which can be brought into view, or made present, as we vary our perspective. Wealso expect physical things to behave in certain ways. On this view everythingexperienced is implicitly contextualized, whether it pertains to the physical, scientific orcultural worlds.Unlike the Kantian categories <strong>of</strong> experience and understanding, Husserl’s horizons arenot fixed but constantly evolving. Through successive acts <strong>of</strong> perception we adjust eachhorizon so that it more comprehensively contextualizes objects or states <strong>of</strong> affairs.Meaning emerges from a weave made up <strong>of</strong> changing horizons and their contents. Thiscreative emergence <strong>of</strong> meaning Husserl calls constitution. To explain any constitutedphenomenon adequately, we have to give a structural description <strong>of</strong> this phenomenon and<strong>of</strong> our present mode <strong>of</strong> consciousness <strong>of</strong> it. But we also have to give a genetic ororiginary description <strong>of</strong> the evolving horizon which the phenomenon and our mode <strong>of</strong>consciousness <strong>of</strong> it presuppose.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 373According to Derrida, certain insoluble problems ensue from this approach, stemmingfrom the fact that the isolation and description <strong>of</strong> the objective structures <strong>of</strong> phenomenaand <strong>of</strong> the horizons through which they are revealed is, on Husserl’s premisses, aninfinite task. Because we must describe ever anew our continually evolving horizons, wewill at the same time be altering our correlative characterizations <strong>of</strong> the objectivestructures <strong>of</strong> phenomena. What now appear as foundational structures could well beshown to be derivative in the future. Being caught up in history, we can never claim toencounter closed or finished structures, that is, structures that would be immune frommodification and deposition. Yet another problem is that <strong>of</strong> discerning where ourhorizons end and where the objective structures <strong>of</strong> phenomena begin. There are no surecriteria for distinguishing between the ‘productive’ and ‘revelatory’ aspects <strong>of</strong> certainconstituted meanings.Derrida does not claim any great novelty in this analysis, and he stresses that thesedifficulties could never have been brought to light were they not built upon Husserl’spowers <strong>of</strong> insight. It is the critical drive in Husserl that foregrounds these problems as heattempts to get back to the things themselves, to describe faithfully the phenomenapresented to consciousness.Derrida does not accept the Husserlian argument that the living present (lebendigeGegenwart) <strong>of</strong> human consciousness is the ultimate locus and ground <strong>of</strong> meaning. Hetakes over the structuralist position that meaning depends on sign-systems that transcendthe intentional control <strong>of</strong> individual subjects. There is no self and no other than can beunderstood apart from signs. The move towards this position is marked in Derrida’s firstbook, Edmund Husserl’s Origin <strong>of</strong> Geometry, an Introduction (1962) [13.1; 13.26]. Allthe problems treated in this early text, according to Derrida, have continued to organizethe work he has subsequently embarked upon. 13In The Origin <strong>of</strong> Geometry (1936), written shortly before his death and published onlyposthumously, Husserl was concerned with the communicability <strong>of</strong> ideal objects, such asgeometrical formations, that are initially reached or constituted in an individual humanconsciousness. Being universal and non-perspectival, geometrical idealities are free fromthe contingencies <strong>of</strong> spatio-temporal existence, and in terms <strong>of</strong> perfection, arguesHusserl, they can serve as the model for any object whatsoever. But precisely because <strong>of</strong>their ideality, they must in principle be accessible to every rational being, capable <strong>of</strong>being objects for all conscious subjects. One <strong>of</strong> the core concerns in The Origin <strong>of</strong>Geometry is to explain how a geometrical formation which is initially confined to thesolitary psychological life <strong>of</strong> the first or proto-geometer can become intersubjective, thatis, an object for the whole human community.Husserl’s immediate answer is that it is speech which brings ideality into the publicrealm, allowing the proto-geometer to share his or her discovery with others in the samecommunity. But it is only writing that allows the discovery to be transmitted fromgeneration to generation, thus giving it a history. Through writing or inscription, thegeometrical formation is passed down to others, who add corollaries and formulatefurther theorems and axioms. Through successive generations, new layers are added ontop <strong>of</strong> the original formation. This is the path <strong>of</strong> scientific progress, and indeed <strong>of</strong> culturaldevelopment in general, and it resembles an elevated rock stratum composed <strong>of</strong> varioussedimented layers. Through encoding the original discovery, the protogeometer sends it


Deconstruction and derrida 374forward in a productive passage through time. The price <strong>of</strong> productive writtentransmission, however, is the loss <strong>of</strong> the conscious intentional states <strong>of</strong> the protogeometer’smind that led to his or her discovery. Writing is an autonomous field that canvirtualize a discovery, separating a bare formation from the conscious acts <strong>of</strong> constitutionthat are communicable through the tone and facial expressions <strong>of</strong> everyday speech. Thisloss is itself a condition <strong>of</strong> progress, for later geometers have to take the bare formationas a readymade given so as to have the time to improve on it. Quite apart from thecomparative shortness <strong>of</strong> wakeful life, our bodily needs leave us little enough time forresearch. All the productive arts and sciences, argues Husserl, have to progress in thisway. But it is just this element <strong>of</strong> loss in writing that has led to the contemporary crisis inwestern civilization. We have lost our roots, our sense <strong>of</strong> where we came from, <strong>of</strong> howand why our scientific and cultural traditions began.Husserl regards this state <strong>of</strong> crisis as endemic—it can never be overcome. Theintentional states <strong>of</strong> the founders <strong>of</strong> our traditions are lost for ever, and there is no returnenquiry(Rückfrage) that could recover them. But if we cannot reactivate the primordialarchē <strong>of</strong> a science in our present age, argues Husserl, we can at least envisage its telos,which is that <strong>of</strong> a complete system <strong>of</strong> knowledge, <strong>of</strong> absolutely transparent and univocalunderstanding. This is not something that can ever be fully actualized; rather it functionsas a infinite ideal. The building up <strong>of</strong> a science on top <strong>of</strong> an original formation can beunderstood as a gradual process <strong>of</strong> approximation towards this ideal. The actualformation can be understood as an essential element within this process that contributesto its determination. In this regard it is described by Husserl as an ‘Idea in the Kantiansense’. Only efficacious through writing, the ideal <strong>of</strong> objective and thorough knowledgeand the correlative Idea in the Kantian sense may not constitute a knowledge <strong>of</strong> origins,but they do show that our scientific and cultural objects are not meaningless whenrecontextualized.In his reading <strong>of</strong> this text, Derrida seeks to show that certain radical conclusions followfrom Husserl’s premisses. These were already touched upon by the latter, but neverdeveloped, perhaps because he well understood the problems they would pose for a textthat valorized the notion <strong>of</strong> a unique and transparent origin <strong>of</strong> geometry and <strong>of</strong> othertraditions in the living present <strong>of</strong> human consciousness. Derrida is careful to emphasizeHusserl’s acute awareness <strong>of</strong> the significance <strong>of</strong> language, and <strong>of</strong> writing in particular.Here we see the first direct articulation <strong>of</strong> the idea that language is more than a materialbody that receives an already constituted truth. Contributing to the clarification andsystematization <strong>of</strong> a discovery, it is not a passive receptacle <strong>of</strong> something given readymade.Constituting ideal objects as definite and repeatable formations, it is a necessarycondition <strong>of</strong> truth, in principle as well as in fact:Husserl insists that truth is not fully objective, i.e, ideal, intelligible foreveryone and indefinitely perdurable, as long as it cannot be said and written.Since this perdurability is truth’s very sense, the conditions for its survival areincluded in its very life… freedom is only possible precisely from the momenttruth can in general be said and written, i.e., on condition that this can be done.Paradoxically, the possibility <strong>of</strong> being written [possibilité graphique] permitsthe ultimate freeing <strong>of</strong> ideality…the ability <strong>of</strong> sense to be linguistically


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 375embodied is the only means by which sense becomes nonspatiotemporal. 14This material condition <strong>of</strong> truth can also jettison what Husserl sees as the originalmeaning <strong>of</strong> a truth, its intentional origin. In philosophy and literature, as well as in thenatural sciences, Husserl well appreciates the possibilities <strong>of</strong> loss and misunderstandingbrought into play by writing. But what he fails to account for, Derrida goes on to argue, isthe possibility <strong>of</strong> the total loss <strong>of</strong> a message in the autonomous field <strong>of</strong> writing. Thiseventuality is to be distinguished from an empirical catastrophe, such as a worldwideburning <strong>of</strong> books and defacing <strong>of</strong> monuments. In this case writing would be materiallydestroyed and the message consumed. What Derrida is adverting to is the possibility <strong>of</strong>the complete disappearance <strong>of</strong> a message in a writing that remains fully intact in theworld. The writing that gives life after death to a message can just as well bury thatmessage. As Derrida points out, we can see abundant evidence <strong>of</strong> this in those prehistoricartefacts and monuments that silently defy all comprehension and translation. That whichis the condition <strong>of</strong> transmission through the ages is not a guarantor <strong>of</strong> the success <strong>of</strong> anysuch transmission.Derrida rejects Husserl’s suggestion that the intentional origin <strong>of</strong> geometry was uniqueto one particular person at one time. He maintains that the unpacking <strong>of</strong> the Idea in theKantian sense undercuts any such suggestion. This, we may recall, is the notion <strong>of</strong> anideal object as an essential element in a process <strong>of</strong> approximation towards a completesystem <strong>of</strong> objective, univocal knowledge. Derrida’s argument is that a person would haveno appreciation <strong>of</strong> the ideality <strong>of</strong> geometry without possessing this notion, even if theychanced upon a bare geometrical formation in the empirical world. The proto-geometercould never understand the significance <strong>of</strong> such formations without some awareness <strong>of</strong>science, <strong>of</strong> its ultimate end. 15 This awareness would include some <strong>of</strong> the conditions that aformation would have to fulfill in order to have an essential status in any science. For thisreason, the Idea in the Kantian sense is not just the end <strong>of</strong> geometry—it is its very origin.Anyone who attains to this idea begins in just as original and authentic a fashion as thechronologically first geometer, since it is not specific to any one culture at any one time.Apart from a brute empirical history <strong>of</strong> ownership and copyrights, Derrida wonderswhether we can ever speak <strong>of</strong> a once-<strong>of</strong>f or unrepeatable origin <strong>of</strong> geometry. Since theintentional origin <strong>of</strong> geometry need not be unique to any one factual individual, geometrycould in principle have an infinite number <strong>of</strong> births and birth certificates, each oneupstaging its forebears. On this view, it can be difficult to divide intentional acts into onesthat are original on the one hand and derivative or parasitic on the other.Perhaps the most important caveat that Derrida has in connection with The Origin <strong>of</strong>Geometry pertains to Husserl’s suggestion that what is lost in writing was a transparentplenitude in its own time. This is the idea that the proto-geometer was adequately awarein the living present <strong>of</strong> consciousness <strong>of</strong> what he or she was about in constituting an idealformation. The fact that the meaning <strong>of</strong> an ideal object as an Idea in the Kantian sense isuniversally accessible, notes Derrida, does not entail that this meaning is adequately givenin the present. In fact and in principle, the project within which we understand the idealityand objectivity <strong>of</strong> a formation cannot be realized in the living present <strong>of</strong> a human subject.The present meaning is given by virtue <strong>of</strong> an ideal which is deferred ad infinitum. Thesign that gives the object its meaning is the sign <strong>of</strong> something for ever absent, because the


Deconstruction and derrida 376realization <strong>of</strong> a complete science within which the significance <strong>of</strong> an ideal object wouldbe transparently intelligible always recedes as we approach it. We can have the emptyidea, but not that <strong>of</strong> which it is the idea. To comprehend the inability <strong>of</strong> consciousness toreach such an absolute is to comprehend the structural necessity <strong>of</strong> deferral, delay, ordifference. As a structure <strong>of</strong> infinite anticipation devoid <strong>of</strong> final fulfilment, the absolute isa limit, a condition <strong>of</strong> possibility <strong>of</strong> meaning that cannot be imagined in itself alone. Tomake it real one would have to be an omnipotent God untrammelled by perspective anddistance, eternally comprehending everything within its absolute gaze. The origin <strong>of</strong>geometry and <strong>of</strong> objectivities in general lies in a promised land which even the so-calledproto-geometer never saw in the living present <strong>of</strong> consciousness. Even in its own time thepast-present was never an undivided plentitude. The meaning <strong>of</strong> objectivity presupposedsomething that could never be brought into view.Derrida’s second book, translated as Speech and Phenomena [13.27], was published in1967. Derrida has described this essay as the one which he likes most, because it raises ina ‘juridicially decisive’ way the ‘privilege <strong>of</strong> the voice’ as it occurs in westernmetaphysics in general and in Husserl in particular. He also says that this work can beread as the other side, the recto or verso, <strong>of</strong> the earlier Introduction ([13.27], 5). In thelater work, Derrida focuses his attention on the Husserlian claim that the living present isbased on an undivided immediacy <strong>of</strong> self-consciousness. In the Introduction, Derrida hadalready argued against the idea that we can ground the meaning <strong>of</strong> objectivity in anundivided present <strong>of</strong> consciousness. Now he will argue that this latter notion is ametaphysical illusion in itself. Reflective awareness or subjectivity is also dependent onthe representation by the sign <strong>of</strong> something that cannot be made fully present.In his account <strong>of</strong> conscious mental life in the Logical Investigations (1900–1), Husserlmakes a distinction between a signified meaning that can be fully present toconsciousness and one that can be only indirectly present. A meaning <strong>of</strong> the first type canbe described as an expression (Ausdruck). A meaning <strong>of</strong> the second type is anythingconveyed through indication (Anzeichen). In general terms, the world <strong>of</strong> indication iscomposed <strong>of</strong> those signs referring to things outside direct awareness. The function <strong>of</strong> anindicative sign is that <strong>of</strong> standing in for something that is completely or partially absent.Although it has its referent or signified, this type <strong>of</strong> sign is devoid <strong>of</strong> intrinsic meaning.To be more than an empty bearer or carrier it must be given meaning by a specificintention, though it may not transmit this in its fullness. When I read a book in which theauthor indicates something to me, for instance, I can grasp that something withoutintuiting his or her background intention as well as I could intuit an intention <strong>of</strong> my own.In contrast to derivative indications, expressions are inherently meaningful and fullypresent to the self. They mean something and they express a meaning. Because anexpression effectively includes content and object, it is a sign that almost immediatelygives way to the actual thing that it signifies. Every expression can subsequently acquirean indicative function, for example when I communicate it’ to another person via speech.In this case expression is given a phonic material body. It is this vehicle that allows it toenter into the arena <strong>of</strong> intersubjectivity. I can also communicate through writing, througha graphic material body. This puts expression into the historical field that threatens theperversion and loss <strong>of</strong> meaning. Writing lacks the immediacy <strong>of</strong> speech. When I make anutterance I can hear myself speak. I concretely experience and understand an indication


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 377that has been permeated by an expression. What I say is present to me, under myintentional control. This immediacy can be lost in writing. When I write something, it cango out beyond my living present. The original immediacy is cast adrift with theindication, and fades into the dead letter on the page. Speech is the only material mediumthat safeguards the life <strong>of</strong> expressed intuitions, for it is a reflection <strong>of</strong> the uncontaminatedimmediacy <strong>of</strong> conscious life. This is why thinking is <strong>of</strong>ten described as a form <strong>of</strong> selfaddressedinner speech. In the actual zone <strong>of</strong> conscious life, however, Husserl does nothold that the solitary mind engages in a silent dialogue with itself. In the interior field <strong>of</strong>pre-expressive intuition, we can only imagine mercurial messages flitting through thegalleries <strong>of</strong> the transcendental ego. We have no need to communicate anything at thislevel because our meanings are immediately experienced and understood. Not even theblink <strong>of</strong> an eye can be held to separate an intention and my intuition <strong>of</strong> it. In the pure selfrelation<strong>of</strong> reflective consciousness, the realm <strong>of</strong> signs is really quite useless (ganzzwecklos).Derrida rejects Husserl’s initial prioritization <strong>of</strong> speech over writing, which he termsphonocentrism. This privilege <strong>of</strong> the voice is regarded by Derrida as a metaphysicalassumption foreign to the rigour <strong>of</strong> a thoroughgoing phenomenological philosophy.Derrida points to the fact that Husserl characterizes most conscious intentions asimperfect or unfulfilled. In perception I intend the entire bureau that I am leaning on. Yetit is only partially present to me as a hard and black horizontal surface that I see with myeyes and touch with my elbows. In imagination I intend the cellars <strong>of</strong> Ludwig <strong>of</strong>Bavaria’s fairytale castle. These are only present to me in so far as they can be envisagedwithout acquaintance or description. It is linguistic signs that stand in for these absences.We use these to denote objects and states <strong>of</strong> affairs that are either indirectly given or notgiven at all. On this description, signs can operate perfectly well in the complete absence<strong>of</strong> their object, and indeed this is one <strong>of</strong> their essential functions. But what about caseswhere the object, so to speak, is the human subject itself? We have to ask whetherpropositions with reflexive pronouns are properly meaningful in the absence <strong>of</strong> thesubject that communicates them.Husserl draws back from affirming this. He admits that we can understand the ordinaryeveryday meaning <strong>of</strong> a mathematical proposition, for example, quite apart from thecircumstances <strong>of</strong> our use <strong>of</strong> it. We can read it without thinking <strong>of</strong> a particular person. Butin a statement that uses the word ‘I’, such as ‘I am alive’, Husserl states that we can gleanits proper meaning only from the individual intentions that permeate it at the time <strong>of</strong> itsutterance or inscription. If we were to read this statement without knowing who wrote it,says Husserl, it might not be meaningless, but it would be alienated from its normalmeaning. According to Derrida, however, such a proposition can and does functionnormally in the absence <strong>of</strong> a speaker or writer. ‘I am alive’ retains its normal meaningeven when the original subject is dead or fictitious. The meaning borne in the reflexivesign or proposition does not have to be fulfilled by a personal intuition. Language has alife <strong>of</strong> its own in writing, and there is no good reason to think why the situation is anydifferent in speech. Here also we have to allow for the transmigration <strong>of</strong> signs that havetheir own meaning. If the expressed personal intuition that my voice breathes into thesign were to give it its normal meaning, and if this were to stay with the sign, theneveryone would have to use my own private language. According to Derrida:


Deconstruction and derrida 378The absence <strong>of</strong> intuition—and therefore <strong>of</strong> the subject <strong>of</strong> the intuition—is notonly tolerated by speech; it is required by the general structure <strong>of</strong> signification,when considered in itself. It is radically requisite: the total absence <strong>of</strong> thesubject and object <strong>of</strong> a statement—the death <strong>of</strong> the writer and/or thedisappearance <strong>of</strong> the objects he was able to describe—does not prevent a textfrom ‘meaning’ something. On the contrary, this possibility gives birth tomeaning as such, gives it out to be heard and read.([13.2], 104; [13.27], 93)In the world that we actually find, the meaning <strong>of</strong> each and every sign is independent <strong>of</strong>whatever momentary intentional fulfilment the speaking or writing subject may give it.Precisely because he recognizes that language has its own life, Husserl tries to limitnormal or proper meaning to the here and now <strong>of</strong> the speaking subject. Yet this subject,implicated in a living medium not under its control, has to stand like a watchguard overits utterances. We <strong>of</strong>ten enunciate a statement and immediately qualify it, aware that ourintention does not encounter a neutral container. We hang around so as to catch certain‘normal’ implications <strong>of</strong> the sign that we were not sufficiently aware <strong>of</strong> at the time <strong>of</strong>speaking or writing. And it could even be argued that writing is better than speakinginasmuch as it focuses the mind and enables greater clarity <strong>of</strong> expression, though againthis is not safeguarded from perversion or loss in either medium.Derrida is not content with exposing phonocentrism as an unjustified prejudice. Hewants to show that the conception <strong>of</strong> an immediate, self-identical consciousness reflectedin expression and subsequently cast into an impure world <strong>of</strong> indication itself falls down.Husserl argues that signs are redundant in the self-relation because we are present toourselves in an undivided now, though he is very careful to qualify this last idea. This canbe seen in a series <strong>of</strong> lectures which he composed between 1893 and 1917 and laterpublished as On the Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> the Consciousness <strong>of</strong> Internal Time in 1928.Husserl here rejects out <strong>of</strong> hand any recourse to the notion <strong>of</strong> detached atomic instants <strong>of</strong>consciousness. Our conscious processes are always ongoing and interconnected, makingup a flowing stream. Within this stream every present moment or immediate now <strong>of</strong> selfconsciousnesscarries an inheritance from the past (retention) and an anticipation <strong>of</strong> thefuture (protention).The past that is held in retention is different from a past that has to be reproduced.Reproduction is the recreation <strong>of</strong> an event that is completely over, one that lies in themore distant past. It is the reactivation <strong>of</strong> a dead event and it always involves somevagueness and distortion. Retention is the holding <strong>of</strong> an immediately lapsed past in thepresent moment <strong>of</strong> consciousness. It would be analogous to the hum <strong>of</strong> a dinner-gong thatechoes on in my ears. The present-past <strong>of</strong> retention avoids the inevitable imperfection <strong>of</strong>reproduction, because there is no significant temporal lapse between the present momentand the immediately past one that makes up the content <strong>of</strong> the retention. I have to beconscious <strong>of</strong> the retentional content in the present moment to be conscious <strong>of</strong> the latter’simmediacy. This can only be identified when I have an immediate past against which itcan be contrasted.As stated above, the present moment also involves a protention. This is an anticipation


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 379<strong>of</strong> the next moment <strong>of</strong> awareness, the one that will immediately follow the now. Implicitin self-consciousness is the expectation that the now will pass into a new moment withinwhich I shall be just as present to myself as I am in this one. I could <strong>of</strong> course switchattention, be knocked unconscious or drop dead, but the suspension or cessation <strong>of</strong> selfconsciousnesscannot be experienced or imagined per se. I cannot know what it is like notto be self-aware; since by definition one cannot be cognizant <strong>of</strong> such a state when one isin it. Barring accidents then, self-consciousness (the ground <strong>of</strong> human subjectivity) isunderstood as something ongoing, not as a once-<strong>of</strong>f act. It has an ideal and repeatablecharacter. Every protention is the expression <strong>of</strong> this understanding, anticipating as it doesthe repetition <strong>of</strong> the present moment <strong>of</strong> self-awareness. Reflective consciousness can beextensive and continuous because each moment contains the ‘about to be’ as well as the‘just gone’. Through protention and retention, past, present and future are connected ineach individual moment <strong>of</strong> reflective awareness.On Derrida’s reading, Husserl is correct and prescient to recognize that each moment<strong>of</strong> self-consciousness involves retentions and protentions. But it is this very recognitionthat opens up a fissure in the claim that the now is something pure, unified and devoid <strong>of</strong>signification. It has been possible to present the now to consciousness only by setting itagainst something different, the immediately past now. It has been possible to present itas part <strong>of</strong> an unbroken unity only by anticipating the moment that will immediatelysucceed it. Consciousness <strong>of</strong> the selfsame, the now, always requires consciousness <strong>of</strong> theother, the not-now. Put another way, that which is different has to be held over andanticipated within the same so as to produce immediacy and continuity, the essentialcharacteristics <strong>of</strong> a conscious subject. Derrida describes this retentional and protentionalprocess as autoaffection. It constitutes rather than being constituted: ‘This movement <strong>of</strong>difference is not something that happens to a transcendental subject; it produces a subject.Auto-affection is not a modality <strong>of</strong> experience that characterizes a being that wouldalready be itself (autos). It produces sameness as self-relation within self-difference; itproduces sameness as the nonidentical’ ([13.2], 92; [13.27], 82). Derrida is arguingagainst the idea <strong>of</strong> a self-identical now and hence <strong>of</strong> a primordial and self-containedsubjectivity. To be itself the now has to point to moments beyond itself. Because they areactual forms <strong>of</strong> pointing, retention and protention can effectively be understood as signs<strong>of</strong> what has lapsed and what is pending. But is this admission <strong>of</strong> signs into the now <strong>of</strong>reflective consciousness also an invasion by indication? Taking retention on its own, onecould argue that since it perfectly captures the past as it was in its own time, it is afulfilled or expressive sign. In the case <strong>of</strong> protention, however, the situation seemsdifferent. The pending moment which I point to in the now will in turn point to anothermoment, and the cessation <strong>of</strong> this process is unimaginable—it could proceed to infinity.What I point to will never fulfil the present sign, because it will not itself be a selfreferentialplenitude. When one comes to look backwards, one sees that the situation wasin fact the same. The present moment was itself anticipated in a previous moment, andthat moment was also anticipated, right back to a primal moment <strong>of</strong> reflection that cannotbe isolated because there was no antecedent reflection to identify it against. (Theantecedent moment would be an unconscious trace hidden from view.) The most recentprotention anticipating the immediate now passed over into a retention on the arrival <strong>of</strong>this present moment, and from this it can be concluded that both protention and retention


Deconstruction and derrida 380(one <strong>of</strong> which collapses into the other) are condemned to an unfulfilled and indicativefunction. The present moment cannot fulfil that which pointed to it in the past, and thepending moment will not fulfil that which is pointing to it in the present. Differencedoubly contaminates the now. It only allows self-presence through a Janus-facedindication <strong>of</strong> an indefinite past and future. Presence is always already outside <strong>of</strong> itself,and so on without a definite end.Derrida concludes his reading by adverting to a strangely prophetic passage from thefirst volume <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s Ideas (1913). Husserl remembers walking through the DresdenGallery and seeing a painting by Teniers. This represents a gallery <strong>of</strong> paintings, each <strong>of</strong>which represent further paintings in an endless regress. In this passage, as Derridainterprets it, can be glimpsed the fate <strong>of</strong> phenomenology. This raises the question <strong>of</strong>whether Husserl in some way reaches deconstruction avant la lettre. In the course <strong>of</strong>Speech and Phenomena Derrida speaks <strong>of</strong> Husserl’s ‘admirable’ analysis <strong>of</strong> internal timeconsciousness, an analysis which he further characterizes as one <strong>of</strong> ‘incomparabledepth’ ([13.2], 94 n. 1; [13.27], 84 n. 9). It seems strange that Husserl failed to see wherethis analysis was leading. The explanation, for Derrida, lies in the fact that the idea <strong>of</strong>unmediated or perfect presence is a pervasive and hidden prejudice carried forward fromancient times. The emphasis on the ‘now’ as an Archimedean point, the ground <strong>of</strong>immediacy and certainty, is one particular manifestation <strong>of</strong> this. So powerful is theprejudice that even Husserl, the first to provide the means for its circumscription, nonethe less remains under its sway. He stands on the very threshold <strong>of</strong> the deconstruction <strong>of</strong>the metaphysics <strong>of</strong> presence.A brief overview <strong>of</strong> Derrida’s career could well begin with the essays from hisformative period in Writing and Difference (1967) [13.3; 13.28]. This collection includesthe first article on genesis and structure and also ‘Force and Signification’ and ‘Structure,Sign and Play’, where the earlier analysis can be seen applied to modern structuralism.Whilst agreeing with the structuralist critique <strong>of</strong> a subjectivity that would be anterior tothe world <strong>of</strong> signs, Derrida sees the general enterprise as misled in its tendency toconstruct closed sign-systems that are abstracted from time and change, and, having donethis, to characterize these as transcendental realities that determine meaning in general.The dream <strong>of</strong> unearthing foundational structures centred on some fixed theme is ametaphysical illusion which sustains itself only by concealing the dynamic and ongoingprocess <strong>of</strong> constitution through which meanings emerge and mutate. The point at whichthis strategy is made evident is the point at which structuralism’s fabrications begin totremble and show their cracks. It is here that deconstruction takes its hold.In ‘Violence and Metaphysics’, Derrida engages with the thought <strong>of</strong> EmmanuelLevinas. Characterizing the history <strong>of</strong> philosophy since Parmenides as a totalitarianwasteland, Levinas calls for an openness to the experience <strong>of</strong> the other that lies beyondthe dominion <strong>of</strong> reason, whose logos has always been one <strong>of</strong> violence and power. Theonly ethical relationship to this other, or others, is one <strong>of</strong> infinite responsibility andrespect. Whilst greatly admiring the approach <strong>of</strong> Levinas, Derrida argues that he does notpay due attention to Husserl’s studies <strong>of</strong> intersubjectivity or to Heidegger’s ‘destruction’<strong>of</strong> those forms <strong>of</strong> thought that proceed from a determinate precomprehension <strong>of</strong> Being.Derrida also maintains that ordinary language and the philosophical discourse thatproceeds from it cannot be escaped in the way that Levinas would like. Since the other


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 381can only be revealed through discourse—the opening <strong>of</strong> peace as well as <strong>of</strong> war—theattempt to transcend this risks its suppression, which would result in the worst violence.In ‘Freud and the Scene <strong>of</strong> Writing’, Derrida examines Freud’s metaphor <strong>of</strong> the mysticwriting pad, where the unconscious is likened to a text and the structures and layers <strong>of</strong>this text compared to forms <strong>of</strong> writing. This text, Derrida will argue, is a weave <strong>of</strong> signsbased on lost traces which involves intervals spaced out in time just as in the world <strong>of</strong>conscious awareness. It would be one more ruse <strong>of</strong> reason to see the unconscious text asembodying primordial truths that could be brought to the surface and transcribed, like anoriginal that is somehow reproduced. Even the most radical <strong>of</strong> critiques run the danger <strong>of</strong>confirming presence at a deeper level, and metapsychology is no exception. This theme<strong>of</strong> covertly reinstating what one seeks to reject recurs throughout the remaining essaysand through the later Derrida.Of Grammatology (1967) [13.4; 13.29] is an extended reworking <strong>of</strong> an article <strong>of</strong> thesame name that Derrida originally published in two parts in 1965. The book incorporatesmany <strong>of</strong> the conclusions reached in Speech and Phenomena, and its purpose, according toDerrida, is to make enigmatic the concepts <strong>of</strong> proximity and <strong>of</strong> the proper that areincluded in the concept <strong>of</strong> presence. The deconstruction <strong>of</strong> these begins with thedeconstruction <strong>of</strong> consciousness. Derrida explicitly generalizes the concept <strong>of</strong> theindicative sign to include anything that can possibly appear, whether it is ‘originally’ inconsciousness or in the world <strong>of</strong> sense-experience. All ‘present’ things are internallyconstituted by variation <strong>of</strong> phonic and graphic marks or protentions and retentions. Themanifest is what it is through being always ready set against irreducible absences. Thereis never a thing in itself that could come to glow in the luminosity <strong>of</strong> its own presence.Derrida rejects the belief that a sign or sign-system can eventually fall away before thenaked object, like a veil that would drop from our eyes. This is the myth <strong>of</strong> thetranscendental signified, <strong>of</strong> a terminus to the play <strong>of</strong> signs somehow outside that play. Itrecurs in various guises throughout the philosophical tradition, as God, or matter, orabsolute knowledge, or the end <strong>of</strong> history. It remains a myth because it is never realized.In the absence <strong>of</strong> the transcendental signified we are left with the apparent limitlessnessand pervasiveness <strong>of</strong> the play <strong>of</strong> signs. In this sense it can be held that everything iswriting, with every instantiation <strong>of</strong> this general writing making up a text. (To give a crudeexample, the red sky in the morning is a set <strong>of</strong> signs written on the blank sheet <strong>of</strong> the sky.This text points to an indeterminate series <strong>of</strong> other events that will probably include astorm.) All meanings are inscribed in a text and point to other meanings in other texts.The world would be the most general text, though it is never closed or finished. Thehistory <strong>of</strong> philosophy can be read as a sustained attempt to suppress such a seeminglyendless play.The ideal <strong>of</strong> the transcendental signified, according to Derrida, is the obverse side <strong>of</strong>logocentrism, which is the affirmation—in whatever form—<strong>of</strong> a pre-ordained order, <strong>of</strong> aunivocal and proper meaning to all things that merely awaits discovery. Because it posesa threat to the communication <strong>of</strong> every supposed univocity, graphic writing hastraditionally been relegated to the role <strong>of</strong> a dangerous and accidental supplement, withRousseau providing the most notable example <strong>of</strong> such a strategy. Writing has beenunderstood as something subsequent to a pre-given plenitude. But Derrida argues thatthere is another meaning to supplementarity which has been all but ignored in the


Deconstruction and derrida 382philosophical canon. The supplement is also that which is required to make up for a lack.If graphic writing were no longer seen as exterior and accidental, the way would be pavedfor the recognition <strong>of</strong> general writing as the weave <strong>of</strong> differences that inhabit and makepossible all forms <strong>of</strong> presence. It is not by accident that Rousseau conceives <strong>of</strong> writing asan unhappy mischance, the root <strong>of</strong> dissemblance and impropriety. Writing has to besuppressed if he is to uphold the logocentric illusion <strong>of</strong> a prelapsarian state <strong>of</strong> nature.Rousseau most clearly demonstrates the inevitable violence <strong>of</strong> metaphysics, whichequates propriety with pure presence through the debasement <strong>of</strong> writing.The year 1972 saw the publication <strong>of</strong> three further books by Derrida: Margins <strong>of</strong><strong>Philosophy</strong> [13.5; 13.30], Dissemination [13.6; 13.31] and Positions [13.7; 13.32].Margins is made up <strong>of</strong> eleven articles written from 1967 on. Most <strong>of</strong> these areapplications <strong>of</strong> a practice <strong>of</strong> reading whose theoretical grounding is effectively completedin the second article <strong>of</strong> the collection, entitled ‘Différance’. This piece can also be read asa summary <strong>of</strong> the earlier works. Derrida presents différance as the development <strong>of</strong>Saussure’s insight that in language there are only differences. It is also presented as anoutcome <strong>of</strong> the important Heideggerian notion <strong>of</strong> ontological difference, the differencebetween Being and beings considered as such:It is the domination <strong>of</strong> beings that différance everywhere comes to solicit, in thesense that sollicitare, in old Latin, means to shake as a whole, to make tremblein entirety. Therefore, it is the determination <strong>of</strong> Being as presence or asbeingness that is interrogated by the thought <strong>of</strong> différance. Such a questioncould not emerge and be understood unless the difference between Being andbeings were somewhere to be broached. First consequence: différance is not. Itis not a present being, however excellent, unique, principal, or transcendent. Itgoverns nothing, reigns over nothing, and nowhere exercises any authority. It isnot announced by any capital letter. Not only is there no kingdom <strong>of</strong> différance,but différance instigates the subversion <strong>of</strong> every kingdom…. Since Being hasnever had a ‘meaning’, has never been thought or said as such, except bydissimulating itself in beings, then différance, in a certain and very strange way,(is) ‘older’ than the ontological difference or than the truth <strong>of</strong> Being.([13.5], 22–3; [13.30], 21–2)Being is not a meaning that commands from a l<strong>of</strong>ty height. It emerges from beings andthey from it. In a similar way the intelligible needs the sensible and the natural thecultural. Différance is the productive movement <strong>of</strong> differing and deferring. Every conceptis deferred in signifying a plenitude without realization and differed in gaining identityfrom that which it is not. Différance is not a concept, but that which makes conceptspossible. It is not an essence, for it assumes a different form in each relation and does notexist before these.In the third article, ‘Ousia and Grammē’, Derrida examines a note by Heideggerconcerning Aristotle on time. Aristotle first posed the problem <strong>of</strong> how Being can bedetermined as presence without determining time as external to substance, and hence asnon-present and nonexistent (the no-longer and the not-yet). According to Derrida,Heidegger seriously neglects Aristotle’s investigations. Furthermore, Heidegger’s own


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 383critique <strong>of</strong> ‘vulgar temporality’ succumbs—despite its significance—to the aporia orperplexity outlined by Aristotle. Authentic existence is characterized as primordialtemporality and inauthentic existence as derivative temporality. In this opposition <strong>of</strong> theprimordial and the derivative Derrida observes a covert reintroduction <strong>of</strong> Being as selfpresentsubstance.‘The Ends <strong>of</strong> Man’ addresses the question <strong>of</strong> humanism, concentrating on Heidegger’scritique <strong>of</strong> the general ideology. Derrida describes this critique as unsurpassed in the‘archeological radicalness’ <strong>of</strong> the questions that it sketches. No metahumanist positioncan neglect the opening <strong>of</strong> these questions without being peripheral and secondary([13.5], 153; [13.30],128). Heidegger wishes to transcend humanism so as to discover theproper essence and dignity <strong>of</strong> man, his humanitas. He seeks to move towards anunderstanding <strong>of</strong> man as an openness to the mystery <strong>of</strong> Being, one who will shepherd thetrue meaning <strong>of</strong> Being in the proximity <strong>of</strong> the near. Derrida regards this alternative as asubtle variant <strong>of</strong> traditional humanism. Heidegger’s evocations <strong>of</strong> the proper and <strong>of</strong>proximity indicate a logocentric ideal, a real meaning <strong>of</strong> Being and <strong>of</strong> the self that can beepiphanically revealed to those who attain to the right attitude.In Dissemination [13.6; 13.31] Derrida writes on Sollers, Mallarmé and Plato. In thebest-known essay, ‘Plato’s Pharmacy’, phonocentrism is traced back to the Phaedrusdialogue, where writing is condemned for endangering the truth <strong>of</strong> the living voice andreinstated as the inscription <strong>of</strong> eternal law in the soul. Writing is ambiguouslycharacterized as poison and cure, this being its most charitable characterization in thewestern tradition.The extended preface or ‘Outwork’ to Dissemination attacks the historical conception<strong>of</strong> the book as the best form <strong>of</strong> encapsulating authorial intentions in the graphic medium,since it has a definite structure <strong>of</strong> beginning, expanding and ending. Derrida reactivateshis claim that the différance in all conscious activities usurps transparency and mastery inevery form <strong>of</strong> every medium. The book is a concatenation <strong>of</strong> irreconcilable elements andforces from which meaning is onanistically disseminated or scattered to the four winds.Positions [13.7; 13.32] is a series <strong>of</strong> interviews held with Derrida so as to clarify hisown project and its relationship with other intellectual movements. It can lay claim tobeing one <strong>of</strong> the more illuminating introductions to his thinking. According to Derrida,deconstruction is not a simple overturning <strong>of</strong> traditional philosophical prejudices or‘violent hierarchies’. It is best conceived as a double gesture <strong>of</strong> unseating the privilegedmotifs within texts (speech, nature, spirit, etc.) and then showing how the opposites onwhich they depend are sited within a subtext or shadow-text. The so-called master text isalways haunted by a double that dislocates it rather than destroying it. Différanceproduces two texts or two ways <strong>of</strong> looking that are at once together and separate.Glas (1974) [13.8; 13.33] can be interpreted as a rather jarring example <strong>of</strong>deconstructive work in progress. 16 Hegel’s discourses concerning God, law, religion andthe family are presented on one side <strong>of</strong> each page and Jean Genet’s somewhat differenttreatment <strong>of</strong> the same topics on the other. Derrida’s running commentary oscillatessomewhere between the two. The subtlety <strong>of</strong> this rather inaccessible performance may liein showing that the reader always becomes a writer to extract sense. It could also beviewed as a once-<strong>of</strong>f experiment in hyper-Joycean equivocity, for Derrida never againpresents a work in this precise format.


Deconstruction and derrida 384With Spurs (1978) [13.10; 13.35], Derrida moves to a consideration <strong>of</strong> sexualdifference. He focuses his attention on Nietzsche’s strange denunciation <strong>of</strong> woman as thenexus <strong>of</strong> untruth and subversion, which on first sight might appear as one more rendering<strong>of</strong> Schopenhauer’s misogynism. Derrida draws out <strong>of</strong> Nietzsche’s cryptic remarks ananticipation <strong>of</strong> some <strong>of</strong> the themes in modern feminist criticism, since the latter wasnever noted for his love <strong>of</strong> the established order or <strong>of</strong> traditional conceptions <strong>of</strong> truth.In The Post Card (1980) [13.12; 13.37], Derrida develops at length the theme—alreadyseen at length in his work on the origin <strong>of</strong> geometry—<strong>of</strong> messages that fail to reach theirdestinations. In the course <strong>of</strong> readings <strong>of</strong> Freud, Lacan and Heidegger, he comparesgeneral writing to a telecommunications service that is quite capable <strong>of</strong> suffering hitchesand breakdowns. The little postcard that is open to all symbolizes the fragility <strong>of</strong>meanings always already cast into space and time. Even messages that reach theiraddressees without too much delay can be misunderstood, whether they come from thesubconscious, from the mystical contemplation <strong>of</strong> being, or from ‘external’ sources.Most <strong>of</strong> Derrida’s work since the late 1970s has concentrated on literature and its genredistinction with philosophy on the one hand and on matters ethical and political on theother. A good example <strong>of</strong> the first set <strong>of</strong> interests can be seen in Parages (‘Regions’)(1986) [13.15], which engages with the work <strong>of</strong> Maurice Blanchot. Derrida has alsowritten on Ponge, Celan and Joyce.The increased concern with ethics and politics first emerges in The Ear <strong>of</strong> the Other(1982) [13.1; 13.38], which was based on a colloquium held in Montreal in 1979.Derrida’s remarks emerge out <strong>of</strong> considerations <strong>of</strong> the philosophical problems <strong>of</strong>autobiography and translation. He stresses that whilst différance undercuts authorialmastery and makes every interpretation a misreading, it does not destroy personalresponsibility. The fact that statements and writings immediately take on a life <strong>of</strong> theirown is an argument for eternal vigilance. One should at least attempt to foresee possiblemisinterpretations <strong>of</strong> one’s works. Though the exercise cannot always succeed, it mayminimize certain dangers inherent in inscription. These dangers have been well shown inthe use that at least one ideology has made <strong>of</strong> the work <strong>of</strong> Nietzsche. We have to proceedas if every part <strong>of</strong> what we say and write could be taken out <strong>of</strong> context.Psyché: Inventions de l’autre (‘Psyche: Inventions <strong>of</strong> the Other’) (1987) [13.17]includes articles on Reconstructive methodology, sexual difference, racism and nucleardeterrence. In ‘Racism’s last word’, written for an itinerant exhibition <strong>of</strong> art againstapartheid, Derrida scrutinizes this very word. Apartheid is the appellation for one <strong>of</strong> theworld’s ultimate forms <strong>of</strong> racism. It signifies the violence <strong>of</strong> the talking animal that canmake words discriminate rather than discern. Though it claims to represent a state <strong>of</strong> lawderived from a natural or divine right, the day will come when this word will resonate inits own emptiness. Yet the collapse <strong>of</strong> what it signifies will be credited not just to thetriumph <strong>of</strong> moral standards but to the laws <strong>of</strong> liberal economics that have come todetermine this system as ‘inefficient’. These laws <strong>of</strong> the market are another standard <strong>of</strong>calculation to be analysed.In ‘No Apocalypse, Not Now’, Derrida attacks certain consequentialist assumptions inthe logic <strong>of</strong> nuclear deterrence. The leading idea in the nuclear arms race has been thateach advance in destructive capability will so impress the opposition as to makecatastrophe more unlikely. Derrida notes that this assumes that the ‘best intentions’


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 385would always be ‘correctly interpreted’ by the other side. The seeming success <strong>of</strong> thisstrategy has also pleased the military-industrial complex. Expensive contracts can bemade without any apparent increase in danger.In the lengthy afterword to Limited Inc. (1988) [13.22; 13.44], the full record <strong>of</strong>Derrida’s critique <strong>of</strong> the work <strong>of</strong> J.L.Austin and exchange with John Searle, Derrida triesto clarify questions concerning the aim and extent <strong>of</strong> the activity <strong>of</strong> deconstruction.Derrida states that although the themes <strong>of</strong> full presence and immediacy have beensubjected to deconstruction, he has never argued for an untrammelled free-play <strong>of</strong>meaning. There can be a relative stability <strong>of</strong> meaning in texts; the point being made isonly that this is not self-sufficient, immutable or indestructible. The double readingrevealing a double text shows that the dominant meaning or interpretation <strong>of</strong> a text cannotlive up to all its claims. In undoing conceptual hierarchies deconstruction seeks toachieve a more just balance. It does not suspend or reject the possibility <strong>of</strong> truth or <strong>of</strong>communication.With Memoires for Paul de Man (1988) [13.21; 13.43] and Du droit à la philosophie(1990) [13.23], Derrida has included essays concerning the responsibilities and position<strong>of</strong> the intellectual in the modern or post-Enlightenment world. 17 He has maintained thatthe freedom <strong>of</strong> the academic world is only an abstract one, since the members <strong>of</strong> thisworld are effectively excluded from the fields <strong>of</strong> ethical and political decision-making.One <strong>of</strong> the crucial roles <strong>of</strong> the university in a technocratically managed society, accordingto Derrida, has been to provide a place where trouble-makers can be properly corralledand the compliant properly funded. As can be imagined, these analyses have notcontributed greatly to Derrida’s popularity amongst certain academics.The most intriguing question that the essays in these books have raised—as with much<strong>of</strong> Derrida’s work over the last few years—is that <strong>of</strong> the future direction <strong>of</strong> his project.Whilst his concentration on ethics and politics could be read as the unfolding <strong>of</strong> thehitherto unseen and positive aspects <strong>of</strong> deconstructive practice, it does not involve a clearadvance on the theoretical groundwork already sketched in the 1960s. Furthermore,Derrida has not spoken <strong>of</strong> any departure from or revision <strong>of</strong> the existing body <strong>of</strong> texts.All the comments he has made on his work have been more or less explanatory in nature.It remains to be seen what new paths may be opened in the future by this mostcontroversial <strong>of</strong> modern thinkers.Timothy MooneyNOTES1 This section reworks certain arguments from the opening sections <strong>of</strong> The Ethics <strong>of</strong>Deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas [13.73].2 This formulation implies, <strong>of</strong> course, a certain delusion on Rousseau’s part, namely that he didnot mean to say what he actually said and that what he actually meant to say is incontradiction with what is said in his text. Such a line <strong>of</strong> thought recalls Paul de Man’sobjections to Derrida in ‘The Rhetoric <strong>of</strong> Blindness: Jacques Derrida’s Reading <strong>of</strong>Rousseau’, in Blindness and Insight: Essays in the Rhetoric <strong>of</strong> Contemporary Criticism, 2ndedn (London: Methuen, 1983), pp. 102–41, where de Man goes so far as to claim that‘Rousseau’s text has no blind spots’ (p. 139). Consequently, ‘there is no need to deconstruct


Deconstruction and derrida 386Rousseau’ (ibid.). However, de Man continues, there is a pr<strong>of</strong>ound need to deconstruct theestablished tradition <strong>of</strong> Rousseau interpretation which has systematically misread his texts.Thus, although de Man claims that Derrida is Rousseau’s ‘best modern interpreter’ (p. 135),one who has restored ‘the complexities <strong>of</strong> reading to the dignity <strong>of</strong> a philosophicalquestion’ (p. 110), Derrida is still blind to the necessarily ambivalent status <strong>of</strong> Rousseau’sliterary language (p. 136). Derrida fails to read Rousseau as literature. Of Grammatology istherefore an exemplary case <strong>of</strong> de Man’s thesis on the necessary interaction <strong>of</strong> blindness andinsight in the language <strong>of</strong> criticism.In defence <strong>of</strong> Derrida, let me briefly say that despite de Man’s many insights, his blindness toOf Grammatology consists in the fact that he reads the latter as a critique <strong>of</strong> Rousseau andnot as a double reading. Derrida is no more speaking against Rousseau than he is speakingfor him. Indeed, one might go so far as to say that the proper name ‘Rousseau’, whose textsDerrida comments upon, simply signifies the dominant interpretation (or, for de Man,misreading) <strong>of</strong> Rousseau; that <strong>of</strong> the ‘époque de Rousseau’ ([13.4], 145; [13.29], 97), aninterpretation that sees Rousseau simply as a philosopher <strong>of</strong> presence, and which ascribes tohim the fiction <strong>of</strong> logocentrism, a fiction that extends even to modern anthropologists likeLévi-Strauss, whose structuralism, it must be remembered, is Derrida’s real target for somuch <strong>of</strong> part two <strong>of</strong> Of Grammatology.3 J.Searle, ‘Reiterating the Differences: A Reply to Derrida’, Glyph, 2 (1977): 203.4 J.Habermas, The Philosophical Discourse <strong>of</strong> Modernity, trans. F.Lawrence (Oxford: PolityPress, 1987), pp. 185–210.5 Cf. Heidegger, Sein und Zeit, 15th edn (Tübingen: Max Niemeyer, 1984), p. 26, trans.J.Macquarrie and E.Robinson as Being and Time (Oxford: Blackwell, 1962), p. 49.6 Cf. Heidegger, Zur Sache des Denkens (Tübingen: Max Niemeyer, 1969), p. 9, trans.J.Stambaugh as Time and Being (New York: Harper & Row, 1972), p. 9.7 R.Kearney, Dialogues with Contemporary Continental Thinkers (Manchester: ManchesterUniversity Press, 1984), 124.8 Cf. E.Levinas, ‘Transcendence et hauteur’, Bulletin de la Société Française de laPhilosophie, 56:3 (1962):92.9 R.Gasché [13.61], 101.10 Dialogues with Contemporary Continental Thinkers, 108.11 For a detailed discussion <strong>of</strong> closure in Derrida, see ‘The Problem <strong>of</strong> Closure in Derrida’, in[13.73], 59–106.12 J.Derrida, ‘Ponctuations: Le Temps de la thèse’, in Du droit à la philosophie [13.23], 444,trans. K.McLoughlin, ‘The Time <strong>of</strong> a Thesis: Punctuations’, in A.Montefiore (ed.),<strong>Philosophy</strong> in France Today (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1983), p. 38.13 Ibid., p. 446, trans. pp. 39–40.14 Derrida, Introduction à l’origine de la géométrie par Edmund Husserl [13.1], trans. [13.26],90. For a detailed outline <strong>of</strong> Derrida’s Introduction and its influence on his later work seeR.Bernet, ‘On Derrida’s “Introduction” to Husserl’s Origin <strong>of</strong> Geometry’ in J.Silverman (ed.)[13.70], 139–53.15 Neither Derrida nor Husserl would ever deny the bare logical objectivity <strong>of</strong> a geometricaltruth, that the three angles <strong>of</strong> a triangle make up two right-angles in two-dimensional space,for example. What they are claiming is that a particular objectivity is only philosophicallysignificant when set within a wider context. For a more detailed explanation <strong>of</strong> this claim, seethe Introduction, pp. 31–3 (trans. pp. 47–8).16 Leavey has provided a concordance <strong>of</strong> references to Hegel in his Glassary (Lincoln:University <strong>of</strong> Nebraska Press, 1986).


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 38717 Derrida’s comments on the modern university clearly display the influence <strong>of</strong> Heidegger, ashe would be the first to admit. An interesting comparison can be made between this aspect <strong>of</strong>Derrida’s work and the more recent writings <strong>of</strong> the Austro-American philosopher PaulFeyerabend. In particular see the latter’s Farewell to Reason (London and New York: Verso,1987).SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHYThe most exhaustive bibliography on the publications <strong>of</strong> Derrick is by A.Leventure, ‘AJacques Derrida Bibliography: 1962–1990’, Textual Practice, 5:1 (spring 1991).Reprinted in amended form in D.Wood, Derrida: A Critical Reader. Another usefulbibliography is by J.P.Leavey Jr and D.Allison, ‘A Derrida Bibliography’, Research inPhenomenology, 8 (1978):145–60. Also useful is the list given by P.Kamuf (ed.) in ADerrida Reader: Between the Blinds (New York and London: Harvester Wheatsheaf,1991). Many <strong>of</strong> Derrida’s articles have been published several times in French andEnglish in a bewildering variety <strong>of</strong> books and journals. I have confined the following listto his published books.Primary texts13.1 Introduction à l’origine de la géométrie par Edmund Husserl, Paris: PressesUniversitaires de France, 1962.13.2 La Voix et le phénomène: Introduction au problème du signe dans laphénoménologie de Husserl, Paris: Presses Universitaries de France, 1967.13.3 L’Ecriture et la différence, Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1967.13.4 De la grammatologie, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1967.13.5 Marges de la philosophie, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1972.13.6 La Dissémination, Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1972.13.7 Positions, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1972.13.8 Glas, Paris: Editions Galilée, 1974.13.9 L’Archéologie du frivole: Lire Condillac, Paris: Denoël-Gonthier, 1976.13.10 Eperons: Les Styles de Nietzsche, Paris: Aubier-Flammarion, 1978.13.11 La Vérité en peinture, Paris: Aubier-Flammarion, 1978.13.12 La Carte postale: De Socrate à Freud et au-delà, Paris: Aubier-Flammarion, 1980.13.13 L’Oreille de l’autre: Otobiographies, transferts, traductions: Textes et débats avecJacques Derrida, ed. C.Levesque and C.V.McDonald, Montreal: VLB Editions, 1982.13.14 D’un ton apocalyptique adopté naguère en philosophie, Paris: Editions Galilée,1983.13.15 Parages, Paris: Editions Galilée, 1986. (A collection <strong>of</strong> essays translated in severalEnglish language texts.)13.16 Schibboleth, pour Paul Celan, Paris: Editions Galilée, 1986.13.17 Psyché: Inventions de l’autre, Paris: Editions Galilée, 1987. [A collection <strong>of</strong> essaystranslated in several English language texts.]13.18 De l’esprit: Heidegger et la question, Paris: Editions Galilée, 1987.


Deconstruction and derrida 38813.19 Ulysse Gramophone: Deux mots pour Joyce, Paris: Editions Galilée, 1987. [Twoessays translated in separate English language texts.]13.20 Signéponge, Paris: Editions du Seuil, 1988.13.21 Mémoires pour Paul de Man, Paris: Editions Galilée, 1988.13.22 Limited Inc. Paris: Editions Galilée, 1990.13.23 Du droit à la philosophie, Paris: Editions Galilée, 1990. [A collection <strong>of</strong> essaystranslated in several English language texts.]13.24 Le Problème de la genèse dans la. philosophie de Husserl, Paris: PressesUniversitaries de France, 1990. [A printing <strong>of</strong> Derrida’s master’s thesis.]13.25 L’Autre Cap, Paris: Editions de Minuit, 1991.Translations13.26 Edmund Husserl’s Origin <strong>of</strong> Geometry: An Introduction, trans. J.P.Leavey, Jr,Lincoln: University <strong>of</strong> Nebraska Press, 1989, rev. edn.13.27 Speech and Phenomena and Other Essays on Husserl’s Theory <strong>of</strong> Signs, trans.D.B.Allison, Evanston: Northwestern University Press, 1973.13.28 Writing and Difference, trans. A.Bass, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1978.13.29 Of Grammatology, trans. G.C.Spivak, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press,1975.13.30 Margins <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, trans. A.Bass, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1982.13.31 Dissemination, trans. B.Johnson, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1981.13.32 Positions, trans. A.Bass, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1982.13.33 Glas, trans. J.P.Leavey, Jr, and R.Rand, Lincoln: University <strong>of</strong> Nebraska Press,1986.13.34 The Archeology <strong>of</strong> the Frivolous: Reading Condillac, trans. J.P.Leavey, Jr,Lincoln: University <strong>of</strong> Nebraska Press, 1987.13.35 Spurs/Eperons, trans. B.Harlow, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1979,bilingual edn.13.36 The Truth in Painting, trans. G.Bennington and I.McLeod, Chicago: University <strong>of</strong>Chicago Press, 1987.13.37 The Post Card: From Socrates to Freud and Beyond, trans. A.Bass, Chicago:University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1987.13.38 The Ear <strong>of</strong> the Other: Otobiography, Transference, Translation: Texts andDiscussions with Jacques Derrida, trans. P.Kamuf and A.Ronell, Lincoln: University<strong>of</strong> Nebraska Press, 1988, rev. edn.13.39 ‘Of an Apocalyptic Tone Recently Adopted in <strong>Philosophy</strong>’, trans. J.P. Leavey, Jr,The Oxford Literary Review, 6:2 (1984):3–37.13.40 ‘Shibboleth’, trans. J.Wilner, in S.Budick and G.Hartman (eds), Midrash andLiterature, New Haven; Yale University Press, 1986, pp. 307–47.13.41 Of Spirit: Heidegger and the Question, trans. G.Bennington and R.Bowlby,Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1989.13.42 Signéponge/Signsponge, trans. R.Rand, New York: Columbia University Press,1984, bilingual edn.13.43 Memoires for Paul de Man, trans. E.Cadava, J.Culler, P.Kamuf, and S. Lindsay,


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 389New York: Columbia University Press, 1989, rev. edn.13.44 Limited Inc., ed. G.Graff and trans. J.Mehlmann and S.Weber, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1988.13.45 The Other Heading: Reflections on Today’s Europe, trans. P.-A.Brault andM.G.Naas, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1992.13.46 Acts <strong>of</strong> Literature, trans. D.Attridge, London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1992. [A collection <strong>of</strong>essays by Derrida from several sources.]Criticism: introductory works13.47 Atkins, D.G. ‘The Sign as a Structure <strong>of</strong> Difference: Derridean Deconstruction andSome <strong>of</strong> Its Implications’, in R.De George (ed.), Semiotic Themes, Lawrence:University <strong>of</strong> Kansas Press, 1981, pp. 133–47.13.48 Cascardi, A.J. ‘Skepticism and Deconstruction’, <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Literature, 8:1(1984):1–14.13.49 Cousins, M. ‘The Logic <strong>of</strong> Deconstruction’, The Oxford Literary Review, 3:2(1978):70–7.13.50 Descombes, V. Modern French <strong>Philosophy</strong>, trans. J.Harding and L.Scott-Fox,Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1980.13.51 Eldridge, R. ‘Deconstruction and its Alternatives’, Man and World, 18 (1985):147–70.13.52 Gasché, R. ‘Deconstruction as Criticism’, Glyph, 7 (1979):177–216.13.53 Hoy, D.C. ‘Deciding Derrida: On the Work (and Play) <strong>of</strong> the French Philosopher’,London Review <strong>of</strong> Books 4:3:3–5.13.54 Kearney, R. Modern Movements in European <strong>Philosophy</strong>, Manchester: ManchesterUniversity Press, 1986.13.55 Norris, C. Deconstruction: Theory and Practice, New York and London: Methuen,1982.13.56 Norris, C. Derrida, London: Fontana, 1987.13.57 Rorty, R. ‘<strong>Philosophy</strong> as a Kind <strong>of</strong> Writing: An Essay on Derrida’, inConsequences <strong>of</strong> Pragmatism, Minneapolis: University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Press, 1982, pp.89–109.13.58 Wood, D. ‘An Introduction to Derrida’, Radical <strong>Philosophy</strong>, 21 (1979): 18–28.Criticism: more detailed works13.59 Caputo, J.D. Radical Hermeneutics: Repetition, Deconstruction, and theHermeneutic Project, Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1987.13.60 Culler, J. On Deconstruction: Theory and Criticism after Structuralism, Ithaca:Cornell University Press, 1982.13.61 Gasché, R. The Tain <strong>of</strong> the Mirror: Derrida. and the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Reflection,Cambridge, Mass, and London: Harvard University Press, 1986.13.62 Giovannangeli, D. Ecriture et repetition: Approche de Derrida, Paris: UnionGénérale d’Editions, 1979.13.63 Hartman, G. Saving the Text: <strong>Philosophy</strong>/Derrida/Literature, Baltimore, Johns


Deconstruction and derrida 390Hopkins University Press, 1982.13.64 Harvey, I. Derrida and the Economy <strong>of</strong> Difference, Bloomington: IndianaUniversity Press, 1986.13.65 K<strong>of</strong>man, S. Lectures de Derrida, Paris: Editions Galilée, 1984.13.66 Llewelyn, J. Derrida on the Threshold <strong>of</strong> Sense, London: Macmillan, 1986.13.67 Melville, S. <strong>Philosophy</strong> Beside Itself: On Deconstruction and Modernism,Minneapolis: University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Press, 1986.13.68 Sallis, J. (ed.) Deconstruction and <strong>Philosophy</strong>: The Texts <strong>of</strong> Jacques Derrida,Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1987.13.69 Silverman, H.J. (ed.) Hermeneutics and Deconstruction, Albany: State University<strong>of</strong> New York Press, 1985.13.70 Silverman, H.J. (ed.) Derrida and Deconstruction, New York and London:<strong>Routledge</strong>, 1989.13.71 Wood, D. and Bernasconi, R. (eds) Derrida and ‘Différance’, Evanston:Northwestern University Press, 1988.Criticism: critical and comparative works13.72 Altizer, T.J. et al. Deconstruction and Theology, New York: Seabury Crossroads,1982.13.73 Critchley, S. The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Deconstruction: Derrida and Levinas, Oxford: BasilBlackwell, 1992.13.74 Dasenbrock, R.W. (ed.) Redrawing the Lines: Analytic <strong>Philosophy</strong>,Deconstruction, and Literary Theory, Minneapolis: University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Press,1989.13.75 Dews, P. Logics <strong>of</strong> Disintegration: Post-structuralist Thought and the Claims <strong>of</strong>Critical Theory, New York and London: Verso, 1987.13.76 Evans, J.C. Strategies <strong>of</strong> Deconstruction: Derrida and the Myth <strong>of</strong> the Voice,Minneapolis: University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Press, 1991.13.77 Ferry, L. and Renaut, A. French <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> the Sixties: An Essay onAntihumanism, trans. M.H.S.Cattani, Amherst: University <strong>of</strong> Massachusetts Press,1990.13.78 Frank. M. What is Neostructuralism?, trans. R.Grey and S.Wilke, Minneapolis:University <strong>of</strong> Minnesota Press, 1989.13.79 Greisch, J. Herméneutique et grammatologie, Paris: Editions du CNRS, 1977.13.80 Lacoue-Labarthe, P. and Nancy, J.L. (eds) Les Fins de l’homme: a partir du travailde Jacques Derrida, Paris: Editions Galilée, 1981.13.81 Michelfelder, D. and Palmer, R. (eds) Dialogue and Deconstruction: TheGadamer-Derrida Encounter, Albany: State University <strong>of</strong> New York Press, 1989.13.82 Rapaport, H. Heidegger and Derrida: Reflections on Time and Language, Lincoln:University <strong>of</strong> Nebraska Press, 1989.13.83 Rose, G. Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Nihilism: Post-Structuralism and Law, Oxford: BasilBlackwell, 1984.13.84 Ryan, M. Marxism and Deconstruction: A Critical Articulation, Baltimore: JohnsHopkins University Press, 1982.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 39113.85 Staten, H. Wittgenstein and Derrida, Lincoln: University <strong>of</strong> Nebraska Press 1984.13.86 Wood, D. (ed.) Derrida: A Critical Reader, Oxford, Blackwell, 1992.


CHAPTER 14Postmodernist theoryLyotard, Baudrillard and othersThomas DochertyINTRODUCTION<strong>Philosophy</strong> has been touched by postmodernism. <strong>Philosophy</strong>, in the modern academy, issupposed to be the discipline <strong>of</strong> disciplines: it is philosophy which will be able to gathertogether, in one over-arching discourse, all the various micro-disciplinary problems andprocedures dealt with in the differing and ostensibly unrelated fields <strong>of</strong> literature,medicine, law, politics and so on; and it is philosophy which will also set itself the task <strong>of</strong>explaining their necessary separations. Postmodernism has not ‘challenged’ philosophy;rather it has simply enabled an earthquake under its foundations; for postmodernism ismost aptly situated precisely in the moment <strong>of</strong> the eradication <strong>of</strong> all foundationalthinking. This, <strong>of</strong> course, makes it a fundamentally paradoxical exercise to ‘define’postmodernism, for any definition would at once inherently seek the foundationaliststatus lexically integral to any description, while it would simultaneously discount in thesemantic content <strong>of</strong> the definition the very possibility <strong>of</strong> such foundationalism. In whatfollows, therefore, I shall not so much ‘define’ postmodernism in philosophy as indicatewhat is at stake in the debates that have constituted the postmodern moment in ourcultures. 1The term ‘postmodern’ was probably first consistently used by Arnold Toynbee in1939; and it was prefigured in his writings in 1934 (that is, at around the date <strong>of</strong> the firstrecorded instance <strong>of</strong> the term’s usage in Spanish, by Federico de Onis). 2 In A Study <strong>of</strong><strong>History</strong>, Toynbee suggested that the ‘modern’ historical period had ended, at a datedetermined in his studies roughly between 1850 and 1918. Toynbee’s historiography wasa product <strong>of</strong> the late nineteenth-century desire to found a synoptic and universal history;and this desire was most easily accommodated in Toynbee’s own individual work by thefact that his history approximates to the condition <strong>of</strong> a Christian theodicy. His task was toredeem humanity by discovering the trajectory <strong>of</strong> history to be a movement <strong>of</strong> separationfrom God and the eternal returns towards a theocentric and universalizing centre <strong>of</strong>meaning for the world. Secularity—history itself—becomes nothing more or less than ahumble interruption in a fundamentally circular narrative structure, whose end is alwaysalready somehow contained in its beginning. This, <strong>of</strong> course, is reflected in much <strong>of</strong> theartistic literary production <strong>of</strong> the first decades <strong>of</strong> the present century in western Europe,where writers such as Eliot, Joyce, Mann, Proust and many others all experimented withthe cyclical structures <strong>of</strong> history. For Toynbee and his kind, the facts <strong>of</strong> history wouldmake sense in relation to a governing narrative structure which would be given and


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 393legitimated in advance, since it is narrated fundamentally from the point <strong>of</strong> view <strong>of</strong> amonotheistic God.Such a notion <strong>of</strong> history is indebted to conflicts which had their root in Enlightenment.As Hayden White points out, the Enlightenment broadly agreed with Leibniz’smonadology in the sense that the philosophers <strong>of</strong> the Enlightenment subscribed to theview that there was an underlying unity or direction to human history. But the bigdifference between Leibniz and Enlightenment is that Leibniz thinks that this essentialunity <strong>of</strong> humanity is simply immanent, whereas the philosophers <strong>of</strong> the Enlightenmentview it as an ideal whose realization lies in the future, an ideal which is therefore, at best,imminent, or one which isyet to be realized in historical time. They could not take it as a presupposition <strong>of</strong>their historical writing, not merely because the data did not bear it out, butbecause it did not accord with their own experience <strong>of</strong> their own social worlds.For them the unity <strong>of</strong> humanity was an ideal which they could project into thefuture. 3Toynbee’s invocation <strong>of</strong> a postmodern moment can thus be seen to accord with theidealist drive <strong>of</strong> Leibniz; yet it also acknowledges the necessarily future orientation <strong>of</strong>history. Toynbee can plainly see that the ‘modern’ moment is not yet a moment <strong>of</strong> auniversal accord or harmony. In this, he is rather like the literary critic Erich Auerbach,who wrote his great study, Mimesis, while living in Turkey in flight from the Nazis. Inthat study, Auerbach poignantly and desperately attempts to discern, and to validate inthe literary history <strong>of</strong> the western world, the idea <strong>of</strong> a shared humanity in which, ‘belowthe surface conflicts’ which ostensibly wedge us apart, ‘the elementary things which ourlives have in common come to light’. 4 Both these writers were writing under the sign <strong>of</strong>the Second World War, in which the ideology <strong>of</strong> a specific racial difference anddisharmony momentarily, but triumphantly, was in the ascendant. Auerbach’s answer tohis predicament was to find solace in aesthetic harmony; Toynbee rather hypothesized amoment in the future, a ‘post-modern’ political moment, when history and humanity canbe properly redeemed.The word ‘postmodern’ is thus characterized, from its very inception, by an ambiguity.On the one hand, it is seen to describe a historical period; on the other, it simply describesa desire, a mood which looks to the future to redeem the present. This ambiguity is at thecore <strong>of</strong> a tension between postmodernism as an aesthetic style and postmodernity as apolitical and cultural reality.This is an instance <strong>of</strong> one <strong>of</strong> the dominant philosophical concerns responsible forshaping the question <strong>of</strong> the postmodern: what is the proper relation in our time betweenthe aesthetic and the political? The particular intimacy <strong>of</strong> the relation between aestheticsand politics in postmodernism is apparent even from the earliest considerations <strong>of</strong> thequestion. Leslie Fiedler characterized the emergence <strong>of</strong> new aesthetic priorities in thenovel during the 1960s as a ‘critical point’ in which new attitudes to time weredeveloped; and such attitudes, he claimed, ‘constitute…a politics as well as anesthetics’. 5 In the light <strong>of</strong> this, it is interesting to note that two <strong>of</strong> the foremost thinkers inthe field <strong>of</strong> postmodernism, Fredric Jameson and Jean-François Lyotard, both write


Postmodernist theory 394equally fluently and influentially on aesthetic culture and on political practices; and, moreimportantly, they have consistently pondered the relation between these hymeneallylinkedactivities. A deep formative influence lying behind much <strong>of</strong> the contemporarydebate, as is now perhaps obvious, is the legacy <strong>of</strong> the Frankfurt school, perhaps mostespecially the work <strong>of</strong> Adorno, to which I shall return. For present purposes, the singlesalient fact is that aesthetic postmodernism is always intimately imbricated with theissues <strong>of</strong> a political postmodernity, even if postmodernism and postmodernity may notalways themselves coincide.As a result <strong>of</strong> the legacy inherited from Frankfurt, the question <strong>of</strong> the postmodern isalso, tangentially at least, an issue <strong>of</strong> Marxism. Marxism, in placing the labouring body atthe interface between consciousness and material history, is the necessary explanatoryand critical correlative <strong>of</strong> a modern culture whose technology (in the form <strong>of</strong> an industrialrevolution) divides human knowledge or consciousness from human power or materialhistory. But the continuing revolutionary shifts within capitalism itself have necessitatedin recent years a marked and vigorous self-reflection on the part <strong>of</strong> Marxism. InHabermas, for instance, Marxism has taken ‘the linguistic turn’, in arguments for acontinuation <strong>of</strong> the emancipatory goals <strong>of</strong> Marxist theory and practice under a revisedrubric <strong>of</strong> ‘communicative action’. Habermas’s faith in the continuing viability <strong>of</strong> avigorously self-revising Marxism is shared by Jameson, who models his own version <strong>of</strong>‘late Marxism’ to correspond with Mandel’s descriptions <strong>of</strong> ‘late capitalism’. 6A key date here, <strong>of</strong> course, is 1968. This is not only a moment which could bedescribed as the high point <strong>of</strong> ‘grand theory’ and <strong>of</strong> the emergence <strong>of</strong> a poststructuralistchallenge to what had become by then the grand structuralist orthodoxies; it is also themoment <strong>of</strong> a critical political failure. The seeming availability <strong>of</strong> a revolution whichbrought workers and intellectuals together all across Europe represented a high point fora specific kind <strong>of</strong> Marxist theoretical practice. But when these revolutions failed, manybegan, at precisely that moment, to rethink their commitments to the fundamentalpremises <strong>of</strong> Marxist theory. Simultaneously, most other erstwhile dominant philosophicaltrajectories (the phenomenological tradition; the insistence on the centrality <strong>of</strong> Hegel viaKojève; the entire ‘history <strong>of</strong> western thought’) came under suspicion and revision.Rudolph Bahro and André Gorz began, from an economistic perspective, to rethinkissues <strong>of</strong> growth and sustainable development. Their emergent ecologism coincidedneatly with the ‘imaginative’ aspects <strong>of</strong> 1968, and Cohn-Bendit began his own movementfrom red to green. Kant began to assume the same kind <strong>of</strong> position <strong>of</strong> centrality onceoccupied by Hegel. Feminism and deconstruction both criticized the monolithic aspects<strong>of</strong> the institutions <strong>of</strong> western thinking. These all coincided neatly with the aftermath <strong>of</strong>the Algerian and other colonial crises, and with the growing awareness <strong>of</strong> the issuesrelating to post-colonialist cultures. The developed countries began to question not onlythe desire <strong>of</strong> the underdeveloped countries for the same levels <strong>of</strong> consumerist technologyas those enjoyed by the First World, but also the reliance <strong>of</strong> that First World uponexhaustible planetary resources.For many European thinkers who were now coming to question the fundamentalgrounds <strong>of</strong> their intellectual activities and philosophies, Marxism now began to appear tobe part <strong>of</strong> the problem, especially in its assumption <strong>of</strong> the desirability <strong>of</strong> human masteryover nature. The emerging Green movement <strong>of</strong> this period moved closely to a post-


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 395Marxism which was sceptical <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment: sharing the emancipatory ideals and thedesire for the fullest possible enjoyment <strong>of</strong> human capacities, but tempering that with theidea <strong>of</strong> a necessary cohabitation between humanity and the rest <strong>of</strong> nature. A postmodernworld needed a post-Marxist politics. Gramsci began to assume a prominent position inthis thinking, and the notion <strong>of</strong> hegemony replaced that <strong>of</strong> class as a fundamental politicalcategory. A new political pluralism became possible precisely at the moment whentechnology, as Lyotard indicates, had made it possible for the multinational companies tohomogenize and unify their forms <strong>of</strong> control. Yet underneath the increasinglyhomogenized capitalist world, the play <strong>of</strong> local forces continues to pose the threat <strong>of</strong> adisruptive pluralism which capitalism must now police if it is to sustain itself. For thoseforces to be activated, all we require is the release <strong>of</strong> something inimical to capital, therelease <strong>of</strong> something which cannot be inserted into or accommodated within a capitalisteconomy. The radical, central philosophers at this moment made their revolutionaryinvestment in the body and in libidinal desire.Perhaps the most extreme re-thinking <strong>of</strong> Marx began with the socalled ‘philosophy <strong>of</strong>desire’ in texts such as Lyotard’s Economie libidinale (1974; complete translation notavailable) or in the work <strong>of</strong> Deleuze and Guattari in their Capitalisme et schizophrénie(1972, 1980; translated 1984, 1987). This work led Lyotard and Deleuze to the positionwhere they favour the supervention <strong>of</strong> a micropolitics which will attend to the local andthe specific without recourse to some grand programme or macropolitical theory such asMarxism, psychoanalysis or evolutionary progress to legitimize actions taken at the locallevel. Practice is now valid—that is to say, it becomes an ‘event’—only when it isunanswerable to, or when it is actually disruptive <strong>of</strong>, a totalizing ‘grand theory’.The most explicit attack on fundamental Marxist theory, and specifically on itsunderlying category <strong>of</strong> ‘production’ is fully developed in Baudrillard’s Le Miroir de laproduction (1973; translated as The Mirror <strong>of</strong> Production 1975), a work which setBaudrillard firmly on a trajectory away from any form <strong>of</strong> classical Marxism. His worksince has increasingly sustained a problematization <strong>of</strong> the oppositionalist impetusinscribed in Marxist theory. For Baudrillard, opposition to a dominant force is alwaysalready inscribed in the structure which holds that dominant force in power. Theoppositional energy is diverted and recharged to the account <strong>of</strong> the dominant force:opposition works like inoculation. Marxism inoculates capital, the better to sustain it:‘critical’ or ‘oppositional’ thinking is, as it were, the last refuge <strong>of</strong> the bourgeois, who iscondemned to go through the motions <strong>of</strong> theoretical opposition while simultaneouslysustaining the historical status quo.Theory, by which I here mean any critical practice which makes a philosophicallyfoundational claim, enters into crisis itself in the wake <strong>of</strong> 1968. Not only has knowledgebecome uncertain, but more importantly the whole question <strong>of</strong> how to legitimize certainforms <strong>of</strong> knowledge and certain contents <strong>of</strong> knowledge is firmly on the agenda. No singlesatisfactory mode <strong>of</strong> epistemological legitimation is available. Even if one were, the verySubject <strong>of</strong> consciousness has, as a result <strong>of</strong> deconstruction and psychoanalysis, also beenthrown into doubt. Postmodernism is shaped and informed by these crises inepistemology, in ontology, in legitimation and in the Subject.In what follows, I shall firstly outline briefly the intellectual trajectory <strong>of</strong> two thinkerswhose work has shaped much <strong>of</strong> the debate over postmodernism: Jean-François Lyotard


Postmodernist theory 396and Jean Baudrillard. I shall then substantively address the issue <strong>of</strong> the Enlightenmentand its contested legacies. This leads into a necessary reconsideration <strong>of</strong> the question <strong>of</strong>politics, specifically under the rubric <strong>of</strong> a theory <strong>of</strong> justice. In conclusion, I shall drawtogether the characteristics <strong>of</strong> postmodern philosophy under the sign <strong>of</strong> what might becalled, in contradistinction to Leibnizian Optimism, a ‘new pessimism’ distinguished notby sadness but by stoicism.TWO PARADIGMATIC THINKERSJean-François LyotardLyotard moved to the centre <strong>of</strong> debates around postmodernism in the late 1970s when hedefined The Postmodern Condition in terms <strong>of</strong> an ‘incredulity toward metanarratives’. 7By this, he meant that, in the contemporary world, it had become difficult to subscribe tothe great narratives which had previously conditioned existence, be they narratives <strong>of</strong>salvation as in the various religions, or <strong>of</strong> emancipation as in Marx, or <strong>of</strong> therapy as inFreud, and so on. Postmodernism was defined in terms <strong>of</strong> an anti-foundationalism; it wasa mood and not a period; and it was characterized by a pragmatic and experimentalistattitude. Like the artist, the postmodern philosopher was to ‘work without rules in orderto formulate the rules <strong>of</strong> what will have been done’ after the event: 8 that is to say,thinking was to be radically experimental and ostensibly undirected in order to allow forthe unpreprogrammed, for the unforeseen, to take place.This led Lyotard to ponder two key theoretical principles: that <strong>of</strong> the ‘event’; and that<strong>of</strong> ‘justice’. 9 An ‘event’ occurs when ‘it happens’ without the ‘it’ having any specificidentity. Such an identification <strong>of</strong> ‘what’ happened can only happen when the event isinserted into a determining structure which will assign a meaning to the happening and asubstance to it. An ‘event’ is, as it were, a happening laid bare, devoid <strong>of</strong> a Subject,devoid <strong>of</strong>—or, better, prior to—an assigned significance. For Lyotard, the honour <strong>of</strong>thinking can itself only occur when thinking is ‘eventful’, when thinking is <strong>of</strong> the status<strong>of</strong> an event.Thought thus has little to do with the accumulation <strong>of</strong> ‘knowledges’ whosesignificance can be arrayed and arranged in hierarchical orders and sequences, initiallyplaced in repositories <strong>of</strong> knowledge such as libraries and museums, but increasingly inour time stored in ostensibly less material but equally reified form on microchips or oncomputer discs.For Lyotard, one effect <strong>of</strong> this is the necessity to wage war on all forms <strong>of</strong> totality. Heargues that any ‘grand narrative’ or foundational theory necessarily tends to homogenizethe absolute heterogeneity and specificity <strong>of</strong> singular events, thereby robbing the event <strong>of</strong>its full ontological or historical status and, more importantly for a philosopher, denyingthe possibility <strong>of</strong> genuine thinking. Further, he argues that such totality most <strong>of</strong>tenarticulates itself under the form simply <strong>of</strong> consensus. Here, he explicitly set himself apartfrom a thinker such as Jürgen Habermas, who argues that, given the lack <strong>of</strong> any priorfoundational philosophy upon which to build a rational society, individual Subjects muststrive collectively or mutually to attain a rational consensus which will enable the


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 397formulation <strong>of</strong> (at least provisional) values against which individual acts can be judged.In other words, a practical social theory is to be based upon rational discourse and thedisinterested pursuit <strong>of</strong> the better argument by a community. Lyotard argues that theconsensus thus reached is illusory, for it is necessarily founded upon a covert violencebetween the participants in the dialogues, in which the discourse <strong>of</strong> one Subject willalways find itself degraded in and by the discourse <strong>of</strong> the other. There is no consensuswithout the covert exercise <strong>of</strong> an imperialist power, according to Lyotard, who thereforeprefers the pursuit <strong>of</strong> paralogy over consensus.In order to maintain thinking at the status <strong>of</strong> the event, it becomes important to bearwitness to what Lyotard calls the ‘differend’. A differend occurs when, in a disputebetween two parties, the rules <strong>of</strong> conflict which bring them into their opposed positionsare made in the idiom <strong>of</strong> one party while the wrong from which the other suffers simplydoes not figure and cannot be recognized in that idiom. That is, the fundamental clash isone <strong>of</strong> language-games; the language-game <strong>of</strong> each party to the dispute simply cannotaccommodate the terms <strong>of</strong> the wrong suffered by the other; and further, there is nocommon language to which a ‘neutral’ appeal can be made to facilitate an adjudicationbetween the two parties.Here we enter the second specific realm <strong>of</strong> Lyotard’s concern: justice. As withknowledge, justice or judging too must become, for Lyotard, an event rather than asubstance. Given that we should abandon the metanarrative, or theory, we now have nogrounds upon which to make our judgments, be they aesthetic, ethical, political orwhatever. Yet we must judge, as a simple condition <strong>of</strong> living. For Lyotard, we must bearwitness to the differend and learn to judge without criteria. This he relates to the Kant <strong>of</strong>the third Critique, where a fundamental distinction is made between determiningjudgment and reflective judgment. Determining judgments are made in conformity to arule; reflective judgments are those where we lack any formal guiding principle, as inaesthetics. Lyotard urges the prioritization <strong>of</strong> the latter, for it is only by making judgingand thinking reflective—and thereby ‘eventful’ —that we will attain to the postmodernmood; and it is only that way that we can avoid the tacit political violence whichdominates and informs our modes <strong>of</strong> philosophy and <strong>of</strong> social being.Jean BaudrillardBaudrillard, like Lyotard, began his career on the political left. But in The Mirror <strong>of</strong>Production, he began his trajectory steadily away from any recognizable Marxism andtowards an extremely different position indeed. Fundamentally, Baudrillard began byarguing that Marx was not Marxist enough; that in the attempt to confound politicaleconomy, Marx simply could not manage to escape the form ‘production’ and the form‘representation’ which shape political economy. Marxism is thus tainted by a complicitywith capitalism, argued Baudrillard. He then began himself to try to find a way out <strong>of</strong> thisby insisting that the world is not ‘pro-duced’ but ‘seduced’: seduction, he claimed in Dela séduction, was logically prior to production. Seduction is not simply sexual: it is ratherany mutual interplay <strong>of</strong> forces <strong>of</strong> attraction and repulsion. It thus can have noparadigmatic form and veers into a multiplicity <strong>of</strong> social practices, none <strong>of</strong> which canassume a position <strong>of</strong> centrality, normativity or dominance. By this point, Marxism has not


Postmodernist theory 398been modified as much as entirely abandoned.Baudrillard began to indicate that Marxism had become part <strong>of</strong> the problem rather thanpart <strong>of</strong> the cure for a society in any case. He suggested that in any given system (such as acapitalist one) which is characterized by efficiency, the possibility <strong>of</strong> opposition to thesystem has to be controlled internally if the system is to persist. The single best way <strong>of</strong>controlling opposition is, <strong>of</strong> course, by accommodation. Hence, using a medical analogy,Baudrillard argued that every system generates localized ‘scandals’ which ostensiblythrow the system entirely into disrepute—but which operate rather like an inoculationagainst disease. Thus, for instance, Watergate was a scandal to the <strong>of</strong>fice <strong>of</strong> the President<strong>of</strong> the USA; but it was a scandal which ‘purified’ the <strong>of</strong>fice by vilifying its temporaryoccupant; it thus enabled the possibility <strong>of</strong> that now ‘purged’, ‘incorruptible’, <strong>of</strong>fice beinginhabited very soon after by Ronald Reagan, whose folly, lies and obvious insincerity faroutstripped anything <strong>of</strong> which Nixon seemed capable. Similarly, capitalism needs andthrives on Marxism; masculinism and patriarchy need feminism if they are to strengthenthemselves; racism requires anti-racist legislation; and so on.This somewhat desperate scenario provokes Baudrillard into his most radical claims,and into a position usually described as ‘nihilist’. The principle <strong>of</strong> reality itself, he argues,is defunct. At an early stage in his career, when he concentrated his attention onconsumer society, Baudrillard rapidly realized not only that consumption was the newstructure <strong>of</strong> power in the social, but also that something had happened to the verymateriality <strong>of</strong> the object <strong>of</strong> consumption. He argued that the object as signifier was moreimportant than the object as referent. In other words, classical ‘use-value’ had beenreplaced not just by ‘exchange-value’ but by what might be called ‘signifying-value’, orthe value <strong>of</strong> the object as a sign. The referent—the ‘real’ world—began simply todisappear in Baudrillard’s theoretical thinking.When allied to his thinking on negation or criticism as a form <strong>of</strong> therapeuticinoculation, this has far-reaching consequences. Baudrillard is now able to argue thatDisneyland, for example, is there as an arena <strong>of</strong> fantasy in order to generate the belief thatthe rest <strong>of</strong> the USA, everything ‘outside’ Disneyland, is ‘real’. In fact, Baudrillard argues,it is the rest <strong>of</strong> the USA which is now living entirely at the level <strong>of</strong> fantasy. Meanwhile‘the real’ has disappeared, or has been overtaken by simulacra <strong>of</strong> the real. Thus he feltable to claim, for instance, that, in a specific sense, the Gulf War <strong>of</strong> 1990 ‘did not takeplace’. Baudrillard indicates that technology has now made it possible for us to reproducethe real in a ‘more’ real form than the ‘original’; and historical events for us now are onlyreal once they have been mediated, usually by television. If we are to make any genuinephilosophical or political engagement in this state <strong>of</strong> affairs, it has to be done byattending not to specific aspects <strong>of</strong> the real but rather to the very principle <strong>of</strong> reality itself.ENLIGHTENMENT AND ITS LEGACIESA major source for the contemporary debates around the postmodern is to found in thework <strong>of</strong> the Frankfurt school, and perhaps nowhere more precisely than in the textproposed by Adorno and Horkheimer in 1944, the Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment, a work‘written when the end <strong>of</strong> the Nazi terror was within sight’. This work prefigures some <strong>of</strong>


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 399Lyotard’s later scepticism over Enlightenment; and it also seriously engages the issue <strong>of</strong>mass culture in ways which influence Gorz’s thoughts on the ‘leisure merchants’ <strong>of</strong>contemporary capitalist societies. It is worth indicating in passing that it is Adorno andHorkheimer, and not Lyotard, who propose that ‘Enlightenment is totalitarian’: 10 thevulgar characterization which describes contemporary German philosophy as pro-Enlightenment and the French as anti-Enlightenment is simplistic and false.Enlightenment aimed at human emancipation from myth or superstition, and from anenthralled enchantment to mysterious powers and forces <strong>of</strong> nature. Such emancipationwas to be effected through the progressive operations <strong>of</strong> critical reason. According toPeter Gay, ‘The Enlightenment may be summed up in two words: criticism and power’: 11criticism would become creative precisely by its capacity for empowering the individualand enabling his or her freedom. Why would Adorno and Horkheimer set themselves inopposition to this ostensibly admirable programme? Why do they argue that ‘The fullyEnlightened earth radiates disaster triumphant’? 12The problem lies not in the theoretical principle <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment but in its practice. Inthe desire to contest any form <strong>of</strong> animistic enchantment by nature, Enlightenment set outto think the world in an abstract form. Consequently, the material content <strong>of</strong> the worldbecomes a merely formal conceptual set <strong>of</strong> categories. As Adorno and Horkheimer put it:‘From now on, matter would at least be mastered without any illusion <strong>of</strong> ruling orinherent powers, <strong>of</strong> hidden qualities. For the Enlightenment, whatever does not conformto the rule <strong>of</strong> computation and utility is suspect’. 13 In a word, reason has been reduced tomathesis: that is, it has been reduced to a specific form <strong>of</strong> reason. More importantly, thisspecific inflection <strong>of</strong> reason is also now presented as if it were Reason-as-such, as if itwere the only valid or legitimate form <strong>of</strong> rational thinking. But Adorno and Horkheimershare a fear that, in this procedure, reason has itself simply become a formal category,which reduces or translates the specific concepts <strong>of</strong> material realities into rationalconcepts, or into a form amenable to mathematization. Reason becomes no more than adiscourse, a language <strong>of</strong> reason (the codes <strong>of</strong> mathematics), which deals with the‘foreign’ matter <strong>of</strong> reality by translating it into reason’s own abstract terms; andsomething—the ‘event’, non-conceptual reality itself—gets lost in the translation. AsAdorno and Horkheimer have it: ‘The multiplicity <strong>of</strong> forms is reduced to position andarrangement, history to fact, things to matter.’ 14 A mathematical consciousness thusproduces the world, not surprisingly, as mathematics. So a desired knowledge <strong>of</strong> theworld is reduced to the merest anamnesis, in which a consciousness never cognizes theworld as it is, but rather recognizes the world as the proper image and correlate <strong>of</strong> theconsciousness itself. Enlightenment thus serves only the self-Identity <strong>of</strong> the Subject <strong>of</strong>consciousness.‘Emancipatory’ knowledge turns out to involve itself firmly with a question <strong>of</strong> power,which complicates and perhaps even restricts its emancipatory quality. Knowledge,conceived as abstract and utilitarian, as a mastery over a recalcitrant nature, becomescharacterized by power; as a result, ‘Enlightenment behaves toward things as a dictatortoward man. He knows them in so far as he can manipulate them. The man <strong>of</strong> scienceknows all things in so far as he can make them.’ 15 Knowledge is hereby reduced totechnology; and that in nature—the ‘event’—which is unamenable to the formal orconceptual categories <strong>of</strong> such mathematical knowledge simply escapes consciousness.


Postmodernist theory 400Yet the Subject believes itself to have captured, dominated and conceptually controlledthe event; for it can determine the meaning <strong>of</strong> the event. There is thus only the illusion <strong>of</strong>power over nature; and yet there is a more important dividend <strong>of</strong> power here: the Subjectendowed with Enlightenment ‘knowledge’ has a power over the consciousness <strong>of</strong> otherswho may be less fluent in the language <strong>of</strong> reason. Knowledge is thus caught up in adialectic <strong>of</strong> mastery and slavery in which the victim is not a dominated and overcomenature but rather other overwhelmed human individuals. Accordingly, knowledge such asthis cannot be purely characterized by disenchantment and emancipation. Enlightenmentdoes not simply produce a disenchanted knowledge <strong>of</strong> the contents <strong>of</strong> the material world;rather, it produces a formally empowered Subject <strong>of</strong> consciousness, a Subject whichexerts its power in the discourse <strong>of</strong> reason, in a language-game. From now on inphilosophy—and this is what will be characterized as the ‘modern’ philosophy fromwhich postmodernism wishes to escape—to know is to be in a position to enslave, or, asLyotard will argue, ‘what was and is at issue is the introduction <strong>of</strong> the will into reason’. 16What is thus at issue is a confusion between the operations <strong>of</strong> a pure reason on the onehand and a practical reason on the other: a confusion between theory and practice,between gnosis and praxis. This is an old Aristotelian distinction which has resurfacedprecisely at the moment when many thinkers are becoming suspicious precisely <strong>of</strong> theoryitself. Twentieth-century literary criticism, the field in which much <strong>of</strong> the postmoderndebate has been fought out, presents us with a series <strong>of</strong> attempts to yoke together theoryand practice. Language, for instance, is <strong>of</strong>ten seen not as something which merely runsalongside and parallel to the ‘real’ events <strong>of</strong> material history: rather, it is consistentlysecularized, realized as itself a historical event. This is so all the way from J.L.Austin’sspeech-act theories <strong>of</strong> performative linguistics, through various advocates <strong>of</strong> the idea <strong>of</strong>‘language as symbolic action’ (Kenneth Burke, R.P.Blackmur and others), and all theway on to the contemporary revival <strong>of</strong> Jamesian and Deweian pragmatism in the thinking<strong>of</strong> Rorty, Fish and others. 17 These are all attempts to bring together the epistemologicalfunction <strong>of</strong> language with the ontological event <strong>of</strong> linguistic activity. And in this regard,twentieth-century literary criticism can be seen to be wrestling with one major andfundamental issue: the perceived rupture between the realm <strong>of</strong> language and the realm <strong>of</strong>Being, a rupture articulated most vigorously by those readers <strong>of</strong> Saussure’s Course inGeneral Linguistics who prioritize above all else the arbitrariness <strong>of</strong> the relation betweenthe linguistic signifier and the conceptual signified. By inserting the cognitive activity <strong>of</strong>a real historical reader between the text and its epistemological content, critics such asFish, Jauss, Iser and others tried to circumvent the threatened split between, on the onehand, the structure <strong>of</strong> consciousness (i.e., the conceptual forms in which a consciousnessappropriates the world for meaning) and, on the other, history (the material content <strong>of</strong> atext which may—and indeed, according to Fish, must—disturb such formal structures).In philosophical terms, what is at stake here is an old Kantian question regarding theproper or adequate ‘fit’ between the noumenal and the phenomenal. Kant was aware thatthe world outside <strong>of</strong> consciousness does not necessarily match precisely our perceptualcognitions <strong>of</strong> that world; and in the Critique <strong>of</strong> Pure Reason he argued that it waserroneous simply to confuse the two. The two elements <strong>of</strong> signification being confusedwere distinguished by Frege as ‘sense’ and ‘reference’; and it is a distinction similar tothis which was maintained by Paul de Man, who argued that such a confusion is precisely


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 401what we know as ‘ideology’: ‘What we call ideology is precisely the confusion <strong>of</strong>linguistic with natural reality, <strong>of</strong> reference with phenomenalism.’ 18De Man’s concern was to ensure that literary criticism made no premature assumptions<strong>of</strong> the absolute validity <strong>of</strong> reference; and in this he simply followed the deconstructivepractice <strong>of</strong> maintaining a vigilant scepticism about the legitimacy or truth-contents <strong>of</strong> anylinguistic proposition made about those aspects <strong>of</strong> the real world that could properly becalled ‘non-linguistic’. He was aware that the premature assumption that the world wasavailable for precise, ‘accurate’ or truthful linguistic formulation was itself an assumptionnot only grounded in but fundamentally demonstrative <strong>of</strong> ideology. But this, <strong>of</strong> course, issimply a reiteration <strong>of</strong> Adorno and Horkheimer in their complaint about the assumptionmade by (mathematical) reason that the world is available for rational comprehension. Itshould now be clear that the fundamental burden <strong>of</strong> the Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment is thatEnlightenment itself is not the great demystifying force which will reveal and unmaskideology; rather, it is precisely the locus <strong>of</strong> ideology, thoroughly contaminated internallyby the ideological assumption that the world can match—indeed, can be encompassedby—our reasoning about it, or by the attendant assumption that the human is notalienated by the very processes <strong>of</strong> consciousness itself from the material world and events<strong>of</strong> which it desires knowledge in the first place. Enlightenment, postulated upon reason,is—potentially at least—undone by the form that such reason takes.For Adorno and Horkheimer, this argument assumed a specific shape recognizable asan abiding question in German philosophy from Kant to Heidegger. What worriedAdorno and Horkheimer was that under the sign <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment, the Subject would becapable <strong>of</strong> an engagement with the world in a manner which would be ‘rational’ only inthe most purely formal (and thus vacuous) sense <strong>of</strong> the word. That is, they were anxiousthat what should be a properly political engagement which involves the Subject in aprocess called intellection or thinking could be reduced to a ritual <strong>of</strong> thinking, to a merelyformal appearance <strong>of</strong> thinking which would manifest itself as a legitimation not <strong>of</strong> aperception <strong>of</strong> the world but <strong>of</strong> the analytical modes <strong>of</strong> mathematical reason itself. Thepolitical disturbance <strong>of</strong> the Subject proposed by an engagement with a materiallydifferent Other (i.e., the Subject as transformed and transfigured through an ‘event’)would be reduced to a confirmation <strong>of</strong> the aesthetic beauty and validity <strong>of</strong> the process <strong>of</strong>mathematical reason itself, a reason whose object would thus be not the world in all itsalterity but rather the process <strong>of</strong> reason which confirms the Identity <strong>of</strong> the Subject as anidentity untrammelled by the disturbance <strong>of</strong> politics, an amorphous identity predicated ona narcissism and uninformed by any real event. In short, the Subject would be reduced toan engagement with and confirmation <strong>of</strong> its own rational processes rather than beingcommitted to an engagement with the material alterity <strong>of</strong> an objective world. 19The ‘aesthetic engagement’ with the world might be characterized as follows: thestructure <strong>of</strong> consciousness determines what can be perceived, and processes it inaccordance with its own internal logic, its own internal, formal or ritualistic operations <strong>of</strong>reason. There is thus a ritual or appearance <strong>of</strong> engagement with the material world only.‘Political engagement’ would be characterized by the rupture <strong>of</strong> such ritual, by theeruption <strong>of</strong> history into the consciousness in such a way that the aesthetic or formalstructures <strong>of</strong> consciousness must be disturbed, reconfigured, rearranged. Enlightenment’scommitment to abstraction is seen as a mode <strong>of</strong> disengagement <strong>of</strong> the ideological,


Postmodernist theory 402opinionated self: abstraction is itself meant to address precisely this problem. But it leads,according to Adorno and Horkheimer, not to a practice <strong>of</strong> thinking but rather to theritualistic form <strong>of</strong> thought; it <strong>of</strong>fers a form without content. Adorno and Horkheimer fearthat it is precisely when Enlightenment addresses the political that it in fact mostsuccessfully evades the political; that Enlightenment is Idealist precisely when it pretendsto be fully materialist.One twentieth-century legacy <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment is the so-called ‘Copernicanrevolution’ proposed initially by structuralism and semiotics. In the wake <strong>of</strong> RolandBarthes, the world became an extremely ‘noisy’ place: signs everywhere announced theirpresence and demanded to be decoded. Such decoding was <strong>of</strong>ten done under the aegis <strong>of</strong>a presiding formal structure, such as myth in anthropology (Lévi-Strauss), desire inpsychoanalysis (Lacan), or grammar in literature (Genette, Greimas, Todorov). Insemiotics, it is always important to be able to discover a kind <strong>of</strong> equivalence betweenostensibly different signs: this is, in fact, the very principle <strong>of</strong> decoding or <strong>of</strong> translationwhich is at the basis <strong>of</strong> semiotic analysis. But as Adorno and Horkheimer indicate:‘Bourgeois society is ruled by equivalence. It makes the dissimilar comparable byreducing it to abstract qualities.’ 20 Such abstraction must wilfully disregard thespecificity <strong>of</strong> the material objects or events under its consideration: ‘Abstraction, the tool<strong>of</strong> enlightenment, treats its objects as did fate, the notion <strong>of</strong> which it rejects: it liquidatesthem.’ 21 The semiotic revolution—a revolution which frequently masqueraded as apolitical, emancipatory heir <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment, but a revolution whose content was only atthe level <strong>of</strong> the abstract sign and thus at the level <strong>of</strong> an aesthetics denuded <strong>of</strong> politics—is,like Enlightenment, irredeemably bourgeois in the eyes <strong>of</strong> the postmodernist, for it isirredeemably caught up in a philosophy <strong>of</strong> identity which negates material and historicalreality in the interests <strong>of</strong> constructing a recognizable Subject <strong>of</strong> consciousness as a selfidenticalentity.When postmodernism rigorously questions the tradition <strong>of</strong> a selfconsciously ‘modern’Enlightenment philosophy, it does not do so in the interests <strong>of</strong> nihilism or irrationality.Postmodernism indicates rather (as did Foucault) that Enlightenment reason may notitself be entirely reasonable. 22 Further, postmodernism returns to the great Kantianquestions: how might we know the alterity <strong>of</strong> a material reality; how might we validate orlegitimize that knowledge?The Dialectic was written in a pr<strong>of</strong>ound awareness <strong>of</strong> the material and historicalrealities <strong>of</strong> fascism and <strong>of</strong> the Nazi atrocities. It is a text which inserts itself in a specifictradition <strong>of</strong> philosophical and ethical tracts which ask for an explanation <strong>of</strong> the presence<strong>of</strong> evil in the world. This tradition was properly inaugurated in the modern world by thedebates around Leibniz and Optimism. Optimism is based on the idea that nature is aLeibnizian monad, and that there is a great unifying chain in nature which links, in anecessary conjunction, all the ostensibly random and diverse elements <strong>of</strong> a seeminglyheterogeneous and pluralistic world. Much more important for our purpose is theobservation that Optimism must be based upon a specific idea <strong>of</strong> progressive time whichchallenges the meaning <strong>of</strong> events. It argues that what appears ‘now’ to be a local evil willbe revealed ‘in the fullness <strong>of</strong> time’ as something which essentially serves the realization<strong>of</strong> a greater good. As Voltaire’s Pangloss has it in Candide, ‘All is for the best in the best<strong>of</strong> all possible worlds’; or, as a less comic predecessor, Milton’s Satan, has it: ‘Evil, be


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 403thou my good.’ 23 <strong>History</strong> would reveal the immanent goodness in the most apparentlyevil acts; under the sign <strong>of</strong> a homogeneous and monadic eternity, the heterogeneous andsecular would be redeemed.In a sense this philosophy is a precursor <strong>of</strong> some contemporary theoretical principles;and it foreshadows directly the great (and perhaps final) flowering <strong>of</strong> a modernist thoughtin deconstruction. According to Optimistic philosophy, the meaning <strong>of</strong> an event is notimmediately apparent, as if it were never present-to-itself: its final sense—to be revealedas the necessity <strong>of</strong> goodness—is always deferred (to be revealed under the sign <strong>of</strong>eternity), and is thus always ‘different’ (or not what it appears to be to the local eyecaught up in the event itself). The major difference between deconstruction andOptimism is that Optimism believes that the final sense lies immanently within an event,whereas deconstruction eschews any such ‘immanentist’ ideas as metaphysical. Yet thetrajectory underpinning both is the same in that they share fundamentally and tacitly aninvestment in the notion <strong>of</strong> a ‘progressive enlightenment’: the passage <strong>of</strong> time is investedwith the idea <strong>of</strong> progress.Optimism was buried, <strong>of</strong> course, with the buildings under the earthquake in Lisbon on1 November 1755. But at that time a different idea <strong>of</strong> progress in history arises. After1755, progress is characterized as a gradual emancipation from the demands <strong>of</strong> the sign<strong>of</strong> eternity. The secularization <strong>of</strong> consciousness became a necessary precondition for thepossibility <strong>of</strong> an ethics: that is to say, the ethical is increasingly determined by thephilosophically rational, or the good is determined by the true. Hans Blumenberg in hisThe Legitimacy <strong>of</strong> the Modern Age, <strong>of</strong>fers eloquent testimony to the inflection this givesto philosophy and to truth. Traditionally, the pursuit <strong>of</strong> truth had been pleasurable,eudaemonic; from now on, the absoluteness <strong>of</strong> truth, and correspondingly its asceticharshness, becomes a measure <strong>of</strong> its validity: ‘Lack <strong>of</strong> consideration for happinessbecomes the stigma <strong>of</strong> truth itself, a homage to its absolutism.’ 24 Pain legitimizesknowledge.There arises thus the possibility—and Kantians would argue the necessity—<strong>of</strong>separating the realm <strong>of</strong> facts from the realm <strong>of</strong> values: neither can legitimately be derivedfrom the other, neither facts from values nor values from facts. Optimism has proceededon the grounds that these were intimately conjoined; and it followed that the progressivemovement from evil to good was seen as inevitable. But once epistemology is separatedfrom ethics, the whole idea <strong>of</strong> historical progress is itself called into question: no longerdo we know with any certainty the point towards which history is supposedlyprogressing. In the wake <strong>of</strong> this, humanity becomes enslaved not to the enchantments <strong>of</strong>myth but rather to the necessities <strong>of</strong> narrative, for humanity has embarked upon a secularmovement whose teleology is uncertain, whose plot is not inherently predetermined byvalues or by an ethical end. 25This critique <strong>of</strong> progress returns in the twentieth century; and is acentral component <strong>of</strong>a postmodernist mood. The paradigmatic example comes in architecture, where there hasgrown a resistance to the ‘modernist’ idea that all buildings must be innovative in aimand design. As Jencks and Portoghesi have suggested, it is possible to relearn from thepast, to develop a ‘new classicism’ or simply to engage with an abiding ‘presence <strong>of</strong> thepast’. 26 The result is—in principle if not always in practice—a heterogeneousjuxtaposition <strong>of</strong> different styles from different architectural epochs as a putative response


Postmodernist theory 404to the homogenizing tendency <strong>of</strong> the so-called ‘international style’. This argument leadsto two interrelated consequences. The first is that lived space is inhabited by acomplicating sense <strong>of</strong> historical time. 27 More importantly, there grows an awareness inarchitecture and urban planning in general that the local traditions <strong>of</strong> a place should berespected in all their specificity, while at the same time these local traditions may beopened to a kind <strong>of</strong> criticism by their juxtaposition with styles from other localities andfrom different traditions. 28 This is a localism without parochial insularity: arevalorization <strong>of</strong> the ‘periphery’ without the need for a determining ‘centre’.Probably the greatest and most-cited description <strong>of</strong> the postmodern coincides nicelywith this architectural scepticism regarding inexorable progress. In philosophy, Lyotardargued that the postmodern mood was characterized by an ‘incredulity towardsmetanarratives’. In an argument which he subsequently described as ‘overstated’, Lyotardargued that it was becoming increasingly difficult to subscribe to the great—andtherapeutically Optimistic—grand narratives which once organized our lives. 29 What hehad in his sights were the great totalizing narratives, great codes which in their degree <strong>of</strong>abstraction necessarily deny the specificity <strong>of</strong> the local event and traduce it in theinterests <strong>of</strong> a global homogeneity or a universal history. Such ‘master narratives’, as theysubsequently came to be called, would include the narrative <strong>of</strong> emancipation viarevolution proposed by Marx; the narrative <strong>of</strong> psychoanalytic therapy elaborated byFreud; or the story <strong>of</strong> constant development and adaptation advanced under the rubric <strong>of</strong>evolution by Darwin. Such narratives operate like Enlightenment reason: in order toaccommodate widely diverging local histories and traditions, they abstract the meaning <strong>of</strong>those traditions in a ‘translation’ into the terms <strong>of</strong> a master code, thereby violating thespecificity <strong>of</strong> the local and rendering real historical events unrecognizable. Asmetanarratives, they also become coercive and normative. In the interests <strong>of</strong> respectingthe heterogeneity <strong>of</strong> the real, and (more importantly for Lyotard) in the interests <strong>of</strong>maintaining the possibility <strong>of</strong> thought, <strong>of</strong> philosophy, we must wage war on suchtotalizing prescriptive grand narratives. Lyotard’s debt to Adornian critical theory isobvious here.This new pessimism with regard to the idea <strong>of</strong> historical progress was foreseen byWalter Benjamin, another great source for much postmodern thinking. In his famousseventh thesis on the philosophy <strong>of</strong> history, he indicates a specific scepticism regardinghistory which has been picked up and thoroughly developed in postmodernism. Hisfamous words in that thesis—‘There is no document <strong>of</strong> civilization which is not at thesame time a document <strong>of</strong> barbarism’—prize open the historical document—and, byextension, the event itself—to an internal instability and mutability. 30 Postmodernism hasenlarged on this to the extent that it challenges the very notion <strong>of</strong> there being anyuniversal history at all. It is important to be clear on this: postmodernism does not denyhistory; rather, it denies that there is only one history. For Lyotard, a universal historyimplies a single transcendent Subject position from which the history might berecuperated, appropriated, recounted or narrated: that is to say, universal history ispredicated on monotheism. In place <strong>of</strong> this, Lyotard advocates the pluralism <strong>of</strong> paganism:multiple gods, multiple histories, no transcendence. 31 Any singular event can be insertedinto any number <strong>of</strong> histories, each presided over by a different force or power; and itsvalue—its essence—will depend upon the contradictions and incoherence involved in our


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 405necessarily considering the event from such a pluralist perspective. In the simpler termswhich Benjamin had in mind, the singular event <strong>of</strong> a battle, say, is different when one isthe victim and when one is the victor: postmodernism would ask us to think the narrativesproposed by both such positions simultaneously.‘Modernity’ itself is increasingly seen as a Benjaminian document <strong>of</strong> civilization and<strong>of</strong> barbarism at once. It is a crude banalization <strong>of</strong> the postmodern position to suggest thatit entirely reneges on modernity. Zygmunt Bauman’s work is an excellent case in pointhere. Given the pessimism regarding Enlightenment and subsequent European history, itwould be an easy step to consider the twentienth century’s greatest disaster, the Naziatrocities, as a consequence <strong>of</strong> modernity. But Bauman takes a much more circumspectpostmodern attitude to the Holocaust. Citing sociological research into the victims <strong>of</strong>hijackings and terrorist activity, he indicates that so-called ‘personality change’ after thetraumatic event is in fact illusory. What happens is that historical circumstances after thetrauma favour the appearance <strong>of</strong> traits which were always latent, but which were notappropriate under the historical norms which conditioned the life <strong>of</strong> the victim before thetraumatic event. A different aspect <strong>of</strong> the personality assumes the normative position: thesame person remains. Bauman allegorizes this to consider the Holocaust:The unspoken terror permeating our collective memory <strong>of</strong> the Holocaust…is thegnawing suspicion that the Holocaust could be more than an aberration, morethan a deviation from an otherwise straight path <strong>of</strong> progress, more than acancerous growth on the otherwise healthy body <strong>of</strong> the civilized society; that, inshort, the Holocaust was not the antithesis <strong>of</strong> modern civilization and everything(or so we like to think) it stands for. We suspect (even if we refuse to admit it)that the Holocaust could merely have uncovered another face <strong>of</strong> the samemodern society whose other, so familiar, face we so admire. And that the tw<strong>of</strong>aces are perfectly comfortably attached to the same body. 32Modernity does not lead inexorably to the Holocaust; rather, the civilized face <strong>of</strong>modernity is attended constantly by a barbarism which is its Janus-complement.The horror at the evil <strong>of</strong> the Holocaust is, for Bauman, really a horror at the rationalityinscribed within the practice <strong>of</strong> the Holocaust. Enlightenment reason had enabled thedevelopment <strong>of</strong> an extraordinarily complete rationally ordered and self-sustaining socialprocess. Part <strong>of</strong> the legacy <strong>of</strong> this is the development <strong>of</strong> efficiency in productivity, andthe (<strong>of</strong>ten self-serving) development <strong>of</strong> technology. The horrifying truth <strong>of</strong> the matter,according to Bauman, is that ‘every “ingredient” <strong>of</strong> the Holocaust…was normal,“normal” not in the sense <strong>of</strong> the familiar…but in the sense <strong>of</strong> being fully in keeping witheverything we know about our civilization, its guiding spirit, its priorities, its immanentvision <strong>of</strong> the world’. 33 Structurally, the gas chambers are driven by the same presidingprinciples that were taken for granted as the positive aspects <strong>of</strong> modernity: rationalizedefficiency in industrial production. The barbarism <strong>of</strong> the Holocaust arises becauseEnlightenment contained within its drive to reason a carcinogenic drive to rationalism,which can be used as well for fascist as for emancipatory ends. For a postmodernsociologist such as Bauman, it becomes difficult to disintricate the ‘rationality <strong>of</strong> evil’from the ‘evil <strong>of</strong> [modern, instrumental] rationality’. As he indicates, in the world <strong>of</strong> the


Postmodernist theory 406death camps, everything was rationalized: ‘Each step on the road to death was carefullyshaped so as to be calculable in terms <strong>of</strong> gains and losses, rewards and punishments.’ 34The SS also knew that, in a perversion <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment, but a perversion made possibleprecisely by Enlightenment, reason was their single best ally in ensuring that their victimswould become complicit in their own suffering, betraying their fellows in the reasonablehope <strong>of</strong> prolonging their own lives thereby: ‘to found their order on fear alone, the SSwould have needed more troops, arms and money. Rationality was more effective, easierto obtain, and cheaper. And thus to destroy them, the SS men carefully cultivated therationality <strong>of</strong> their victims.’ 35Reason, which was supposed to legitimize the neo-pagan and emancipatory activities<strong>of</strong> Enlightenment, is now itself in need <strong>of</strong> legitimation. It can no longer assume thecapacity for self-legitimation without assuming an exclusivity which necessarilyvictimizes other possible (and equally, if differently) reasonable narratives. Its claimsupon universality are supplied by its inherent tendency to fall into the merest rationalism.It produces an administered society, and not a reasonable one; reason is replaced byefficiency and by the aesthetic and formal vacuities <strong>of</strong> rationalism. As both Derrida andFoucault have argued, though in very different ways, Enlightenment reason is pr<strong>of</strong>oundlyexclusivist: it can legitimate itself only by first identifying and then stigmatizing itsOther. As a result, Enlightenment reason is a potent weapon in the production <strong>of</strong> socialnormativity, driving people towards a conformity with a dominant and centred single‘norm’ <strong>of</strong> behaviour. Reason, in short, has to produce the ‘scandal’ <strong>of</strong> its Other to keepitself going. Baudrillard has argued that this has an extremely important corollary effectin the twentieth century. In our time, it is not so much reason itself which requireslegitimation as the very principle <strong>of</strong> reality (which, it is assumed, is founded uponrational principles). Society, in a move structurally parallel to Enlightenment reason, thusproduces the Other <strong>of</strong> the real—fantasy—to legitimize the normativity <strong>of</strong> its ownpractices. Thus: ‘Disneyland is there to conceal the fact that it is the “real” country, all <strong>of</strong>“real” America, which is Disneyland (just as prisons are there to conceal the fact that it isthe social, in its entirety, in its banal omnipresence, which is carceral.’ 36 Theemancipation proposed by Enlightenment brings with it an incarcerating impetus: its‘freedom’ turns out to be but the form <strong>of</strong> a freedom, an aesthetics rather than a politics <strong>of</strong>freedom. The name for this aestheticization <strong>of</strong> the political is representation. In thepostmodern, representation, as both a political and an aesthetic category, has come underincreasing pressure; and it is to this that we can now turn.JUSTICE AND REPRESENTATIONEnlightenment reason is self-legitimizing: it takes one historically and culturally specificinflection <strong>of</strong> reason for the universal form <strong>of</strong> all Reason; and then adjudges all competingforms <strong>of</strong> reason to be, ipso facto, unreasonable. 37 In crude terms, Enlightenment Europejudged the rest <strong>of</strong> the cultures <strong>of</strong> the world in precisely the terms <strong>of</strong> EnlightenmentEurope; and when, not surprisingly, it found the rest <strong>of</strong> the world to be ‘different’, itjudged it to be inferior, unreasonable, ‘underdeveloped’. Hence there arises thelegitimation for a racist and imperialist consciousness which underpins some <strong>of</strong> the most


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 407unjust actions <strong>of</strong> the modern world, culminating perhaps in the Holocaust.Enlightenment’s difficulty, it seems, was in accepting the possibility <strong>of</strong> a plurality <strong>of</strong> theforms <strong>of</strong> reason, each specific to particular historical or cultural events in theirsingularity. That difficulty had its root in the tendency to abstraction, or to theory.Equally abstract is the idea <strong>of</strong> a Universal <strong>History</strong> which, if it is to exist, mustdisregard the singularities <strong>of</strong> specific events, reading them as ‘signs’ or semiotic counterswhich can be meaningfully inserted into a governing and totalized master narrative.Given that a human culture or society is made possible precisely by the narratives whichit tells to itself, then it becomes clear that what is at stake here is a massive politicalinjustice.The postmodern attack on the notion <strong>of</strong> a Universal <strong>History</strong> has importantramifications for the questions <strong>of</strong> representation and justice. As I indicated earlier, aUniversal <strong>History</strong> is tacitly predicated upon a monotheism which brings in its wake anincipient totalitarianism. It presupposes a single transcendental position (‘God’) fromwhich the whole <strong>of</strong> history can be recounted or truthfully narrated. Accordingly, if wesubscribe to such notions, then all contradictory (‘pagan’) human narratives areautomatically discarded and deemed to be nothing more than ‘fictions’. In pragmatic fact,<strong>of</strong> course, this has meant that, as Benjamin and others have indicated, all history is toldfrom the point <strong>of</strong> view <strong>of</strong> the victor, who, as a ‘master narrator’, assumes the position <strong>of</strong> atotalitarian author, or God; and any opposing narratives—such as the narratives whichconstituted the entire cultural and social history <strong>of</strong> the victim—are either ignored, deniedor brought into line with the dominant narrative <strong>of</strong> the victor, from whose point <strong>of</strong> viewthey appear to be deviant, disjunctive and clearly false. The master narrator simplysubsumes other competing narratives within a totalized framework, and assigns thecompeting narratives to a marginalized position. Those margins have, in modernism,been occupied by various figures such as dissidents, intellectuals, communists, women,lesbian and gay people, ‘foreigners’, and so on. In contrast to this, the postmodern facesthe problematic possibility <strong>of</strong> a potentially endless and self-contradictory series <strong>of</strong> representationswithout the predication <strong>of</strong> an implied presence anywhere which would existto ground or hierarchize the competing representations or narratives.In addition to this, and linked to it, is the political complication <strong>of</strong> the issue <strong>of</strong> justice.How can we judge an event? In the ‘modern’ world it is possible to judge according tospecific criteria. These criteria are assumed to be shared by a social consensus. But thisalso implies an instance <strong>of</strong> presence somewhere, a fundamental ground <strong>of</strong> truth uponwhich all judgments can be made. That is to say, both representation and justice require afoundational theory. It is precisely such a theory that postmodernism would challenge, onthe grounds that it is a theory which is always tacitly founded upon injustice and upon thecovert violence <strong>of</strong> totalization.Habermas would agree that no necessary foundation for a social formation exists priorto human beings in community. But he has consistently argued for the necessity <strong>of</strong>struggling towards the fabrication <strong>of</strong> a society founded upon a rational consensus.Lyotard challenges this on the grounds that consensus without the prior exercise <strong>of</strong> powerand without covert injustice seems to be impossible; and on the grounds that such aconsensus, which would <strong>of</strong> necessity conceal and act as a cover for the violences andinjustices upon which the social is founded, may therefore not even be desirable.


Postmodernist theory 408For Lyotard, there is, in any achieved consensus, necessarily repression or, worse,oppression. 38 In order to circumvent this, he advocates that we multiply differences andthat we bear witness to the differend, a term taken from legal discourse. A differendarises under specific circumstances: two opposed parties in a dispute are each in the rightaccording to their own terms <strong>of</strong> reference; the terms <strong>of</strong> reference <strong>of</strong> each party cannotaccommodate, or refuse to accommodate, the other party; and there is no common groundor third set <strong>of</strong> terms <strong>of</strong> reference which will allow an adjudication between the twoparties while respecting their own terms <strong>of</strong> reference. In short, a differend arises when welack a theory which will encompass radically divergent (‘pagan’) narratives. This mayarise in a court <strong>of</strong> law; but, for Lyotard, it arises everywhere as an issue <strong>of</strong> justice andrepresentation. 39Neither party to a differend can find an adequate representation <strong>of</strong> itself in thelanguage-game <strong>of</strong> the other party. Each therefore feels violated by its insertion into thatlanguage-game. Further, we lack a ‘neutral’ or monotheistic theory which can encompassand adequately represent both parties. In the absence <strong>of</strong> criteria upon which to make thenecessary judgments, how then do we judge? 40Judgment and representation are intimately related in the postmodern. The just hasalways been closely linked to the true; and justice depends upon a revelation <strong>of</strong> truth.There is a clear structural similarity between this and a Marxist hermeneutic. The project<strong>of</strong> an ideological demystification starts from the presupposition that a text (or the object<strong>of</strong> any critical judgment) is always informed by a specific historical and political nexus,and that the text is the site for the covering over (or disappearance) <strong>of</strong> the contradictionsimplicit in this historical conjuncture. The task <strong>of</strong> critical judgment here is in the firstinstance epistemological: it involves the necessary revelation <strong>of</strong> a truth lying concealedbehind an appearance. But it is precisely the opposition between ideological appearanceon one hand and foundational or true reality on the other which the postmodern putsunder speculative pressure.As Baudrillard has argued, the real in our time is no longer what it used to be.Technology has made it possible to confound the separation between the authentic andthe fake, between the real and its representation, in ways far more radical than evenBenjamin imagined. Yet that separation, <strong>of</strong> course, is precisely the separation required fora foundational philosophy or for any philosophy which has a strong investment in aunivocal and transcendental notion <strong>of</strong> truth. The postmodern eschews any such simpleaccess to the true or to foundational criteria upon which to base its acts <strong>of</strong> criticism or <strong>of</strong>judgment.We live increasingly in the time <strong>of</strong> what Debord aptly called ‘the society <strong>of</strong> thespectacle’. Our politics, and our justice, have become increasingly ‘spectacular’, a matter<strong>of</strong> ‘show trials’ and ‘live’ television courtroom drama. A poignant icon <strong>of</strong> this state <strong>of</strong>affairs is to be found in the example, <strong>of</strong>ten cited by Paul Virilio, <strong>of</strong> the women <strong>of</strong> thePlaza de Maya in Buenos Aires, who congregate in silence at regular intervals simply tobear witness to their relatives who have been made to ‘disappear’ by a cruel politicomilitaryregime. 41 Political systems—including soi-disant ‘democratic’ systems—increasingly deal with dissident thought by controlling and regulating its appearances;and, on occasion, dissident thinkers themselves are entirely ‘disappeared’ either directlyby force or indirectly by bureaucratic measures. The essence <strong>of</strong> the political in our time is


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 409formulated not upon the old—the ‘modernist’—relation between appearance and reality,but rather upon the relation between appearance and disappearance. Increasingly, the realitself is subject to this relation as well, when, for a random instance, the reality <strong>of</strong> theGulf War <strong>of</strong> 1990 was reduced to the status <strong>of</strong> a video game, death and destructiondisappearing until such times as the military decided it was appropriate for theirreappearance before the population to be acceptable. 42Fundamentally, this shift has affected the status <strong>of</strong> knowledge upon which judgmentand representation are based. The opposition <strong>of</strong> appearance to reality assumes necessarilythat the Object <strong>of</strong> knowledge is stable, and that there exists a model for the Subject <strong>of</strong>knowledge which is transcendent. But in the postmodern mood, this has beencontaminated by a historicity and mutability which render both Subject and Objectunstable. As a result, knowledge itself—predicated upon a stable relation between theSubject and Object <strong>of</strong> knowledge, upon a moment <strong>of</strong> anagnorisis or recognitionproducing the Identity <strong>of</strong> the Subject—has entered into crisis.This crisis was foreseen by Kant. In the Critique <strong>of</strong> Pure Reason Kant faced up to thequestion <strong>of</strong> the scientificity—by which he meant verifiability—<strong>of</strong> knowledge about theworld; and he argued there for the necessity <strong>of</strong> a priori judgment in such matters. Butmore than this, he argued that an a priori knowledge gleaned simply from an analyticmethodology would simply tell us a great deal about the methodology, and notnecessarily anything new about the world: it would provide only anamnesis. That is tosay, to perceive the world at all, consciousness needs a form in which to comprehend it;that form—the analytic method <strong>of</strong> perception—serves primarily the function <strong>of</strong> selflegitimation.Kant, like the contemporary postmodernist, wanted the world to be able toshock us into new knowledge, into the unforeseen and unpredictable. For Badiou, whomakes a clear—and we might now say ‘Kantian’—distinction between truth and theaccumulation <strong>of</strong> knowledges, for instance, ‘what is clear is that the origin <strong>of</strong> a truth is <strong>of</strong>the order <strong>of</strong> an event’. 43 Kant wanted the world to be able to shock us out <strong>of</strong> theideological conditioning <strong>of</strong> our consciousness’s structures. He wanted, thus, what hecalled the synthetic a priori, which would exceed the analytic a priori. The syntheticwould not only confirm the method <strong>of</strong> epistemological analysis <strong>of</strong> the world; it wouldalso allow for the structural modification <strong>of</strong> the very analytic method itself to account forand encompass a new given, the new and therefore unpredictable data <strong>of</strong> the world. Itwould thus provide not just anamnesis but what we would now call the event <strong>of</strong>knowledge, or knowledge as event rather than fact.In the Critique <strong>of</strong> Judgment, this distinction between analytic and synthetic more orless maps directly on to a distinction between determining and reflective judgments, adistinction made much <strong>of</strong> by Lyotard in the question <strong>of</strong> postmodern justice. In adetermining judgment, an analytic method determines—predetermines—the result <strong>of</strong> thejudgment: as in mathematics, say, where the structure <strong>of</strong> arithmetic determines the result<strong>of</strong> its internally generated problems, such as those <strong>of</strong> addition or subtraction. In reflectivejudgment, we have a different state <strong>of</strong> affairs, for here, as in our judgments about theaesthetically beautiful, there are no predetermining rules in accordance with which wecan verify our judgments: we judge ‘without criteria’, in the phrase made famous byLyotard. In short, this means that we judge without a predetermining theory. Judgments,we could say, are replaced by acts or by events <strong>of</strong> judging: the aesthetic form <strong>of</strong> justice is


Postmodernist theory 410replaced by the political event <strong>of</strong> justice.In this state <strong>of</strong> affairs, the operation <strong>of</strong> reason extends itself beyond its own internallycoherent framework and attempts to grasp—or to make—the new. This extension is onein which we can see a shift in emphasis away from scientific knowledge towards whatshould properly be called narrative knowledge. Rather than knowing the stable essence <strong>of</strong>a thing, we begin to tell the story <strong>of</strong> the event <strong>of</strong> judging it, and to enact the narrative <strong>of</strong>how it changes consciousness and thus produces a new knowledge. The postmodernprefers the event <strong>of</strong> knowing to the fact <strong>of</strong> knowledge, so to speak.But the central problem remains: how can one legitimize an ‘event’ <strong>of</strong> judging? Withrespect to what can one validate what must effectively be a singular act? For Lyotard, acredulity towards metanarratives (i.e., subscription to a prevailing theory against whosenorms single events <strong>of</strong> judging might themselves be judged and validated) is tantamountto a concession to systems theory. Even Habermas, who is opposed to Lyotard on manycounts, opposes this, seeing that in such systems theory ‘belief in legitimacy…shrinks toa belief in legality’. 44 For Habermas, communicative action can lead to the establishment<strong>of</strong> consensus, which would provide the necessary—if always provisional—grounds uponwhich to make our judgments. But Lyotard would see the establishment <strong>of</strong> consensus as ameans <strong>of</strong> arresting the flow <strong>of</strong> events, in such a way that truth would be reduced to anaccumulation <strong>of</strong> knowledges. That is to say, in short, that consensus is the meanswhereby a philosophy <strong>of</strong> Becoming is reduced to a philosophy <strong>of</strong> Being. The modernistassumes that it is possible to pass from Becoming to Being; the postmodernist believesthat any such move is always necessarily premature and unwarranted, and that its primaryvictim is truth in the guise <strong>of</strong> the event.Politics, as we usually think it, depends upon consensus; most <strong>of</strong>ten, such consensusarticulates itself under the rubric <strong>of</strong> ‘representation’, in which there is first an assumedconsensus between representative and represented, and second the possibility <strong>of</strong>consensus among representatives. This is bourgeois democracy, and, for thepostmodernist, hardly a democracy at all. In place <strong>of</strong> such a politics, the postmodernistmakes the demand for a justice. Justice cannot happen under bourgeois democracy, whichis always grounded in the tyranny <strong>of</strong> the many (and even, <strong>of</strong> course, in many‘democratic’ systems, on the tyranny <strong>of</strong> the few—on the hegemonic control <strong>of</strong> thoughtand <strong>of</strong> mediatic representations, appearances and disappearances, exercised by a few whomediate the norms <strong>of</strong> a social formation). We may no longer be able to legislatecomfortably between opposing or competing political systems, for we can no moresubscribe to such totalizing forms; but we can address the instance, the event, <strong>of</strong> judgingand <strong>of</strong> justice in its singularities.Here lies the basis <strong>of</strong> the ethical demand in the postmodern, a demand whose roots liein the work <strong>of</strong> a philosopher such as Levinas. We must judge: there is no escape from thenecessity <strong>of</strong> judging in each particular case. Yet we have no grounds upon which to baseour judgment. This is pr<strong>of</strong>oundly akin to Levinas:I have spoken a lot about the face <strong>of</strong> the Other as being the original site <strong>of</strong> thesensible…. The proximity <strong>of</strong> the Other is the face’s meaning, and it means in away that goes beyond those plastic forms which forever try to cover the facelike a mask <strong>of</strong> their presence to perception. But always the face shows through


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 411these forms. Prior to any particular expression and beneath all particularexpressions, which cover over and protect with an immediately adopted face orcountenance, there is the nakedness and destitution <strong>of</strong> the expression as such,that is to say extreme exposure, defencelessness,vulnerability itself…. In itsexpression, in its mortality, the face before me summons me, calls for me, begsfor me, as if the invisible death that must be faced by the Other, pure otherness,separated, in some way, from any whole, were my business. 45The ‘face-to-face’ implicates us in a response, in the necessity <strong>of</strong> sociality. We mustbehave justly towards the fact <strong>of</strong> the Other; but we cannot do that according to apredetermined system <strong>of</strong> justice or a predetermining political or ethical theory. The Otheris itself always other than itself; it is not simply a displaced Identity in which we mayonce more recognize and reconstitute our self. The demand is for a just relating to alterity,and for a cognition <strong>of</strong> the event <strong>of</strong> heterogeneity. In short, therefore, we must discover—produce—justice. Here, for Lyotard and many others is the real political burden <strong>of</strong> thepostmodern: the search for a just politics which will respect the differend that constitutesthe event.THE NEW PESSIMISMPostmodernism has thrown the very fundamental notion <strong>of</strong> critique into doubt. It asks twobasic questions <strong>of</strong> critique: first, given that, in order to be consistent internally, critiquemust have a theoretical foundation, how does it escape the injustice <strong>of</strong> violence; second,is critique not always accommodated by and within the existing totality <strong>of</strong> its ostensibleobject, and thereby rendered at best redundant and at worst complicit with its own defeat?Many conclude, as a consequence, that postmodernism is nihilist through and through,and that it gives succour to a contemporary socio-cultural and political state <strong>of</strong> affairs inwhich late capitalism carries on unabated and uncontested.This view causes a particular concern among critics <strong>of</strong> culture, who, coincidentallywith the rise <strong>of</strong> postmodernism in philosophy, have striven to validate mass and popularforms <strong>of</strong> culture, and who therefore see the work <strong>of</strong> critical philosophy to be thoroughlyenmeshed in matters <strong>of</strong> general political interest. It is a widely held belief that thepostmodern has somehow eradicated the boundaries supposed to exist between ‘high art’and ‘popular culture’. This is largely due to an understanding, deriving largely fromJameson, that the fundamental trope <strong>of</strong> postmodernism in art is pastiche, a ‘parodywithout purpose’. 46 While modernists would cite or refer intertextually to a wide range <strong>of</strong>other artistic products (Joyce using Homer, say), they would do so for some specific ends.Postmodernists, it is argued, reiterate the same structural strategy <strong>of</strong> quotation, partialmisrepresentation and so on, but they do this simply for the sake <strong>of</strong> it. In short, wheremodernism’s strategy <strong>of</strong> quotation sent the Subject from one signified to another,postmodernism’s similar strategy stays defiantly at the level <strong>of</strong> the signifier. We watch arock video, in which allusions will be made to Hitchcock, say, and which may use archivecinematic footage; but the point is simply to play with such references and not to assignany governing ‘meaning’ or intentionality to them.


Postmodernist theory 412This is an ‘ad hocism’ which has seen its counterpart in some forms <strong>of</strong> contemporaryarchitecture, where some architects have explicitly tried to accommodate their design tothe various tastes and demands <strong>of</strong> a variegated community. Typically, contemporarypopular art-forms plunder, and thereby question the ‘value’ <strong>of</strong>, the forms <strong>of</strong> high art,which are <strong>of</strong>ten deemed to be obstructively monumental. Modelling themselves onDuchamp, whose ‘ready-mades’ or ‘LHOOQ’ derive their power from the questioning <strong>of</strong>all modes <strong>of</strong> ‘originality’, contemporary artists frequently ‘sample’ or repeat the ‘greatworks’ <strong>of</strong> the past. In fact, as a result <strong>of</strong> this, much <strong>of</strong> the popular cultural product whichgoes under the name <strong>of</strong> the postmodern in our time is actually simply a continuation <strong>of</strong>the modern. It is frequently characterized by fragmentation instead <strong>of</strong> unity, byintertextuality or autoreferentiality instead <strong>of</strong> reference, by the prioritization <strong>of</strong> thesignifier over the signified, and similar tropes and figures as we found in Joyce, Proust,Mann, Gide, Picasso, Kandinsky, Schoenberg, Stravinsky and others.There is an important distinction, however. If the allusions and cultural crossreferencesmade in contemporary popular art are not grasped by an audience, then so beit. There is nothing to be gained by such knowledge, which would only allow for the selfsatisfyingcongratulation <strong>of</strong> narcissistic self-recognition and self-legitimation as a‘connoisseur’. The fundamental argument here is based upon a rather cheerful‘degradation’ <strong>of</strong> knowledge, or at least a degradation <strong>of</strong> knowledge-as-fact in favour <strong>of</strong>knowledge-as-event.Knowledge here has become nothing more than the next ‘byte’ on the computer screen,the next 30,000 pixel-image, the next s<strong>of</strong>tware package. It is important to indicate thatthis is as much an effect <strong>of</strong> the technology <strong>of</strong> postmodernity as it is <strong>of</strong> any philosophicaldeterminants <strong>of</strong> the cultural practices <strong>of</strong> postmodernism. For the philosopher orintellectual who assumes that his or her position is to be that <strong>of</strong> the critic whose criticismsare based upon knowledge, enlightenment, the pursuit <strong>of</strong> truth or at least <strong>of</strong> the betterarguments in the interests <strong>of</strong> the construction <strong>of</strong> a ‘rational society’, this surely provokesa dismal pessimism.Yet it would be true to say that this kind <strong>of</strong> pessimism is, in a sense, rather banal. Withthis form <strong>of</strong> pessimism, there yet remains the hope <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment, <strong>of</strong> an enlightenmentpossessed by the critic and therefore available to others. What is at stake inpostmodernism is a much more rigorous form <strong>of</strong> Pessimism, one which will act as aphilosophical counter to the Optimism on which Enlightenment and modernity arefundamentally grounded. As I indicated earlier, such Optimism projects into the future amoment <strong>of</strong> redemption <strong>of</strong> the present. It suggests the possibility and even the eventualnecessity <strong>of</strong> a coincidence between intellection and material practice, between aestheticsand politics, between ‘I’ as the Subject <strong>of</strong> consciousness and ‘me’ as its Object. Therebyit suggests the immanence as well as the imminence <strong>of</strong> a moment <strong>of</strong> self-presence; andfundamentally, therefore, such an Optimism can be seen to be predicated upon aphilosophy <strong>of</strong> Identity. If the postmodern is distinguishable from the modern, thedistinction lies in the willingness <strong>of</strong> postmodernism to countenance and indeed toencourage a philosophy <strong>of</strong> alterity. The Pessimism <strong>of</strong> the postmodern lies in a realizationthat the future will not redeem the present; that the material world may be thoroughlyresistant to consciousness and to our determination to master it by signification; thathistory, in short, does not exist for the Subject.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 413Such a Pessimism, <strong>of</strong> course, has nothing to do with an emotion <strong>of</strong> sadness. It is,rather, <strong>of</strong> the philosophical order <strong>of</strong> an ethical demand. If the crude formulation <strong>of</strong>Optimism is that ‘all is for the best in the best <strong>of</strong> all possible worlds’, then Pessimismdoes not strictly speaking simply or simplistically state the reverse, that ‘all is for theworst in the worst <strong>of</strong> all possible worlds’. Rather, it takes as its first step theacknowledgement, even within modernist Optimism, that there are a number <strong>of</strong> ‘possibleworlds’. It advances from this that these possible worlds may exist simultaneously (in theform, say, <strong>of</strong> ‘first’ world, ‘Third’ world, ‘underdeveloped’ world, and so on), and thatwe should bear witness to the differend which constitutes their mutual relations. Wecannot therefore homogenize these worlds, nor can we hierarchize their order <strong>of</strong> priorityor normativity. We are in no position to speak <strong>of</strong> the ‘all’, and therefore cannot describe itas being either ‘for the best’ or ‘for the worst’: the ‘all’ is, in fact, precisely the kind <strong>of</strong>homogenizing semantic trope which postmodernism would counter with ‘the local’ or,better, the ‘singularity <strong>of</strong> the event’. The singularity <strong>of</strong> the event always implicates theSubject in an act <strong>of</strong> judgment, and such judgments, made without criteria, are best facedboth stoically and ethically. 47 Postmodern Pessimism derives from the realization that‘the just’ can never be formulated; the positive aspect <strong>of</strong> such Pessimism lies in therealization that the just must be enacted, invented. <strong>History</strong> may not exist for the Subject;but the Subject must ‘just’ exist.NOTES1 For a full indication <strong>of</strong> the scope <strong>of</strong> these debates, see T.Docherty (ed.), Postmodernism: AReader (Hemel Hampstead: Harvester-Wheatsheaf, 1993), and C.Jencks (ed.), ThePostmodern Reader (London: Academy Editions, 1992).2 F.de Onís (ed.), Antologia de la poesia española e hispanoamericana (Madrid, 1934);A.Toynbee, A Study <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong>, vol. 1 (1934; 2nd edn, Oxford: Oxford University Press,1935), p. 1, note 2, and vol. 5 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1939), p. 43. For a fullerdocumentation <strong>of</strong> the history <strong>of</strong> the term ‘postmodernism’, see M.Köhler,‘“Postmodernismus”: Ein begriffsgeschichtlicher Überblick’, Amerikastüdien, 22:1 (1977).3 H.White, Metahistory (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1973; repr. 1987). pp.61–2.4 E.Auerbach, Mimesis (1946; trans. W.R.Trask; repr. Princeton: Princeton University Press,1974), p. 552. See my comments on what, theoretically, is at stake in this text in T.Docherty,After Theory (London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1990), pp. 122–3.5 L.A.Fiedler, ‘The New Mutants’, Partisan Review, 32 (1965):505–6. The distinction betweenaesthetic postmodernism as mood and political postmodernity as a periodizing term has <strong>of</strong>tenbeen seen as a state <strong>of</strong> affairs productive <strong>of</strong> a specific ‘schizophrenia’. For more on this, seeF.Jameson, Postmodernism (London: Verso, 1991), pp. 25ff.; and cf. the work <strong>of</strong> Deleuzeand Guattari and those thinkers usually grouped under the rubric <strong>of</strong> ‘anti-psychiatry’, such asRollo May, David Cooper, R.D.Laing, Norman O.Brown and others.6 See, e.g., J.Habermas, Theory <strong>of</strong> Communicative Action, 2 vols, trans. T. McCarthy (London:Heinemann, 1984); Habermas, Philosophical Discourse <strong>of</strong> Modernity, trans. F.G.Lawrence(London: Polity, 1985); F.Jameson, Late Marxism (London: Verso, 1990); E.Mandel, LateCapitalism (London: Verso, 1978).7 J.Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition [14.44], xxiv. Lyotard indicates that such a definition


Postmodernist theory 414is ‘simplifying to extremes’; and later, in Le Postmoderne expliqué aux enfants [14.34], 40,he points out that in this text he overstressed the narrative genre.8 Lyotard, Postmodern Condition, [14.44], 81.9 For more on the event, see Lyotard, ‘The Sublime and the avant-garde’, in A. Benjamin (ed.)[14.47] and cf. G.Bennington, Lyotard: Writing the Event (Manchester: ManchesterUniversity Press, 1988). On justice, see Lyotard, Le Différend [14.30] and Lyotard and J.-L.Thébaud, Au juste [14.41].10 T.Adorno and M.Horkheimer, Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment (1944; trans. J. Cumming, London:Verso, 1986), p. 6.11 P.Gay, The Enlightenment, vol. 1 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1966), p. xiii.12 Adorno and Horkheimer, Dialectic, p. 3.13 Ibid., p. 6.14 Ibid., p. 7.15 Ibid., p. 9.16 Lyotard, ‘Svelte Appendix to the Postmodern Question’, trans. T.Docherty, in R.Kearney(ed.), Across the Frontiers (Dublin: Wolfhound Press, 1988), p. 265.17 See, for examples, J.L.Austin, How to do Things with Words 2nd edn, (Oxford: OxfordUniversity Press, 1975); K.Burke, Language as Symbolic Action (Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong>California Press, 1966); S.Fish, Self-Consuming Artifacts (Berkeley: University <strong>of</strong> CaliforniaPress, 1972), and Is there a Text in this Class? (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,1980); W.J.T.Mitchell (ed.), Against Theory (Chicago: University <strong>of</strong> Chicago Press, 1985),which includes a ‘more-pragmatist-than-thou’ statement by Richard Rorty, the mostexplicitly ‘New Pragmatist’ <strong>of</strong> current pragmatic theorists.18 Paul de Man, The Resistance to Theory (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1986), p.11. See also G.Frege, ‘On Sense and Meaning’, in M.Black and P.T.Geach (eds),Translations from the Philosophical Writings <strong>of</strong> Gottlob Frege (Oxford: Blackwell, 1952).19 On the philosophical deconstruction <strong>of</strong> such identity, see, e.g., V.Descombes, ModernFrench <strong>Philosophy</strong>, trans. L.Scott-Fox and J.M.Harding (Cambridge: Cambridge UniversityPress, 1980), p. 38.20 Adorno and Horkheimer, Dialectic, p. 7.21 Ibid., p. 13.22 See M.Foucault, Folie et déraison (Paris: Plon, 1961).23 Voltaire, Candide (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1968), passim; John Milton, ‘ParadiseLost’, in B.A.Wright (ed.), Milton: Poems (London: Dent, 1956), p. 218 (Bk iv, line 112) andp. 164 (Bk i, line 253). Cf. my comments on this in Docherty, On Modern Authority(Brighton: Harvester Press, 1986), ch. 7.24 H.Blumenberg, The Legitimacy <strong>of</strong> the Modern Age (1966), trans. R.M.Wallace (Cambridge,Mass.: MIT Press, 1983), p. 404.25 The indebtedness <strong>of</strong> this mode <strong>of</strong> thinking to the proto-existentialist Kierkegaard should beclear: the sense that one was always ‘embarked’ and that the grounds upon which one makesjudgments are constantly shifting was always close to the centre <strong>of</strong> Kierkegaardian thinking.26 See, e.g., C.Jencks, Postmodernism (London: Academy Editions, 1987), and P. Portoghesi,Postmodern (New York: Rizzoli, 1983).27 See D.Harvey, The Condition <strong>of</strong> Postmodernity (Oxford: Blackwell, 1989).28 See K.Frampton, ‘Towards a Critical Regionalism’, in H.Foster (ed.), Postmodern Culture(London: Pluto Press, 1983).29 J.-F.Lyotard, The Postmodern Condition [14.44], xxiv. For the suggestion that this is overstated, see Lyotard, Le Postmoderne expliqué aux enfants [14.34], 40.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 41530 W.Benjamin, Illuminations, ed. Hannah Arendt, trans. H.Zohn (Glasgow: Fontana, 1973), p.258.31 See, e.g., Lyotard, Rudiments païens [14.27] and Instructions païennes [14.26].32 Z.Bauman, Modernity and the Holocaust (Oxford: Polity Press, 1979), p. 7.33 Ibid., p. 8.34 Ibid., pp 202–3.35 Ibid., p. 203.36 J.Baudrillard, Simulations [14.19], 25.37 See J.Derrida, Margins <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong>, trans. A.Bass (Brighton: Harvester, 1982), p. 213.38 Lyotard and R.Rorty, ‘Discussion’ [14.49], 581–4.39 See Lyotard, Le Différend [14.30].40 For a full exploration <strong>of</strong> this notion <strong>of</strong> ‘judging without criteria’, see Lyotard and Thébaud,Au juste [14.41].41 See G.Debord, La Société du spectacle (Paris: Buchet-Chastel, 1968); P.Virilio, L’Horizonnégatif (Paris: Galilée, 1984), esp. cinquième partie.42 See J.Baudrillard, La Guerre du golfe n’a pas eu lieu [14.15], and C.Norris, Intellectuals andthe Gulf War (London: Lawrence & Wishart, 1991).43 A.Badiou, Manifeste pour la philosophie (Paris: Seuil, 1989), p. 17 (trans. T. Docherty).44 J.Habermas, Legitimation Crisis, trans. T.MacCarthy (London: Heinemann, 1976).45 E.Levinas, The Levinas Reader, ed. Séan Hand (Oxford: Blackwell, 1989), pp. 82, 83.46 See F.Jameson, ‘Postmodernism; or, the Cultural Logic <strong>of</strong> Late Capitalism’, in hisPostmodernism (London: Verso, 1991); and see also the various earlier, and more influential,forms <strong>of</strong> Jameson’s essay in Foster (ed.), Postmodern Culture (where it appears as‘Postmodernism and Consumer Society’) and in New Left Review, 146 (1984):56–93.47 On such stoicism, see G.Deleuze, Logique du sens (Paris: Minuit, 1969).SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHYWhat follows here is a list <strong>of</strong> titles by Lyotard and by Baudrillard which are relevant tothe theme, concept, practices or philosophies <strong>of</strong> postmodernism. Given the fact thatpostmodernism is explicitly eclectic, it does not comprise a representative selection <strong>of</strong> thewritings available on postmodernism. For a more detailed bibliography <strong>of</strong>postmodernism, as opposed to a list <strong>of</strong> the writings <strong>of</strong> Lyotard and Baudrillard, the readershould consult the following texts: S. Connor, Postmodernist Culture (Oxford: BasilBlackwell, 1989); T.Docherty, Postmodernism: A Reader (London: Harvester-Wheatsheaf; New York: Columbia University Press, 1993); L.Hutcheon, A Poetics <strong>of</strong>Postmodernism (London: <strong>Routledge</strong>, 1988).BaudrillardPrimary texts4.1 Le Système des objets, Paris: Gallimard, 1968.4.2 La Société de consommation, Paris: Gallimard, 1970.4.3 Pour une critique de l’économie politique du signe, Paris: Gallimard, 1972.


Postmodernist theory 4164.4 Le Miroir de la production, Tournail: Casterman, 1973.4.5 L’Echange symbolique et la mort, Paris: Gallimard, 1976.4.6 L’Effet Beaubourg, Paris: Galilée, 1977.4.7 Oublier Foucault, Paris: Galilée, 1977.4.8 De la séduction, Paris: Denoël, 1979.4.9 Simulacres et simulation, Paris: Galilée, 1981.4.10 Les Stratégies fatales, Paris: Grasset, 1983.4.11 La Gauche divine, Paris: Grasset, 1985.4.12 Amérique, Paris: Grasset, 1986.4.13 L’Autre par lui-même, Paris: Galilée, 1987.4.14 Cool Memories, Paris: Galilée, 1987.4.15 La Guerre du golfe n’a pas eu lieu, Paris: Galilée, 1991.Translations4.16 The Mirror <strong>of</strong> Production, trans. M.Poster, St Louis: Telos Press, 1975.4.17 For a Critique <strong>of</strong> the Political Economy <strong>of</strong> the Sign, trans. C.Levin, St Louis: TelosPress, 1981.4.18 In the Shadow <strong>of</strong> the Silent Majorities, trans. P.Foss, P.Patton, and J. Johnston, NewYork: Semiotext(e), 1983.4.19 Simulations, trans. P.Foss, P.Patton, and P.Beitchman, New York: Semiotext(e),1983.4.20 The Evil Demon <strong>of</strong> Images, Sydney: Power Institute Publications, 1987.4.21 Selected Writings, ed. M.Poster, Cambridge: Polity Press, 1988.LyotardPrimary texts4.22 La Phénoménologie, Paris: PUF, 1954.4.23 Dérives à partir de Marx et Freud, Paris: Union Générale d’Editions, 10/18, 1970.4.24 Discours, figure, Paris: Klincksieck, 1971.4.25 L’Economie libidinale, Paris: Minuit, 1974.4.26 Instructions païennes, Paris: Galilée, 1977.4.27 Rudiments païens, Paris: Union Générale d’Editions, 1977.4.28 La Condition postmoderne, Paris: Minuit, 1979.4.29 Le Mur du pacifique, Paris: Galilée, 1979.14.30 Le Différend, Paris: Minuit, 198314.31 L’Assassinat de l’expérience par la peinture: Monory, Paris: Le Castor Astral,1984.14.32 Le Tombeau de l’intellectuel, Paris: Galilée, 1984.14.33 L’Enthousiasme: la critique kantienne de l’histoire, Paris: Galilée, 1986.14.34 Le Postmoderne expliqué aux enfants, Paris: Galilée, 1986.14.35 ‘Sensus Communis’, Le Cahier du Collége International de Philosophie, 3(1987):67–87.


<strong>Routledge</strong> history <strong>of</strong> philosophy 41714.36 L’Inhumain, Paris: Galilée, 1988.14.37 Leçons sur l’analytique du sublime, Paris: Galilée, 1991.14.38 Lyotard, J.-F. and Chaput, T., Less Immatériaux, Paris: Centre Georges Pompidou,1985.14.39 Lyotard, J.-F. and Francken, R., L’Histoire de Ruth, Paris: Le Castor Astral, 1983.14.40 Lyotard, J.-F. and Monory, J., Récits tremblants, Paris: Galilée, 1977.14.41 Lyotard, J.-F. and Thébaud, J.-L., Au juste, Paris: Christian Bourgois, 1979.14.42 Lyotard, J.-F. et al., La Faculté de juger, Paris: Minuit, 1983.Translations14.43 ‘One <strong>of</strong> the Things at Stake in Women’s Struggles’, SubStance, 20 (1978): 9–17.14.44 The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge, trans. G.Bennington andB.Massumi, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1984.14.45 The Differend, trans. G.van den Abbeele, Manchester: Manchester UniversityPress, 1990.14.46 Peregrinations, New York: Columbia University Press, 1988.14.47 The Lyotard Reader, ed. A.Benjamin, Oxford: Blackwell, 1989.14.48 Just Gaming, trans. W.Godzich, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 1985.14.49 Lyotard, J.-F. and Rorty, R, ‘Discussion’, Critique, 41 (1985):581–4.


Glossaryalterity—a perspective on otherness that goes beyond mere binary opposition. In thework <strong>of</strong> Emmanuel Levinas, the other is ethically prior to any projection <strong>of</strong> self.apodictic—a term used to refer to that which is absolutely certain and necessarily true.Husserl introduced the phenomenological method in order to make philosophy a‘rigorous’ science based on apodictic grounds.aporia—from the Greek apeiron (boundless, infinite). Term used for a puzzling questionor theme that generates other questions, but has no clear and simple resolution.apperception—a primary tenet <strong>of</strong> the philosophy <strong>of</strong> reflective consciousness that refersto an awareness <strong>of</strong> one’s own changing mental states. For Kant transcendentalapperception describes the unity <strong>of</strong> consciousness (pure ego) that precedes andsynthesizes our perceptions, thus grounding any possibility <strong>of</strong> experience at all.binary opposition—a principle first explored in the theory <strong>of</strong> Ferdinand de Saussure, theSwiss linguist whose Cours de linguistique générale (1916) pointed out the relationalfeatures <strong>of</strong> language that later influenced the development <strong>of</strong> structuralism. It identifiesthe ‘phonemic’ differences that allow us to recognize significant contrasts betweenwords as spoken (e.g., bat/cat), while at the same time ignoring phonemic differencesthat are not used to distribute meaning in a particular language (e.g., coat/caught).categorical imperative—Kant’s ‘moral law’ which is universally binding by selflegislatingreason. One formulation would be: ‘Act only on that maxim through whichyou can at the same time will that it should become a universal law.’critical theory—in its most general application, designates the activity <strong>of</strong> culturalcritique as philosophical praxis. This would include Kulturkritik as practised bymembers <strong>of</strong> the Frankfurt school (Horkheimer, Marcuse, Adorno, Benjamin andHabermas), as well as by French and Italian social philosophy represented by Gramsci,Foucault, Althusser and Lyotard. A broad category encompassing studies usingMarxist and Freudian methods <strong>of</strong> analysis, as well as works focusing on aesthetics andmass culture.Dasein—Heidegger’s term to designate ‘that being for whom Being is an issue’, aconcept most fully developed in Being and Time. Originally a word in German simplymeaning ‘existence’, it takes on a contextualized resonance, and Heidegger stressedthat Dasein was never to be understood simply as the Cartesian ‘subject’.deconstruction—a term used by Jacques Derrida to describe the strategies and tacticswhich can be used to re-examine the presuppositions <strong>of</strong> texts which are usually readfrom a logocentric perspective. It represents a philosophical challenge to the‘metaphysics <strong>of</strong> presence’ by including attention to the negative term which is alwaysleft as a trace <strong>of</strong> supplementary meanings.différance—more than just the difference (différence) that stands in opposition toidentity, this term is used by Derrida to describe the prior ground upon which suchoppositions are constructed. As such, it always resists binary categories by going


Glossary 419beyond them.differend (différend)—a term used by Jean-François Lyotard to emphasize theincommensurability <strong>of</strong> different ‘language games’ that usually results in the silencing<strong>of</strong> the weaker participant. A persistent heterogeneity that can never be reduced tosameness.discourse ethics—a term used by Jürgen Habermas to refer to the linguistic dimension <strong>of</strong>his project for communicative action. All speakers have the right to freely argue fornormative claims that possess universal validity.eidos—Greek term which has been used in various ways to convey the sense <strong>of</strong> form,shape, appearance, image or idea. Plato uses this term for his abstract Forms or Ideasreflecting universal essences. For Husserl eidos is the essence <strong>of</strong> a noematic contentrevealed by the phenomenological method <strong>of</strong> inquiry. (See also phenomenology.)epochē—the bracketing or suspension <strong>of</strong> empirical and metaphysical presuppositions <strong>of</strong>the ‘natural attitude’. Husserl proposed such bracketing as the first methodologicalmove <strong>of</strong> his phenomenology.être-en-soi—Sartre’s term for ‘being-in-itself’, a mere thing which is acted upon andremains passive. For Sartre this entails inauthentic existence, which evades theresponsibility for making choices. Opposed to être-pour-soi, being-for-itself, whichactively makes choices and takes responsibility in living authentically.existentialism—in the twentieth century, the philosophy <strong>of</strong> existence developed ideas <strong>of</strong>both Kierkegaard (1813–55) and Nietzsche (1844–1900) that stressed the primacy <strong>of</strong>individual freedom, choice and responsibility in a world devoid <strong>of</strong> absolute values.Significant contributors would be Jean-Paul Sartre, Albert Camus and Simone deBeauvoir.Frankfurt school—founded in 1923, the major centre for critical theory during the1930s, and re-established after the Second World War, when many <strong>of</strong> its memberswere forced to flee to America. (See also critical theory.)fusion <strong>of</strong> horizons—a concept used by Hans-Georg Gadamer (Horizontverschmelzung)to indicate the importance <strong>of</strong> recognizing historical distance in the activity <strong>of</strong>philosophical hermeneutics. Approaching any text necessarily brings together thehistorical horizon <strong>of</strong> the interpreter, which must be taken into account, with that <strong>of</strong> anhistorically distant tradition.genealogy—a term used first by Nietzsche and later by Foucault to describe the historicalinterrogation <strong>of</strong> discursive practices that produce knowledge and shape institutions.Neither predictably evolving nor continuous, these discourses reveal the ultimate locus<strong>of</strong> power relations that construct the subject.grammatology—the science <strong>of</strong> the written sign proposed by Derrida that challenged thedominance <strong>of</strong> spoken (phonocentric) discourse which privileges presence. The writtensign is thus left open to alternative interpretations and meanings.hegemony—a concept developed by Antonio Gramsci that stresses the ideologicalimportance <strong>of</strong> cultural institutions in protecting the interests <strong>of</strong> a dominant class.Apparent consensus is achieved by a political and cultural leadership that transmits andlegitimates its own values, which remain unexamined as ideologically neutral. Theconcept changed the focus <strong>of</strong> much Marxist theory from the economic base tosuperstructure.


Glossary 420hermeneutics—a term broadly defined by Paul Ricoeur as ‘the art <strong>of</strong> decipheringindirect meaning’. This philosophical task <strong>of</strong> interpretation proceeds via the mediations<strong>of</strong> symbol, myth, dream, image, narrative, text and ideology. For Gadamer as well, allencounters with tradition must be viewed through this structure <strong>of</strong> interpretation.hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> suspicion—the practice <strong>of</strong> critical or ‘depth’ hermeneutics that revealsthe hidden and <strong>of</strong>ten ideological nature <strong>of</strong> texts, events and social practices. Ricoeuridentifies three ‘masters <strong>of</strong> suspicion’: Marx, Nietzsche and Freud.ideal speech situation—a concept suggested by Habermas to describe the requiredconditions <strong>of</strong> equality and free, unencumbered speech for participants to reach auniversally binding consensus in rational discourse.ideology—For Marx this meant ‘false consciousness’, that is, the complex <strong>of</strong> abstractbeliefs that ignore historical and material existence by distorting and concealing socialcontradictions. The Marxist critiques <strong>of</strong> religion and German idealism aim to highlightthis contradiction. Expanded by the work <strong>of</strong> Gramsci who recognized the importance<strong>of</strong> the ‘superstructure’ in supporting ideological hegemony through culturalinstitutions. Less negatively, for Ricoeur, the natural inclination within any socialgrouping to bind itself through foundational myths that appeal to tradition and resistchange.instrumental rationality—a translation <strong>of</strong> Max Weber’s concept Zweckrationalität,which identifies goal-oriented rationality as ‘the iron cage’ from which we cannotescape. It permeates our lives in the form <strong>of</strong> increasing bureaucracy and narrowingexpertise. It greatly influenced Horkheimer’s and Adorno’s critique <strong>of</strong> Enlightenmentrationality, Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment.intentionality—a concept revived by Franz Brentano from medieval philosophy and latermore fully developed by Edmund Husserl in his phenomenology. His emphasis onconsciousness as always ‘consciousness-<strong>of</strong>-something’ is the foundation for his noeticnoematicstructure <strong>of</strong> the intentional act. Consideration must be given to both thenoetic act itself (willing, believing, etc.), as well as to the noematic ‘content’ <strong>of</strong> thisact. Only in this way is the essence or eidos <strong>of</strong> what is intended revealed. For Husserl,the three modes <strong>of</strong> intentionality (perception, imagination, and signification) are fullyinterrelated.jouissance—While this term is usually translated from the French as ‘pleasure’, itconnotes an orgasmic joy and release that engages the whole body.life-world (Lebenswelt)—a term used in the late work <strong>of</strong> Husserl (The Crisis <strong>of</strong> theEuropean Sciences, 1937), referring to a shared background <strong>of</strong> culture, tra-dition andlanguage that contextualizes subjective experience. The prototype <strong>of</strong> the life-world canbe found in the life-philosophy and hermeneutic work <strong>of</strong> Wilhelm Dilthey whodeveloped Hegel’s concept <strong>of</strong> life and its domain <strong>of</strong> internal relations. Dilthey alsogreatly influenced Heidegger’s focus on lived, historical experience in Being and Time(1927). Most recently, the term reemerges in Habermas’s theory <strong>of</strong> communicativeaction.logocentrism—philosophical thinking that privileges ‘presence’ and attempts to definereality, truth, and knowledge with a concept <strong>of</strong> ‘being’ which is rooted in identifiablebinary oppositions.mauvaise-foi—a term used by Sartre that literally means ‘bad faith’, a mode <strong>of</strong> living


Glossary 421inauthentically and passively. A refusal to acknowledge that one always has the freedomto choose.Naturwissenschaft—the German for ‘natural philosophy’, the study <strong>of</strong> nature in general.Originally used to refer specifically to the science <strong>of</strong> investigating mechanisticprinciples and laws within the field <strong>of</strong> physics. Opposed to Geisteswissenschaften(human sciences) in the work <strong>of</strong> early hermeneutic theorists such as Dilthey.noema—see phenomenology.norms—a term referring to the standards or rules invoked to guide human conduct indetermining what ought to be done, or what one is obliged to do, in an ideal andregulative sense.ontological difference—for Heidegger, the distinction between ‘Being’ (Siein) and‘beings’ (Seiende), which emphasizes that merely cataloguing existing beings or‘entities’ ignores the ontological priority <strong>of</strong> Being-qua-Being.ontology—a branch <strong>of</strong> philosophy that investigates ‘being-as-being’. Questions areraised regarding topics in the metaphysical domain, such as the nature <strong>of</strong> reality,existence, essence and necessity.ousia—from the Greek for ‘substance’. The term used by Aristotle to indicate the mostimportant and permanent <strong>of</strong> his ten categories.phallocentrism—a form <strong>of</strong> logocentric thinking in which the phallus takes on theidentity <strong>of</strong> logos or reason. Women are thereby defined within the context <strong>of</strong>patriarchal relations which represents them exclusively from a male perspective.phenomenology—one <strong>of</strong> the most influential philosophies <strong>of</strong> the twentieth century,developed by Edmund Husserl. He attempted to secure a rigorous method fordescribing the vital role <strong>of</strong> human consciousness in constituting meaning. His projectto go ‘back to the things themselves’ (‘zu den Sachen selbst’), first announced inLogical Investigations (1900), required a step back from ‘the natural attitude’ <strong>of</strong>common sense in an effort to describe the essential contents (noema) <strong>of</strong> our intendingacts (noesis), Husserl’s ‘eidetic phenomenology’ was later revised by Heidegger into a‘hermeneutic’ and ‘existential’ phenomenology (Being and Time, 1927), which in turninfluenced numerous philosophers, such as Gadamer, Ricoeur, Merleau-Ponty andSartre. (See also intentionality.)positivism—the view <strong>of</strong> scientific methodology that privileges ‘neutral’ observation andcontrol in experimental procedures. First envisioned by Auguste Comte (1798–1857)as the most developed stage <strong>of</strong> human development, it is now associated withtechnological rationalization and control.postmodernism—a term used by Jean-François Lyotard (The Postmodern Condition,1979) to refer to the radical and constant mutability contained within the concept <strong>of</strong>modernism itself; not to be understood simply as a ‘stage’ that comes after or replacesmodernism. An influential challenge to the notion <strong>of</strong> the autonomous subject guided bythe metanarratives <strong>of</strong> historical consciousness, postmodernism has affected variedintellectual domains, such as philosophy, literature and an.poststructuralism—shares with structuralism the rejection <strong>of</strong> the paradigm <strong>of</strong> the humansubject as the self-contained cogito or consciousness found in phenomenology andexistentialism. However, it also rejects the static internal relations <strong>of</strong> the structuralistmodel, opting instead for multiple possibilities within the signifier-signified


Glossary 422combinations. The later work <strong>of</strong> some French philosophers who began as‘structuralists’ (e.g., Lacan, Barthes) most closely fits this stance. (See also semiotics.)readiness-to-hand (Zuhandenheit)—for Heidegger, Dasein’s relationship to entities aspractical comportment and everyday involvement, e.g., just using the hammer and notconsciously articulating the process. Contrasts with the concept <strong>of</strong> ‘Presence-at-Hand’ (Vorhandenheit), whereby Dasein regards an ‘object’ with abstract(circumspective) comportment.reification—a concept (Verdinglichung) used by Marx to describe the reduction <strong>of</strong>human beings and human relations to ‘thing-like’ objects, as well as the alienation <strong>of</strong>human labour from the material objects produced by its own work. Later muchdeveloped by Lukács in the longest chapter <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong> and Class Consciousness.semiotics—a ‘science <strong>of</strong> signs’, also known as semiology, developed by Ferdinand deSaussure in Europe and C.S.Peirce in America. Studies the constitutive-relationalnature <strong>of</strong> signs and their communicative properties in society. The linguistic sign is astructural relationship between an acoustic ‘signifier’ and the concept or ‘signified’ itrefers to. Much extended by Roland Barthes in his analyses <strong>of</strong> social semiotics wheresignification is heavily dependent on the connotation or associative powers <strong>of</strong> the sign,in popular culture and advertising especially.signifier, signified—see semiotics.social imaginary—for Ricoeur, the symbolic discourses which permit the formation <strong>of</strong>complex socio-political groupings. Foundational symbols and myths provide theideological basis for this identity, which is constantly tested by the potential for changeand the need for change (Utopian possibilities).structuralism—a movement focusing on internal structural relations rather than content,based on the linguistic method <strong>of</strong> analysis developed by Ferdinand de Saussure. Hesuggested that language constituted a self-contained system, wherein meaning wasgenerated within language itself rather than merely reflecting a ‘given’ reality. Thisrevolutionary claim, and the methodology it entailed, attracted immense interest acrossa spectrum <strong>of</strong> intellectual disciplines. Lévi-Strauss applied de Saussure’s insights toanthropology, Lacan to psychoanalysis, Althusser to Marxism and Foucault to hiswide-ranging social critique. The exponents <strong>of</strong> structuralism maintained an adversarialrelation with existentialists and phenomenologists, whose belief in a transcendentallyfree human subject was rejected. (See also poststructuralism.)technē—from the Greek for skill, art, or craft. For Aristotle anything created by humans,as opposed to physis (nature) which is anything not humanly crafted. This knowledge<strong>of</strong> how to reach a desired end can be procedural as well, and would include not onlythe fine arts <strong>of</strong> music, dance, poetry, drama, etc., but also such special skills as rhetoricand medicine.Mara Rainwater, University College Dublin


Indexa priori 35, 298, 496Abbagnano, Nicola 290, 311–312, 385Absolute, the 293–294, 295–296, 303–306, 310, 311, 385, 412action 75, 94, 130, 219, 269–271, 272, 497Adorno, Theodor 113, 215, 219, 224–226, 476, 482–483, 485, 486The Adventures <strong>of</strong> Dialectic (Merleau-Ponty) 77, 78, 88aesthetics 224–224–226, 230, 314Against Method (Feyerabend) 166, 251The Aim and Structure <strong>of</strong> Physical Theory (Duhem) 154alienation 192–192, 193, 199, 201Aliotta, Antonio 290Alone <strong>of</strong> All Her Sex (Warner) 422alterity 506Althusser, Louis 159, 191, 198, 200–202, 404ambiguity 97, 110, 162Analysis <strong>of</strong> Sensations (Mach) 151analytic philosophy 1, 2, 5, 144–144, 145, 148, 149, 166 –168Anderson, Perry 204anxiety 46 –46apodictic 506aporia 506apperception 10, 506application 242, 261, 263appropriation 267, 268, 273Aquinas, Thomas 289, 304architecture 489Archive for the <strong>History</strong> <strong>of</strong> Socialism and the Worker’s Movement 213, 215Ardigo, Roberto 289Arendt, Hannah 410Aristotle 9–9, 263, 264, 447;reappropriation <strong>of</strong> 40, 42–6Aron, Raymond 62, 63, 75, 81art 49–50, 74, 92, 93, 224–226, 292–292, 498 –499Art de France 88atheism 132 –132Auerbach, Erich 475Austin, J.L. 204, 484authentic/inauthentic 74authenticity 70 –72autobiography 399Avenarius, Richard 150, 296


Index 424Babich, B.E. 168Bachelard, Gaston 144, 145, 155, 159–163, 166Bahro, Rudolph 477Balibar, Etienne 202Banfi, Antonio 289, 290, 308, 385Barnes, B. 166Barthes, Roland 267, 390, 392–393, 397 –399486Baudelaire, Charles 393Baudrillard, Jean 410, 478, 479, 481–482, 492, 494 –495Bauer, Bruno 211Bauman, Zygmunt 490 –491Beautiful, the 296, 297, 300behaviourism 89being 9, 19, 97, 135, 114, 247, 292Being 299, 300–300, 301, 302, 383, 484, 497;in Aristotle 45;in Hegel 354;in Heidegger 38–9, 40, 42, 43, 46–7, 55, 58–61, 63–4, 67, 68–9, 157, 301, 302, 339, 446–7, 464;in Husserl 41–2;in Merleau-Ponty 121;metaphysics <strong>of</strong> 372–4Being and Nothingness (Sartre) 66–69, 71, 75, 76, 411Being and Time (Heidegger) 2, 35, 36, 39, 46, 47, 54, 246, 248, 446‘Being-in’ 40 –41being-in-itself (l’être-en-soi) 66–69, 148, 128, 507being-in-the-world 39–40, 41, 42–42, 63, 68, 72, 90, 246, 248, 308, 256, 258, 259, 268, 272, 279,391Bellarmine, Cardinal 157, 158Benjamin, Jessica 434Benjamin, Walter 191, 194, 249, 215, 224–224, 490Berkeley, George 62, 148, 150, 158, 300Bernstein, Richard J. 242, 251, 276, 277Berthelot, Marcellin 154, 170Betti, Emilio 242, 244, 250Bhaskar, Roy 159, 161, 204binary opposition 391–392, 410, 506biologism 413Blackmur, R.P. 484Blanchot, Maurice 465Bloch, Ernst 191, 194 –195Bloor, D. 163, 166Blumenberg, Hans 488body, the 68, 92, 97, 114–115, 419–420, 423, 424, 427body-subject 89, 94Boltzmann 150Bontadini, Gustavo 307Bopp 402


Index 425Bosanquet, B. 313boundary situations 120 –120Boyle, Robert 148, 150Bradley, F.H. 307Braidotti, Rosi 423, 430Bréier, Emile 86Brentano, Franz 7, 8–8, 9, 13, 151, 167Bridgman 158Brunschvicg, Léon 86Bubner, Rudiger 164Bukharin, Nikolai Ivanovitch 188Buridan, Jean 191Burke, Kenneth 484Butterfield, H. 156 –191Camus, Albert 450Canguilhem, Georges 161, 166Capital (Marx) 200, 212, 213capitalism 480Capitalisme et schizophrénie (Deleuze and Guattari) 478Carabellese, Pantaleo 290, 300–302, 313care 42 –42Carlini, Armando 307Carnap, Rudolp 113, 148Cartesian, dualism 114, 217, 272;order 163Cartesian Meditations (Husserl) 19–19, 86Castoriadis, Cornelius 274categorial intuition 14–15, 18, 34–35categories 296–298, 451Caudwell, Christopher 204Chardin, Teillhard de 199Chodorow, Nancy 434choice 72, 74, 94Chomsky, Noam 158, 419chora 419, 420Cixous, Hélène 416, 431 –433class theory 210–211, 217–217, 218classical theory 227 –228Cobb-Stevens, R. 167Code, Lorraine 430cognition 5, 10, 15, 22, 224, 247;acts <strong>of</strong> 10Cohen, G.A. 204coherence 309Cohn-Bendit, Daniel 477Colletti, Lucio 198, 309communication 124 –125


Index 426communicative action 230 –231Comte, Auguste 152concepts 17, 65concrete 292, 294, 301 –302conscience 37consciousness 19, 21, 304, 478, 492;in Carabellese 364–7;in Gadamer 311, 312;in Husserl 451, 454, 458–9;in Levinas 156, 160;in Sartre 75–6, 80, 82, 83, 87, 89, 403content/s 6, 8continental philosophy 1–1;questioning <strong>of</strong> foundations 2–3;responsiveness <strong>of</strong> ideas 4;and science 175–206;style 3–4contradiction 201conversation 253, 258–258, 261, 263, 266, 281Copenhagen school 158Cornforth, Maurice 204Course in General Linguistics (Saussure) 390–391, 484creation 51 –51creative fidelity 109, 124The Crisis <strong>of</strong> European Science and Transcendental Phenomenology (Husserl) 220critical ontology 300 –304critical theory 506;defined 254–9;in Frankfurt School 265–71;origins 259–65;recent developments 272–81Criticism and Truth (Barthes) 397critique 228–229, 498Critique <strong>of</strong> Dialectical Reason (Sartre) 62, 65, 72, 75, 78Critique <strong>of</strong> Instrumental Reason (Horkheimer) 219Critique <strong>of</strong> Pure Reason (Kant) 145,485, 495 –496Croce, Benedetto 195, 289, 300, 313;absolute historicism 358–64;works by 360Crombie, A.C. 148, 156, 164, 166, 169Culler, Jonathan 161Cuvier, G. 402Dasein 35–43, 47–49, 51, 54, 117, 118, 148, 147, 247, 249, 506 –507Davidson, D. 158De Beauvoir, Simone 61, 63, 78, 411–414, 415–416, 430, 433, 434De Man, Paul 467–468, 485Debord, G. 495


Deborin 188deconstruction 477, 507;commentary 443–5;defined 441–3, 464;double reading 443, 446–8;problem <strong>of</strong> closure 448–9Deleuze, Gilles 403, 410;and Guattari, F. 478Della Volpe, Galvano 197, 309, 310Delphy, Christine 435Derrida, Jacques 130, 255, 390, 400, 403, 410, 431;deconstruction 441–9;Husserl’s influence on 449–60;publications 460–7Descartes, René 16, 23, 53, 127D’Espagnat, Bernard 162 –162despair 112The Development <strong>of</strong> the Monist View <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong> (Plekhanov) 187D’Hondt, Jacques 203Dialectic <strong>of</strong> Enlightenment (Adorno/Horkheimer) 220–223, 224, 226, 227, 231, 482, 485, 487Dialectical Materialism (Lefebvre) 199Die Hermeneutik als allgemeine Methodik der Geiteswissenschaften (Betti) 242différance 256, 431, 463, 464, 465, 507differend 507Dilthey, Wilhelm 192, 240–241, 242Dingler, Hugo 151, 167discourse 259, 426discourse ethics 507Dissemination (Derrida) 462, 464distantiation 266–267, 282 –282Donate, Eugenio 400Donnici, R. 383Dostoevsky, Fyodor 136drama 112 –113Droysen, J.G. 241Drummond, John 13Dubos, René 170Duchamp, M. 499Duhem, Pierre 144, 145, 147, 151, 153–158, 165, 166Dummett, Michael 167Eagleton, Terry 204The Ear <strong>of</strong> the Other 465 –466Economie libidinale (Lyotard) 478Ecrits (Lacan) 397ecstases 43, 55, 68Eddington, A. 158effective-history 252 –252Index 427


Index 428Ego 19–20, 291–292, 294, 301, 303, 305, 310, 312, 403ego-identity 5eidetic reduction 64–64, 65eidos 9, 64 –64Einaudi, Luigi 290Einstein, Albeit 150, 153The Elementary Structures Study <strong>of</strong> Kinship (Lévi-Strauss) 393 –395Elements <strong>of</strong> Political Economy (Mills) 211The Elements <strong>of</strong> Semiology (Barthes) 392–393, 397 –398Elkaim, Arlette 61Ellul, Jacques 146, 170Elster, Jon 204emotions 66empiricism 32Encompassing 148 –122engagement, aesthetic and political 486Engels, Friedrich 194, 214, 289enjoyment 131enlightenment 220 –223Enlightenment, the 220, 475;and its legacies 481–92epistemé 402epoché 507equality 275, 415equivalence 137Erlanger school 152, 167eros 135 –135Esprit 87Essays on the Materialist Conception <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong> (Labriola) 195essences 21 –24ethics 70–73, 137, 277, 422The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Ambiguity (De Beauvoir) 78, 411The Ethics <strong>of</strong> Sexual Difference (Irigaray) 424 –425Etre et avoir (Marcel) 86Euclid 23event 479–480, 496 –497evil 109, 135, 487Evola, Julius 314existence, in Heidegger 35–56;in Merleau-Ponty 105–23;in Sartre 74–100existentialism 70, 78–79, 116, 117, 132, 311–312, 507Existenz 117–118–119, 148–122, 124–124, 125, 126experience 256Experience and Judgement (Husserl) 20 –24experiment/s 148, 157, 158explanation 1, 241–242, 269, 272expression 93, 134, 135


Index 429Eye and Mind (Merleau-Ponty) 88, 93face-to-face 133–134, 135factical life 34–35facticity 41, 247, 249family, and paternity 115The Family Idiot (Sartre) 62, 78, 79feminine, the 128, 135, 410–90, 417, 419, 420, 425, 426–428, 429–430, 431feminism 477, 480fetishism 212Feuerbach, Ludwig 200, 212Feyerabend, Paul 151, 158, 161, 166, 251Fichte, J.G. 303, 384fidelity 117 –117Fiedler, Leslie 476finality 64Fish, S. 484, 485Flaubert, Gustave 63, 64, 65, 66, 73flesh, the 97 –99For Marx (Althusser) 200for-itself/in-itself 68, 100, 271Formal and Transcendental Logic (Husserl) 16Foucault, Michel 80, 147, 161, 167, 401–404, 410, 487foundationalism 2Franchini, Raffello 299Frank, Philipp 149Frankfurt School 191, 210, 224, 476, 482, 507fraternity 76free variation 21 –21freedom 80, 93–106, 275–277, 311, 412, 413, 492Frege, Gottlob 5, 8, 13, 17, 167French Communist Party (PCF) 199, 202Freud, Sigmund 73, 404, 410, 434, 461Fromm, Erich 215Fuller, J. 169Fundamentals <strong>of</strong> Language (Jakobson) 393fusion <strong>of</strong> horizons 253–253, 261–261, 507Gadamer, Hans-Georg 152, 164, 168, 241, 242, 399;authorial intention 316;distantiation 315, 323–4;fusion <strong>of</strong> horizons 306–7;hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> 295–7, 299, 302–3;and language 309–13, 314–15;and prejudice 303–5;on solidarity 335–6;text interpretation 315–22Galileo Galilei 22–24, 53, 148, 150, 156, 191, 158, 289


Garaudy, Roger 200Gasché, Rodolphe 448Geertz, Clifford 270, 272genealogy 507 –508General Psychopathology (Jaspers) 118Genet, Jean 75, 465Genette 486Gentile, Giovanni 195, 289, 313;actual idealism 353–62;works by 352–3geometry 23–23, 451–455, 468Gerlach, Kurt Albert 214German Enlightenment 219–219, 220The German Ideology (Marx) 211Gestalt psychology 396Gethmann 167Girard, René 400Glas (Derrida) 464 –465God 116–117, 123, 125–126, 132–133, 136–142, 200, 293–293, 304, 307–308, 383, 455, 475, 493Godard, Jean-Luc 398Goldmann, Lucien 193Good, the 296, 297, 300Gorz, André 477Graff, Gerald 443grammar 12grammatology 508Gramsci, Antonio 186, 195–197, 203, 290, 477;on Marxism 374–7Gray, Peter 483Green movement 477Greimas 486Grimm 402Grondin, Jean 279Grunberg, Carl 241Gurvitch, Georges 86Gutting, Gary 147Guzzo, Augusto 307Habermas, Jurgen 476, 480, 494, 497;and critical theory 275–81;on Marxism 261Hacking, Ian 147, 152, 158, 164Halder 164Hall, Stuart 204Haller, R. 167Hanson, N.R. 145, 146, 158, 166Harré, Rom 144, 149Harris, Errol 385 –386Index 430


Index 431Hayek, F.A. 284Heelan, Patrick A. 164, 167, 168Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich 46, 50, 54, 129, 277, 291, 294, 302, 303, 402, 410;criticised 258;influence on Jaspers 150, 154;and Marxism 223, 232, 233, 245;thought and action 254–5hegemony 197–197, 508Heidegger, Martin 1–1, 3, 32, 118, 148, 151, 164, 167, 168, 246–248, 311, 410, 446;analysis <strong>of</strong> Dasein 47–53;criticised 159;deconstructive reappropriation <strong>of</strong> history <strong>of</strong> ontology 54–7;early writings 39;fundamental ontology 58–63;on Hölderlin 59–61;influence on Levinas 157;and language 311;and Nietzsche 64, 66;reappropriation <strong>of</strong> Aristotle 40, 42–7;reappropriation <strong>of</strong> Husserl 39–42;the ‘turn’ 63–9Helmholtz, R. 150Hempel, H.-P. 148Herbart, Johann Friedrich 10hermeneutical, circle 47, 248–248;consciousness 305;experience 333;values 333–4hermeneutics 274, 508;ethical and political implications 333–8;legal 320;methodological 322;ontological 299, 322;Romantic 290–5, 317;text to action 326–33hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> suspicion 508Hertz 158Hiley, D.R. et al. 169Hill, Christopher 204Hipparchia’s Choice (le Doeuff) 430Hirsch Jr, E.D. 242, 243, 244, 252, 266historicism 22;absolute 358–64, 374;relativistic 363, 382history 22, 129, 145, 146, 220, 310;in Althusser 243, 245;and life-world 27–31;in Merleau-Ponty 112, 115, 117, 118;


Index 432in Ricoeur 344–5, 347;and Sartre 95–6;zig-zag method 30<strong>History</strong> and Class Consciousness (Lukács) 191, 193Hobbes, Thomas 24, 148Hobsbawn, Eric 204Hölderlin, Friedrich 402Holocaust 3, 490–491, 492Homer 221homo viator 111Homo Viator (Marcel) 115Hook 150Horkheimer, Max 214, 482–483, 485, 486;and development <strong>of</strong> critical theory 261–5Hüber, Kurt 147human rights 275, 276, 285human sciences 241–241, 269–269, 271 –272humanism 162–162, 276, 278, 285Humanism and Terror (Merleau-Ponty) 88Hume, David 7, 10, 14, 15, 150Husserl, Edmund 1, 3, 5–6, 62, 63–64, 90, 99, 145, 150, 151, 158, 160–160, 164, 167, 168, 468;ego and world 23–5;essences 25–7;immanence and transcendence 18–23;influence on Derrida 449–60;life 7–8;life-world and history 27–31;logical investigations 13–18;phenomenological reduction 297–8;reappropriation <strong>of</strong> 40–2;and science 276–7, 278Husserl Archive 6, 87Hyppolite, Jean 400, 450‘I’ 113, 119, 457, 458Idea, the 454ideal speech situation 508idealism 110, 289;actual 353–62;mystical 367–72ideas 186Ideas (Husserl) 460Ideas Pertaining to a Pure Phenomenology (Husserl) 13, 15, 16, 18The Idea <strong>of</strong> Phenomenology (Husserl) 15, 19identity 75, 228, 410, 415, 418–419, 422, 423–424, 434, 487, 498, 500ideology 211, 508Ihde, D. 146imagination 65–66, 81, 274, 284


Index 433immanence 6, 15, 18, 38, 62, 128, 130, 220, 303, 413infinity 132Institute <strong>of</strong> Social Research 213, 214, 215instrumental rationality 220, 225, 230, 508instrumentalism 158 –158intellect 9intentionality 8, 11, 14–14, 34–34, 62 –6291, 128, 508interpretation 243, 248, 261–262, 265–268, 271–272, 283intersubjectivity 133Introduction to Marxist <strong>Philosophy</strong> (Sève) 203Introduction to Metaphysics (Heidegger) 48, 49, 54intuition 8–8–9, 21, 128, 384, 457Irigaray, Luce 416, 423 –429Iser, W. 485Jaki, Stanley L. 147, 155, 191Jakobson, Roman 393James, William 150, 151Jameson, Fredric 204, 476, 477, 484, 498Jardine, N. 148, 164, 169Jaspers, Karl 108–108, 117–126;on communication 151–3;and Existenz 143–4, 145–6, 148–9, 151–2, 153, 154;God and Transcendence 153–5;on philosophy 150–1;and science 144–7;and truth 147–8Jaurès, Jean 198Jauss 485Jonas, Hans 145jouissance 418, 421, 422, 508The Journal for Social Research 215judgement/s 9, 13, 496 –497justice 479, 480–481;and representation 492–8Kant, Immanuel 2, 5, 54, 165, 223, 241, 277, 300, 301, 384, 480, 485, 495–496;influence on Jaspers 145, 147, 148, 152–4;on women 409Kant and the Problem <strong>of</strong> Metaphysics (Heidegger) 45Kearney, Richard 446Keynes, J.M. 204Kierkegaard, Soren 79, 109, 135, 117, 118, 122, 248, 274kinship 394 –395Kirchh<strong>of</strong>f, J. 150, 178Kisiel, Theodore 168Klage, Ludwig 222Kleinpeter, Hans 169


Index 434Knorr-Cetina, K. 166knowledge 217, 246, 260, 286, 295, 296, 299, 415, 483–484, 487, 495, 499Knowledge and Human Interests (Habermas) 229Kockelmans, J. 167, 168Kojève, Alexandre 86, 128Korsch, Karl 191, 193 –194Koyré 148, 156Kristeva, Julia 403, 416, 417 –423Kronecker, Leopold 6Kuhn, Thomas 145, 146, 152, 158, 165, 166, 245, 251Kyi, Aung San Suu 285La Roy 147La Vie intellectuelle 86Labica, George 202Labriola, Antonio 195–195, 289, 297Lacan, Jacques 161, 163, 258, 396, 399–401, 410, 415, 416–417, 419, 486Lafargue, Paul 198language 18, 80, 99, 230, 262, 391, 397, 400–401, 415, 417, 419, 423, 424, 453, 457, 484;hermeneutics <strong>of</strong> 309–15;in Mach 181–2;in Merleau-Ponty 113–15language-games 480Latour, Bruno 147, 163, 169Lavoie, D. 283Le Doeuff, Michèle 429 –430Le Système du monde (Duhem) 154Lefebvre, Henri 199 –199The Legitimacy <strong>of</strong> the Modern Age (Blumenberg) 488Leibniz, Gottfried Wilhelm 45, 53, 304, 475, 487Lenin 185, 188, 190Les Origines de la statique (Duhem) 154Les Temps modernes 74, 87, 88Letter on Humanism (Heidegger) 78Lévi-Strauss, Claude 268, 390, 393–396, 403, 486Levinas, Emmanuel 108, 127–137, 461, 497–498;eros 165–6;face-to-face 163–6;and God 161–3, 166, 167–8;influences on 156–9;Jewishness 158;master/slave 165;and metaphysics 159–60, 168;and the other 161;on philosophy 159–61;and representation 160–1;responsibility 167;substitution 167–8;


Index 435time 166Levy, Benny 63, 70, 73, 76life-world 22, 24, 89, 145, 246–247, 268, 508 –509Limited Inc. (Derrida) 466Lippman, Gabriel 154literary criticism 485Lloyd, Genevieve 430Locke, John 5, 14, 17logic 12, 32Logical Investigations (Husserl) 10–16, 33, 34, 455logocentrism 448, 462, 509Longuet, Charles 198Lorenzen 152, 167Lotze, Hermann 10Low 170Lowenthal, Leo 215Lowit, Alexandre 246Lukács, Georg 186, 191–193, 214, 262Lyotard, Jean-François 403, 476, 477, 478, 479–481, 489, 490McAllester Jones, M. 161, 162Mach, Ernst 144, 145–146, 147–153, 165, 166, 296;influences 183;and language 181–2;sensationalism 184, 185, 186MacIntyre, Alasdair 146, 158, 263Macksey, Richard 400McMullin, E. 169Maiocchi, Roberto 155Mallarmé,Stéphane 403Mandel, E. 477Mao Tse-tung 185, 190Marcel, Gabriel 108, 109–117, 129, 136;creative fidelity 152;on God 141–3;on nature <strong>of</strong> philosophy 133–9;on the other 139–41Marcuse, Herbert 215Margins <strong>of</strong> <strong>Philosophy</strong> (Derrida) 462 –464Marin, Louis 395Marine Lover <strong>of</strong> Friedrich Nietzsche (Irigaray) 427Maritain, Jacques 155Martin, R.N.D. 154, 155, 191Martinetti, Pietro 290, 313;mystical idealism 367–72Marx, Karl 184, 185, 289;and critical theory 255–9;his daughters 240;


Index 436Paris Manuscripts 229, 233Marxism 77, 79, 97–97, 175, 184–187, 213–214, 217, 480;Café Marx 259;central European 231–6;Chinese 230–1;English-speaking world 247–8;French 240–6;future 248–9;Italian 236–40, 374–7;and postmodernism 476–8;Soviet 226–30Marxism and <strong>Philosophy</strong> (Korsch) 193Marxism-Leninism 187–190, 199, 203master narratives 489master/slave 115, 128, 129, 134, 210 –210materialism 309;mechanistic 76Materialism and Empiriocriticism (Lenin) 187maternity 421mathematics 159matter 89Maturana, U. 167mauvaise-foi 138, 509meaning 259, 267, 268, 269, 270, 400, 451, 465, 466Meinong 167Memoirs <strong>of</strong> a Dutiful Daughter (De Beauvoir) 86Mercier-Josa, Solange 203Merleau-Ponty, Maurice 69, 86–88, 99–100, 191, 246, 257, 271, 277, 390, 395–396;freedom, history and politics 115–19;hyperdialectic <strong>of</strong> the flesh 119–22;primacy <strong>of</strong> perception 108–12;speech, language and art 112–15metaphor 393, 400, 404Metaphysical Journal (Marcel) 109metaphysics 52–53, 120, 130–130, 132, 137, 298, 304, 314method 243, 259, 265metonymy 393, 404Mill, John Stuart 11, 12, 32Miller, Henry J. 283Milton, John 487Mimesis (Auerbach) 475 –476mind 5mirror stage 399 –400mirroring 427 –428The Mirror <strong>of</strong> Production (Baudrillard) 478, 481modernity 490 –491motion 270Muller 163


Index 437Musil, R. 151Mussolini, Benito 195mystery 111myth 220narrative 273–274, 283Nathorp, P. 33natural philosophy 241, 269, 509naturalism 22nature 292, 383Nausea (Sartre) 61Needham, Rodney 395negativity 64–65New Left Review 191, 204The New School for Social Research 393Newton, Isaac 53, 148, 150Nicomachean Ethics 36Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm 47, 52, 110, 112, 117, 122, 151, 163, 167, 221, 223, 403, 465, 466nihilism 54, 127Nizan, Paul 88No Exit (Sartre) 61, 69noema 16, 19norms 509Notebooks for an Ethics (Sartre) 63, 77, 80notions 65nuclear arms race 466numbers 8–8, 11Object 495, 500object, the 127, 292, 455objectivism 245, 249–250, 401Of Grammatology (Derrida) 398, 442–443, 445, 461Olgiati, Francesco 307On the Jewish Question (Marx) 210On the Manifold Meaning <strong>of</strong> Being in Aristotle (Brentano) 32Onis, Federico de 474ontological difference 509ontology 509;defined 159;fundamental 58–63;regional 22–3oppression 494optimism 487–489, 500The Order <strong>of</strong> Things (Foucault) 397, 401Ordine nuovo 196origin 402 –403Origin <strong>of</strong> Geometry (Husserl) 451 –455Orth, E.W. 167


Index 438other, the 112, 114–115, 131, 136, 259Other, the 68–69, 412, 486, 497 –498otherness 130, 414, 416, 420, 421Otherwise than Being or Beyond Essence (Levinas) 127, 135, 136ousia 509overdetermination 201Paci, Enzo 309pantheistic mysticism 303Parages (Derrida) 465Pareto, Vilfredo 290Pareyson, Luigi 307parts/wholes 12 –12Pascal, Blaise 111, 133, 150, 157perception, in Merleau-Ponty 88 –91Perelman, Chaim 265pessimism 489 –490phallocentrism 424, 509phenomenological hermeneutics 243–245;background 297–301;basic themes 301–15;text interpretation 315–26Phenomenological Interpretations <strong>of</strong> Aristotle (Heidegger) 33phenomenology 33, 35, 130, 167, 228, 509;defined 110–12;how viewed 1–2Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Spirit (Hegel) 46, 67 128, 210The Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Internal Time-consciousness (Husserl) 35, 19–20, 458The Phenomenology <strong>of</strong> Perception (Merleau-Ponty) 78, 87, 89 –93phenomenon 6, 131The Philosophical Discourse <strong>of</strong> Modernity (Habermas) 226The Philosophical Imaginary (Le Doeuff) 429philosophy 120, 122, 202, 223, 264, 291 488;activity <strong>of</strong> 448;feminist 409–11, 414–17;German 265, 275–6, 350–1;history <strong>of</strong> 461, 462;and Irigaray 426;Italian 350–2, 380;and Le Doeuff 429;nature <strong>of</strong> 133–9<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Arithmetic (Husserl) 7 –13<strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Right (Hegel) 210phonocentrism 456 –458phronesis 263–263Pierce, C.S. 150Plato 44, 52, 114, 130–130, 263, 303, 306, 446, 447, 464Plaza, Monique 435


The Pleasure <strong>of</strong> the Text (Barthes) 398 –399Plekhanov, George Valentinov 187 –187Plotinus 303poetry 74, 114–114, 314Poincaré, Henri 148, 152Pollach, Fredrich 215Popper, Karl 157, 158, 204, 243Popular Scientific Lectures (Mach) 151Positions (Derrida) 464positivism 2, 152, 169–170, 509possession 114 –115postmodernism 80, 238, 474–476, 493, 510;and Marxism 476–8;new pessimism 498–501postructuralism 390, 510see also structuralismThe Post Card (Derrida) 465praxis 64, 65, 75–76, 80, 196–196, 199, 210, 213, 214, 258, 278, 484prejudice 250 –251presence 460presence-at-hand/readiness to hand 37, 38, 39, 47, 510presentation 6Price, Derek de Solla 146The Primacy <strong>of</strong> Perception (Merleau-Ponty) 166The Principle <strong>of</strong> Hope (Bloch) 194Prison Notebooks (Gramsci) 196problem 111Promethean legend 48, 49, 50propositions 11, 13–13, 16 –18prose 74The Prose <strong>of</strong> the World (Merleau-Ponty) 93, 396Proudhon, P.J. 198Proust, Marcel 445Psyché: Inventions de l’autre (Derrida) 466psychoanalysis 159, 399, 415, 416, 423, 424–425, 478psychologism 5, 8, 11, 32Psychology <strong>of</strong> Imagination (Sartre) 62, 64Psychology <strong>of</strong> Weltanschauungen (Jaspers) 118pupil/teacher 295, 430question 252Quine, W.V.O. 147, 157racism 466, 480, 492Radical <strong>Philosophy</strong> 203rationality 224, 491Reading Capital (Althusser) 200real, the 494 –495Index 439


Index 440reality 305, 480 –481reason 219, 220, 223, 251, 263, 276, 281–282, 306, 483, 484, 491 –493Redner, Hugh 146reduction 16–16, 246–246, 257reflection, primary and secondary 135 –111reification 262, 510religion, in Jaspers 125–126;in Levinas 166–8;in Marcel 141–3representation 131–131, 402, 415;and justice 492–8responsibility 71, 136‘ressentiment’ (Scheler) 87Revolution in Poetic Language (Kristeva) 417rhetoric 265 –265Ricardo, D. 402Ricoeur, Paul 1, 164, 241, 242, 243;on action 328–9;on explanation 331;on freedom 336;fusion <strong>of</strong> horizons 307;hermeneutics 299, 302;on imagination 333;and language , 310, 313–15;text interpretation 322–6, 330, 343;on understanding 331Riehl 303Robbe-Grillet, A. 399Roland Barthes (Barthes) 399Rorty, Richard 164, 253, 484Rose, Jacqueline 416Rosmini, A. 300Rossi, Mario 309Rousseau, Jean-Jacques 213, 443, 444, 446, 447, 462, 467 –468Royce 109Ruggiero, Guido de 314Russell, Bertrand 12sacrifice 222 –222Sade, Marquis de 222 –223St Augustine 44, 126, 133, 289Saint-Exupéry Antoine de 96Saitta, Giuseppe 384salvation 112Sartre, Jean-Paul 1, 6, 61–61, 86, 88, 128, 134, 191, 278, 403, 410, 411, 430, 433, 450;‘biographies’ 89, 90, 92;and the body 140;contribution 77;


Index 441development 75–7;ethics 85–9;existential phenomenology 96–7;existential psychoanalysis 89–90;Marxism 97;methodology and epistemology 77–9;ontology 81–5;philosophy <strong>of</strong> history 95–6;philosophy and literature 90–2;postmodernism 98–100;psychology 80–1;social philosophy 92–5;structuralism 98Saussure, Ferdinand de 1, 99, 258, 390–393, 403, 419, 484scepticism 432Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph 109Schirmacher, W. 146Schlegel, Friedrich 402Schleiermacher, Friedrich 240–240, 242Schlick, M. 148Schopenhauer, Arthur 112, 303, 409, 465Sciacca, Michele Federico 291, 307science 20, 22, 118–120, 227, 228, 251–251, 263–264;and analytic-style 175–6, 177, 203–6;and Bachelard 194–200;continental 175–206;and Duhem 187–94;influences 178–9;and Mach 177–8, 179–87Search for a Method (Sartre) 63Searle, John 444The Second Sex (De Beauvoir) 411 –414Seebohm, Thomas 168seeing 44self, the 133, 152, 220–221, 299, 403, 414self-consciousness 210, 291, 293, 301, 458 –459semiotics 1, 391–392, 395, 396, 397–398, 419 486–487, 510see also sign, thesensationalism 151sense 16, 19Sense and Non-Sense (Merleau-Ponty) 93Sept 87Serbati, Antonio Rosmini 289Sève, Lucien 203sexual difference 411–414, 415, 418, 423, 424–425, 428, 434, 435, 465Shapin, S. 166;and Scheffler, S. 206A Short Course (Stalinist manual) 189, 190, 199


Index 442sign, the 11–12, 260, 391–392, 455, 457, 459, 461 –462see also semioticssign-systems 460–461, 462signifier/signified see semioticsSigns (Merleau-Ponty) 93, 100Smith, Ralph 161Snow, C.P. 163social imaginary 510society, and individual 217;theories concerning 255–8Socratic dialogue 133Sokolowski, Robert 17solidarity 276 –276sophia 37Sorel, Georges 198space 305Spaventa, Bertrando 289, 291Speaking/Language is Never Neutral/Neuter (Irigaray) 423speech 14, 133, 456 –458Speech and Phenomena (Derrida) 398, 455, 460, 461 –462Spinoza, Benedictus de 200–201, 303, 383spirit 294, 296–298, 299, 305Spirito, Ugo 299, 314Spurs (Derrida) 465Stalin, Joseph 185, 188 –189The Star <strong>of</strong> Redemption (Rosenzweig) 129Stegmüller, Wolfgang 145story-telling 273Strauss, Leo 263Stroker, E. 167structuralism 79, 259, 486, 510;French 390–404see also poststructuralismstructure 395The Structure <strong>of</strong> Behavior (Merleau-Ponty) 86, 88 –89The Structure <strong>of</strong> Scientific Revolutions (Kuhn) 244A Study <strong>of</strong> <strong>History</strong> (Toynbee) 474Stumpf, Karl 6, 10style 397sub-humanity 72 –72Subject 412, 478, 485–486, 487, 495, 500subject, the 277, 422, 432subject-in-process 418subject/object 245–246, 295, 300, 302, 384subjectivism 6, 243, 245, 250–250, 259, 401, 459substitution 136 –137Symbolic, the 417, 418, 419, 420, 421A System <strong>of</strong> Logic as a Theory <strong>of</strong> Knowing (Gentile) 292


Index 443The Taming <strong>of</strong> Chance (Hacking) 168Taylor, Charles 271technē 36–36, 37, 48–49, 511technique 111 –112Telos 222text 398–399;interpretation 315–26theory 478The Theory <strong>of</strong> Communicative Action (Habermas) 226, 230The Theory <strong>of</strong> Intuition in Husserl’s Phenomenology (Levinas) 61thinking 448Thomism 307, 384Thompson, E.P. 204 –204Thompson, John B. 272Tiles, Mary 147, 150, 161time 5, 20–20, 301, 305;in Aristotle 45, 51, 53;existentiality 47–53;in Hegel 56;in Heidegger 68;in Kant 55–6;in Levinas 166;in Sartre 78, 83Time and Free Will (Bergson) 61Time and Narrative (Ricoeur) 273–273, 282Timpanaro, Sebartiano 198 –198Totality and Infinity (Levinas) 127, 129 130, 132, 135Toynbee, Arnold 474–475, 476tradition 130, 253, 262, 281transcendence 15–19, 38–43, 115–117,Transcendence <strong>of</strong> the Ego (Sartre) 403transcendental argument 2, 32True, the 296, 297, 300truth 5, 167, 291, 294, 298–300, 306, 415, 493, 496;in Aristotle 42–3, 44;in Gadamer 308, 313, 318, 322, 342;in Heidegger 55, 62;in Husserl 12–13, 17, 453;in Jaspers 147–8;in Ricoeur 340Truth and Method (Gadamer) 243–244, 308, 266, 276The Two Cultures (Snow) 162unconscious 73, 400, 416, 429, 461understanding 1, 240–242, 247–248, 249, 251, 253–308, 260, 261, 262–263, 268, 272, 276The Unhappy Consciousness in the <strong>Philosophy</strong> <strong>of</strong> Hegel (Wahl) 86Unity 304, 305, 307


Index 444universal history 490–491, 493universals/particulars 12Useful, the 296, 297, 298, 300Valéry, Paul 92–93, 162 –162validity 229Validity in Interpretation (Hirsch) 242 –243values 275–275, 282Van Breda, Hermann 7Varisco, Bernardino 383Vienna Circle 149, 152, 167violence 76, 285, 494Virgin Mary 422Virilio, Paul 495The Visible and the Invisible (Merleau-Ponty) 97–99, 100Voltaire 487Wallace, William 156War Diaries (Sartre) 77 –78Warner, Marina 422Weber, Max 124, 219, 220, 226, 230Weierstrauss, Karl 6Weil, Felix 214Weil, Simone 410Weinberg, C.B. 158What is Literature? (Sartre) 93What is Metaphysics? (Heidegger) 46White, Haydn 284, 475will-to-power 53Willard, Dallas 10Williams, Raymond 204Wimmer, L. 145Winch, Peter 241Wittgenstein, L. 110, 148, 204, 241Wittig, Monique 435The Word (Sartre) 72world 44writing 397, 456, 462Writing Degree Zero (Barthes) 397Writing and Difference (Derrida) 398 460 –461Wuketis, F.M. 167Wundt, Wilhelm 6, 303Zhdanov, Andrei 189

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