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February 19, 2008
by Dr. Daniel N. Robinson

side bar side bar side bar There has been an abiding rift between Anglo-American philosophy and what is all too broadly referred to as Continental philosophy.  The sources are many and will not surrender to tidy summaries.  Philosophy in the English-speaking world, with its emphasis on linguistic and conceptual analysis, has resisted the well-known European penchant for grand and global theories of human nature, the world, man's place in the world, etc.  A heavy price is always exacted, however, against those who place a higher premium on clarity than inventiveness.  For many, “analytic philosophy” seems to be little more then linguistic fiddling even as Rome and the rest of the world burn down.  Though disappointing, it is not at all surprising that students approach works by Marx, Adorno, Nietzsche, Freud, and their disciples with great eagerness, even devotion.  And how disappointed they are when philosophers of analytical persuasion urge them to calm down long enough to determine whether the works in question are offering anything that might be settled at the level of fact or even meaning.

For many years Jurgen Habermas has enjoyed a large and devoted readership.  His credentials as a European intellectual are flawless.  His early years found him steeped in Marxist wisdom.  His teachers included both Horkheimer and Adorno, with Habermas recording his independence by refusing to alter his dissertation for Horkheimer  -- whose Chair he would come to occupy in 1964.  As for the dissertation itself, the very title summons a reader to the heady dialectics of neo-Marxist reflections on the lives we so innocently enjoy living: The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: an Inquiry into a Category of Bourgeois Society.  Inevitably he accepted a celebrity’s reception by the People's Republic of China.

It was in 1981 that Habermas’s scholarly standing was secured by the publication of his two-volume The Theory of Communicative Action.  In this work he developed -- with sufficient repetition to warrant two volumes -- a defense of the thesis that the realm of rationality is found within social and cultural contexts rather than in the allegedly inaccessible reaches of the individual mind.  Thus, he stands as one of the pillars of social constructionism.  What the ‘ism’ rejects are all forms of essentialism by which the human condition is understood in terms of what is essentially human, and this at the level of the individual person.  To use just the sort of plain talk that Continental philosophers regard as philistinism, I would put the case this way: An essentialist knows that some cultures prefer cheesecake to bread and honey.  Cuisine is surely a cultural construct.  But that human beings metabolize carbohydrates according to the principles of the Krebs cycle is understood to be an essential feature of human glycolytic metabolism.  Alas, so too is the aspiration to freedom and self perfection.  To wait for some sort of “discourse” to bring this about is to come too late to the party.

Habermas writes of something he calls “Core Europe”.  He sees it as the Europe of the Enlightenment, with its café metaphysics and voluble savants of the salon.  Their defining marks include a strident secularism, resistance to the authority of rank, and confidence that pragmatic and informed human beings -- as with Wittgenstein's lucky fly -- might find their way out of the bottle.

But they didn't.  First they found their way to Robespierre and the Terror.  They followed this with bloody, unsuccessful, and wretchedly loquacious revolutions.  And, of course, for an epilog, they gave us two world wars, each of them powered by just those grand theories to which the European mind seems addicted.

Meanwhile, the young United States limped along with its reformed and modest Calvinism, it's firm Christian foundations, a Constitution unencumbered by inflated estimations of human nature and richly informed by the mixed and worrisome history in which that nature had repeatedly expressed itself.  For every Jefferson who found secular France so wonderfully liberated, there was a wise and sober John Adams wondering how a nation could be governed by 20 million atheists.

There is much to be said for Continental philosophy, particularly its emphasis on the historical and cultural contexts generative of perspectives, initiatives, even cognition.  Owing to this, it has the resources to lift itself, however belatedly, out of some of the deeper holes it digs for itself.  This talent is now on display in the most recent insight of Jurgen Habermas.  Here it is, believe it or not:    

“Christianity, and nothing else, is the ultimate foundation of liberty, conscience, human rights, and democracy, the benchmarks of Western civilization. To this day, we have no other options… We continue to nourish ourselves from this source. Everything else is postmodern chatter.”

I am reminded of Evelyn Waugh’s reception into the Roman Catholic Church in the Fall of 1930.  It caused quite a stir.  He was charged with having been “captivated by the ritual”.  But listen to what Waugh had to say:

“It seems to me that in the present phase of European history the essential issue is no longer between Catholicism, on one side, and Protestantism, on the other, but between Christianity and chaos.  Civilization -- and by this I do not mean talking cinemas and tinned food, nor even surgery and hygienic houses, but the whole moral and artistic organization of Europe -- has not in itself the power of survival.  It came into being through Christianity, and without it has no significance or power to command allegiance.”   (In Joseph Pearse, Literary Converts, page 166)

Is it too early to wish Jurgen a Happy Easter?

 

Response to Love and Chemicals:

I read your e-mails on a regular basis and find them most enjoyable. I am impressed with the continual quality of articles. No Spin, but real journalism, if I may use that term. Keep up the good work. I wish the whole world could read these articles with an open and rational mind. - Dr. Glenn W. Brownewell Jr. Pillsbury Baptist Bible College

Very interesting! As far as evidence for man's soul (or spirit) is concerned, I have found "The Mysterious Matter of Mind" by Arthur Custance to be of interest. Available at www.custance.org. Also see his "The Nature of the Soul". - Earle Briard

Scientists make poor philosophers! The debate of the location of the soul is hundreds of years old. My God, Barkley and Hume went at it so intensely that one contemporary wag (Cannot cite.) said " No matter, never mind!" Look mind or soul vs matter is NOT a scientific topic. And for those who are in education the topic is worn out. Actually, scientifically speaking the same as division by 0 (zero) in mathematics, a forbidden operation. As a scientist, admittedly no longer doing any research, I see little value in the ruminations of scientists about such matters. Frankly, I thought Russell went off the deep end before he stopped. No technique, no representational system is infinitely extensible. Furthermore, a representation, e=mcc or f=ma is not the same as reality. Also, for the same reasons Design Theory is not a scientific theory. It is a way to say that not Darwinism, Gouldism, or randomism as a causation are FAILED scientific theories. Like Potolemy's astronomy. Which until quite recently was computational more accurate than Newtonian Mechanics. I believe in these sort of cases one must attack the faulty premise that topics such as soul are legitimate topics to discuss under the rubric of science. Who cares if the person is a scientist? They might be, probably are, less qualified than a college philosophy major to have this kind of discussion. The concept of the soul implies a 16 (or less/more?) dimensional reality. ( Please note it did not say universe which has four or, possibly, five dimensions. String theory is not testable. So it is not scientific. That does not make it false. That makes it unscientific. Will some one please draw a little Venn diagram. God, a little basic logic please. No one is asking for second order predicate calculus. Enjoy, - Dr. Ray Sandborgh

What mechanistic/materialistic thinkers, like Dawkins and Steve Pinker, conveniently overlook is the whole issue of intentionality. Indeed it is a core dogma of Richard Dawkins that we are "robot vehicles blindly programmed to preserve the selfish molecules known as genes". Suppose I drive from London to Manchester. A Pinkerite would say: 'Every inch of your journey was undertaken in your car, and was entirely dependent on your car [two true premises]: therefore your car is a complete and sufficient explanation for your journey [false conclusion]. There is a wilful - and egregious - elision on the part of such thinkers of necessary and sufficient causality. In the example given: it is, of course trivially true that I would never have got from London to Manchester without my car. And it would be illegitimate to invoke mysterious causes to explain any, or every, inch of the journey [a species of 'God-of-the-Gaps' thinking, perhaps]. But we do need an overarching cause, or reason, involving intentionality to explain why the journey was undertaken in the first place. My car is not the reason why I decided to go to Manchester [I was - shall we say - going to attend a friend's wedding]: it was simply the means I used to get there. I wouldn't have got there without it [though I could have gone by train]: but neither would I have got there if I hadn't intended to [though my intention could have been frustrated by the car breaking down]. In any event, means and ends should not be wilfully confused, and Pinkerite legerdemain should be identified and nailed, wherever it occurs! - Dan O'Hara

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We live complex lives. We strive to sort out priorities that sometimes conflict or seem incompatible. A moral framework is needed to help us understand the reality around us. Our Judeo-Christian heritage provides a framework to help us comprehend the choices we make and the conflicts that arise over them. It is not only the main source of our spiritual values, but also many of the secular values we depend on.

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Dan Robinson Daniel N. Robinson
Daniel N. Robinson is a member of the Philosophy faculty at Oxford University, where he has lectured annually since 1991. He is also Distinguished Professor, Emeritus, at Georgetown University, on whose faculty he served for 30 years. He was formerly Adjunct Professor of Psychology at Columbia University. Professor Robinson earned his Ph.D. in neuropsychology from City University of New York. Prior to taking his position at Georgetown, he held positions at Amherst College, Princeton University, and Columbia University.

Professor Robinson is past president of two divisions of the American Psychological Association: The Division of History of Psychology and the Division of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology. He is former editor of the Journal of Theoretical and Philosophical Psychology. Professor Robinson is author or editor of more than 40 books, including Wild Beasts & Idle Humours: The Insanity Defense from Antiquity to the Present, An Intellectual History of Psychology, The Mind: An Oxford Reader, and Aristotle's Psychology.
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