A presentation delivered 11/
16/ 2017 at a conference on the theme Creating
a Philosophy for the Future at the University of Macau (abbreviated here)
I have been inspired by the vision of cosmopolitanism that
is taught in thinkers like Zeno and Tagore and Tu Weiming.
I have also been instructed by the likes of Kant, Nietzsche
and Feuerbach, who warn philosophers not to repeat the mistakes of the past --
not to mistake conditions of experience for realities, or replace thinking with
moral judgment, or fly away to mysteries when we still have real, material
problems to solve here on earth.
In my remarks today, rather than inspire or warn, I thought
I would just to go on practicing philosophy, and show what that is like -- but more
narrowly, as Plato teaches, not
philosophy but to philosophize. Thus
I am not proposing to identify philosophy with any of its aspects or to dictate
what philosophy can and cannot be. My
whole focus is to accept the reality of pluralism in philosophy and accept that
there is more than one way to conduct the project of philosophy.
Yet for me philosophy is criticism, without which it becomes
the lesser thing of mere talk fearful of having to face opposition and
questioning. I am not saying that
philosophy is only this -- philosophy
is also creation -- for example, philosophy is constructive mapping --
proposing trial mind-maps and maps of reality.
What I am saying is that philosophy may
be many things but must be
criticism.
And so for many years I have tried to square my universalist
ideal of philosophy -- thinking that philosophy happens everywhere and among
all people, and that it cannot be hemmed in as only one tradition -- with the
other side of this inequation, which is that the essence of philosophy is skepticism.
cultural universal of philosophical thinking < cultural rarity of skepticism
This dilemma got me to searching. So I made philosophical literature from
around the world my study, looking for new ways of conceiving criticism -- and
in truth we do see criticism in many traditions, in Kaibara Ekken, for example,
or Dharmakirti, or Kwasi Wiredu-- but not in every world tradition or every example, since we often see
conformity instead -- dogmatism rather than inquiry. In many cases, going on with the tradition
seems more important than inquiry, experiment or truth.
In the midst of all this, in my own searches, I discovered that the idea of philosophy as therapy is deeply
evocative and powerful. This is the kind
of practice that I want to talk about today.
Therapy like philosophy is an examination. It is a kind of criticism that we have
volunteered for and one that we know that we need. Noting the very wide latitude in practice --
that there is very little uniformity in practice -- still everyone looks for
this help in some general sense -- many are asked and many offer this kind
service. The therapy I am talking about
is a kind of healing that is a harsh scrutiny of belief and desire and a way of
calling a person to account. It sees falsity and calls it out.
This is a kind of work
that a person does, which has to be one’s own work -- this is work on oneself
and who one deeply is as a person -- the whole point of doing this is that you
do it yourself -- it’s yours -- no
one can take this over or make it easier.
Just as true, this is something one does with other people
-- you learn it from others, practice
it with others, and teach it to others -- part of doing this for
oneself is listening to what other people have to say -- and when we all get
get back to working on ourselves, we are bringing back what we have learned
from the world.
That is: philosophy like therapy is a kind of
reality-testing -- in both we are making more room for reality -- and both are
‘verified’ thinking in that in both you bring things to light and see how they
test out. This is not just contemplation
of the world but action and
observation -- learning from mistakes, disciplines, experience.
Both are like listening -- also both are like saying --
getting it out there and seeing.
Philosophy is perhaps most like therapy in that both exist
to address suffering.
So for quite some time I have been pursuing the metaphor of
philosophy as therapy. I have tried to
think of philosophy not as a subject that makes progress over time -- instead I
am thinking about philosophy as a way of helping a person make progress.
Philosophy is a guide (as it were) for pursuing the human
project. Philosophy is the art of life.
Nietzsche claims in his Prelude
to a Philosophy of the Future that nothing with a history can be defined --
but philosophy has a history -- philosophy has myriad histories in traditions
and languages around the world.
Therefore philosophy is indefinable.
Yet philosophy is defined over and over again, obsessively, incessantly
--- as the love of wisdom, as the world comprehended in thought, as a fight
against bewitchment, as clarifying the nature of evidence, as promoting the
good, as upholding freedom, or envisioning human thriving -- as a search for
happiness, humaneness, justice -- as practice of death, as the intellectual
conscience, as the dream of a universal calculus, as thinking oneself free, as
a search for moral competence, as irrepressible aspiration beyond the given, as
wrestling with fate -- as countless successions paths teachings sects
disciplines schools doctrines and ways -- readings, genealogies, critiques -- a
thousand origins and archetypes -- as wonder, computation, the desire to find
out -- as the voice of doubt, reason, the poor, the Other, the universal,
history, community, science, posterity -- the study of Being, the critique of
belief, the founding of scientific method -- it seems there is no limit to the
shapes it may take -- philosophy is the mind at work in thinking.
So I will greatly overgeneralize and make the bold claim
that the background situation for philosophy, read from these many names and
tasks and schools, is threefold:
that we are playthings of fate -- we are thrown into the
world, as Heidegger says;
that we feel the dizziness of freedom -- to use
Kierkegaard’s mind-altering phrase; and
that we look for truth -- we look for a way forward by
trying to discover what is real.
Philosophy is committed to argument and conceives the
disease that impedes human thriving as a problem especially with the way people
think and believe. We can think of arguments as ways of addressing these kinds
of problems -- the same way we think about drugs, treatments, therapeutics,
exercises -- as various kinds of remedies.
We can think of the thing we are trying to cure as ignorance; we can also think of it as confusion and following
bungled action; as fantasy worry shame anxiety resistance repression regression
inattention imprint laziness surrender -- as an inheritance from an
unresponsive parent -- as an impact from a traumatic event -- as a chemical
imbalance -- as denial, defense, fragmentation; as not forgiving; as bias fear
selfishness weakness irresponsibility corruption -- as attachment; as
exclusion; as repetition-compulsion; roughly, in my terms, as borrowed functioning. We can also think of what we are doing as the
search for meaning -- so a therapeutic intervention is a moral lesson is a
thought experiment -- a test. We can think of ‘truth’ as the secret -- the
thing behind the pain -- the agitating cause of the symptom.
The world is the origin of meaning, but meaning has no form
without human beings to shape it. People do not do this in isolation but socially
and interactively with others. Culture
provides not just raw materials but deep patterns and structures for stitching
meaning together. Thus philosophy goes
on in a context -- diagnosis takes place in a context -- healing goes on in a
context -- families inheritances geographies histories images rituals texts
idioms languages-in-use -- roughly: shared traditions. Thus the key problem of psychological
integration varies with the elements we identify as out of sync and needing to
get back together -- which means that self-regulation takes off from the
underlying mind-map into which one is born -- thus we look for the ‘secret’ and
the cause of the symptom in culture, through culture, and by culture -- we are internalizing
resources from society for remaking the self.
Real philosophy has to accuse itself of being a sham, as
KoĊakowski argued. When we think about
philosophy through therapy, and we look for the ‘secret’ and the cause of our
pain in culture, we see immediately the problem of self-deception -- mauvaise foi, bad faith, uneigenlichkeit, inauthenticity -- the
false self -- thus we have to wonder who is doing the ‘philosophizing’ we are
talking about and where we should look to find the philosopher -- and so we raise
huge questions about the topology of the self and how the life-context one is
born into informs identity.
Thinking about the problem this way, philosophy has
minimally two moments: history; and criticism.
That is, there is the background into which one is born. First there is something like cultural
identity and then there is a kind of distancing / questioning project that takes off from this beginning. A human being exists in history and, like a
people or a race, can be occupied, colonized, dehumanized. This is the deep truth in conceptions of philosophy
from thinkers like Fanon and Dussel and Amartya Sen -- philosophy is de-colonizing the mind. Thus philosophy
is ‘context and therapy’; ‘tradition and criticism’; ‘worldview’ and ‘departure
from the natural standpoint.’
Thus philosophy speaks initially from and to a community,
but a philosophy that speaks only to one
people -- that sets itself part -- is falling back to ideology, worldview,
culture, the natural attitude -- tradition.
I am saying that philosophy that is philosophy must break free from tradition and narrow parochialism.
Therefore philosophy is criticism -- skepticism and the
struggle against dogmatism. It has to join the fight against
ethnocentrism and seek impartiality -- it must
break with the local paradigm, break or expand it far beyond its familiar and
home ground. Otherwise this is merely belief, merely culture, and not actually
thinking at all.
Ultimately philosophy in order to be philosophy must seek a global perspective and a planetary scrutiny of ideas. We are just beginning to imagine what this
this kind of scrutiny might be like.
Seeking criticism does not mean accepting criticism --
sometimes the problem is to defend what is so, but in other cases the criticism
is good and has to be taken in -- there is no formula for telling things apart
-- it takes a while to see your way around.
Philosophy feels the “dizziness of freedom” -- as
Wittgenstein says, it’s a kind of itch -- an impulse or torment or anxiety we
cannot settle, a fundamental stance towards everything -- what cynics probably
would call an adolescent quest for truth. There is a sense of crisis, high
stakes, a hunger, a thirst, a spell, a deep unrelenting need, a nagging sense
that time is elapsing, that our hour is brief.
Philosophy confronts the dizzying shipwreck -- shame, utter failure, getting
it wrong, a place where control breaks down -- circumstances force us to learn
something completely unexpected. Maybe
with some practice with dizziness we find our way back from failure -- recovering,
getting over it -- learning something like resilience and steadiness while
trying to make sense of the noisy, crazy-making, irreversible festival of
life.
When we begin to look at philosophy as therapy, we can think
of therapy as the elenchus --
Socrates’ method of critical cross-examination -- as controversy, debate,
challenge, free speech, frank speech -- as confession, truth telling, stripping
bare -- what Foucault (or was it Paul Ricouer?) called the “hermeneutics of
suspicion.” This is a dislodging,
uncovering, breaking the chain, a subversion, disloyalty, betrayal, even a treason
-- also getting pushed out, ejected, exiled -- but then getting situated in a
new place, or even many places -- no longer living merely in the home ideology,
but moving to the truth procedure itself -- finding
a home in the questions.
At the heart of therapy is transference -- roughly,
overwriting an old situation within a new one.
In therapy there are lots of ideas about transference -- lots of kinds
-- e.g. positive (creating affection), negative (creating hostility), and
erotic (creating desire) -- which represent different kinds of strategies for
rewiring a faulty circuit. People also
talk about something called the ‘selfobject’ transference, which is a way of
finding the thing that you were always looking for. I think this is true for the ‘philosophical’
transference as well -- e.g. philosophy that inspires, challenges and seduces
-- also philosophy that offers a completely new way of looking at things.
But ultimately we see that ‘insight’ is never enough to
alter a person’s behavior since it is possible to ‘know’ something without
deeply knowing it. In therapy the
‘something-to-be-added’ is emotional
working through -- what the analytic theorist Franz Alexander called an
“encounter” in which a person undergoes a “corrective emotional experience” -- helping
to bring insights to a place in a person’s mind where he can use them. Philosophy tries to get at this idea in calling a person to account. Just as the patient’s life gets enlisted as
an ally in the struggle against neurosis -- when the daily actions that fill a
person’s life begin to be a source of change rather than perpetuating the
problem -- so philosophy tries to get a person into a mind frame where the
change is beginning to take. This means
that life has to be more powerful
than therapy -- more powerful than philosophy -- life is not about philosophy
but instead philosophy is about life and how we go about living it.
Therapeia
originally meant ‘service to the gods’ -- a kind of holy practice -- but Plato famously
reimagined this idea as a new kind of ‘service to man’ -- having no aim to
treat the gods but only mere people. His
proposal for this service is to get things out into the open where we can see
them and talk about them. We are trying
to get to what is real and to own up to the truth about ourselves. Somehow it is healing just to see the truth
-- also to say it -- it’s a great release to get out from under illusion -- and
people have a capacity to get hold of difficult truths and live with them.
In therapy and in philosophy people do this together --
philosophy has to be your own work, but you do it with other people -- both a
kind of ‘owning up’ with people.
So the patient looks for an encounter with the therapist (--
e.g. to be forgiven)
and
and
the therapist sees in the patient everything he has failed
in himself (-- e.g. to forgive)
-- the therapist is a screen for the patient’s exploration
of himself
-- the patient is a screen for projecting the therapist’s
sins
-- this gives the patient a chance to get things out in the
open and look at them
-- this gives the therapist another chance to let go
-- another chance to keep working on himself and also do
someone else some good.
So in philosophy my partner in conversation and especially
the person who disagrees with me and challenges me is my irreplaceable
corrective and reality-check.
Therefore self-realization without social involvement is
morally bankrupt
-- for the same reason philosophy is fundamentally dialogue,
exchange, love --
philosophy as a need and willingness to engage and search
with another person.
How can we be sure that what we think is ‘critical’ -- how
do we know that ‘critical thinking’ really is ‘critical thinking’? --
Philosophy must confront itself if it is not a sham. -- If philosophy is criticism,
then how do we know that criticism is valid
criticism? How do we know what to think, what to believe, how to act, what to
do?
I think we can read some signs that the philosophical
therapy is working and is healing and curative -- for example, in a powerful
sense of agency, in self-responsibility -- a zest for life, an interest in
life, an engagement in life, a fundamental openness and emotional availability
-- an opening to criticism -- not so much mythologizing about the past but more
imagining about what is possible.
To be able to see that -- if I keep learning -- that my own
point of view will in time cede to something new -- this will be a defeat of
the way I currently think -- means that I have to go on with looking for new
ways of getting at a problem, new language -- I have to resist collapsing
everything I care about into what I am certain of right now.
This means upsetting my own arrogance, hubris, narcissism, grandiosity, certainty -- less Id and Superego
and more Self -- more jumping in, seeing what happens, making room for
compassion -- for irony too -- making a huge space where we can make mistakes
yet still come back from them -- making room for the Other, for what one does not see and perhaps cannot
see.
Freedom is meaningless if the other person stays enslaved -- though we don’t see it, we need the other person to be free
Freedom is meaningless if the other person stays enslaved -- though we don’t see it, we need the other person to be free
Ignorance (hubris, uncaring) is a kind of sickness that
degrades us -- this is what rigorous scrutiny of belief, and calling a person
to account, is trying to get at.
I am saying something like this: philosophy is commitment to
the human project -- the art of life -- this is commitment to virtue -- to
human excellence -- also including intellectual virtue, whose essence is
impartiality. Impartiality underlies the
moral idea itself and arouses its expansion -- which is why mere belief is never enough.
I am talking about approaching something like wisdom, in
which a person comes to terms with his past and finds a way to laugh and
outgrow his mistakes -- not with the sense that every problem has been solved
or that all conflict has been done away with, but by gaining a sense of
composure and a desire to offer one’s service.
On this model, there is no once-and-for all, ultimate
problem, fundamental problem, or final problem for philosophy, whose solution
would put human beings in a completely new position in life -- instead the idea
is to go on with philosophy, to go on doing the work -- conceiving of
philosophy not as a way of solving the problem of life but as practice the
doing of which keeps us human. This is
practice getting back to the questions.
I can see that that there is a danger of degrading
philosophy by this strategy -- making it into a kind of self-help advice -- or
adding to the tendency to pathologize completely ordinary human behavior -- or tranquillize
our dizzying human freedom. I see that
this happens, but in my thinking, philosophy is not a way of helping a person escape from the moral consequences of
life actions -- nor help anyone escape from dizzy freedom -- I don’t think real
therapy is like this either.
Thinking about the philosophy of the future, my result is
not that philosophy is in
danger. The problem is that people are.
Roughly: the search for truth and the search for moral competence
ultimately are the same search -- necessitating an examination of Being and a
duty to treat the sickness that keeps us from thinking.
Many of us find our way to philosophy and begin the
critical, life-altering, curative process, which in our time breaks out from
parochial limits and is impatient with bias. I am here today to represent this
idea for our conference -- to get it out in front of us where we can see it, to
discuss and test it and see if it makes any sense.
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