January 20, 2003
Richard Rorty
Norm Jenson responds to my blogged outline of the class I’m doing at MIT. He recommendsd an article by Richard Rorty, “The Decline of Redemptive Truth and the Rise of a Literary Culture.” Rorty is one of the few practicing philosophers who makes me wish that I had actually kept reading philosophy during The Great Forgetting (= the 17 years since I left academics). Rorty’s pragmatism is itself highly pragmatic and not lost in theories of pragmatism. He revels in how he has dodged the 16-ton weight that philosophy has shouldered for millennia. His thought is actually frolicsome. For example, on his home page you’ll find a link to “Redemption from Egotism” where he writes:
The emergence of the novel has contributed to a growing conviction among the intellectuals that when we think about the effects of our actions on other human beings we can simply ignore a lot of questions that our ancestors traditionally thought relevant. These include Euthyphro’s question about whether our actions are pleasing to the gods, Plato’s question about whether they are dictated by a clear vision of the Good, and Kant’s question about whether their maxims can be universalized. Instead, a decision about what to do should be determined by as rich and full a knowledge of other people as possible—in particular, knowledge of their own descriptions of their actions and of themselves. Our actions can be justified only when we are able to see how these actions look from the points of view of all those affected by them.
Seen in this light, what novels do for us is to let us know how people quite unlike ourselves think of themselves, how they contrive to put actions that appall us in a good light, how they give their lives meaning. The problem of how to live our own lives then becomes a problem of how to balance our needs against theirs, and their self-descriptions against ours. To have a more educated, developed and sophisticated moral outlook is to be able to grasp more of these needs, and to understand more of these self-descriptions.
Damn, that’s good. And, placed in the context of thousands of years of philosophy aimed at deducing morality from principles or calculating it based on totally pleasures and pains, it’s radical. (It also says clearly what I’ve been struggling to say aboutsympathy-based morality.)
From Vergil Iliescu comes a link to a BBC lectures on trust and digital identity. For example, Tom Bailey writes a philosophical history of trust (Glaucon, Machiavelli, Hobbes, Hume) that’s clear and engaging, and works itself around (in its philosophical way) to saying that the traditional pessimists think trust is irrational because they have forgotten that first and foremost humans are social. I’m not satisfied with Bailey’s resolving sociality into individuals taking responsibility for the parts they play in our lives, but the article remains highly readable and readworthy.