CIAO DATE: 10/07
Politics and Acquiescence in Rorty's Pragmatism
Matthew Festenstein
One of the most long-standing and potent charges against pragmatism from the point of view of political philosophy has been that of acquiescence.1 Whatever the personal, moral or political commitments of particular pragmatists, this criticism alleges, pragmatism is vulnerable to appropriation by whatever social forces are most powerful. This criticism takes various forms (MacGilvray 2000), but its core can be fairly simply stated. On the one hand, pragmatism (at least in its Deweyan version) subsumes theoretical reasoning within practical reasoning. For the Deweyan account, inquiry is understood as a particular kind of activity. Like other activities, it is pursued in order to achieve particular goals. In its course one's goals may change, new conceptions of what one is doing emerge and indeed who one is may emerge, etc. But inquiry should be understood as goal-directed activity, and successful inquiry as that which allows us to deal with the environment in better ways. On the other hand, Deweyan pragmatism is notoriously reticent about setting out 'final ends' for the sake of which this activity takes place (Richardson 1999: 122). Inquiry is then viewed as instrumental and goal-directed, but the goals to which it is or should be directed are left out of the picture of practical reasoning. Accordingly, social consensus or power rushes to fill the vacuum. The dilemma that this position presents for the pragmatist, then, is that either she abandons the aspiration to say something critical about existing social and political arrangements or she abandons the pragmatist view of inquiry: she cannot have both.
Agents, Spectators, and Social Hope:
Richard Rorty and American Intellectuals
Marek Kwiek
Rorty wrote his Achieving Our Country as a philosopher, intellectual, academic and citizen, and each of these perspectives lead to a different emphasis in reading his book, and to a different story (and 'storytelling' is one of the themes of the book). The emergent pictures vary: the philosopher tells a story of the growing isolation and cultural sterility of analytic philosophy in the United States of America after the Second World War; the intellectual tells a story of the political bareness and practical uselessness of (the majority of) American leftist intellectuals in the context of the emerging new global order at the turn of the 21st century; the academic tells the story about humanities' departments at American universities, especially departments of literature and cultural studies, and their students, and contrasts their possible future fate with the past fate of departments of analytical philosophy and their students; and, finally, the citizen tells a story about the nationhood, politics, patriotism, reformism (as well as the inherent dangers and opportunities of globalization). Rorty plays the four descriptions off against one another perfectly and Achieving Our Country represents him at his very best: Rorty is passionate, inspiring, uncompromising, biting and very relevant to current public debates. Owing to the intelligent combination of the above perspectives, the clarity and elegance of his prose, and (although not revealed directly) the wide philosophical background provided by his new pragmatism, the book differs from a dozen others written in the 1990s about the American academy and American intellectuals. It also sheds new and interesting light on Rorty's pragmatism, providing an excellent example of the application of his philosophical views. One has to note that, generally, it is almost impossible to think of any piece written by Rorty outside of the context of his philosophy, and Achieving Our Country is no exception to this rule.
Rorty, Gutting, and Commonsense
Jacek Brzozowski
In his Pragmatic Liberalism and the Critique of Modernity Gary Gutting attempts to rescue Richard Rorty's seminal work from various accusations of relativism and skepticism that have plagued it. These arise due to Rorty's recurrent resistance to the inclusion of any hint of metaphysical realism, which has thus resulted in Rorty committing to (what are seen by many analytic philosophers as objectionable1) claims such as 'everything we know is known only under "optional description"' (Rorty 1979: 379), 'the absurdity of thinking that the vocabulary used by present science, morality, or whatever, has some privileged attachment to reality which makes it more than just a further set of descriptions' (Rorty 1979: 361), and to instances in later work when he states that '[t]he hardness of fact in all these cases is simply the hardness of previous agreements within a community about the consequences of a certain event' (Rorty 1991: 80). In this paper I intend to describe the pragmatic liberal theory that Gutting puts forward, showing how he uses Rorty's pragmatism to set his foundations, and how he then builds on this by appealing to a 'humdrum' commonsense view in order to save Rorty. I will follow Gutting's strategy of approaching the theories of 'knowledge without representation', 'justification as social practice', 'the problem of truth', and 'Davidsonian Therapy' separately, arguing systematically that each of these aspects fails as a convincing appeal to commonsense, humdrum realism, and that the additions to Rorty do not strengthen his theory; instead, they show the importance of the epistemologies that the theory is trying to denounce.
'Don't Kick the Habit':
A Taylorian Critique of Rorty's Achieving Our Country
Deane-Peter Baker
In his Theoria 97 (June 2001: 23-40) assessment of Richard Rorty's Achieving Our Country, Fred Dallmayr agrees that Rorty's criticism of the contemporary Left in America is necessary, that the Left has indeed lost the momentum that in previous years so impacted American society. He further agrees with Rorty that there is an important distinction to be made between the old-guard 'reformist' Left and the new orthodoxy of 'cultural' Leftism. Dallmayr argues, however, that Rorty's critique is unbalanced, and is unfairly biased against the 'cultural' Left, despite the occasional conciliatory statement. He argues further that there is something worrying in the style of American pride that Rorty is promoting. In particular, argues Dallmayr, it seems to ignore the fact that in the contemporary world national boundaries can no longer be sharply defined, and the narrow form of national pride that Rorty seems to espouse can be a destructive force in the interwoven international community. Undoubtedly, Dallmayr makes some telling points against Rorty's position in what is a thoughtful and well-crafted response. There is, however, more to be said, and I wish in this paper to add to Dallmayr's critique, working from within the philosophical framework provided by Charles Taylor.1 I will also consider the attempt, made by Gary Gutting, to overcome some of the shortcomings of Rorty's pragmatism by drawing on aspects of Taylor's philosophy.
Rorty and Tolerance
Christian B. Miller
While Richard Rorty's general views on truth, objectivity, and relativism continue to attract much attention from professional philosophers, some of his contributions to ethical theory have thus far been remarkably neglected. In other work, I have begun the task of sketching what a Rortyan approach to traditional questions in meta-ethics might look like.1 Here, however, I shall attempt to summarize and evaluate some of the contributions that Rorty has made to important debates in first-order normative theory. More specifically, my attention will be devoted primarily to the question of what moral obligations of respect and tolerance, if any, we have towards those who act out of moral frameworks which are divergent from our own.
The paper proceeds in three parts. In the first section, I suggest that one promising way of approaching ethical issues about tolerance is through the somewhat novel strategy of first clearly differentiating the various forms of moral relativism. With this background in place, we can then proceed in section two to the details of Rorty's own view. Finally, the paper concludes with some worries about the plausibility, coherence, and stability of Rorty's positive proposal.
Justice Without Foundations
Patrick Lenta
It's All in the Game: A Nonfoundational Account of Law and Adjudication, by Allan Hutchinson. Durham: Duke University Press, 2000.
Law is politics. This thesis, subject to certain qualifications, underpins and is the conclusion of the present book. Advanced by the American realists and radicalized by critical legal studies scholars, the idea that law and adjudication is ineluctably political receives one of its most epistemologically radical formulations in Allan Hutchinson's work. This essay seeks to evaluate the internal coherence of Hutchinson's attempt, in a formulation he terms nonfoundationalism, to explicate and radicalize the idea that adjudication is irreducibly ideological, as well as his claim to provide new co-ordinates for radical legal praxis.