Keith Hart on Mon, 6 Oct 2003 15:06:20 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> A Puff Piece on Wikipedia (Fwd) |
Kermit Snelson wrote: >But to be honest with ourselves, we must look deep into what intellectualism means.< I know that intellectuals are killers, sometimes not just figuratively. I am one myself, after all. But not all forms of thinking or persons that we might deem to be "intellectual" are equally homicidal. Indeed some intellectuals struggle mightily to retain their humanity and even to contribute to schemes of human improvement. This notion of the close affinity between intellectuals and death starts with opposing ideas and life. Hume called ideas "pale sensations" and we all know what he meant. Ideology, Marx's camera obscura, is the attempt to persuade people that ideas shape their lives rather than the other way around. The author's dream and nightmare is that his/her living thoughts will survive like so many frozen embryos in dead books. Trebor Scholtz (New Media Education and Its Discontent, nettime, 5.10.03) published a fascinating essay on this list, while we were extending the boundaries of the present thread, about the anti-intellectualism of American students. This aspect of the Anglophone empiricist tradition goes far beyond the students and helps to account for the estrangement of American intellectuals from their own public. When I was dining at the high table of my Cambridge college one evening, a neighbour asked me if I thought I was an intellectual. I replied yes. He looked around at the other fellows, deep into their mortgages and creme brulee, and said " Well, you are the only one here." I have long thought that the function of the universities is to take bright young people and persuade that they will never change the world with their ideas. The intellectual has to dehumanise him/herself in order to do the work. That is what detachment means -- avoiding domestic responsibility, staying out of today's political fight, separating ideas from the persons who acted as midwife to their birth, subjecting oneself to inner torment in the small hours, riding the rollercoaster between mania and depression. And if the intellectual is nourished by social engagement, by acrtually caring about other people, by all the human passions, then moving between the two poles of his/her existence can be a rocky ride. Max Weber, who suffered from terrible depressions and tried to be both a politician and an intellectual, wrote two wonderful essays called "Politics as a vocation" and "Science as a vocation". In them he claimed that the politician, in engaging with the struggle for power, must be guided by passion. But he also has to take care to be reasonable, since people will reject him if he is clearly mad. Equally, the scientist must be guided by reason and cultivate objective detachment. But Weber notes that the best scientists are also passionate enthusiasts for their work. So that, although the two professions appear to depend on the ideal types of passion and reason respectively, in reality they must be combined to be effective as human practice. Nevertheless, DNA was not discovered by people kissing babies on the stump. How can engagement and detachment be synthesised as a pattern of daily work or as an alternating cycle? Exile, as Edward Said among others insisted, is one possible answer. The involuntary exile has to time to think and write, while being reminded daily that s/he is the victim of coercion. Imprisonment, in some extreme cases, has been an even more powerful incentive to sustained intellectual production. It is curious, given this intellectual-killer hypothesis, that Rene Descartes, our common ancestor, found that signing up as a professional soldier in the Thirty years war gave him lots of time to think between the sporadic fighting. He spent most days in bed until midday and then got up to read books by the fire. Every now and then he took a few weeks' sabbatical in a Paris monastery. This example raises Kermit's second point about the dependence of intellectuals on patrons who are themselves directly or indirectly responsible for killing (or let's call it "exploitation"). Well, again there is wide variation in that. A 19th century French civil servant holding down a sinecure while writing novels on the side isn't exaxctly Paul Wolfowitz. Compromised, for sure, but then we all define our personal politics by picking the battles we want to fight. In the 70s, I worked as a consultant for the World Bank, the British Foreign Office, USAID etc, but I was never employed by the same agency twice. Some people would prefer to stay outside. I wanted to see how these things worked and kept my tattered integrity by writing reports that no proletarian could afford to write. The kind of intellectualism and its forms of expression also make a difference. For the last two centuries, the relationship between living persons and impersonal collective entities has been obscured by most traditions of western social thought. This contrasts vividly with the two vehicles of mass instruction and entertainment in this period, novels and movies. Public education has largely been based on the "hose and bucket" principle that students should leave their personal experience at home, while they allow themselves to be filled up with impersonal knowledge in the classroom. Probably the apogee of dehumanised intellectualism was French structuralism in the 1960s, a response to American systems approaches which dumped the subject, history, dialectic and all the other baggage of the German tradition. Not many intellectuals actually kill someone, but Althusser did. At the same time, the debasement of the liberal tradition into economics and its apotheosis as state capitalism encouraged an anti-liberal strand, now in the ascendent in dissident circles. What is common to both sides is indifference to the need to hold the personal and impersonal dimensions of life in some dialectical relationship, as they were in the liberal Enlightenment. Brian Holmes wrote: >Acknowledging that inheritance seems to me like buying with one's spiritual faculties into a status quo of inequality, oppression and domination < I do not aspire to be in the liberal Enlightenment any more than I would want to live in Europe's religious wars. Nor can I understand how individuals like Locke, Rousseau and Hume can be identified with what they were fighting against. I just think that the weakening of state capitalism, under social and technological conditions we may summarise as the digital revolution, opens up new opportunities for us to reconfigure relations between the personal and impersonal dimensions of human experience, whether as practising intellectuals or not. In this regard, I find more food for thought in the eighteenth century than among the neo-liberals and anti-liberals of our time. This is why I resist Kermit's conflation of a series of posts into his "persecution of writers" theme or indeed the "intellectuals as killers" motif on which I have hung this post. Voltaire's duplicitous exercises in character assassination stood in dialectical relationship to Rousseau's platform of authorial transparency. I am drawn to (and sometimes appalled by) the latter's conception of the writer's public responsibility which can and must involve being personal at times, but should not, according to him, impinge unnecessarily on his audience's sensibilities. This contradictory rule of style is hard to follow in practice and may account for the lapse of judgment at the end of my previous post. Keith Hart # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net