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Requiem for a Heavyweight

Word that Richard Rorty was on his deathbed – that he had pancreatic cancer, the same disease that killed Jacques Derrida almost three years ago – reached me last month via someone who more or less made me swear not to say anything about it in public. The promise was easy enough to keep. But the news made reading various recent books by and about Rorty an awfully complicated enterprise. The interviews in Take Care of Freedom and Truth Will Take Care of Itself (Stanford University Press, 2006) and the fourth volume of Rorty’s collected papers, Philosophy as Cultural Politics (Cambridge University Press, 2007) are so bracingly quick-witted that it was very hard to think of them as his final books.

Intellectual Affairs

But the experience was not as lugubrious as it may sound. I found myself laughing aloud, and more than once, at Rorty’s consistent indifference to certain pieties and protocols. He was prone to outrageous statements delivered with a deadpan matter-of-factness that could be quite breathtaking. The man had chutzpah.

It’s a “desirable situation,” he told an interviewer, “not to have to worry about whether you are writing philosophy or literature. But, in American academic culture, that’s not possible, because you have to worry about what department you are in.”

The last volume of his collected papers contains a piece called “Grandeur, Profundity, and Finitude.” It opens with a statement sweeping enough to merit that title: “Philosophy occupies an important place in culture only when things seem to be falling apart – when long-held and widely cherished beliefs are threatened. At such periods, intellectuals reinterpret the past in terms of an imagined future. They offer suggestions about what can be preserved and what must be discarded.”

Then, a few lines later, a paradoxical note of rude modesty interrupts all the grandeur and profundity. “In the course of the 20th century,” writes Rorty, “there were no crises that called forth new philosophical ideas.”

It’s not that the century was peaceful or crisis-free, by any means. But philosophers had less to do with responding to troubles than they once did. And that, for Rorty, is a good thing, or at least not a bad one – a sign that we are becoming less intoxicated by philosophy itself, more able to face the need to face crises at the level (social, economic, political, etc.) they actually present themselves. We may yet be able to accept, he writes, “that each generation will solve old problems only by creating new ones, that our descendants will look back on much that we have done with incredulous contempt, and that progress towards greater justice and freedom is neither inevitable nor impossible.”

Nothing in such statements is new, of course. They are the old familiar Rorty themes. The final books aren’t groundbreaking. But neither was there anything routine or merely contrarian about the way Rorty continued to challenge the boundaries within the humanities, or the frontier between theoretical discussion and public conversation. It is hard to imagine anyone taking his place.

An unexpected and unintentional sign of his influence recently came my way in the form of an old essay from The Journal of American History. It was there that David A. Hollinger, now chair of the department of history at the University of California at Berkeley, published a long essay called “The Problem of Pragmatism in American History.”

It appeared in 1980. And as of that year, Hollinger declared, it was obvious that “‘pragmatism’ is a concept most American historians have proved that they can get along without. Some non-historians may continue to believe that pragmatism is a distinctive contribution of America to modern civilization and somehow emblematic of America, but few scholarly energies are devoted to the exploration or even the assertion of this belief.”

Almost as an afterthought, Hollinger did mention that Richard Rorty had recently addressed the work of John Dewey from a “vividly contemporary” angle. But this seemed to be the a marginal exception to the rule. “If pragmatism has a future,” concluded Hollinger in 1980, “it will probably look very different from the past, and the two may not even share a name.”

Seldom has a comment about the contemporary state of the humanities ever been overtaken by events so quickly and so thoroughly. Rorty’s Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature (Princeton University Press, 1979) had just been published, and he was finishing the last of the essays to appear in Consequences of Pragmatism (University of Minnesota Press, 1982).

It is not that the revival was purely Rorty’s doing, and some version of it might have unfolded even without his efforts. In such matters, the pendulum does tend to swing.

But Rorty’s suggestion that John Dewey, Martin Heidegger, and Ludwig Wittgenstein were the three major philosophers of the century, and should be discussed together — this was counterintuitive, to put it mildly. It created excitement that blazed across disciplinary boundaries, and even carried pragmatism out of the provinces and into international conversation. I’m not sure how long Hollinger’s point that pragmatism was disappearing from textbooks on American intellectual history held true. But scholarship on the original pragmatists was growing within a few years, and anyone trying to catch up with the historiography now will soon find his or her eyeballs sorely tested.

In 1998, Morris Dickstein, a senior fellow at the City University of New York Graduate Center, edited a collection of papers called The Revival of Pragmatism: New Essays on Social Thought, Law, and Culture (Duke University Press) — one of the contributors to it being, no surprise, Richard Rorty. “I’m really grieved,” he told me on Monday. “Rorty evolved from a philosopher into a mensch.... His respect for his critics, without yielding much ground to them, went well with his complete lack of pretension as a person.”

In an e-mail note, he offered an overview of Rorty that was sympathetic though not uncritical.

“To my mind,” Dickstein wrote, “he was the only intellectual who gave postmodern relativism a plausible cast, and he was certainly the only one who combined it with Dissent-style social democratic politics. He admired Derrida and Davidson, Irving Howe and Harold Bloom, and told philosophers to start reading literary criticism. His turn from analytic philosophy to his own brand of pragmatism was a seminal moment in modern cultural discourse, especially because his neopragmatism was rooted in the ‘linguistic turn’ of analytic philosophy. His role in the Dewey revival was tremendously influential even though Dewey scholars universally felt that it was his own construction. His influence on younger intellectuals like Louis Menand and David Bromwich was very great and, to his credit, he earned the undying enmity of hard leftists who made him a bugaboo.”

The philosopher “had a blind side when it came to religion,” continued Dickstein, “and he tended to think of science as yet another religion, with its faith in empirical objectivity. But it’s impossible to write about issues of truth or objectivity today without somehow bouncing off his work, as Simon Blackburn and Bernard Williams both did in their very good books on the subject. I liked him personally: he was generous with his time and always civil with opponents.”

A recent essay discussing Rorty challenges the idea that Rorty “had a blind side when it came to religion.” Writing in Dissent, Casey Nelson Blake, a professor of history and American studies at Columbia University, notes that Rorty “in recent years stepped back from his early atheist pronouncements, describing his current position as ‘anti-clerical,’ and he has begun to explore, with increasing sympathy and insight, the social Christianity that his grandfather Walter Rauschenbusch championed a century ago.”

Blake quotes a comment by Rorty from The Future of Religion, an exchange with the Catholic philosopher Gianni Vattimo that Columbia University Press published in 2005. (It comes out in paperback this summer.)

“My sense of the holy,” wrote Rorty, “insofar as I have one, is bound up with the hope that someday, any millennium now, my remote descendants will live in a global civilization in which love is pretty much the only law. In such a society, communication would be domination-free, class and caste would be unknown, hierarchy would be a matter of temporary pragmatic convenience, and power would be entirely at the disposal of the free agreement of a literate and well-educated electorate.”

I’m not sure whether that counts as a religious vision, by most standards. But it certainly qualifies as something that requires a lot of faith.

Two items of great interest came to my attention too late to include in this column. One is the final interview with Rorty, conducted by Danny Postel just before the philosopher’s death. The other is a tribute to Rorty by Jürgen Habermas.

Scott McLemee writes Intellectual Affairs each week. He also blogs at Quick Study.

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Comments

Maybe I’m Missing The Point

I must say Scott that if (1) creating the capacity to end civilization as we know it, along with the ability to destroy a huge bite of the Earth’s “uncivilized” life in the process (nuclear weapons and delivery systems), and (2) abusing Mother Earth to the extent that we have, and in the process jeopardizing life on Earth to the point where only dramatic curtailing of our behavior is likely to rescue the situation (global warming) – virtually all of which took place in the twentieth century – is not sufficient grist for the philosophers’ mill, then I suppose I’m just confused about how large a crisis is required to“ ... [call] forth new philosophical ideas.”

Am I missing the point ... or is this solid evidence of the poverty of twentieth century philosophy?

Oh yes, and about Rorty’s blind side vis- -vis religion. Let’s have lunch together at the end of this century – I suggest B. Smith’s near Union Station in D.C. – and, if by that time, there are not more out-of-the- closet atheists in the Western Hemisphere than Saturday and Sunday “worshippers,” I’ll buy. Otherwise it’s your treat.

RWH, at 8:15 am EDT on June 13, 2007

Missing rortyu’s point

RWH—You did, indeed, miss Rorty’s point. He was not referring to technological, political crises, but to crises of thought and belief, crises in philosophy, if you will. The late 19th century “death of God and man” perhaps qualifies as our last major crisis of that sort. I think, though, that Rorty’s own substantial re-evaluation of foundational philosophy (extending Wittgenstein) might become a major change, or at least extension of change, in philosophy—at least, I hope so.

David E, USC, at 4:10 pm EDT on June 13, 2007

In Response To David E.

Sorry to repeat such an extensive quotation, but ...

“’Philosophy occupies an important place in culture only when things seem to be falling apart – when long-held and widely cherished beliefs are threatened. At such periods, intellectuals reinterpret the past in terms of an imagined future. They offer suggestions about what can be preserved and what must be discarded.’

Then, a few lines later, a paradoxical note of rude modesty interrupts all the grandeur and profundity. ‘In the course of the 20th century,’ writes Rorty, ‘there were no crises that called forth new philosophical ideas.’

It’s not that the century was peaceful or crisis-free, by any means. But philosophers had less to do with responding to troubles than they once did. And that, for Rorty, is a good thing, or at least not a bad one – a sign that we are becoming less intoxicated by philosophy itself, more able to face the need to face crises at the level (social, economic, political, etc.) they actually present themselves.”

I take the globe-threatening weaponry of the twentieth century and our environmental assault on Mother Earth (and please don’t forget the impact of population growth) to challenge the notion that each person is master of hir destiny. We survive only by collective action. Certainly the relevance of existentialism suffers in this context.

Add to that the shock to pre-twentieth century philosophy and its grounding in morality and religion that is wrought by the phenomenal growth of science and mathematics during the twentieth century, wherein every time one blinks hir eyes yet another “gap” that previously required “super human” intervention and “explanation” (along with the requisite apologies by theologians and philosophers) has been “filled in.”

Indeed, it is not outrageous to suggest that with every monumental advance in scientific discovery – and there have been more than a few during the twentieth century – both philosophy and religion must scramble to maintain their relevance. To its credit, it seems as though every time I turn around philosophy has made yet another effort to engulf another branch of science. So, David E., while I will still own up to possibly missing “the” point, I seriously doubt it is the point you suggested I missed.

I love philosophy. But, truth be known, as I get older and read and study more, philosophy tells me less and less about myself and my world ... and religion tells me almost nothing. Thank goodness for science and mathematics. There I find answers that satisfy me and excite me.

RWH, at 6:00 pm EDT on June 13, 2007

Rorty as an “Important, But Unfashionable” Philosopher

“In the course of the 20th century,” writes Rorty, “there were no crises that called forth new philosophical ideas.” As your note, Scott, Rorty was always good for making “outrageous statements,” and I would include this as one of them. As a student in the Philosophy Department at Princeton in the early 1960s, I was immersed in existentialism, which was taught to me by two very different but equally engaging professors, Walter Kaufmann and Richard Rorty, who were respectively the first and second readers on my senior thesis on Sartre’s ethics. Among their differences was their sharply opposed evaluations of Martin Heidegger’s thought. In any event, it strikes me as inconsistent with his own practice at the time for Rorty to be so dismissive of existentialism as a set of “new philosophical ideas” emerging to prominence in the wake of World War II.

I maintained contact with Rorty and, later on as Philosophy and Social Science Editor at Princeton University Press, I talked Rorty out of submitting the manuscript of “Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature” to the University of Chicago Press, which had earlier published an anthology titled “The Linguistic Turn” that Rorty had edited. (I convinced Rorty that the option clause in Chicago’s contract was legally unenforceable.) I realized that this was a manuscript of exceptional promise, though it did have a mixed reception by the pre-publication reviewers. However, I wasn’t prepared myself for quite the intellectual revolution it fomented. To help keep the price reasonable, PUP applied to the NEH for a publication subsidy, which was awarded. To justify the subsidy, we didn’t feel we could be too optimistic about potential sales, so we only printed 1,500 copies (which may seem like a lot today but was modest for the late 1970s). The book came out just prior to the Eastern APA convention, and we took a few extra copies with us to the book exhibit in New York. Those disappeared within a very short time, and we kept calling back to Princeton to ship more copies. By the end of the convention, we had sold over 100 at the booth, an extraordinary number when you consider that selling even 5 copies at such a convention is usually regarded as a major success. That was the first sign that we had something really special on our hands. As it turned out, the entire first printing sold out within two or three months, and it happened so quickly that we did not have sufficient time to prepare for a reprint (which, in those pre-digital days, ordinarily took several months to accomplish). As a result, much to our embarrassment and Rorty’s, the book was out of print for about three months when demand was at its highest!

The book, of course, went on to go through many printings and to become one of Princeton’s all-time best sellers (though not at the level of the I Ching or Joseph Campbell’s books). It caught on first more with literary theorists than with philosophers (despite the success of the initial APA sale), and it’s not surprising perhaps that Rorty eventually gravitated toward literature in his departmental affiliation after leaving Princeton first for Virginia and then for Stanford. Rorty had always been regarded as something of an oddity among his colleagues in philosophy, respected (unlike Kaufmann) because he knew Davidson, Quine, Sellars, Wittgenstein, etc. as well as any of them but viewed as an eccentric for his passion for such Continental thinkers as Derrida, Heidegger, etc.

My own concern, as his editor, was that “Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature” seemed to have some profound implications for political theory, but Rorty didn’t know this field well at all and I encouraged him to develop those implications in later work, which he did. He had grown up in a family engaged in political thinking, but curiously did not reflect this in his own early work to any significant extent. Becoming a public intellectual evidently obliged him to speak out more on issues of political import, which in turn prompted him to become more self-reflective about the philosophical basis of his own political instincts.

In preparing a booklet to celebrate our 50th anniversary at Penn State Press last year, I turned to Dick as someone I knew would be likely to respect the kind of independent and adventurous path in building a list in philosophy that I had pursued at Penn State, reflecting his influence on my own intellectual life, and he responded promptly and generously with the following remarks: “Over the past few decades, Penn State Press has published some of the most interesting philosophy being written in the United States. It has made available the writings of important, but unfashionable, philosophers who are not part of the analytic ‘mainstream.’ Penn State has also published many books that link up philosophy with other areas of the humanities, and others that bring together analytic and Continental philosophy. Its editorial policies have resulted in a very impressive philosophy backlist.” The second sentence, in particular, could almost have been a biographical statement: Rorty was certainly an “important, but unfashionable” philosopher when his magnum opus came out in 1979.

As others have mentioned, Dick was a decent person who embodied the ideal of democracy as a respectful conversation among equals with differing commitments and values. His was the epitome of civil discourse, and we shall all miss his always stimulating contributions to our cultural life.

Sandy Thatcher, at 1:25 pm EDT on June 14, 2007

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