For those of us whose melioristic sympathies are rooted in William James's Pragmatism, the enlistment of Bertrand Russell as an ally in the moral equivalent of war may sound odd. James called him an ass ("Bertie Russell trying to excogitate what true knowledge means, in the absence of any concrete universe surrounding the knower and the known. Ass!"), he took nasty swipes at WJ and said the "logical outcome" of the Will to Believe when applied to religion and politics would be carnage. "What is wanted is not the will to believe but the wish to find out, which is its exact opposite."
Nonetheless, I am struck more by the affinities of James and Russell and Richard Rorty as hopeful meliorists and humanists, and (though Rorty's general public demeanor was glum and Eeyore-ish) philosophers united in their pursuit of happiness. Those affinities far outweigh any differences as to the best interpretation of the relation between belief and knowledge.
Meliorism, humanism, hope, and happiness are centered in forward-looking action, not armchair or seminar room contemplation. Rorty, Russell, and James (and let's add Dewey) share in the former's "protest against the idea that human beings must humble themselves before something non-human, whether the Will of God or the Intrinsic Nature of Reality." Pragmatism as Anti-Authoritarianism
James, it's true, defended the right of believers to humble themselves before "whatever they may call the divine." But his more characteristic disposition was to exalt the ways in which beliefs of all sorts could get persons formerly humbled and crippled by the challenges of living off their knees, up and moving forward.
It's always, for happy hopeful melioristic humanists, a question of what value for life our respective commitments and projects may deliver. It's always our really vital question: "What is this world going to be? What is life eventually to make of itself?"
Happy the philosopher whose center of gravity has shifted to this earth of things and finite humans questing to do their bit to make things just a little better. Going forward.
No comments:
Post a Comment