Archive for May, 2007

Books on atheism

Saturday, May 26th, 2007

I was suggesting to a friend who has studied futurism that we can expect to see a backlash against religion in the next few years, a revival of militant atheism. This is a reaction to eight years of Bush and the aggression of certain fundamentalists, both Muslim and Christian.

Three books have been released that advocate atheism and scepticism.
1. The God Delusion by Richard Dawkins
2. The Atheist Manifesto by French philosopher Michel Onfrey
3. God is Not Great by journalist Christopher Hitchens.

I understand Al Gore is about to publish a book called ‘The Assault on Reason’.

The main problem has been a social acceptance of faith as equal to reason. We are supposed to tolerate people’s religious choices. The problem with this is that this tolerance becomes the failure to question and challenge absurdities. A perfect example happened in an encounter between Richard Dawkins and the minister of a megachurch in Colorado Springs (I think the same one that later admitted to having a homosexual affair and taking speed). The minister said that the eye and the ear could not suddenly appear. Richard Dawkins looked at him stunned and calmly said that he did not know of any scientist who ever claimed they ’suddenly’ appeared. At which point the minister got aggressive and accused Dawkins of arrogance. The point here is that such idiot ministers have a captive audience who accept everything they say, no matter how ridiculous. No doubt he has been telling his congregation that biologists think eyes suddenly appeared and there has been no one to disabuse him of his stupidity.

Another example of error appeared in a doco called ‘God on my Side’ (which probably will not air in the US). The reporter was very restrained and allowed the fundamentalist Christians to speak. He was talking to the Duffy brothers from Texas, three preachers with silly hair. He broached the subject of homosexuality and one brother said with full confidence that right throughout history there is plenty of evidence that an acceptance of homosexuality leads to the decline of civilization. I laughed! There is no such evidence. Where do these people get this nonsense? The answer is that they are not well-educated and think that a thorough knowledge of the Bible qualifies them to comment on things they know nothing about. They then spread this misinformation within their communities and it becomes accepted as fact – because it is never challenged.

This last belief reminds me that this idea of moral decay and the collapse of civilization is one of the great myths of the Judeo-Christians. The fact is that civilizations can accept a great variety of sexual deviance and continue to thrive. The Greeks accepted pederasty and thrived, the Romans tolerated homosexuality and prostitution, the Hindus institutionalised child sex, etc. Apart from this individual rulers have been generally free to indulge their sexual whims and also govern. The Roman emperor Hadrian had a boy lover called Antinous. When Antinous died young Hadrian had him deified and worshipped. At this time the Roman Empire had expanded as far north as Scotland. There is a wall called Hadrian’s wall that was built to stop the Scots invading Roman England. All the evidence suggests that sexual preferences and practices have no impact on civilization. None. Civilizations collapse for a variety of reasons, but never sexual practices.

The Internet porn revolution

Friday, May 25th, 2007

As a society we are still infected by the sex negative attitudes of the Judeo-Christians. We still think sex is still somehow ‘wrong’. We may have moved on from regarding sex for pleasure as sin, but we still think the open discussion of sex and the open display of sexual images and themes as wrong. The idea that sex should remain in the ‘private’ domain of the bedroom has replaced the idea that sex is a sin. This is irrational. What is wrong with a sexual image? The idea that sex should be ‘private’ is a direct hangover from the Judeo-Christian idea that sex for pleasure is evil. The early church moralists said that sex was only for procreation and that all non-procreative arousal was a sin. They told married couples that sex should be performed in a perfunctory manner, preferably at night with the lights out and with night clothes on – to avoid any extra arousal. I know a lot of people think we have progressed from this extreme position, but I would argue that we have only changed slightly. Many people are still embarrassed by naked body, the sight of genitals and the physical reality of sex.

The internet porn revolution is slowly changing this, but there is still a high degree of moral panic over this. It seems our embarrassment means we cannot think about the issue in any clear way. In today’s Melbourne Age there is an article that suggests that Internet porn compulsion/addiction is affecting relationships.

Well, der! Any compulsion affects a relationship because the compulsion works against intimacy, whether that compulsion is alcohol or collecting or a general compulsive disorder. Seriously, there are people who become obssessed about collecting certain items, so obssessed it takes over the relationship. Should we be shocked that some people become obssessed by Internet porn instead of gambling, drinking or collecting dolls?

So how big a problem is it? The Age article cites two studies. One suggested that 9% were addicted and another suggested 6%. Well! You could knock me down with a feather! A whopping 6-9%. It’s a crisis! Seriously folks, how many relationships are ruined by other addictions like alcohol and gambling? I’d suggest it’s a rate higher than 6-9%, and these activities are widespread and legal.

The journalist responsible for this piece of moral panic, Adele Horin, drops this clanger – “And the kind of material available exceeds imagination”. This is a very revealing sentance and tells us immediately she is a sexual conservative. It’s a silly thing to say. Clearly if it exists then someone has imagined it. It therefore does not exceed someone’s imagination. All Horin is saying is that it exceeds her limited imagination. But we should not be surprised. A society that considers the open discussion of sex is bound to produce people with a limited sexual knowledge and imagination.

Horin does go on to say: “The rising tide of internet pornography is giving some Australians the best sex education of their lives.”

So what’s the moral panic about? It’s clash between those who think sex should be private and hidden and those who think it should be openly celebrated. Those who think it should be kept private need to answer this question – why is porn so popular? The answer is simple. People have always been interested in sex. It’s a perfectly natural part of being human and a society that censors sexual imagery and keeps it out of the public domain will only create a subaltern desire for those images.

I have no problem with graphic sexual images, but I do have a problem with the porn industry. It’s often just crude and artless. But first we need to understand where the term porn comes from. It comes from the Greek ‘pornai’, meaning prostitute. It was created by the archaeologist C O Mueller in 1850. He had encountered erotic frescoes in Roman ruins and assumed that they were from brothels. He was wrong. Many were in fact from wealthy homes. It seems that the display of sexual images was the height of good taste in Roman society. Of course the puritannical Judeo-Christians regarded prostitutes as sinners and because sex was only for procreation the enjoyment of sexual imagery was also a sin. God forbid we should enjoy the erotic! So erotic imagery was banned and hidden. Of course the natural human interest in sex subverted the ban and erotic images were produced in nearly every age and culture. The reason the porn industry is so crude is because it was originally illegal and produced by the criminal underground who lacked any creative or artistic sensibility.

In my view the solution to the porn problem is to legitimise erotic imagery in the public domain. This will rob the porn idustry of its appeal as a subaltern activity. In fact this is what is happening anyway. The US porn industry is huge, with some estimates suggesting it turns over more money than Hollywood. The sheer size of the industry has legitimised it to some extent and some operators are becoming more professional. The porn actress Jenna Jameson runs her own company and turns over a few million. Actors are better paid and better looked after. This will improve as the porn industry becomes more mainstream and control is taken away from the criminal underground (who do nopt have a history of treating people well).

But this is the other side of the moral shock. That there are a seemingly endless supply of young women in particular who want to be in the porn industry because they like sex. We have all heard the story of Linda Lovelace – how she was bullied and forced into porn by a violent boyfriend. That is not the case today, and whilst there are no doubt still many seedy operators, the growing professionalism means they are disappearing. The moral shock comes from sexual conservatives like Adele Horin who lack the imagination to conceive of young women who are effectively sexual athletes and exhibitionists who enjoy what they do and make good money, like the actress who said she specialises in anal orgasms. I would guess Horin didn’t even know anal orgasms were possible.

The article goes on to say that some women feel threatened by porn sex, that they cannot hope to compete. This is a real problem and the fault lies with the men who think their partners should compete. Would they expect their partners to run like a professional athlete, play violin like a concert violinist, or cook like a four star chef? No. But this is because these things are openly discussed in society and we clearly understand that some people excel in certain fields. The key here is ‘open’ discussion and an ‘open’ appreciation of these skills. It is the same in the erotic fields, some people have talent. Not many men have the stamina or size of porn actor. Not all women have the heightened desire that porn actresses do. There is a young porn star who has a naturally large vagina and she is able to accomodate larger objects, despite her petite frame. But I would guarantee that not too many people would know that there is also a variation in female genitals. Again, because sexual knowledge is kept out of the public domain.

What has this got to do with integral philosophy? It’s obvious. The erotic is a part of who we are and an integral society must integrate it into its culture.

And on a final note of annoyance. The article clearly marks Adele Horin as a conservative feminist moralist because she raises the objection that Brazilian waxes are somehow designed to evoke pre-pubertal girls. Rubbish! I suppose the demand from women that men be clean shaven indicates their desire for pre-pubertal boys? Horin clearly does not know that more and more women are demanding that their men trim and shave their pubic hair as well. In Australia this is known as shaving one’s ‘back, crack and sack’. Depilation as a long history and has been practiced by many cultures. Horin displays her ignorance by raising this tired conservative feminist furphy. People shave their pubic hair for two reasons – no-one likes hair in the mouth (the reason women say they like clean-shaven men, because they don’t like kissing hair) and smooth skin is more sensitive to touch.

The internet porn revolution is an information revolution. It must be integrated into society.

As for porn addiction. Any addiction is a problem and addictive personality types can be addicted to anything. There is no evidence to suggest that porn is somehow inherently more addictive than anything else. Any concern over an addiction to porn or to sex usually carries a moral shock element due solely to the Judeo-Christian idea that sex is bad and that addiction to anything to do with sex is somehow worse than any other type of addiction.

Integrating validity claims & multiple perspectives

Thursday, May 24th, 2007

Wilber 5 is arguably about multiple perspectives and their integration. But whereas Ken seems to have a “meta”perspective or “integral theory” to handle this job, Habermas “rejects the idea of a metadiscourse that sorts out these boundary issues [so] he must answer this challenge in his democratic theory.” Such an approach avoids what has become the totalizing hegemony of an individual’s metanarrative versus the “public autonomy” of democracy. (By the way, with the latter terms I’m reminded of Mark’s use of the quadratic nature of the social holon’s “agency.”) In any event, you can see from the excerpts below where Ken gets a lot of his ideas on perspectives, validity claims and integration.

As to who has the “better argument” between Ken and Habermas, which criteria will you use? Which form of argument and which validity claim? Or as the below points out, how can one integrate them when they compete in the public sphere? This also brings in the topic of “altitude,” which Habermas also deals with in that democracy is an advance on pre-modern forms of social interaction.

I guess for me some questions are: Is what Ken offering in terms of the “next level,” both of individual and social development, really beyond the deliberative democracy Habermas proposes as the integrating factor? Or is it possible that we have yet to even achieve a full deliberative democracy and hence Ken’s “beyond” is really just speculation informed by personal and unconscious biases from his/our “lifeworld” that have yet to be recognized? And wouldn’t we have to study and understand Habermas at least as equally well that we study and understand Ken to be able to compare their ideas to make such validity claims ourselves? And then hash out such integration via public, communicative discourse within a “community of the adequate?”
And wouldn’t such communal adequacy have such well-informed comparison of ideas instead of just accepting the model of one person, no matter how brilliant or integrative?

I personally cannot see how one can claim to the title of being “integral” without exploring the foundations from which Ken built his model, and Habermas is certainly one such foundation. Unless you explore Habbie and others yourself you are accepting Ken’s interpretations without your own careful and critical consideration and are in effect justifiably criticized for tagging along as a cultish follower. And quite frankly I’m not interested in hearing regurgitated Kenobilia from such acolytes, as puke stinks no matter how exquisite the original meal.

From the Stanford Encyclopedia entry on Habermas

Although Habermas’s attitude toward these different modes of critical theory is somewhat ambivalent, he has given good reasons to accept the practical, pluralist approach. Just as in the analysis of modes of inquiry tied to distinct knowledge-constitutive interests, Habermas accepts that various theories and methods each have “a relative legitimacy.” Indeed, like Dewey he goes so far as to argue that the logic of social explanation is pluralistic and elides the “apparatus of general theories.” In the absence of any such general theories, the most fruitful approach to social-scientific knowledge is to bring all the various methods and theories into relation to each other: “Whereas the natural and the cultural or hermeneutic sciences are capable of living in mutually indifferent, albeit more hostile than peaceful coexistence, the social sciences must bear the tension of divergent approaches under one roof” (1988a, 3). In TCA, Habermas casts critical social theory in a similarly pluralistic, yet unifying way. In discussing various accounts of societal modernization, for example, he argues that the main existing theories have their own “particular legitimacy” as developed lines of empirical research, and that Critical Theory takes on the task of critically unifying the various theories and their heterogeneous methods and presuppositions. “Critical social theory does not relate to established lines of research as a competitor; starting from its concept of the rise of modern societies, it attempts to explain the specific limitations and the relative rights of those approaches” (TCA, 2: 375).

What are these claims that are open to criticism and justification? In opposition to the positivist fixation on fact-stating modes of discourse, Habermas does not limit intersubjectively valid, or justifiable, claims to the category of empirical truth, but instead recognizes a spectrum of “validity claims” that also includes, at the least, claims to moral rightness, ethical goodness or authenticity, personal sincerity, and aesthetic value (TCA 1: 8–23; 1993, chap. 1). Although Habermas does not consider such claims to represent a mind-independent world in the manner of empirical truth claims, they can be both publicly criticized as unjustifiable and defended by publicly convincing arguments. To this extent, validity involves a notion of correctness analogous to the idea of truth. In this context, the phrase “validity claim,” as a translation of the German term Geltungsanspruch, does not have the narrow logical sense (truth-preserving argument forms), but rather connotes a richer social idea—that a claim (statement) merits the addressee’s acceptance because it is justified or true in some sense, which can vary according to the sphere of validity and dialogical context.

The term “lifeworld,” by contrast, refers to domains of action in which consensual modes of action coordination predominate. In fact, the distinction between lifeworld and system is better understood as an analytic one that identifies different aspects of social interaction and cooperation (1991b). “Lifeworld” then refers to the background resources, contexts, and dimensions of social action that enable actors to cooperate on the basis of mutual understanding: shared cultural systems of meaning, institutional orders that stabilize patterns of action, and personality structures acquired in family, church, neighborhood, and school (TCA 1: chap. 6; 1998b, chap. 4).

The rationalization of the lifeworld in Western modernity went hand-in-hand with the growth of systemic mechanisms of coordination already mentioned above, in which the demands on fully communicative consensus are relaxed. If large and complex modern societies can no longer be integrated solely on the basis of shared cultural values and norms, new nonintentional mechanisms of coordination must emerge, which take the form of nonlinguistic media of money and power. For example, markets coordinate the collective production and distribution of goods nonintentionally, even if they are grounded in cultural and political institutions such as firms and states. Modernization can become pathological, as when money and power “colonize the lifeworld” and displace communicative forms of solidarity and inhibit the reproduction of the lifeworld, as when, for example, universities become governed by market strategies.

As mentioned above, Habermas proposes a multi-dimensional conception of reason that expresses itself in different forms of cognitive validity: not only in truth claims about the empirical world, but also in rightness claims about the kind of treatment we owe each other as persons, authenticity claims about the good life, technical-pragmatic claims about the means suitable to different goals, and so on. As he acknowledges, the surface grammar of speech acts does not suffice to establish this range of validity types. Rather, to ground the multi-dimensional system of validity claims, one must supplement semantic analysis with a pragmatic analysis of the different sorts of argumentative discourse—the different “logics of argumentation”—through which each type can be intersubjectively justified (TCA 1: 8–42). Thus, a type of validity claim counts as distinct from other types only if one can establish that its discursive justification involves features that distinguish it from other types of justification. Whether or not his pragmatic theory of meaning succeeds, the discursive analysis of validity illuminates important differences in the argumentative demands that come with different types of justifiable claims. To see how Habermas identifies these different features, it is first necessary to understand the general structures of argumentation.

The pragmatic analysis of argumentation in general. Habermas’s discourse theory assumes that the specific type of validity claim one aims to justify—the cognitive goal or topic of argumentation—determines the specific argumentative practices appropriate for such justification. Discourse theory thus calls for a pragmatic analysis of argumentation as a social practice. Such analysis aims to reconstruct the normative presuppositions that structure the discourse of competent arguers. To get at these presuppositions, one cannot simply describe argumentation as it empirically occurs; as we already saw in TCA, one must adopt the performative attitude of a participant and articulate the shared, though often tacit, ideals and rules that provide the basis for regarding some arguments as better than others. Following contemporary argumentation theorists, Habermas assumes one cannot fully articulate these normative presuppositions solely in terms of the logical properties of arguments. Rather, he distinguishes three aspects of argument-making practices: argument as product, as procedure, and as process, which he loosely aligns with the traditional perspectives on argument evaluation of logic, dialectic, and rhetoric. Pragmatically, each of these perspectives functions as a “level of presupposition” involved in the assessment of the cogency—the goodness or strength—of arguments. Habermas seems to regard these perspectives, taken together, as constituting the pragmatic idea of cogency: “at no single one of these analytic levels can the very idea intrinsic to argumentative speech be adequately developed” (TCA 1: 26).

At the logical level, participants are concerned with arguments as products, that is, sets of reasons that support conclusions. From this perspective, arguers aim to construct “cogent arguments that are convincing in virtue of their intrinsic properties and with which validity claims can be redeemed or rejected” (ibid., 25). Following work by Stephen Toulmin and other informal logicians, Habermas regards most if not all argumentation as ultimately resting on ampliative arguments whose conclusions do not follow with deductive certainty but only as more or less plausible or probable. The logical strength of such arguments depends on how well one has taken into account all the relevant information and possible objections. Thus the term “logical” has a broad sense that includes not only formal but also informal logics, in which strength depends on the interrelated meanings of terms and background information that resists complete formalization: induction, analogy, narrative, and so on.

Given the ampliative character of most arguments, logical assessment presupposes the dialectical adequacy of argumentative procedures. That is, we may regard the products of our argument-making practices as logically strong only if we presume, at the dialectical level, that we have submitted arguments and counterarguments to sufficiently severe procedures of critical discussion—as Habermas (TCA 1: 26) puts it, a “ritualized competition for the better arguments.” Dialectical treatments of argumentation typically spell out the “dialectical obligations” of discussants: that one should address the issue at hand, should respond to relevant challenges, meet the specified burden of proof, and so on.

However, robust critical testing of competing arguments depends in turn on the rhetorical quality of the persuasive process. Habermas conceives the rhetorical level in terms of highly idealized properties of communication, which he initially presented as the conditions of an “ideal speech situation” (1973a; also 1971/2001). That way of speaking now strikes him as overly reified, suggesting an ideal condition that real discourses must measure up to, or at least approximately satisfy—motifs that Habermas himself employed until rather recently (cf. 1993, 54–55; 1996b, 322–23). He now understands the idea of rhetorically adequate process as a set of unavoidable yet counterfactual “pragmatic presuppositions” that participants must make if they are to regard the actual execution of dialectical procedures as a sufficiently severe critical test. Habermas (2005b, 89) identifies four such presuppositions as the most important: (i) no one capable of making a relevant contribution has been excluded, (ii) participants have equal voice, (iii) they are internally free to speak their honest opinion without deception or self-deception, and (iv) there are no sources of coercion built into the process and procedures of discourse. Such conditions, in effect, articulate what it would mean to assess all the relevant information and arguments (for a given level of knowledge and inquiry) as reasonably as possible, weighing arguments purely on the merits in a disinterested pursuit of truth. These conditions are counterfactual in the sense that actual discourses can rarely realize—and can never empirically certify—full inclusion, non-coercion, and equality. At the same time, these idealizing presuppositions have an operative effect on actual discourse: we may regard outcomes (both consensual and non-consensual) as reasonable only if our scrutiny of the process does not uncover obvious exclusions, suppression of arguments, manipulation, self-deception, and the like (2003a, 108). In this sense, these pragmatic idealizations function as “standards for a self-correcting learning process” (2005b, 91).

As an understanding of the rhetorical perspective, Habermas’s highly idealized and formal model hardly does justice to the substantive richness of the rhetorical tradition. One can, however, supplement his model with a more substantive rhetoric that draws on Aristotle’s account of ethos and pathos (Rehg 1997). In that case, the rhetorical perspective is concerned with designing arguments for their ability to place the particular audience in the proper social-psychological space for making a responsible collective judgment. But the “space of responsible judgment” still remains an idealization that may not be reduced to any observable actual behavior, but can at most be defeasibly presumed. The same probably holds for dialectical procedures. Although the dialectical perspective draws on the tradition of public debate, dialectical norms, when understood as pragmatic presuppositions, are not identical with institutionalized rules of debate (1990a, 91). A neutral observer can judge whether interlocutors have externally complied with institutional procedures, whereas engaged participants must judge how well they have satisfied the dialectical presupposition of severe critical testing.

The differentiation of argumentative discourses. If the different validity claims require different types of argumentation, then the relevant differences must emerge through a closer analysis of the ways the above aspects of argumentative practice adjust to different sorts of content, that is, the different validity claims at issue (cf. 2005b, chap. 3). To be sure, Habermas does not regard every validity claim as open to discourse proper. Sincerity claims (or “truthfulness claims,” as it is sometimes translated) are the prime example. These are claims an actor makes about his or her interior subjectivity: feelings, moods, desires, beliefs, and the like. Such claims are open to rational assessment, not in discourse but by comparison with the actor’s behavior: for example, if a son claims to care deeply about his parents but never pays them any attention, we would have grounds for doubting the sincerity of his claim. Note that such insincerity might involve self-deception rather than deliberative lying.

Truth and rightness claims, by contrast, are susceptible to argumentative justification in the proper sense, through what Habermas calls “strict discourses.” As he first analyzed the discourses connected with these two types of validity (1973a), they had much in common. Although the types of reasons differed—moral discourse rested primarily on need interpretations, empirical-theoretical discourse on empirical inductions—in both cases, the relevant reasons should, in principle, be acceptable to any reasonable agent. In the case of empirical truth claims, this process-level presupposition of consensus rests on the idea that the objective world is the same for all; in the case of moral rightness, it rests on the idea that valid moral rules and principles hold for all persons. In both cases, the appropriate audience for the testing of claims is universal, and in making a truth or rightness claim one counterfactually presupposes that a universal consensus would result, were the participants able to pursue a sufficiently inclusive and reasonable discourse for a sufficient length of time. Although his early statements are somewhat unclear, on one reading Habermas defined not only moral rightness but also empirical truth in terms of such ideal consensus (similar to C. S. Peirce). He now further distinguishes truth from moral rightness by defining the latter, but not the former, in terms of idealized consensus. More on that below.

Authenticity claims, unlike truth and rightness claims, do not come with such a strong consensual expectation. Habermas associates this type of claim with “ethical” discourse. Unlike moral discourse, in which participants strive to justify norms and courses of action that accord due concern and respect for persons in general, ethical discourses focus on questions of the good life, either for a given individual (“ethical-existential” discourse) or for a particular group or polity (“ethical-political” discourse). Consequently, the kind of reasons that constitute cogent arguments in ethical discourse depend on the life histories, traditions, and particular values of those whose good is at issue. This reference to individual- and group-related particularities means that one should not expect those reasons to win universal consensus (1993, 1–18; 1996b, 162–68). However, Habermas (2003b) seems to recognize one class of ethical questions that do admit of universal consensus. Choices of technologies that bear on the future of human nature, such as genetic enhancement engineering, pose species-wide ethical issues. Such issues concern not merely our self-understanding as members of this or that particular culture or tradition, but how we should understand our basic human dignity. The core of human dignity, and thus the basis for a human-species ethics, on his view, lies in the capacity of human beings for autonomous self-determination.

In sum, Habermas’s discourse theory aligns different types of validity claim with different types of justificatory discourse. At the logical level, cogent arguments must employ somewhat different sorts of reasons to justify different types of claims. Although some sorts of reasons might enter into each type of discourse (e.g., empirical claims), the set of relevant considerations that are individually necessary and jointly sufficient for making logically strong arguments will differ. Thus, claims about what human beings need are relevant reasons in moral arguments about welfare obligations, but not for supporting the truth claim that quarks exist. At the dialectical level, one must meet different burdens of proof by answering different types of challenges. For example, in defending the ethical authenticity of Tom’s pursuit of a career in medicine, one need not show that medicine is a career everyone must follow, but only that such a career makes sense, given Tom’s personal background, talents, and desires. One can also examine Tom’s career choice from a moral perspective, but in that case one need only show that anyone in his circumstances is morally permitted to pursue medicine. At the rhetorical level, finally, the scope and depth of agreement differs according to the type of claim. Moral rightness claims and empirical truth claims are justified by reasons that should be acceptable to a universal audience, whereas ethical claims are addressed to those who share a particular history and tradition of values.

Having differentiated types of discourse, Habermas must say something about how they interrelate. Clearly, some discourses depend on other types: most obviously, moral and ethical discourses partly depend on empirical claims, and thus depend on the outcome of empirical discourses about the circumstances and consequences of behavioral rules and the collective pursuit of the good life. The question of interrelationship becomes especially urgent in the political sphere, where different discourses intertwine and lead to competing conclusions, or when issues arise in which discourse types cannot be cleanly separated, so that the standards of cogency become obscure or deeply contested (McCarthy 1991, chap. 7; 1998). Because Habermas (1996c, 1534f) rejects the idea of a metadiscourse that sorts out these boundary issues, he must answer this challenge in his democratic theory.

Habermas (1990a, 116–94) has also attempted to give discourse ethics some empirical foothold by looking to moral psychology and social anthropology. The psychological line of argument draws on the theory of communicative action to reconstruct theories of moral development such as Lawrence Kohlberg’s. According to Habermas, moral maturation involves the growing ability to integrate the interpersonal perspectives given with the system of personal pronouns; the endpoint of that process coincides with the capacity to engage in the mutual perspective-taking required by (U) [universalization principle]. The anthropological line of argument focuses on identity formation, drawing on the social psychology of G. H. Mead. In broad agreement with Hegelian models of mutual recognition, Mead understands the individual’s development of a stable personal identity as inextricably bound up with processes of socialization that depend on participation in relationships of mutual recognition. Habermas (ibid., 195–215; 1990b) extends this analysis to respond to feminist and communitarian criticisms of impartialist, justice-based moralities. According to the standard critiques, such moralities assume an implausibly atomistic view of the self and thus fail to appreciate the moral import of particularity and cultural substance: particular relationships between unique individuals, on the one hand, and membership in particular cultural communities or traditions, on the other. Mead’s analysis shows that the critics are on to an important point: if individuation depends on socialization, then any anthropologically viable system of morality must protect not only the integrity of individuals but also the web of relationships and cultural forms of life on which individuals depend for their moral development. Discourse ethics, Habermas claims, meets this two-fold demand in virtue of the kind of mutual perspective-taking it requires. If we examine (U), we see that it requires participants to attend to the values and interests of each person as a unique individual; conversely, each individual conditions her judgment about the moral import of her values and interests on what all participants can freely accept. Consequently, moral discourse is structured in a way that links moral validity with solidaristic concern for both the concrete individual and the morally formative communities on which her identity depends.

The central task of Habermas’s democratic theory is to provide a normative account of legitimate law. His deliberative democratic model rests on what is perhaps the most complex argument in his philosophical corpus, found in his Between Facts and Norms (1996b; German ed., 1992b; for commentary, see Baynes 1995; Rosenfeld and Arato 1998; vom Schomberg and Baynes 2004). Boiled down to its essentials, however, the argument links his discourse theory with an analysis of the demands inherent on modern legal systems, which Habermas understands in light of the history of Western modernization. The analysis thus begins with a functional explanation of the need for positive law in modern societies. This analysis picks up on points he made in TCA (see sec. 3.1 above).

Societies are stable over the long run only if their members generally perceive them as legitimate: as organized in accordance with what is true, right, and good. In premodern Europe, legitimacy was grounded in a shared religious worldview that penetrated all spheres of life. As modernization engendered religious pluralism and functional differentiation (autonomous market economies, bureaucratic administrations, unconstrained scientific research), the potentials for misunderstanding and conflict about the good and the right increased—just as the shared background resources for the consensual resolution of such conflicts decreased. When we consider this dynamic simply from the standpoint of the (D) [discourse]-principle, the prospects for legitimacy in modern societies appear quite dim.

Sociologically, then, one can understand modern law as a functional solution to the conflict potentials inherent in modernization. By opening up legally defined spheres of individual freedom, modern law reduces the burden of questions that require general (society-wide) discursive consensus. Within these legal boundaries, individuals are free to pursue their interests and happiness as they see fit, normally through various modes of association, whether that pursuit is primarily governed by modes of strategic action (as in economic markets), by recognized authority or consensual discourse (e.g., within religious communities, in the sciences), or by bureaucratic rationality (as in hierarchically organized voluntary enterprises). Consequently, modern law is fundamentally concerned with the definition, protection, and resolution of conflicts among, individual freedoms in their various institutional and organizational contexts.

The demands on the legitimation of law change with this functional realignment: to be legitimate, modern law must secure the private autonomy of those subject to it. The legal guarantee of private autonomy in turn presupposes an established legal code and a legally defined status of equal citizenship in terms of actionable basic rights that secure a space for individual freedom. However, such rights are expressions of freedom only if citizens can also understand themselves as the authors of the laws that interpret their rights—that is, only if the laws that protect private autonomy also issue from citizens’ exercise of public autonomy as lawmakers acting through elected representatives. Thus, the rights that define individual freedom must also include rights of political participation. As Habermas understands the relation between private and public autonomy, each is “co-original” or “equiprimordial,” conceptually presupposing the other in the sense that each can be fully realized only if the other is fully realized. The exercise of public autonomy in its full sense presupposes participants who understand themselves as individually free (privately autonomous), which in turn presupposes that they can shape their individual freedoms through the exercise of public autonomy. This equiprimordial relationship, Habermas (1998a, chap. 9) believes, enables his discourse theory to combine the best insights of the civic republican and classical liberal traditions of democracy, which found expression in Rousseau and Locke, respectively.

The idea of public autonomy means that the legitimacy of ordinary legislation must ultimately be traceable to robust processes of public discourse that influence formal decisionmaking in legislative bodies. Habermas summarizes this requirement in his democratic principle of legitimacy: “only those statutes may claim legitimacy that can meet with the assent of all citizens in a discursive process of legislation that in turn has been legal constituted” (1996b, 110). As he goes on to explain, this principle articulates the core requirement for “externally” institutionalizing the different types of practical discourse that are relevant for the justification of particular laws. Decisions about laws typically involve a combination of validity claims: not only truth claims about the likely consequences of different legal options, but also claims about their moral rightness (or justice), claims about the authenticity of different options in light of the polity’s shared values and history, and pragmatic claims about which option is feasible or more efficient. Legitimate laws must pass the different types of discursive tests that come with each of these validity claims. Habermas also recognizes that many issues involve conflicts among particular interests that cannot be reconciled by discursive agreement on validity but only through fair bargaining processes.

The cult of I-I revisited

Saturday, May 12th, 2007

As Open Integral was initiated in large part as a reaction to Ken’s Wyatt Earp affair and charges of being a cult, here’s a recent discussion from ebuddha on the topic. What do you think?

Update on Integral Institute as a “cult“, or cult-like
by ebuddha on Wed 09 May 2007 05:27 PM PDT

Last year, when all the crazy-ness around Ken Wilber’s Wyatt Earpy posts began, I had been looking for the criteria checklist for “cultish” behavior. I had found one checklist, and blogged on that, but I knew there was one out there that was more comprehensive. (It’s clear that ANY checklist would have some points, as organizations have analogous interests, such as a cause, or getting new members, etc. Where is gets dangerous is if nearly every item on the checklist test, is “yes”. )

Today, quite by accident, I ran into it the checklist. So I thought it would be interesting to go through each check box, one at a time:

1, The group displays excessively zealous and unquestioning commitment to its leader and (whether he is alive or dead) regards his belief system, ideology, and practices as the Truth, as law.

Well, certainly SOME people feel this way about Ken Wilber. But in my estimation, not many. Since this a on/off judgment call, I’m going with “no”.

2. Questioning, doubt, and dissent are discouraged or even punished.

This one isn’t even close – definite “no”.

3. Mind-altering practices (such as meditation, chanting, speaking in tongues, denunciation sessions, and debilitating work routines) are used in excess and serve to suppress doubts about the group and its leader(s).

While meditation is encouraged, as is the ILP, this is still a definite no.

4. The leadership dictates, sometimes in great detail, how members should think, act, and feel (for example, members must get permission to date, change jobs, marry—or leaders prescribe what types of clothes to wear, where to live, whether or not to have children, how to discipline children, and so forth).

Umm…nope.

5. The group is elitist, claiming a special, exalted status for itself, its leader(s) and members (for example, the leader is considered the Messiah, a special being, an avatar—or the group and/or the leader is on a special mission to save humanity).

There is definitely this going on, because, you know, integral is the highest form of being! . Given the terms of this checklist, I’ll give this a “yes”. Although, it must be said, most groups consider themselves on a “special mission”.

6. The group has a polarized us-versus-them mentality, which may cause conflict with the wider society.

If the “us” is the 2nd tier, versus 1st tier, then yes. While I think, most of the time, in practice, people aren’t evaluated as “1st tier” or “2nd Tier”, the philosophy as such, DOES easily lead to an “us” versus “them” mentality. I’m going to go with “yes”, but with caveats. Still counts as a yes though, for these purposes.

7. The leader is not accountable to any authorities (unlike, for example, teachers, military commanders or ministers, priests, monks, and rabbis of mainstream religious denominations).

This is true. While there is a new CEO, and a board, as was seen last year, Ken isn’t really accountable to anyone – the power structure rests with him solely. It must be said, for any founder of a company, this is usually the case. It is the case for Anthony Robbins, or Chopra, or any single proprietor with employees. But still, this would be “yes”, on the checklist.

8. The group teaches or implies that its supposedly exalted ends justify whatever means it deems necessary. This may result in members’ participating in behaviors or activities they would have considered reprehensible or unethical before joining the group (for example, lying to family or friends, or collecting money for bogus charities).

No.

9. The leadership induces feelings of shame and/or guilt in order to influence and/or control members. Often, this is done through peer pressure and subtle forms of persuasion.

You have a little bit of this, in the 1st tier/2nd tier distinction, but not enough for a “yes”. No on the checklist.

10. Subservience to the leader or group requires members to cut ties with family and friends, and radically alter the personal goals and activities they had before joining the group.

No, clearly not.

11. The group is preoccupied with bringing in new members.

Isn’t nearly EVERY group preoccupied with bringing in new members, from the democratic party, to the local rotary club? Not much evidence, but the checklist would be yes. Doesn’t really prove anything though. “yes”.

12. The group is preoccupied with making money.

Again, most groups are preoccupied with making enough money to function. In terms of an ‘extraordinary’ desire to make money -ponzi schemes or multi-level marketing, working on your friends – that would be a “no”.

13.Members are expected to devote inordinate amounts of time to the group and group-related activities.

Nope.

14. Members are encouraged or required to live and/or socialize only with other group members.

Nope.

15. The most loyal members (the “true believers”) feel there can be no life outside the context of the group. They believe there is no other way to be, and often fear reprisals to themselves or others if they leave (or even consider leaving) the group.

No.

So – what’s the total?

11 No’s
4 Yes’s.

Given the fact that at least 2 of the Yes’s in question have caveats to them, I think we can clearly, unequivocally, and authoritatively say that, Integral Institute is in no shape, way or form, a cult. Just an organization, with an enthusiastic mission to spread one philosopher’s views.

Now, as an alternative, if this same checklist were to be utilized for Andrew Cohen the Guru – my, my my, how quickly we get more yes’s! Very quickly you find out that yes, Cohen as Guru groups are, organizationally, a cult.

Integral suicide

Wednesday, May 9th, 2007

I’ve often expressed an interest in dealing with policy from an integral perspective. Theory is fine, but how do we put it into practice?

I was watching a rather moving documentary on TV. It was an examination of the growing movement amongst senior citizens to choose the moment and method of their death. There is a group in Oz called Exit who demand the right to suicide painlessly. It seems that seniors in their hundreds are going to Mexico to buy nembutol, a drug used to euthanase animals, and then smuggle it back into Oz. Apparently nembutol causes a peaceful death. However, a more radical faction of Exit have started manufacturing nembutol illegally in backyard laboratories. What is driving this movement?

The seniors interviewed were quite adamant that they did not want to die a slow, helpless death where they were kept alive just to be kept alive. They all expressed a fear of loosing ‘quality’ of life and rotting away in a nursing home. They were also quite adamant that they would only suicide when they were close to their last years. One man was 91 and still active, but calmly noted he was declining rapidly. All of the seniors interviewed seemed intelligent and very competent. In fact my guess is that many of them were of above average intelligence with many having achieved a lot in their lives. One was a retired doctor. The message I got was that these people feared loosing control and wanted to control the manner in which they died. Some of them spoke bitterly about becoming the victims of the medical profession who would put them in beds and keep them alive without ensuring a ‘quality’ of life. One woman complained that she didn’t want to put in a home to play mindless games of bingo.

Of course, the documentary canvassed the opinions of those opposed to the Exit movement, but I found their objections faulty. This may very well have been a fault of the video researchers for not finding better arguments against suicide. One doctor was an advocate from Right to Life. He was arrogant, patronizing and young. It made me think that anyone under the age of sixty or so should generally be barred from advocating on this issue. He exemplified everything the Exit elders were objecting to – a medical profession willing to remove power from them. This young advocate was like most moralisers, he assumed his moral position was absolute and right – people have to be kept alive even if they suffer greatly.

The second anti position was another doctor. She thought the answer was to understand what the Exit elders feared and solve that problem. I found her argument naive. They fear the gradual loss of control that occurs in old age. They fear decripitude and being infantalized in nursing homes. In a way the doctor was right. A lot more must be done to ensure a dignified old age, but much of this has to do with money. It’s okay if you are rich, but if you are poor you face a life of poverty on an inadequate pension and sub-standard care in a sub-standard nursing home. Some of these sub-standard nursing homes do the bare minimum and are really just ‘parking’ places where old people are hidden away to die.

The problem with people who have retired is that they no longer make an income, so they become an expense on society. The doctor was naive because there is no movement to radically improve aged care, people would rather hide the problem away. It’s an interesting problem. Society is not ready to assist the elderly to suicide, but they are also not prepared to spend the money to ensure a dignified old age.

I would expect to see an increase in the demand for the suicide option as the boomers get older. The boomers will be less likely to tolerate the disempowerment of old age. There will have to be a quite radical rethink of aged care. No more waltzes and Bing Crosby as the music of the 60’s and 70’s takes over. How about prescribing marijuana for use in retirement homes?

Btw, the members of Exit argued that the elderly are suiciding at an increasing rate anyway. The reason they want nembutol legalized is so that the suicide is non-violent. The most common form of suicide amongst the elderly, especially older men (who have lost their partner and are alone) is hanging. The Exit seniors were quite adamant. We will choose our own time, but we want to be able to do it peacefully.

What do you think? Should the elderly and the terminally ill be able to suicide? Is a greater good being served in keeping people who will not recover alive? What would the integral policy be?

Gadamer & Hermeneutics: Whatzit mean?

Monday, May 7th, 2007

One thing leads to another, as usual. In the last thread we started talking about coming to an understanding of an author’s meaning. It seems there are more accurate interpretations than others, but who decides and how? Is it the author him/herself that determines their own meaning? Such was explored in the 2 chapters on literary theory in Ken’s Eye of Spirit and my own little essay at Integral World, “Who decides what Wilber means?” To introduce this thread I’ve selected a brief essay from a Christian theologian commenting on Derrida and Gadamer. I hope to explore Gadamer more fully in the comments to come.

Gadamer, Derrida and How We Read by Bruce Ellis Benson

The literary phenomenon of “deconstruction” is regarded by many as an irresponsible fad that has now become passé. Fortunately, most of the wild, irresponsible readings of texts that went under the banner of “deconstruction” are passé. Yet in the same way that the historical performance movement has so deeply influenced classical music that it has become virtually the norm, the work of Jacques Derrida and Hans-Georg Gadamer has so affected our ways of reading texts that we are no longer aware of it.

With the deaths of these two thinkers — Derrida in October at age 74 and Cadamer in 2002 at the remarkable age of 102 — we are in a position to reflect on that influence.

My joining the two figures may strike some as odd, since Gadamer and Derrida are often portrayed as polar opposites. According to the usual account, Gadamer is the conservative upholder of the traditional way of reading and Derrida the deconstructer of all that is sacred. If you’re for Gadamer, you must be against Derrida — and vice versa.

Yet the similarities in the way they’ve changed how we read and think about texts far outweigh their differences. Both, for example, stress the role of “play” in reading texts and the way in which we are controlled by (rather than in control of) history.

Derrida’s early work is particularly marked by a kind of Nietzschean playfulness. In Of Grammatology, for example, he gives a playful yet exquisitely subtle reading of Rousseau that brings the complexity of writing to the fore. Derrida recognized that writing has both advantages and disadvantages, and that it cannot have the one without the other On the one hand, writing can make an author’s thought present even without the author’s presence. On the other hand, the fact that in writing (unlike in speech) an author’s presence is unnecessary means that the author is no longer able to control interpretation. Charitable interpreters often make appeals to “what the author really meant,” but the absence of the author means that we are left with only the text. And texts can be understood in different ways.

For some early followers of Derrida, that recognition provided cover for sloppy ways of reading texts — as if a text could be read in any way. Derrida himself was an extremely careful, even scrupulous, reader of texts. That care is certainly evident in Derrida’s own writing. I found it also amply demonstrated in the seminars that I was privileged to take with him and the many times I heard him speak. Although a central theme in his thought is that texts can be read in various ways and at multiple levels, the depiction of Derrida as not believing in the possibility of an author’s ability to communicate by way of writing, or as giving license to readers to make texts mean whatever they want them to mean, is a caricature.

Not only did Derrida insist on the need for careful study of texts, using the appropriate “instruments of criticism,” but he was annoyed with those he felt had “avoided reading me and trying to understand” and so ended up with an interpretation of his texts that he deemed “false” (Limited Inc).

Yet Derrida was well aware that “this indispensable guardrail has always only protected, it has never opened a reading” (Of Grammatology), and that even a careful commentary is already an interpretation.

The recognition that there are no “purely literal” interpretations is just as much a theme in Gadamer, who claimed that we always bring our prejudices to a text and so read it in light of our own experience. He went against the grain in thinking that prejudices are not necessarily bad; he went so far as to say that they are absolutely’ essential for there to be any understanding at all.

However, Gadamer never suggested that we could or should rest on our prejudices. Truly entering into a conversation with a text means that we put both ourselves and our prejudices at risk. The text may have something to say to us that overthrows our prejudices, so that we find ourselves “pulled up short by the text” (Truth and Method).

Like Derrida, Gadamer thought that reading a text involves entering into a kind of play between text and reader in which the text has an effect upon us and we an effect upon the text. Of course, that play requires a certain degree of humility on the part of the reader. Gadamer himself radiated that kind of humility. In my encounters with Gadamer I found him to be just as interested in asking questions about my work as I was about his. When he agreed to read some of the early portions of my dissertation, not only was his critique gracious but also it was clear that he was interested in learning from me.

That kind of receptivity is precisely what Gadamer thought was necessary for understanding to take place. He thought of understanding as a kind of “event” that happens to us. For that event to take place, we have to be willing to listen. Given that willingness, events of understanding can take place continually. Not surprisingly, we are sometimes startled by these events of understanding, for they demonstrate to us just how little we are in control of texts.

This idea of being at the mercy not just of texts but also of history is a theme in both Gadamer and Derrida. Although Derrida is commonly read as either overthrowing or at least attempting to evade the effect of history and tradition, he made it clear just how much we are embedded in Western ways of thinking. Americans are usually amazed to discover that Derrida was often criticized in France as too conservative because of his insistence on studying classical texts. While Derrida was always trying to think beyond the bounds laid down by tradition, he realized that one can only go beyond those bounds in small ways and that, even in going beyond them, one displays a profound indebtedness to them.

Here we come to a point of difference between Gadamer and Derrida. Gadamer had a great respect for tradition and believed that being steeped in a tradition is what makes understanding possible. Derrida would no doubt have criticized Gadamer for being too positive about tradition. In turn, Gadamer would likely have criticized Derrida for not being sufficiently appreciative of the wisdom that tradition hands down to us. That difference is mostly a matter of emphasis, however, and not something fundamental.

Probably the most profound way in which Gadamer and Derrida have shaped hermeneutics is in how we think about texts. Both thinkers saw texts as constituted not by dead letters but by living words. Gadamer went so far as to claim that a text does not fully exist except in the moment in which it is read and understood. Further, the very reading and understanding of texts has an impact upon the texts themselves. Thus, rather than being static, texts are constantly in motion, since our interpretation of them affects their very being.

As living entities, texts have a history, and that history becomes so intimately connected to the texts themselves that there can be no clear distinction between text and interpretation history. Rather than their being merely an expression of an author’s thought, texts are mutually constituted by author and reader. That balance is one found in both Gadamer and Derrida, despite the fact that Derrida has often been (wrongly) read as saying that readers have the sole control of texts.

So what do these two figures mean for a pastor preparing a sermon on a biblical text? They call for rethinking the very essence of interpretation. Explicating a text requires a willingness to play with it, a willingness to hear what it has to say with open ears. While we all come to texts with our prejudices, engaging a text in a genuine dialogue means that those prejudices are put into question.

In reading a text like the Bible, one is well aware of its special authority and its peculiar way of questioning us. Yet, if we are to be truly faithful interpreters, we need just as much to question it. It is within this mutual questioning, this to-and-fro movement, that understanding takes place. Although Derrida is somewhat less sanguine about the ability of texts to communicate truth, Gadamer closes his magnum opus Truth and Method by saying that the “discipline of questioning and inquiring” indeed “guarantees truth.” We merely need to be willing to enter into dialogue and able to listen.

* * *

Bruce Ellis Benson, associate professor of philosophy at Wheaton College (Illinois). is a visiting scholar at General Theological Seminary and lecturer in philosophy of religion at Union Theological Seminary. He is the author of Graven Ideologies: Nietzsche, Derrida and Marion on Modern Idolatry (InterVarsity Press) and, more recently, The Improvisation of Musical Dialogue: A Phenomenology of Music (Cambridge University Press) This article appeared in The Christian Century, March 11, 2005, pp. 30-32. Copyright by the Christian Century Foundation; used by permission. Current articles and subscriptions information can be found at www.christiancentury.org. This material was prepared for Religion Online by Ted and Winnie Brock.