La Mettrie viu a Silicon Valley.
Leon Wieseltier |
Has there ever been a moment in American
life when the humanities were cherished less, and has there ever been a
moment in American life when the humanities were needed more? I am
genuinely honored to be addressing you this morning, because in recent
years I have come to regard a commitment to the humanities as nothing
less than an act of intellectual defiance, of cultural dissidence.
For
decades now in America we have been witnessing a steady and sickening
denigration of humanistic understanding and humanistic method. We live
in a society inebriated by technology, and happily, even giddily
governed by the values of utility, speed, efficiency, and convenience.
The technological mentality that has become the American worldview
instructs us to prefer practical questions to questions of meaning – to
ask of things not if they are true or false, or good or evil, but how
they work. Our reason has become an instrumental reason, and is no
longer the reason of the philosophers, with its ancient magnitude of
intellectual ambition, its belief that the proper subjects of human
thought are the largest subjects, and that the mind, in one way or
another, can penetrate to the very principles of natural life and human
life. Philosophy itself has shrunk under the influence of our weakness
for instrumentality – modern American philosophy was in fact one of the
causes of that weakness -- and generally it, too, prefers to tinker and
to tweak.
The machines to which we have become enslaved, all of
them quite astonishing, represent the greatest assault on human
attention ever devised: they are engines of mental and spiritual
dispersal, which make us wider only by making us less deep. There are
thinkers, reputable ones if you can believe it, who proclaim that the
exponential growth in computational ability will soon take us beyond the
finitude of our bodies and our minds so that, as one of them puts it,
there will no longer be any difference between human and machine. La
Mettrie lives in Silicon Valley. This, of course, is not an apotheosis
of the human but an abolition of the human; but Google is very excited
by it.
In the digital universe, knowledge is reduced to the status
of information. Who will any longer remember that knowledge is to
information as art is to kitsch-–that information is the most inferior
kind of knowledge, because it is the most external? A great Jewish
thinker of the early Middle Ages wondered why God, if He wanted us to
know the truth about everything, did not simply tell us the truth about
everything. His wise answer was that if we were merely told what we need
to know, we would not, strictly speaking, know it. Knowledge can be
acquired only over time and only by method. And the devices that we
carry like addicts in our hands are disfiguring our mental lives also in
other ways: for example, they generate a hitherto unimaginable number
of numbers, numbers about everything under the sun, and so they are
transforming us into a culture of data, into a cult of data, in which no
human activity and no human expression is immune to quantification, in
which happiness is a fit subject for economists, in which the ordeals
of the human heart are inappropriately translated into mathematical
expressions, leaving us with new illusions of clarity and new illusions
of control.
Our glittering age of technologism is also a
glittering age of scientism. Scientism is not the same thing as science.
Science is a blessing, but scientism is a curse. Science, I mean what
practicing scientists actually do, is acutely and admirably aware of its
limits, and humbly admits to the provisional character of its
conclusions; but scientism is dogmatic, and peddles certainties. It is
always at the ready with the solution to every problem, because it
believes that the solution to every problem is a scientific one, and so
it gives scientific answers to non-scientific questions. But even the
question of the place of science in human existence is not a scientific
question. It is a philosophical, which is to say, a humanistic,
Owing
to its preference for totalistic explanation, scientism transforms
science into an ideology, which is of course a betrayal of the
experimental and empirical spirit. There is no perplexity of human
emotion or human behavior that these days is not accounted for
genetically or in the cocksure terms of evolutionary biology. It is true
that the selfish gene has lately been replaced by the altruistic gene,
which is lovelier, but it is still the gene that tyrannically rules.
Liberal scientism should be no more philosophically attractive to us
than conservative scientism, insofar as it, too, arrogantly reduces all
the realms that we inhabit to a single realm, and tempts us into the
belief that the epistemological eschaton has finally arrived, and at
last we know what we need to know to manipulate human affairs wisely.
This belief is invariably false and occasionally disastrous. We are
becoming ignorant of ignorance.
So
there is no task more urgent in American intellectual life at this hour
than to offer some resistance to the twin imperialisms of science and
technology, and to recover the old distinction — once bitterly
contested, then generally accepted, now almost completely forgotten –
between the study of nature and the study of man. As Bernard Williams
once remarked, “’humanity’ is a name not merely for a species but also
for a quality." You who have elected to devote yourselves to the study
of literature and languages and art and music and philosophy and
religion and history — you are the stewards of that quality. You are the
resistance. You have had the effrontery to choose interpretation over
calculation, and to recognize that calculation cannot provide an
accurate picture, or a profound picture, or a whole picture, of
self-interpreting beings such as ourselves; and I commend you for it.
Do
not believe the rumors of the obsolescence of your path. If Proust was a
neuroscientist, then you have no urgent need of neuroscience, because
you have Proust. If Jane Austen was a game theorist, then you have no
reason to defect to game theory, because you have Austen. There is no
greater bulwark against the twittering acceleration of American
consciousness than the encounter with a work of art, and the experience
of a text or an image. You are the representatives, the saving remnants,
of that encounter and that experience, and of the serious study of that
encounter and that experience – which is to say, you are the
counterculture. Perhaps culture is now the counterculture.
So keep your heads. Do not waver. Be very proud. Use
the new technologies for the old purposes. Do not be rattled by
numbers, which will never be the springs of wisdom. In upholding the
humanities, you uphold the honor of a civilization that was founded upon
the quest for the true and the good and the beautiful. For as long as
we are thinking and feeling creatures, creatures who love and imagine
and suffer and die, the humanities will never be dispensable. From this
day forward, then, act as if you are indispensable to your society,
because – whether it knows it or not – you are.
Congratulations.
Leon Wieseltier, "Perhaps Culture is Now the Counterculture" A Defense of the Humanities , New Republic, 28/05/2013
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