Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Responding to Contemporary Sophism…Cloaked in Contemporary Platonism

In studying for my comprehensive exams in political theory, there’s a definite theme that seems applicable today. The debate between the Sophists and Platonists over truth and politics. This is obviously a perennial topic that comes up again and again throughout the history of political thought, but this converstaion is interesting as the debate seems to be somewhat timeless.

According to Reginald Allen:

“The sophists were wandering teachers of Greece in the latter part of the fifth century, traveling from city to city to lecture for a fee…[The] rise of democracy – direct, not representative, democracy – made skill in rhetoric important not only to those ambitious for political advancement, but to ordinary citizens concerned to safeguard before the law their property, their citizenship, and their lives. Sophism was not a doctrine, hardly even an attitude of mind, but a social movement…”

The sophists essentially rejected the idea of absolute Truths – in terms of both knowledge and morality – and elevated rhetoric to the art par excellence; teaching the unskilled, often poorly educated, how to “make the weak argument stronger and the strong argument weak.” In response, Plato (via Socrates) argues that highest human activity (the proper domain of politics) is the search for the enduring Forms that represent the Truth. This is done not by appealing to sensory experience (as the Sophists do), but to reason.

The reason I find this debate so interesting, is because it instantiates a dualism that persists today. On the one hand, it seems increasingly clear that FOX news and other right wing venues deploy sensory experience – so called “common sense” – in efforts to politicize events – and to manipulate perception of those events – in a way that is deleterious to the left. The “foreign” sound of the name Obama leads to facile claims about citizenship, the sight of Hispanic protestors waving Mexican flags are used to evoke unease over immigrant loyalties and potential terrorist ties, the fear and anxieties over economic distress are easily transformed into fears of socialism. Unfortunately, these efforts are resulting in increasing extremism and blatantly irrational behavior.

[See, for instance, this article] http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/14/opinion/14rich.html?_r=1&em

On the other hand, however, the Platonic response is to elevate expert rule – the Philosopher King who alone has access to the world of Goodness and Truth – to an almost tyrannical position. The sheer idiocy of the opposing claims makes us want to scream out, “NO DAMMIT! Obama is a patriotic US citizen, the vast majority of immigrants are simply seeking opportunity for themselves and their families, and stabilizing the economy demands some government intervention.” And we aren’t wrong. The problem is that our opponents are just as certain that they have the truth as we are. Though there is a qualitative difference between their truths and ours, it is dangerous to assume that we have the objective Truth, and, were the country only ruled by us enlightened few, we would all be better off.

Both of our truths, it seems to me, are mediated by perceptions of “democracy,” political community, and justice. Resorting to Platonism – or, for that matter, its modern “empirical” counterpart, “science – is appealing because it gives us some solid ground beneath our feet (some privileged space on which to stand and proclaim our path of vision unique), but it’s arrogant, apolitical, and – above all – impractical. Both FOX on the right and MSNBC on the left have adopted the rhetorical tactics of the sophists, while proclaiming – in perfectly Platonic manners – that their Truth is objective (“Fair and Balanced”). Theoretically, I think that Foucault and Deleuze offer some tools that could point towards “another way,” but practically, the left has yet to formulate an adequate response. There seem to me to be two strategies that are making headway. The first, ironically, is found on the BBC and other outlets that make the attempt to be “objective (and in doing so serve to caricature stations like FOX). The second, is achieved through satire - Comedy Central/SNL and other efforts to reveal the absurdity of contemporary sophist/Platonists.

Monday, April 13, 2009

The new tea party revolutionaries...

I find it interesting that, after the last election cycle, conservative arguments have been marginalized and they are effectively now in the HETERODOXY, we are also hearing much in the media now from "revolutionary," "tea-bagging," right-wing conservatives hailing incendiary remarks. And because the whole constellation of positions taken in what used to be under the umbrella of the right wing political camp has been disbanded and is in disarray, more and more of these political postures are becoming super-radical, anti-government, anti-establishment, anti-America, and anti-democratic. One can find bible-thumping anti-evolution Christians screaming "burn the books," libertarian party actives, constitution party actives, and conspiracy theorists warning about a "communist infiltration," and FOX News all coming together at these "tea parties."

Conservative right-wingers are now HETERODOX, and anti-establishment revolutionaries.
Bible-pushing Christians are now HETERODOX, and anti-establishment revolutionaries.
Free-market capitalism ideologues are now HETERODOX, and anti-establishment revolutionaries.

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Incommensurate philosophies

I've become a nihilist in regards to political economy. On the one hand, we have the conservative/libertarian/Austrian "cut taxes" ideology (regardless of massive deficits). On the other hand, we have the modern liberal/Keynesian "spend public money" ideology (to jumpstart production again - do we really need to prop up unprofitable industries?). But there is this logjam where no real progress is made (no side is more convincing than the other) because there are NO AGREED UPON FACTS. If we can't agree on what is going on on the ground, there is no real debate in the discourse - it's just ideologies clashing and trying to gain power/influence. Neither party has the proper approach. How can these incommensurate ideologies co-exist? The crisis needs to get worse to tip the scales.

The real question for me is: would capitalism ACTUALLY COLLAPSE IF WE DID NOTHING? Would there be a real threat of revolution? Are modern liberals vindicating Marx? Or is it just Polanyi's double movement?

Do those on the left really want capitalism to survive, given the environmental destruction and social polarization? If we were serious about change, it seems like we could have done much more (i.e. climate change, relocalization). What would the Republicans have done if they were in power? Would they really have had the balls to "do nothing"? (i.e. in the face of the real risk of socialist revolution or otherwise)...

Monday, November 10, 2008

Keynes alive and well.

"Nov. 9 (Bloomberg) -- China announced a 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus plan to spur expansion in the world's fourth-largest economy, helping sustain global growth as the U.S., Europe and Japan teeter on the brink of recession.
The funds, equivalent to almost a fifth of China's $3.3 trillion gross domestic product last year, will be used by the end of 2010, the Beijing-based State Council said today on its Web site. China will adopt a ``pro-active fiscal policy'' and pursue a ``moderately loose'' monetary policy, it said."

"(NY Times) The Bush administration was overhauling its rescue of the American International Group on Sunday night, according to people involved in the deal, amid signs that the interest on its current credit line of more than $100 billion was putting too much strain on the ailing insurer."

...MARKETS AND GOVERNMENTS ARE COMPLEMENTARY INSTITUTIONS. WRITE THAT ON THE BOARD ONE HUNDRED TIMES...

Friday, October 10, 2008

A Foucauldian NIghtmare

The biopolitics of the information age: Data Mining

This excerpt from NPR (talking about a new book by data mining expert, Stephen Baker) discusses the way in which different entities (from Amazon.com to political campaigns to insurance companies) order you in categories ("tribes") depending on your consumptive choices (ranging from the goods you buy to the sites your surf) and attempt to mold and direct your day-to-day choices based upon the information that they receive.

Here is a portion of the article...also check out the 20 minute interview:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=95166854

"When it comes to producing data, we're prolific. Those of us wielding cell phones, laptops, and credit cards fatten our digital dossiers every day, simply by living. Take me. As I write on this spring morning, Verizon, my cell phone company, can pin me down within several yards of this café in New Jersey. Visa can testify that I'm well caffeinated, probably to overcome the effects of the Portuguese wine I bought last night at 8:19. This was just in time for watching a college basketball game, which, as TiVo might know, I turned off after the first half. Security cameras capture time-stamped images of me near every bank and convenience store. And don't get me started on my Web wanderings. Those are already a matter of record for dozens of Internet publishers and advertisers around the world....

...The Numerati also want to alter our behavior. If we're shopping, they want us to buy more. At the workplace, they're out to boost our productivity. When we're patients, they want us healthier and cheaper. As companies like IBM and Amazon roll out early models of us, they can predict our behavior and experiment with us. They can simulate changes in a store or an office and see how we would likely react. And they can attempt to calculate mathematically how to boost our performance. How would shoppers like me respond to a $100 rebate on top-of-the-line Nikon cameras? How much more productive would you be at the office if you had a $600 course on spreadsheets? How would our colleagues cope if the company eliminated our positions, or folded them into operations in Bangalore? We don't have to participate, or even know that our mathematical ghosts are laboring night and day as lab rats. We'll receive the results of these studies—the optimum course—as helpful suggestions, prescriptions, or marching orders."

The scary part about this is that data mining opens up a wealth of knowledge about personal behavior that the statistics of twenty years ago did not. This provides new potential for entities to intervene in the management of day-to-day life...Political campaigns engaging in micro-targeting, for example, have the means to render us transparent as a very deep level.

Monday, October 6, 2008

Althusser - Foucault connection...

According to Wikipedia: "The prominent Guevarist Régis Debray studied under Althusser, as did the Derrida, noted philosopher Michel Foucault, and the pre-eminent Lacanian psychoanalyst Jacques-Alain Miller."

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

Amy Poelher's silence kills the McCain campaign.

The road to the Whitehouse runs through Letterman and Saturday Night Live...