Post Truth is Funny until Someone Loses an Eye: A Response to Steve Fuller

 

I know philosophers and scientists who don’t like history and historians who are more than a bit suspicious of philosophers. Some of this, perhaps much of this, has to do with an attitude prominent in the last century and not dead in ours: the notion that philosophers are the handmaids of science rather (in fact exactly!) as they once were the handmaids of theology. Philosophy is on the side of science and scientific discourse has a certain way of framing things. As Lyotard says, it is (for most of its direct practitioners at least) a denotative language game and a denotative language game is referential and realist. A realist and referential language game is framed in terms of necessity. If Darwin had not discovered natural selection someone else would have because it is there to be discovered. It can be read (indeed MUST be read) directly from nature for nature has an underlying structure that is fixed and determinate. Do species evolve by natural selection? Yes because, if we ask nature, nature says yes. It imposes its own answer and we must bow to its dictates. This causes a problem because there is another discourse, history, which is also referential but in a different way. It refers to the world not in the framework of necessity but contingency. For the historian few things if any HAD to happen. Nothing HAD to be discovered on the grounds that it was simply there. This would not be a problem except for the fact that science has a history and there are historians who look at science not using scientific framing but historical framing. A Marxist might serve as an example. SHE might say that if relations of production were different in Victorian England Darwin might have formulated a very different theory. Indeed, we post (non-vulgar!) Marxists might add that if politics, economics, religion and aesthetic styles and movements had been different Darwin might have seen a very different nature than the one he did. Nature imposes no necessity by itself for the decisions WE make cause nature to speak differently to different people in different places. The implication of this, and this so whether by strict deduction or simple implication or suggestion, is that no science is universal and all science is regional and tensed. Contingency trumps necessity and history swallows science and its supposed necessities. If x or y had been different historically we would inhabit a different nature.[1] This, for instance, is why philosopher Alex Rosenberg says history and historians are all wrong. We need a new history that is a simple expression of physics (without contingency, free will or intentionality) because otherwise we are throwing away the possibility of knowing about the past and, by implication, anything else!

No doubt there are many sage ways of splitting the difference between these two broad frameworks. I might, for instance, tell a comforting story about how the (subjective and contingent) logic of discovery is one thing and the (presumably more objective and rigorous) logic of justification another (and for all I know that might be a good enough story!). The interesting thing for me and for Sociologist-cum-philosopher Steve Fuller is that on this point Elvis has already left the building. We are actually past debating this question as a mere academic concern about disciplinary boundaries and whether the social sciences swallow the natural ones (as per the Edinburgh school) or, as Alex Rosenberg would have it, vice versa. Contingency has defeated necessity and we have what Fuller and others have labeled the post truth condition. Fuller’s advice on the post-truth condition is to relax and enjoy it but as he is a provocateur and indeed (I sometimes suspect) prankster we might wonder whether he is tweaking us (see his latest book A Players' Guide to the Post Truth Condition). Certainly, post-truth is looking bleak at the moment because it is the one stance that doesn’t work in a plague. I suppose he thinks this because he is a critic in what is actually a legitimate enlightenment sense. HE questions authority like we are ALL supposed to do ALL the time according to t-shirts. In fact, he raises the question Edmund Burke once raised about Marie Antoinette’s gown: if we strip the mystique from authority there is no authority, just another naked person! Just think if people who tout ‘peer reviewed research’ as a gold standard actually saw that weird, petty gate keeping process in action! In the contemporary west we have social processes for certifying the truth of certain claims. These processes confer epistemic legitimacy on questions of fact and questions of theory. Now they do so only within certain domains. I might, for metaphysical reasons, accept what A.N. Whitehead says about the primordial and consequent nature of God but, if I do, THAT is not a public reason. Nor should it be a public reason because judgments of metaphysics and ontology are contested and highly individuated rather like judgments of taste. Whether God exists and whether he has a di-polar primordial and consequent nature is something on which ‘gentlemen’ disagree. Of course there are also things on which ‘gentlemen’ should not disagree and these are things like medical science and the legitimacy of elections that have been certified by all the relevant authorities. If there is no clear intellectual line to be drawn between these two categories there is a social one that we are all in the habit of drawing daily. I am NOT punching out Whiteheadians though process theology is not quite my cup of tea![2]              

                What then could go wrong with this ‘gentlemen’s agreement’ (and yes I am referring subversively to the Gregory Peck film of the name)?[3] Correctly to my mind Fuller points out that the ground has completely altered and that certifying epistemic legitimacy is no longer quite the thing at stake. This is why ALL the ‘critical thinking skills’ in the world taught by ALL the best professors will not alter the post-truth condition one single bit. I quote “Simply put and without prejudice, in the post truth condition what matters is not whether something is true or false but how the matter is decided”. This, it would seem, is a simple outcome of what Lyotard terms the emancipatory language game. Autonomy means we live under our own law, such laws as we can give ourselves by our own lights and the fact that someone knows the truth about x or y gives them no dictatorial power over anyone else (after all that’s what the Medieval church claimed- error has no rights!). Fuller points out that this is a clear development of principles internal to the enlightenment: it is where the moral project of the enlightenment clashes with the epistemic project. True and false must be the product of a consensus forming process we can all live with. I cannot tell Whiteheadians what they ought to believe or say about God even if I have slam dunk arguments that they are wrong. HOW we determine truth is now more important than WHAT we determine for the rules of the game must be fair. [4]

Here we come across the second aspect of the post truth condition and again I quote: “The ultimate prize in the post truth condition is to name the game you play even if you turn out the loser.” This is as much as to say that we now struggle to define the rules of the game rather than win within the terms of the game laid out for us. If we are losing the game we can play a different game as homeopaths propose with respect to allopathic medicine. Naming the game you play means, in part, changing the framing of a fact, redeploying that fact in a new framework which we might call, especially if we don’t like it, spin. Take the following example: in the Middle Ages a thousand years of theological reflection had worked out the Christian mysteries and the destiny of human kind with objectivity and marvelous precision, the very kind of objectivity we ascribe today to things like general and special relativity. In the early modern period did Europeans wake up and suddenly notice that Aristotle, Augustine and Aquinas were meretricious junk? That never happened. Fuller would say that people like Hobbes, Luther and Galileo found ‘wiggle room’ in the military sense of space in which to maneuver. They found new ways to play the knowledge game and outflank the old guard.[5] They rewrote the rules of that game itself and,having succeeded in that endeavor, their successors got to write winner’s history about the so called ages of darkness and superstition. In fact, even to this day Bill Nye and Neil DeGrasse Tyson (following in the footsteps of Carl Sagan and Cosmos) get to tell this same winner’s history to children as ‘the objective facts’. Of course, since the internet came along especially, cultural authorities like Mr. Nye (and his professional looking bow tie) no longer command the respect they once did as a critical mass of people are now playing a different game with strange, repellent new rules. What is worse the internet has destroyed the possibility of effectively censoring them. When media had flagship publications like the Globe and Mail or New York Times or public broadcasters like NPR or the CBC ‘professionalism’ could be imposed on reportage and the expression of opinion. Access to platforms of communication was kept scarce and difficult. Now who even watches CBC news? Plus, I can post all the bogs I want where I can tell even the elites where and why they are full of it! The only problem here is over-saturation- my opinions are a drop in a vast ocean unless they find an echo-chamber to resound in.  

Fuller seems, on the whole, sanguine about this even taking COVID into account. After all, it was the professors themselves who, cultivating their hermeneutic of suspicion, contributed to creating the post-truth condition. Alas though, they have been outflanked exactly as Luther and Calvin were outflanked by the radical wing of the reformation.  Still, it seems that if we are committed to ‘autonomy’ as modernity defines it, we cannot be uncritically committed to a culture of priestly expertise. Fuller seems to assume that things will balance out and we will end up with a more democratized, egalitarian culture in whatever form this may take (and that has yet to be fully defined). I suppose that is nice work if you can get it. I can think of other ways all of this can end many of them not pleasant. In one sense though, I believe his intuitions are correct if not his exact conclusions. I believe the framing that views our current crisis of legitimation as an epistemic problem is incorrect. What we actually have is a crisis of recognition, recognition being the scarcest thing in our world and the most contested (even wealth is a form of it!). If recognition were democratized radically people might actually be o.k. with expertise again. Take anti-vaxxers as an example. Right now is their moment in the sun. Though a small minority they are flexing power in a context where they cannot be ignored. They are forcing US to talk about them!  All it takes is a small, isolated group of supposed whack jobs to derail public health policy in the most advanced and educated nations on earth (though astro-turfing DOES play a role here). Where recognition is concerned they have us hostage and they are going to relish the moment! This is a version of the 19 men with box cutters phenomenon brought to us be  certain Bin Laden! 

Now, of course, we have to figure out what forms of recognition would satisfy this and other alienated groups of people. We would then have to figure out which can be granted without alienating a different group. These are challenging problems to which I don’t have pat answers. In Fuller’s terms people are trying to name the game they are playing and not all games are mutually compatible. They can’t all be played at once. Some people, in fact, will lose and our current problem is that when people lose the post truth game they simply reject the process by which the game was played. Indeed, they try to manipulate the game so that they never have to face the psychic wound of defeat again. This may be because the stakes are too high for losers to buy into the process. This is in terms both of ‘face’ (i.e. recognition) and potential material factors. Worse, I suspect that when material hopes take a significant hit, ‘face’ becomes that much more important: hence the cultic status of fetish objects like assault rifles. How, then, to get the losers to buy into the new normal? I have one suggestion: face can be cashed in for material benefits and lost face can mean lost benefits. This is why there is no ultimate distinction between economic justice and epistemic justice. Precarity as a general factor in society may well be incompatible with expertise if people think they are losing face to ‘experts’ and ‘elites’ who don’t actually have their interests at heart and take no account of their sensibilities or insecurities. If we WANT expertise to exist (Fuller seems not to at times), then the cost of it may be a significant investment of social resources into long term economic security for marginal persons (whether that marginality be economic or ‘other’) and persons who, while not currently ‘marginal’ by OUR definition, fear becoming so (and note that self-perceived marginality is the exact same poison in the body politic that ‘real’ marginality is- in fact it may be worse). Pascal said that if you want to become a Christian take a little holy water. The same applies here: if we don’t like the post-truth condition we can alter it by doing something. That something may be as simple as a basic annual income that lowers the stakes of the game.     

                     



[1] Of course a scientist has to work with the theories we have just like a theologian has to work the religions we have. It matters little to her whether we could have had different ones in an alternate time line. We can’t will a world without Christianity or the bomb because that door has closed. This is a post hoc historical necessity though it is not the kind of timeless, apodictic necessity we have been conditioned to seek for scientific and philosophic claims. It is similar to the way past evolution closes down pathways for the future. I leave open, then, the question of whether, like Nietzsche said of Christianity, science has produced its own grave digger by turning the science of nature into ‘natural history’ and introducing the snake of historicity into the paradise of pure reason. 

[2] Oddly enough Whitehead editor David Griffin is now a 9/11 truther. The CIA, apparently, has more power over contingency than Whitehead’s God! Of course people in other ages did punch each other out over God because metaphysics and revelation established the truth about him among the relevant experts. WE, of course, have not changed our mind about the social necessity of recognizing certain epistemic claims over others we have just shifted them from theology to nature and switched from deductive and hermeneutic methods to inductive and experimental ones. On THIS basis we club anti-vaxxers on the head (so far symbolically) along with flat-earthers and other heretics who refuse to recognize how our society produces knowledge as authoritative. That we no longer BURN such people is a moral advance but not really, as far as I can see, an epistemic difference.     

 [3] It is important to understand the function of these agreements. A gentlemen’s agreement is an un-thematic social consensus founded in an immediate bond of sympathy and antipathy. In many philosophy departments, for instance, it is tacitly assumed that no one will commit the solecism of defending panpsychism or formulating a new ontological argument. What happens, though, when a non-gentleman elbows his way into the club? The feeling that constitutes the club as a club is now gone. For instance, we can no longer tell the same jokes! Since this feeling is now gone it is no longer available as a ground for ensuring consensus. The members must now REACT to people who say or do the ‘wrong’ things. WORSE, once the feeling behind the agreement is broken the previously unspoken rules of the club now have to be formalized and even justified or explained (and there is nothing sadder than watching someone flail for arguments to defend the club). Once a gentlemen’s agreement has to be defended it is already lost. The old guard will now react resentfully to the interlopers who will react bitterly in turn thus starting a feedback loop that will be bafflingly difficult to close. OUR problem as a society is that various ethic, sexual and religious ‘others’ (from both the right and the left!) have elbowed their way into the club. We no longer have disagreements within the rules but disagreements about the rules. In short, we have a crisis of legitimation. We no longer have a situation in which we can disagree about x within the framework of y but we now have to argue about both x and y. Worse, or better depending on your point of view, there is no current social fact (like the natural attitude of a well-bred Englishman say) which we can substitute for an epistemic justification.          

 [4] An example of someone not getting this rule is Richard Dawkins. Dawkins says he doesn’t have to attend to the arguments of theists because his disproof of the existence of God is sound. In the post-truth world, however, it is not enough to be ‘right’ in this purely formal and now empty sense. One has to dialogue with others, join the ‘conversation’ as it were, if one’s conclusions are to have any social validity and without social validity they can have no epistemic validity either. As Fuller says how we determine things process wise is more important than what we determine. Part of the ‘truth’ is the social process of citation and critical dialogue. This is why in an academic paper one has to cite the work of others no matter how correct one thinks one is. On Dawkins’ principle (I am right about Descartes already so why should I read Descartes scholarship?) one’s life as an academic would be so blissfully easy!  Alas, though, whatever ‘truths’ I uncover have to be certified by a social process.      

[5] Perhaps following Paul Feyerabend, Fuller seems to view the history of science in vitalistic, even voluntaristic terms. Galileo and Kepler are exercising a will to power vis a vis their predecessors irreducible to reason or natural necessity. They are productive of new discourses not because of nature (which under-determines what we say about it) but out of a contest or agon where the autonomy or authority of the modern self is at stake: to adapt a phrase from Blake, they create a system so as not to be enslaved to another man’s. Thus, they use all the tricks in their arsenal to establish their theoretical revolutions as the new normal. In other words, they are changing the rules of the game to create a new game in their own image. One can, certainly, tell other stories about the birth of modernity as Hegel, say, or Marx did. For such stories the scientific revolution would be a moment in the self-positing of freedom or of the evolution of class consciousness rather than an (ultimately nihilistic) eruption of the pure will to novelty. To the post truth stance, though, the past would indeed take on this form.         

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