The Myth of the Empirical
The
empirical is a myth and, if I were an empiricist, I suppose I would say that is
a bad thing (the myth being concerned, as Aristotle says, with the most abstract
and general). It isn’t, however, a bad thing at all. It is just a thing. This
myth is a powerful representation of what is means to know. It is an image of
knowing and images of knowing can be good or bad depending on their
application. Certainly, the myth of the empirical can lead us down some very unproductive
paths. It has emancipatory potential too even on a direct social level. The myth
of the empirical is, like other powerful myths, complex and multifaceted. The
myth of the empirical is, for one thing, a democratic myth. All persons qua
persons possess the basic capacity for observation. At the same time ‘the
empirical’ is a possession of the cadre of specialists we call scientists. The
empirical is directly to hand for all to see and at the same time the product
of the most refined, specialized even esoteric application of method. Due to this complexity, the empirical can be vexed, contested category. This fact came home to me as I was reading
a journalist complain that the empirical is under threat and indeed in decline.
People, he informs us, no longer understand the rules of empiricism. This is
odd for empiricism has, historically at least, had great trouble with the
concept of rules. How does any finite observation justify a universal law? How
can a rule or canon of reason, universal in scope, found itself on the particularity
of observation? Indeed, it seems to interpret things we need to bring our
minds and their content to the things we observe. On this reading the empirical
is just what is unruly. The empirical is just what disrupts and overturns
the rules. The empirical is the excess, the surplus, the different, even the
free. This appears negatively as Hume’s problem of induction but, we can think
of it positively as well. The empirical is what presents as beyond the
necessary circle of reason.
The
empirical is something we now associate with the hard sciences but that is not
exactly its history. If we take the empirical as in some sense the purely given then the first empirical event I can think of is the calling of
Abraham in the Hebrew Tenach. Abraham is called from Ur of the Chaldees which
represents the given totality of nature, culture, and the gods. This call is an
event, a pure event not given in nature or reason. It is radically empirical. The
empirical is also the realm of the magician who learns from experience what
the occult properties of things are precisely because they are occult. The
alchemist, too, does not find the philosopher’s stone by a transcendental deduction
but by an ecstatic immersion in material process and change. Bacon, of course,
applies evangelical principle here. Things are known by their fruits. By
experimental labor the scientist brings forth novelty. The hidden springs of
nature are revealed by their results. There is another component to this
myth which is the blank slate. If the empirical is what is known, then the mind
that knows it is in a position of pure receptivity. The empirical writes on the
blank slate of possibility. Taken radically, this would mean that nothing
pre-structures our knowledge in advance. The mind is a pure mirror which simply
reflects back what occurs. It is an emptiness waiting for anything and
everything to be written on it. This mind is everything and no thing, like pure
matter.
Thus,
we might say that the empirical is unruly because beings are always giving in
excess of the categorical, or at least of those categories that are finitely, discursively
structured. The empirical can, Hume admits, disrupt our habits of expectation
and formed association though he only states this point negatively and
sceptically. What is the empirical in itself? One might speak of novelty, of
chance, of spontaneity, even of freedom. If you are certain kind of
Neo-Platonist what gives outside the categorical is the Good and here the empirical is present in the more sophisticated guise of the experiential. If you are Levinas
it is the whole sphere of the ethical manifest in the face of the other. Of
course, you may wonder why I speak of the empirical as a myth. Why is the
empirical, after all, an image or model of knowing and not the thing in itself?
Well, there are other ways one can speak of apprehension and these involve the
categorical as actively shaping the world we figure ourselves as passively
observing. This categorical realm may range from the a-priori to the social or linguistic.
Too much happens implicitly BEFORE we receive the object passively for the
empirical to be anything but a useful picture for one moment in how we grasp
things. To be Thomistic for a moment, at very least we need the concept of an ens
to apprehend anything as an object. Receptivity is pre-structured in advance by
the mind’s active light. This goes on without our noticing and for that reason
the myth of the empirical is intuitive and easy. Alas, this means that the myth of the empirical, if pressed to closely, if understood too literally, betrays the complexity of experience. It also, by sleight of hand, turns the ideational into the observational. The result of THAT is pure polarization for the other must be a fool or a lying knave not to see what is simply given in direct experience. At this point we see the temptation embodied in the myth of the empirical: the temptation of anti-intellectualism. There can only be ONE purely empirical account of things: mine, or, if egotism is collective, ours. Worse, if the world is what is simply there to be seen, and if hard nosed, practical people are those who see what is there to be seen, then the world of art of thought and culture, even of theoretical as opposed to applied science, becomes a realm of spurious delusion and false sophistication. It must for it is a world of complexity and difference rather that pure positivity and hard 'objective truth'. Here, it seems, is where we run up against the limit of this myth and see that, after all, it is only an image, an abstraction from the total field of knowing. A myth is as dangerous as it is liberating if it is not balanced by another myth.
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