Tuesday, October 26, 2004

When Intellectual Innovators Become the Status Quo

Brian Leiter's email exchange with Jerry Fodor on the definition of analytic philosophy has generated a great deal of discussion. One comment to the post, by Jason Stanley, has generated still more discussion at Crooked Timber. Here is Jason's comment:

There is a certain kind of very influential academic who has a difficult time recognizing that they are no longer a rebellious figure courageously struggling against the tide of contemporary opinion, but rather have already successfully directed the tide along the path of their choice. Chomsky is one such academic, and Fodor is another.

Ortega y Gasset, in his generational theory of history, posited that at any given time in history, there are three generations, each with its own episteme and ethos. The oldest generation has been supplanted by the middle generation, which is the current dominant paradigm, but which is constantly being undermined by the youngest generation. It seems to me like this has always been the way things have worked in the history of ideas: each successive generation works to overcome and supplant its immediate predecessor, and once it has done so, it becomes the status quo. Sometimes, the middle generation has trouble letting go of its subversive attitude, as Jason noted in his comment. For instance, Noam Chomsky and others in his generation revolutionized the way we view the mind and human beings in general, and it must have been a big rush to do so. Now that their ideas have become the status quo, I imagine it's a bit of a let down. Of course, in many ways, and on many fronts, they are already being supplanted, so while they feel they are still they rebels, they are actually the target of new rebellions.

I wonder why it is that things tend to work out that way, particularly in intellectual spheres such as science and philosophy. I'm sure one reason is that it's easier to criticize than defend complex ideas, as any undergraduate who has written papers on famous philosophers has learned. Also, the best way to make a name for oneself is to supplant accepted ideas. However, I think the biggest reason for the constant flow of intellectual upheaval is that every system of ideas is flawed, and the people best equipped to notice the flaws in any system are those who are not fully invested in it. Someone (maybe Plank?) once remarked that the best way for a new theory to gain acceptance is for all of its detractors to die. That may be a bit extreme, but I think it captures this key aspect of the intellectual world: for new theories to gain prominence, the theories they have supplanted have to be widely questioned by those who have not spent their lives formulating and defending them.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

The Age of Khepera (the scarab god) was 1963 - 1999, and was represented by the ultimate "scarab" generationl icons: The Beatles.

Two thousand zero zero, party over -- Prince.

For more details and more cutting edge stuff, see:
www.sunkingjournal.com



 

Posted by Robert Urbanek

Anonymous said...

If Philosophy is simply "footnotes to Plato," then Chomsky's writings are some of the most obvious footnotes to date. Formal logic and language philosophy may have done some good towards clarifying semantic issues, showing the shortcomings of behaviorism and empiricism and any remaining idealist notions, and perhaps contributed to more effective programming languages; yet has there been any achievement reached in analytical phil. equal to say the Human Genome Project, quantum physics, or even Keynesian economics....

Analytical phil and linguistics point to the brain functions, don't they? Eventually cog. science will reveal the biochemistry of language and logic, and there is no necessary assurance that basic logico-semantic assumptions (say, Modus Ponens) will be validated... I guess I'm asking if it's conceivable that researchers in brain science and neurology could prove things regarding cognition and perception that would substantially alter any non-empirical, philosophical account of thought or mind....  

Posted by nemesis

Anonymous said...

I imagine there is a great deal of potential, in any science, but particularly in the cognitive sciences, for demonstrating the inaccuracy of philosophical intuitions. For instance, one thing we've learned about vision is that a single neural state does not necessarily lead to a single visual experience. It's actually much more complex than that. The same goes for human rationality (in the work of Tversky and Kahneman, for instance). Are we going to show that the nature of certain formal systems, like deductive logic, are wrong? Obviously not, but we may show that those systems are more contrived than previous philosophers have thought (as the Wason selection task does, in a way), or that they are represented in counterintuitive ways (as research on mathematical cognition may do). 

Posted by Chris