Culture Should we cancel Aristotle?

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Original:https://www.nytimes.com/2020/07/21/opinion/should-we-cancel-aristotle.html
Archive:http://archive.is/cLes1


Should We Cancel Aristotle?
He defended slavery and opposed the notion of human equality. But he is not our enemy.
By Agnes Callard
Ms. Callard is a philosopher and professor.
  • July 21, 2020


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Credit...Illustration by John Whitlock; photographs by Getty Images

The Greek philosopher Aristotle did not merely condone slavery, he defended it; he did not merely defend it, but defended it as beneficial to the slave. His view was that some people are, by nature, unable to pursue their own good, and best suited to be “living tools” for use by other people: “The slave is a part of the master, a living but separated part of his bodily frame.”
Aristotle’s anti-liberalism does not stop there. He believed that women were incapable of authoritative decision making. And he decreed that manual laborers, despite being neither slaves nor women, were nonetheless prohibited from citizenship or education in his ideal city.
Of course Aristotle is not alone: Kant and Hume made racist comments, Frege made anti-Semitic ones, and Wittgenstein was bracingly upfront about his sexism. Should readers set aside or ignore such remarks, focusing attention on valuable ideas to be found elsewhere in their work?
This pick-and-choose strategy may work in the case of Kant, Hume, Frege and Wittgenstein, on the grounds that their core philosophical contributions are unrelated to their prejudices, but I do not think it applies so well to Aristotle: His inegalitarianism runs deep.


Aristotle thought that the value or worth of a human being — his virtue — was something that he acquired in growing up. It follows that people who can’t (women, slaves) or simply don’t (manual laborers) acquire that virtue have no grounds for demanding equal respect or recognition with those who do.
As I read him, Aristotle not only did not believe in the conception of intrinsic human dignity that grounds our modern commitment to human rights, he has a philosophy that cannot be squared with it. Aristotle’s inegalitarianism is less like Kant and Hume’s racism and more like Descartes’s views on nonhuman animals: The fact that Descartes characterizes nonhuman animals as soulless automata is a direct consequence of his rationalist dualism. His comments on animals cannot be treated as “stray remarks.”


If cancellation is removal from a position of prominence on the basis of an ideological crime, it might appear that there is a case to be made for canceling Aristotle. He has much prominence: Thousands of years after his death, his ethical works continue to be taught as part of the basic philosophy curriculum offered in colleges and universities around the world.
And Aristotle’s mistake was serious enough that he comes off badly even when compared to the various “bad guys” of history who sought to justify the exclusion of certain groups — women, Black people, Jews, gays, atheists — from the sheltering umbrella of human dignity. Because Aristotle went so far as to think there was no umbrella.

Yet I would defend Aristotle, and his place on philosophy syllabuses, by pointing to the benefits of engaging with him. He can help us identify the grounds of our own egalitarian commitments; and his ethical system may capture truths — for instance, about the importance of aiming for extraordinary excellence — that we have yet to incorporate into our own.


And I want to go a step further, and make an even stronger claim on behalf of Aristotle. It is not only that the benefits of reading Aristotle counteract the costs, but that there are no costs. In fact we have no reason at all to cancel Aristotle. Aristotle is simply not our enemy.
I, like Aristotle, am a philosopher, and we philosophers must countenance the possibility of radical disagreement on the most fundamental questions. Philosophers hold up as an ideal the aim of never treating our interlocutor as a hostile combatant. But if someone puts forward views that directly contradict your moral sensibilities, how can you avoid hostility? The answer is to take him literally — which is to say, read his words purely as vehicles for the contents of his beliefs.
There is a kind of speech that it would be a mistake to take literally, because its function is some kind of messaging. Advertising and political oratory are examples of messaging, as is much that falls under the rubric of “making a statement,” like boycotting, protesting or publicly apologizing.
Such words exist to perform some extra-communicative task; in messaging speech, some aim other than truth-seeking is always at play. One way to turn literal speech into messaging is to attach a list of names: a petition is an example of nonliteral speech, because more people believing something does not make it more true.
Whereas literal speech employs systematically truth-directed methods of persuasion — argument and evidence — messaging exerts some kind of nonrational pressure on its recipient. For example, a public apology can often exert social pressure on the injured party to forgive, or at any rate to perform a show of forgiveness. Messaging is often situated within some kind of power struggle. In a highly charged political climate, more and more speech becomes magnetically attracted into messaging; one can hardly say anything without arousing suspicion that one is making a move in the game, one that might call for a countermove.
For example, the words “Black lives matter” and “All lives matter” have been implicated in our political power struggle in such a way as to prevent anyone familiar with that struggle from using, or hearing, them literally. But if an alien from outer space, unfamiliar with this context, came to us and said either phrase, it would be hard to imagine that anyone would find it objectionable; the context in which we now use those phrases would be removed.
 
Roman slavery wasn't horrific. Slaves could buy their freedom, and their children would have full roman citizenship as well as the right to run for office.

One particular issue with this was what would happen if children were born in slavery. There was a Roman legal case being fought over such a matter, but it was interrupted by the eruption of Vesuvius.
 
You can tell she's a "philosopher" because of all the unexpected things in that picture! How special.

Maybe I'm a bit too harsh when it comes to this, but modern philosophy is a laughing stock of what it used to be, and ironically enough it's developed into exactly what countless philosophers throughout human history have warned about. They're "philosophers" for the sake of being philosophers, and I wouldn't be surprised if she doesn't have a single damn expertise outside of "being a philosopher".

"As a philosopher" today is like saying "as an artiste"

I don't mind taking tophats over this, but the standards of modern philosophy is an absolute shame.
That's happening with a lot of academic studies, and they're trying to infect STEM with it too.
 
Maybe I'm a bit too harsh when it comes to this, but modern philosophy is a laughing stock of what it used to be, and ironically enough it's developed into exactly what countless philosophers throughout human history have warned about.
thats something pretty new. the Positivismusstreit was 50 years ago and some of the people defending science against marxism are still alive.

why is the US losing a battle against the Frankfurt school 60 years after popper BTFOed them?

also anglos shouldnt into philosophy, it always fails on the very basic level.
 
I mean, yeah, Aristotle was a dick, but so was every other philosopher back then (and the ones alive today), and they've been dead for like over two-thousand years, so it doesn't matter anymore.

Society has moved on from the Ancient Greeks so trying to cancel their philosophers is fucking retarded and a pointless waste of time.
Here we go again judging the actions of people from centuries ago in today's lens.

Just cancel the guy and save us the nepotism.
 
Didn't Caligula claim to have won a great victory over Neptune by sending a legion to Gaul and having them stab the beach and collect shells, or something to that effect?

Yes, since he constantly made fun of the upper class, senators etc they tried to paint him as insane for this stunt. However, he did this on purpose for the legions failing his uncle, Tiberus, when he aspiered to conquor Britannia.

As punishment for this humiliating defeat he marched the army to the coast and waged war on Neptune and then hailed his army as unstoppable, tongue in cheek. Humiliating the generals that so let down his uncle.
 
Aristotle influenced Corporatism, which was the economic system eventually adopted by Fascists. If these activist idiots ever decide to read the details about what Fascism actually is, Aristotle will undoubtedly be targeted.

Or, you know, he'll just get canceled because he's a white male philosopher. They are already calling for the cancellation of school lessons on all people who fit that description.
 
Roman slavery wasn't horrific. Slaves could buy their freedom, and their children would have full roman citizenship as well as the right to run for office.

So could American ones (and, if we extrapolate, grandchildren of slaves have full citizenship and may run for office.) That doesn't stop people from crying over it, and insisting slavery was the most inhumane thing ever.
 
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