Post by Jack Ten
Hegel
can hardly be considered new to the philosophical scene, yet re-discovering him
is akin to stumbling across an at times exciting find. Other times the
experience is tiring, as when it seems possible to detect the strains of
Eurocentrism even in the early 1800s in Germany (Leitch 2001: 545).
History
would seem to confirm the thesis that there are no new ideas, just ideas newly
uncovered, or claimed. We can be the first to uncover in our time an existing
idea, thereby attaching our name to it. It is this ephemeral aspect of idea
‘ownership’ that seems the genesis of the fierce competition among thinkers to
be ‘the first’, with the world as the assumed audience.
Hegel
maintains that a budding idea/ movement (thesis) necessarily causes conflict
(anti-thesis). The conflict creates a still newer point of view: the synthesis
of the thesis and anti-thesis.
The
synthesised idea is one that brings the human condition even closer to its
truth. Synthesis, the resolution of conflict, seems to be the example of man
coming ever closer to, what in mystical terms, would be Nirvana. Most religions
at some time have been accused of a degree of mysticism. As a staunch
Christian, that Hegel’s ideas would too seem to be influenced by mysticism does
not seem an improbable conclusion.
It is
interesting how an idea travels. In the discipline of Social Anthropology,
Victor Turner is a master of the analysis of social drama. According to Turner
(Turner 1987: 4), social drama has four stages:
1) a breach with social convention
(Hegel’s ‘thesis/movement combines Turner’s first and second stages),
2) a crisis in which the threshold of
social tolerance is exceeded and a ‘limen’ is produced: an unstable phase that
is neither a part of the old nor yet part of the to-be new,
3) redress (society/group, etc seeks
solutions through mediation, legal system, ritual (Hegel’s antithesis),
4) re-integration of the group into
society (Hegel’s synthesis). However, the re-integrated group is different, and
will never again occupy the place its forerunner once had in society.
*
What
Hegel seems most to promote with his levels of human understanding of self
(art, religion, philosophy) is creativity. Follow your thoughts; let them
unfold, he seems to say. On the other hand, responsibility and duty, he also says,
lay within social relationships and are defined by them rather than by abstract
rules of morality and ethics.
At the
same time, however, Hegel advises that an individual’s greatest responsibility
and sense of duty lay with the state – what seems to be a contradiction of
thought. At the very least, such thinking is an infringement upon the freedom
of thought and creativity of expression that Hegel claims to promote. Why? Because
if one’s ultimate responsibility is to the state, then it is the state that
will define what it is acceptable as ‘creative’ and ‘free’.
Abuse
of the state’s definition will lead to Hegel’s theory of thesis (movement),
anti-thesis (conflict), and synthesis.
Has
Hegel described nothing more than the vicious circle of the human condition as
we have conceived and live it?
*
It is
interesting that attempts to explain what this life is all about, what it
means, seems to exist in all disciplines. Engels uses economics to offer an
answer (“…the ultimately determining element in history is the production and
reproduction of real life…” (Leitch 2001: 648).
In
“Economic and Philosophic Manuscripts of 1844 (1932: trans. 1959)’, Marx is
especially concerned here with the origin and impact of alienation” (Leitch
2001: 648). Marx’s family converted from Judaism to Christianity to escape
persecution. It is interesting to observe the possible underlying effect this
may have had on Marx’s interpretation of the world through his writings. If
Engels and Marx raised questions that they did not answer on the role in
society of ‘writers, thinkers and intellectuals’, perhaps it was because they
were ultimately, through their writing, trying to answer very personal
questions that had to do with their place in life. They were ‘working through’
their existential challenges. In Marx’s case, answers came through economics;
specifically through the contradictions that capitalism produces (ibid: 649).
Had he
turned his attention to religion or social issues, his answer would also as
applicable.
*
It is
nothing less than shocking to realise the extent to which the era in which an
author lives, and the author’s place within the social spheres of that era,
dictate if not what the author will write then certainly how it will be done.
Gramsci would seem to agree, “There is no human activity from which every form
of intellectual participation can be excluded…” (Leitch 2001: 1140), and “Mass
formation has standardised individuals both psychologically and in terms of
individual qualification and has produced the same phenomena as with other
standardised masses: competition which makes necessary organisations for the
defence of professions, unemployment, over-production in the schools,
emigration, etc.” (ibid: 1143).
Bibliography
Leitch, Vincent B. et al (eds). 2001.
- Georg
Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, 1770-1831; Karl Marx 1820-1895. In:
The
Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism.
New
York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc.
Turner, Victor 1987.
The
Anthropology of Performance.
New
York: PAJ Publications.
What would be surprising in 1800 would be to find anything other than Eurocentrism, don't you think?
ReplyDeleteYes, I see your point. Perhaps in mind was how there must also have been other voices that were not given attention but existed nonetheless. The Eurocentrism cannot be contested, it seems.
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