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Bullshit and Philosophy

Page 35

by Reisch, George A. ; Hardcastle, Gary L.


  Ken Gemes, “Nietzsche’s Critique of Truth,” Philosophy and Phenomenological Research 52, pp. 47–65.

  183

  Kenneth Burke, The Rhetoric of Religion: Studies in Logology (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1961).

  184

  There are some important exceptions. At both the University of Iowa and the University of Minnesota, for example, students are required to take Rhetoric (offered by a Rhetoric, not English, department) in lieu of the usual required Composition courses. It would be interesting to document the contribution to an education through a comparison of these different models.

  185

  Plato’s unflattering portrayal of poets and Sophists mark the opening salvo in the philosophical war against bullshit, even though Plato availed himself of bullshit in promoting the “myth of the metals” as a principle of social stratification in his Republic. This doublethink has not been lost on today’s neo-conservative followers of Leo Strauss.

  186

  An updated defense of Franklin’s position (“the civilizing force of hypocrisy”) is Jon Elster, “Deliberation and Constitution Making,” in Jon Elster, ed., Deliberative Democracy (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. 97–122.

  187

  Nevertheless, the emerging literature in “virtue epistemology” courts just such uninhibited judgments. See Linda Zagzebski and Abrol Fairweather, eds., Virtue Epistemology: Essays on Epistemic Virtue and Responsibility (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001).

  188

  Alan Sokal and Jean Bricmont, Fashionable Nonsense: Postmodern Philosophers’ Abuse of Science (London: Profile, 1998).

  189

  “Let the believer beware!”

  190

  On this reading of Galileo, see Paul Feyerabend, Against Method (London: Verso, 1975).

  191

  Ernest Gellner, Words and Things: A Critical Account of Linguistic Philosophy and a Study in Ideology (London: Gollancz, 1959). An academically sublimated form of such language-driven class anxiety remains in the discipline of sociolinguistics, whose seminal researcher was Basil Bernstein. His work is compiled in Class, Codes, and Control: Theoretical Studies towards a Sociology of Language, three volumes (London: Routledge, 1971–77).

  192

  A good collection of recent work on the epistemology of testimony is the following special issue: Martin Kusch and Peter Lipton, eds., Studies in History and Philosophy of Science 33: 2 (June 2002), Part A, pp. 209–423.

  193

  Among those touched by Kierkegaard were not only the Existentialists but also the young Karl Popper. See Malachi Hacohen, Karl Popper: The Formative Years, 1902–1945 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp. 83–84. I read Popper sympathetically as a “scientific existentialist” in Steve Fuller, Kuhn versus Popper: The Struggle for the Soul of Science (Cambridge: Icon, 2003), pp. 100–110.

  194

  One way to look at the inter-temporal comparison of the evidentiary basis of knowledge claims in the present and the imagined future is in terms of sacrificing a short-term adherence to “only the truth” in favor of “the whole truth” in the long term. I discuss this as a trade-off between correspondence and coherence theories of truth in Steve Fuller, The Intellectual (Cambridge: Icon, 2005), pp. 51–60.

  195

  On the influence of inquisitorial legal systems on Bacon, see James Franklin, The Science of Conjecture: Evidence and Probability before Pascal (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001), pp. 217–18.

  196

  For an account of the Lomborg Affair, focusing on the legal issues, see Steve Fuller, “The Future of Scientific Justice: The Case of the Skeptical Environmentalist.” Futures 36 (2004), pp. 631–36.

  197

  On the early problematic institutionalization of Baconian ideal, see William Lynch, Solomon’s Child: Baconian Method in the Early Royal Society of London (Palo Alto: Stanford University Press, 2001).

  198

  See Tal Golan, Laws of Men and Laws of Nature: The History of Scientific Expert Testimony in England and America (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2004).

  199

  “Naturalism” is normally regarded as a metaphysical doctrine, a species of monism opposed to supernaturalism. The doctrine has been historically hostile to monotheistic world-views for their postulation of a transcendent deity, resulting in an unforgivable dualism. This point joins, say, Spinoza and Dewey in common cause as naturalists, regardless of their many other differences. However, the prefix “methodological” softens the blow by suggesting that only the conduct of science—not all aspects of human existence—presupposes naturalism. Even this is false, as any honest appraisal of the metaphysical realist (a.k.a. supernaturalist) strand in the history of science should make apparent. I participated in Kitzmiller as a “rebuttal witness,” specifically to this bit of bullshit that the judge ended up accepting without question. Philosophers have questioned both why adherence to scientific methodology requires naturalism and why adherence to naturalism must remain merely methodological. These two points are made, respectively, in Theodore Schick, “Methodological Naturalism versus Methodological Realism,” Philosophy 3: 2 (2000), pp. 30–37; Massimo Pigliucci, “Methodological versus Philosophical Naturalism,” Free Inquiry 23 (2003), pp. 53–55.

  Volume 24 in the series, Popular Culture and Philosophy™

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  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Bullshit and philosophy : guaranteed to get perfect results every time / edited by Gary L. Hardcastle and George A. Reisch.

  p. cm.—(Popular culture and philosophy)

  Summary: “Sixteen essays offer discussions, interpretations, and criticisms related to Harry G. Frankfort’s essay “On Bullshit” and other philosophical work on bullshit. Topics addressed include: the definition of bullshit; the ethics and epistemology of bullshit; and the role of bullshit in contemporary culture”—Provided by publisher.

  Includes bibliographical references and index.

  eISBN : 978-0-812-69784-1

  1. Truthfullness and falsehood. I. Hardcastle, Gary L. II. Reisch,

  George A., 1962-

  BJ1421.B85 2006

  177’.3—dc22

  2006025918

  Table of Contents

  Popular Culture and Philosophy®

  Title Page

  On Bullshitmania

  I - To Shoot the Bull?

  Chapter 1 - On Letting It Slide

  Tolerable Bullshit

  Intolerable Bullshit

  Bullshit and Self-Deception

  Blameless Bullshit

  Bullshit and Truth

  Chapter 2 - A Defense of Common Sense

  The Truth Matters

  “What Exactly Do You Mean?”

  Let’s Stop Bullshitting Ourselves

  Chapter 3 - The Pragmatics of Bullshit, Intelligently Designed

  The Example of Intelligent Design

  A Definition of Bullshit—New and Improved!

  The Truth in Bullshit

  The Truth about Semantics

  Solving Frankfurt’s Puzzle, or, Baseball, Hot Dogs, Apple Pie, and Bullshit

  The Case for Purism about Bullshit

  Chapter 4 - Bullshit and the Foibles of the Human Mind, or: What the
Masters of ...

  Some Cognitive Foibles of the Human Mind

  Reclaiming the Public Square

  Chapter 5 - Bullshit and Personality

  Does the Bullshitter Pay Attention to the Truth?

  Two Modes of Bullshit

  Bullshit and Personality Disorders

  Some Examples of Bullshit in Personality Disorders

  Perfect Partners: Bullshit and Distorted Social Perceptions

  The Threat Posed by Bullshit

  Chapter 6 - Performing Bullshit and the Post-Sincere Condition

  Mission Statement

  Shitty Attitudes: On the Use and Misuse of Bullshit in Life

  Bullshit as a Condition of Life

  The World as Will to Bullshit

  Overcoming Overwhelming Bullshit

  Chapter 7 - The Importance of Being Earnest: A Pragmatic Approach to Bullshitting

  Two Tauroscatological Schools

  The Epistemic Imperative

  The Problem with Bullshitting

  So Why Bullshit?

  II - The Bull by the Horns

  Chapter 8 - Deeper into Bullshit

  1 Without the Shit of the Bull

  2 Two Species of Bullshit

  3 Bullshit and Lying

  4 Bullshit as Unclarifiable Unclarity

  5 Bullshit as Product and Bullshit as Process

  Chapter 9 - The Unity of Bullshit

  No Bullshit, Please, We’re Austrian

  A Little Carnap in Everyone

  The Unity of Bullshit

  Chapter 10 - Raising the Tone: Definition, Bullshit, and the Definition of Bullshit

  Semantic Negligence

  A Caricature History of Semantics

  Persuasive Definition

  Broadening the Analysis

  Backfire

  Good Definitions

  Is Frankfurt’s Definition of ‘Bullshit’ Itself PD?

  Chapter 11 - Different Kinds and Aspects of Bullshit

  Harry Frankfurt on Bullshit

  A Different Take on Bullshit

  A Different Kind of Bullshit

  III - It’s All Around Us

  Chapter 12 - The Republic of Bullshit: On the Dumbing-Up of Democracy

  Bullshitting and Lying in Politics

  The Myth of the ‘Well-Informed’ Citizen

  ‘Dumbing-Up’: Some Distortions of Democratic Equality

  Philosophy versus Bullshit

  Chapter 13 - Political Bullshit and the Stoic Story of Self

  How to Analyze Bullshit

  Stories Shape Our Feelings

  Bullshit Around the Globe

  Chapter 14 - Bullshit at the Interface of Science and Policy: Global Warming, ...

  Bullshit of the Isolated Fact

  Bullshit of Universal Standards

  Combatting the Two Kinds of Bullshit

  Chapter 15 - Rhetoric Is Not Bullshit

  The Problem (and Politics) of Rhetoric

  The Truth about Postmodernism

  Rhetoric and Bullshit

  Chapter 16 - Just Bullshit

  Bullshit as a Call to Open-Mindedness

  Wittgenstein: Ultimate Bullshit Detector—or Bullshitter?

  Bullshit as Deferred Epistemic Gratification

  The Scientific Method as a Search for the Justice in Bullshit

  Our Distinguished Panel of Incomparable Geniuses

  Our Index, Exquisitely Crafted for Your Illumination

  ALSO FROM OPEN COURT

  Copyright Page

 

 

 


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