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RE: BHA: Writer-Reader relation; Aristotelean causes



Hello Howard,

Primarcy of the writer or primacy of the book?

This was in reference to the emancipatory potential of critical realism. A schema had been proposed, CR -> spread of idea -> emancipation, and it was pointed out that, although a book/writer (i.e., CR) may hold the knowledge necessary for emancipation, it is still up to the reader to accept it and put it into practice. Thus, the debate between the (causal) primacy of the writer or the reader (or were you making a different connection refering to the primacy of the writer or the book?). Of course, Bhaskar recognizes that emancipation "which consists in the transformation...from an unwanted to a wanted source of determination, is both causally presaged and logically entailed by explanatory theory, butcan only be effected in practice" (RR, 90). I'm not sure if this answers the original question, but I hope it slightly clears up what I was trying to say. Brian



Howard

> [Original Message]
> From: Brian Dick <alethic_truth@xxxxxxxxxxx>
> To: <bhaskar@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
 > Date: 5/8/2002 11:51:41 PM
> Subject: BHA: Writer-Reader relation; Aristotelean causes
>
> Hi All,
> 	Tobin, I see your point and the context it was made in.  I guess I was
> playing more of a devil's advocate role in my argument as I pretty much
> agree with your point, but I am still a little shaky on it.  Now, and
this
> may have some relevancy for the debate on Aristotelean causes, Bhaskar
> states that on the TMSA, "the ontological structure of human activity or
> praxis is conceived, after Aristotle, as consisting in the
transformation
by
> efficient (intentional) agency of pre-given material (natural and
social)
> causes" (RR, 92).  Thus, I see the objectification of a book as a
> cultural/social form as what might be called the 'material cause' of
> emancipation (or science).
> 	Now to relate this to the CR -> spread of idea -> emancipation schema
laid
> out by Marsh.  Bhaskar attacks the position of "rationalistic
> intellectualism, which sees social theory as (actually or potentially)
> immediately efficacious in practice" (RR, 89; I would be quoting out of
> SRHE, but I haven't had time to go back through it).  Thus, social
theory
is
> a necessary, BUT INSUFFICIENT condition of human emancipation (as I
believe
> Bhaskar notes in chapter 1 of RR).  Social theory must be put into
practice
> (the 'efficient cause of emancipation').
> 	Therefore, I think that the book-reader relationship may be analogous
to
> the base-superstructure metaphor.  As the foundation of a house does not
> fully determine the exact structure of the house, but does condition the
> form it may take, so the book, while not determining what the reader
does,
> conditions what is (cognitively, or otherwise) available to the reader
> (whether the reader accepts it or not).  Am I correct in proposing this?
If
> I am, then it would seem that we are beholden to the 'primacy of the
writer'
> (just as the economic base holds primacy (in the final analysis) over
the
> cultural superstructure), rather than the primacy of the reader (even
though
> I am intuitively sympathetic to this argument).  Of course, if I hold
this
> position, then I may be liable, as I pointed out earlier, to fall into
the
> fallacy of reification.  I guess I still remain a bit confused as to
what
my
> position is on this matter.
> 	On the matter of formal and final causes, could these perhaps be
aspects
of
> both societies and individuals, while societies alone remain the
material
> cause and individuals the efficient?  For example, I see directionality
> (final cause; or am I not putting it in strong enough language, i.e.
> teleological?) at both the level of society (history) and the individual
> (biography).  (With formal cause perhaps relating to the structure of
> society (mode of production?) and the habitus of the individual
> respectively?)
> Brian
>
>
>
> >From: Tobin Nellhaus <nellhaus@xxxxxxx>
> >Reply-To: bhaskar@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >To: bhaskar@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >Subject: Re: BHA: path dependence, critical realism and marxism
> >Date: Tue, 7 May 2002 21:55:19 -0400
> >
> >Hi Brian--
> >
> >It's true that texts have constraining and enabling features, and so
there
> >are limits to what can be argued as valid interpretations of a
particular
> >text.  The play *Hamlet* cannot plausibly be taken as a thesis on
quantum
> >mechanics.  But the question remains about how we see the propagation
of
a
> >text as a causal element in social or cultural change.  I've read the
New
> >Testament, for example, but it didn't lead me to believe in the
divinity
of
> >Jesus and to take him as my personal savior.  Lots of people (like
history
> >students) read *Mein Kampf* but aren't turned into Nazi sympathizers.
The
> >ideas spread, but to what effect?  Walter Ong's book *Orality and
Literacy*
> >had a profound impact on my research, but at least as much (and
probably
> >more) through the ways I disagreed with it than through the parts I
thought
> >were on the mark.  An ordinary book on astrology probably sells far
more
> >than anything by Bhaskar, but I'm not sure what one should say about
their
> >relative social impact.  In any case, once a book is "out there," the
> >author's agency is (more or less) over, advertising or in-person
pummelling
> >notwithstanding: any social impact it may have really starts from how
> >readers respond to it (if they do, and if they even read it).  My
comment
> >about the primacy of the reader was meant in that respect.  There is of
> >course an analogy here with TMSA, or maybe more clearly with Archer's
> >morphogenesis, since it emphasizes the agent's action undertaken within
> >historical preconditions.  Anyway, all I'm doing is underscoring the
> >difficulties facing a proposition like "CR -> spread of idea ->
> >emancipation" and, as Marsh recommends, subjecting it to just a little
> >research.
> >
> >T.
> >
> >---
> >Tobin Nellhaus
> >nellhaus@xxxxxxxx
> >"Faith requires us to be materialists without flinching": C.S. Peirce
> >
> >
> >   ----- Original Message -----
> >   From: Brian Dick
> >   To: bhaskar@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
> >   Sent: Tuesday, 07 May 2002 7:37 PM
> >   Subject: Re: BHA: path dependence, critical realism and marxism
> >
> >
> >
> >   Hi Tobin
> >
> >   Perhaps the TMSA can help in this matter.  The TMSA gives two
> >diametrically opposed positions, which it attempts to unite.  One the
one
> >hand, we have society determining the individual (Durkheim), while on
the
> >other we have the individual determining society (Weber).  Now Bhaskar
> >shows that to hold one or the other of these positions alone is to
commit
> >the fallacies of reification and voluntarism respectively.  Rather, we
have
> >to see society as both constraining and enabling the individual as the
> >individual (normally) reproduces and (sometimes) transforms society
(with
> >society and the individual mediated by a set of positioned-practices).
> >
> >   Now, as regards the causal efficacy of writing a book, I see that
the
> >same two fallacies can arise.  If we say that only the author/book has
> >causal efficacy we fall into the trap of reification, while if we say
that
> >only the reader does we end up with a form of voluntarism.  Thus,
holding
> >onto the 'primacy of the reader' may lead to voluntarism.  It might be
> >better said that the reader is constrained and enabled by the book
(whether
> >that be in cognitive or other terms), while, as you point out, it is up
to
> >the reader to change (or reproduce) the world.
> >
> >   *Note: Please take my comments with a grain of salt, as Im a bit new
to
> >the server, but this seems to make sense.
> >
> >   Best,
> >
> >   Brian
> >
> >
> >
>
>
>
>
> _________________________________________________________________
> Joi




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