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(OPE-L) Marx and Wittgenstein
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Title: (OPE-L) Marx and Wittgenstein
http://ndpr.icaap.org/content/archives/2003/10/stern-kitching-pleasants.html
Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2003.10.13
Kitching, Gavin and Pleasants, Nigel
(eds.), Marx and Wittgenstein: Knowledge, Morality and
Politics, Routledge, 2002, 320pp, $95.00 (hbk), ISBN
0415247756.
Reviewed by:
David G. Stern
University of Iowa
What, the reader of this review may well wonder, is the point of a
collection of essays connecting Marx and Wittgenstein? After all,
"it is possible to take almost any two thinkers of genuine
insight and sophistication and to find some parallels and
commonalities in their thought. Indeed, doing so is one of the
favourite intellectual pastimes of all academics." Indeed, one
could legitimately ask whether "any two thinkers have less
in common than Karl Marx and Ludwig Wittgenstein." Consider, for a
moment, the case for the prosecution. On the one hand we have Marx,
political activist and economic theorist, the founder of the
'science' of 'historical materialism,' whose Theses on
Feuerbach proclaim that "philosophers have only interpreted the
world in various ways, the thing however is to change it." On the
other, Wittgenstein, a philosopher who "showed virtually no
interest in conventional political activity," famous for writing
that "philosophy . . . leaves everything as it is" and who asked
himself "who knows the laws by which society evolves?" only to
answer "I am sure they are a closed book to the cleverest of
men."
Gavin Kitching's excellent introduction to Marx and
Wittgenstein not only anticipates and responds to these
objections-all of the quotations in the previous paragraph are
taken from his opening essay-but also provides a helpful
orientation as to the range of approaches taken by the contributors
to this volume. Kitching's response to these objections is
carefully measured. He sums up the point of the book in terms of
three interrelated aims, aims that echo the Hegelian triad of thesis,
antithesis, and synthesis. Kitching tells us that the book as a whole
aims to show that (1) there are important commonalities in the
thought of the two writers; (2) there are, nevertheless, important
differences between Marx and Wittgenstein, and among Marxian
Wittgensteinians; (3) yet a synthesis of Marx and Wittgenstein can be
"mutually enriching" (pp. 2-3).
The principal historical connections lie partly in Wittgenstein's
sympathy for certain aspects of the left in the 1930s-he is said to
have described himself as "a communist, at heart"-and
partly in the question of the role that Pierro Sraffa's Marxism
might have played in his role as "stimulus for the most
consequential ideas" of the Philosophical
Investigations.1 The principal systematic commonalities lie in
Marx's and Wittgenstein's rejection of the dualism of subject and
object, observer and observed, and their turn toward human action or
practice. The principal differences, as indicated above, have to do
with the contrast between Wittgenstein's opposition to scientism,
and scepticism about a science of society, and the Marxist pursuit of
such a science. Furthermore, the individual contributors disagree
greatly about the possibility and desirability of a synthesis of Marx
and Wittgenstein. I will return to the question how far the book
realizes its editors' aims after a brief survey of the individual
contributions.
The fourteen essays are arranged into six parts, each bearing a title
that sums up its contribution to the story mapped out in the
Introduction. In Part I, "Conventional Wisdoms," T. P. Uschanov
reviews the reception history of Ernest Gellner's polemical attack
on Wittgenstein's philosophy in general, and Gellner's caricature
of him as a covert political conservative, pursuing his political
commitments under cover of philosophical impartiality, in particular.
While Gellner's critique, largely composed of shoddy rhetoric,
insinuation and personal abuse, created considerable controversy, it
was dismissed by the philosophical establishment at the time.
However, his caricature of Wittgenstein was enormously attractive to
those who needed a convenient rationale for dismissing him. It has
since become conventional wisdom in many quarters, and especially
among social scientists, and is certainly part of the reason why a
relatively small number of social scientists on the left have taken a
serious interest in Wittgenstein.
In Part II, "Commonalities," four different ways of connecting
the two thinkers are explored. Ted Schatzki approaches the
connections between Marx and Wittgenstein by considering their
conceptions of natural history; David Rubinstein looks at their
understanding of culture and practical reason; David Andrews gives a
Wittgenstein-influenced reading of Marx on commodity fetishism; and
Terrell Carver discusses their relationship to postmodernism.
In Part III, "Wittgenstein and Sraffa," Keiran Sharpe and John B.
Davis, both experts on economics and philosophy, provide informative
and complementary accounts of how Sraffa's Marxism, and his
particular approach to economics and questions of economic theory,
could have influenced Wittgenstein's work on the Philosophical
Investigations. Sharpe sees the link in terms of the emphasis on
the inter-relationship between social action, criteria, and context
in Sraffa's work, and the ways this would have led him to criticize
the "asocial epistemology" (127) of the Tractatus. Davis
highlights the parallels between Gramsci's unveiling of hidden
structures of power, Sraffa's historicist critique of neo-classical
economics, and Wittgenstein's discussion of family resemblance,
rule-following and practice. Sharpe, by dint of carefully assembling
and arranging the available evidence, makes a surprisingly strong
case for what must be a matter of conjecture; Davis makes the far
stronger, and highly implausible, claim that Wittgenstein's later
ideas "presupposed the same philosophical posture of critique that
Sraffa's (and Gramsci's) possessed" (142).
Part IV, "Disjunctions," draws our attention to a leading area of
disagreement among the contributors, concerning the nature of the
relationship between the everyday use of language and
social-scientific uses of language. In view of Peter Winch's
pivotal role in the debate over this topic, and his formative
influence on most social scientists interested in Wittgenstein, it is
appropriate that both Ted Benton, in "Wittgenstein, Winch and
Marx," and Nigel Pleasants in "Towards a critical use of Marx and
Wittgenstein," approach this issue by means of a discussion of
Winch's interpretation of Wittgenstein. Benton identifies a tension
in Winch between the naturalistic tenor of most of his work and his
commitment to the anti-naturalistic view that one cannot give a
causal account of human action. His proposed resolution is to give up
the anti-naturalism, a position that is justified by an appeal to
"Wittgenstein's naturalism." Benton's Wittgenstein has a
conception of human nature that is a restatement of Marx's: a
Wittgenstein, like Rubinstein's and Schatzki's, made safe for a
traditional sociological theory, by way of a reading of his
philosophy as a theory of practice. Pleasants, on the other hand,
like Fann, Kitching, Carver, and Read, contends that a construal of
Wittgenstein as a practice theorist, a philosopher who put forward a
theory of the social constitution of mind and meaning in order to
undermine the methodological individualism of traditional philosophy,
reproduces the very methodological errors Wittgenstein opposes.
Pleasants' Wittgenstein conceives of philosophy as an activity of
clarification, one that brings about a change in the way we look at
things but does not consist in the production of a theory of society
or of practice: "what is to be avoided is the tendency-of both
Wittgensteinians and Marxists-to automatically assume there must be
an authentic 'Wittgensteinian' or 'Marxist' line on whatever
engages their interest" (165).
Part V, "Forerunners," complicates the relatively self-contained
story told so far, as it draws connections with previous work on the
Marx-Wittgenstein connection. The first published essay on Marx and
Wittgenstein, Ferrucio Rossi-Landi's rich and provocative
"Towards a Marxian use of Wittgenstein," originally published in
Italian in 1966, is reprinted in a slightly shortened version.
Joachim Israel's "Remarks on Marxism and the philosophy of
language" looks at the encounter between Wittgenstein and Marx
within Marxist philosophy of language. He first considers Volosinov
and Bakhtin as anticipators of Wittgenstein, then turns to a critique
of Rossi-Landi's reading of Wittgenstein, and ends by recommending
Markus' use of Wittgenstein in developing a contemporary Marxist
philosophy of language.
Part VI, "Knowledge, morality and politics" reprises the subtitle
of the book and promises the most direct engagement with the aim of
showing how the encounter between Marx and Wittgenstein can be
philosophically productive. Kitching's "Marxism and
reflectivity" approaches the question of whether Marxism is a
science by way of a highly critical reading of Wright, Levine, and
Sober's Reconstructing Marxism. He identifies the leading
failure of that book as a lack of reflexivity, the very reflexivity
that Kitching identifies as central to both Marx's and
Wittgenstein's approach to understanding practice. Read's "Marx
and Wittgenstein on vampires and parasites" draws parallels between
Wittgenstein on the relationship between the language of everyday and
philosophical language, and Marx's account of exploitation in
capitalism. Finally, Fann's "Beyond Marx and Wittgenstein (A
confession of a Wittgensteinian Marxist turned Taoist)" provides an
apt autobiographical conclusion. It tells the story of his journey
from postwar Taiwan to the US in search of a rational faith, his
combination of Wittgenstein's critique of metaphysics with
Marxism-Leninism's critique of capitalism, his proselytizing
support for Mao's Cultural Revolution, his rediscovery of
Wittgenstein's anti-scientism after the collapse of communism, and
his Taoist rejection of Wittgenstein's and Marx's demanding
ideals in favor of a life lived as an end in itself, not as a means
to an end.
To what extent, then, will the book as a whole realize its editors'
hopes that bringing Marx and Wittgenstein together in this way will
lead to an open, intense, and honest "dialogue both among and
between Marxists and Wittgensteinians" (xv)? That depends, to a
very large extent, on how one conceives of such a dialogue. Given the
differences in outlook and loyalties separating most Marxists and
most Wittgensteinians-the differences briefly summarized at the
beginning of this review-it seems unlikely that this collection of
attempts to forge links between Wittgenstein and Marxism will have
any more impact on "dominant understandings of Marx or
Wittgenstein" (Kitching, 11) than the surprisingly large number of
previous attempts to do so, a tradition that already includes a
number of books (Manser 1973, Rubinstein 1981, Easton 1983, Kitching
1988, Pleasants 1999) and many more journal articles.
However, that would be an overly narrow way to answer the question of
the potential impact of this book. Pleasants provides a helpful
framework here, distinguishing three broad kinds of attempts at
relating Marx and Wittgenstein (161). First, there are accounts that
try to show that Marx influenced Wittgenstein, either through
Wittgenstein's reading of specific texts of Marx, or via some
intermediary. As Pleasants notes, these projects are a familiar, and
fairly limited, kind of intellectual history. Furthermore, given the
very scanty evidence, they will always seem speculative at best,
wishful thinking at worst. Second, there are interpretations that
argue for some similarity, or parallel, between certain aspects of
their views, a "conventional scholarly exercise in textual
interpretation and theoretical construction" (161). The principal
problem with this approach, as T. E. Wilkerson unkindly but pithily
observes in his review of another "Wittgenstein and . . . "
project, is that "any two philosophers are similar in some respect,
but there is often little profit in dwelling on the
similarity."2
Third, there are writers who go further afield than the historians
and the drawers of similarities. Typically, they use methods or ideas
derived from one thinker to reconstruct the other, or draw on both
for social and political criticism. It is this project-making use
of Marx and Wittgenstein, rather than interpreting them-that is
encapsulated in the epigraph to Rossi-Landi's contribution: "Do
not seek for the meaning of a philosopher, seek for his use:
the meaning of a philosopher is his use in the culture."
(Pleasants, 161; Rossi-Landi, 185) These parts of this collection,
those that go beyond the letter of what Marx and Wittgenstein had to
say, are the ones that have the greatest promise and will hold the
most interest for a readership extending beyond those specializing in
Marx and Wittgenstein. Indeed, the particular topics discussed in
this book are connected with a number of broader currents of
contemporary thought. For there is a renewed interest at present in
bringing together Wittgenstein's contribution to a critique of
traditional philosophy, and his emphasis on bringing words home to
their ordinary uses, on the one hand, and a radical, or liberatory,
ethics and politics, on the other. Three collections of new essays
that exemplify these developments are The Legacy of Wittgenstein:
Pragmatism or Deconstruction (ed. Ludwig Nagl and Chantal Mouffe;
Peter Lang, 2001); Slow Cures and Bad Philosophers: Essays on
Wittgenstein, Medicine and Bioethics (ed. Carl Elliott; Duke
University Press, 2001) and Feminist Interpretations of Ludwig
Wittgenstein (ed. Naomi Scheman and Peg O'Connor; Pennsylvania
State University Press, 2002).
Furthermore, there is a strikingly autobiographical dimension to many
of the essays in this collection; taken together, they cast light on
the Nietzschean idea that "philosophy is always autobiography"
(Fann, 282). In contrast to most professional philosophy, which
aspires to read as if written from nowhere, many contributors tell us
about the relationship between their professional and personal lives
and the ideas they discuss. Carver's insightful essay draws our
attention to the need that readers have to construct an authorial
persona when reading Wittgenstein or Marx, a characterization of the
"who, when and why of writing it," in order to understand what
the author wrote. Carver notes that we do not only have to be able to
tell a story about what motivated Marx and Wittgenstein in order to
interpret what they wrote. The same point about emplotment
"certainly applies to the way that interpretations of texts by Marx
and Wittgenstein are constructed by commentators . . . Readers thus
have the job of learning about commentators as authors when
reading their texts, as well as learning about Marx and
Wittgenstein when reading theirs" (96). Similarly, we readers of
Marx and Wittgenstein have the job of learning about the
contributors to the volume as authors when reading
their texts. One of the pleasures of this book is the willingness
of a number of authors to tell us about how their personal,
political, and philosophical lives are related. Part of what we learn
from their autobiographical stories is the moral seriousness of their
interpretations of Marx and Wittgenstein: the sense of elation felt
on discovering that they could reconcile certain views, or their
distress at finding that certain aspects of one or the other's
thought had to be rejected. We also learn that the most interesting
connections between Marx and Wittgenstein that the book draws are
neither historical connections between those two figures, nor
systematic parallels between their thought, but rather the
connections that have been forged by their readers.
Endnotes
1.
Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations, Preface. Ray Monk reports
that Wittgenstein once told Rowland Hutt: "I am a communist, at
heart" (Monk, Ludwig Wittgenstein: The Duty of Genius, p. 343. New
York, Macmillan, 1990.)
2.
T. E. Wilkerson, review of Russell Goodman's Wittgenstein and
William James, Mind 2003, p. 346. I should add that I do not agree
with Wilkerson's harsh assessment of Goodman's book.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
© Notre Dame Philosophical
Reviews
ISSN: 1538 - 1617
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