The Enlightenment refers to a period centered around the
eighteenth century when philosophers argued over the need to focus on the use
of reason to justify opinions and actions.
This was an era where the goal was to establish rules for society in
which the dominance of religious faith and monarchical power were diminished
and were replaced by principles that were “rational” and evidence-based. This “Age of Reason” has always been viewed
as a mixed blessing for humanity. Reason
has led to mankind’s greatest advances as well as its most horrendous errors;
producing both tremendous advances in health and longevity as well as repeated
instances of genocide. And if one defines a rational person as one who uses
reason and logic to form opinions and guide actions, why do we feel that we are
surrounded by so many irrational people? Could it be that we are inherently irrational,
or could it be that we misunderstand the concept of rationality?
Kwame Anthony Appiah discusses some of the philosophical
contentions surrounding rationality and irrationality that exist to this day in
Dialectics of Enlightenment for the New York Review of Books. In the process, he discusses things of
interest to philosophers, but also produces some illuminating thoughts for the
rest of us. On the topic of what is
rational and what is not, Appiah refers to his father’s cultural belief systems.
“My father, as was the norm
among Asante of his generation, thought that there were many invisible spirits
in the world, who could advance his causes if he conformed to rules they had
laid down, and he was taught that ‘avoid eating bush meat,’ a stipulation of
his particular Asante clan, was one of those rules. He was being reasonable,
therefore, in his avoidance of eating bush meat. From an outside perspective,
though, we can see that it was not rational, because there are no such spirits.
(Sorry, Dad.)”
Appiah fails to quote the source for his conclusion that “there
are no such spirits.” It would seem it
continues to be just as difficult to prove there are no gods or spirits as it
is to prove that they exist. Yet,
without proof, Appiah defines his father to be irrational by a perspective of his
choosing. He goes further and allows
that his father’s views were “reasonable” given his father’s state of knowledge
at the time.
“To learn about an illness, my
Asante ancestors might have consulted a fetish priest; today we might send a
blood sample off to a lab. On an individual level, my Asante ancestors, acting
on the basis of trusted authority, weren’t less reasonable than we are.”
So how can it be that Appiah uses reason and logic and is
rational, while his father used reason and logic and was deemed
irrational? An explanation for this is
provided which implies that individuals are incapable, on their own, of acquiring
the knowledge required to act rationally.
They must be supported by a “rational” knowledge infrastructure that can
assist them.
“…the analysis of rationality
must expand beyond the individual level. Where traditional belief practices and
natural science differ is as institutions: the social organization of inquiry
makes all the difference.”
“It’s a critical fact that the
cognitive division of labor in advanced societies provides each of us with
epistemological resources far greater than any that would fit between our ears.
We can talk casually about entangled electrons, the Bantu migration,
gram-negative diplococci, and Petrarchan sonnets because there are communities
of researchers who know about these things. ‘Meanings’ just ain’t in the head!’
the philosopher Hilary Putnam once observed: that is, the meaning of our
sentences involves both a particular relation to reality and a particular
relation to other, expert users of the language. Rationality, a fortiori, isn’t
in the head, either. It’s something we do with one another and the world.”
Appiah seems to be claiming that modern people have
access to knowledge canonized by agreement of experts on particular topics. He doesn’t say whether that agreement has to
be unanimous or could result from mere majority rule, but he does imply that
belief in these collective conclusions forms the basis for rational
deliberations on the part of a “rational” individual. This dependence on unknown others as a basis
for individual analyses is rather disturbing.
It is well documented that consensus opinions by economists, historians,
and scientists have often been found to be in error. In the medical sciences, errors, inaccuracies,
and outright fraud are exposed almost daily.
In addition, this reliance on “recognized” experts reeks of conformity rather
than cognitive deliberation.
Disagreement with conventional wisdom is not necessarily irrational; and
how can progress ever be made without the questioning of conventional wisdoms?
As society has become more complex, individual success
has become more dependent on becoming expert in a few particular things. We are guided to “learn more and more about
less and less.” It can be exciting and
entertaining to become an intellectual gadfly, wondering about asking annoying
and troubling questions of these experts, but it is difficult to earn a living
that way. This enforced specialization
may produce an “efficient” economy, but it does not necessarily produce good
citizens. Citizenship requires time and
effort spent deliberating on issues, but our “efficient” economy produces
wealth and the perverse need to work ever-longer hours in pursuit of that
wealth. A more ideal society might focus
more on the creation of leisure time than on the creation of wealth.
Meanwhile, given the society we live in, we should
recognize that one person’s treasure can be another person’s trash, and one
person’s rationality can be another person’s irrationality.
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