| A Review of: Knowledge and Civilization by by Gianni Vattimo and Santiago ZabalaIn Knowledge and Civilization Barry Allen gives us another account
and reworking of the problem of knowledge, which he inherited and
admirably developed from the philosophy of his mentor, Richard
Rorty. This book offers an extension of the thesis fleshed out in
Truth in Philosophy, which Allen published twelve years ago. Both
books are redescriptions of philosophy not only after metaphysics,
but also after the so-called "analytical/continental division"
that is quietly coming to an end. The conclusion of this philosophical
division is not being replaced by another foundational division,
but by "conversational philosophy" (at the end of his
book, discussing the meaning of "civilization" for the
Greeks, Allen clearly states that "we are still pursuing the
conversation, which is still called philosophy.") This is
neither a philosophical position, nor a statement about method, but
a way beyond interpreting "knowledge" as justified beliefs
with foundational pretensions. The book contains a foreword by Rorty
and is divided into three parts: In the first part knowledge is
variously defined-analytically, dialectically, and polemically; in
the second part, Allen looks at knowledge as it is conceived and
presented by three great modern thinkers: Nietzsche, Foucault, and
Rorty; and, finally, in the last part, knowledge is discussed as
an aspect of the history and evolution of human civilizations.
"Knowledge," according to Allen, "is artifactual;
it exists through our act alone" as a bridge, a museum, or
even as a book since these are kinds of achievements that "reveal
ourselves more than they reflect, mirrorlike, an order of fact'
or being'." Pragmatically considering "knowledge"
not as a problem of essence (of what something is), but rather of
existence (of how it can bej), Allen has produced a text which
counters not only what C.P. Snow meant by the "two cultures",
but also what Quine posited when he said that "philosophy of
science is in philosophy enough." There are no methodological
justifications to divide culture strictly into scientific and
humanist spheres, and likewise there is no need to reduce philosophy
to the realm of science (with its narrow domain of truth') since
knowledge comes from "civilization, not from truth."
Snow's division and Quine's reduction are precisely what Allen is
arguing against in this book.
While writing this review in Rome (Allen would probably call it a
town of infinite overlapping artifacts of materialized history),
it occurred to us that the most interesting point Allen makes in
his introduction is that knowledge was cultivated some 50,000 years
after the evolutionary consolidation of our species, and, moreover,
that despite what the Bible says, knowledge does not grow on trees
and does not exist just because we need it. Knowledge is not a
methodological linguistic game or scientific routine; it is a
"superior artifactual performance", and "its
performance" is what counts, not its essence.
Thus, Allen is processing an "actual philosophy", which
does not focus on the presence of a form that makes a thing knowable,
but on the form's integral involvement in the history-making of
human civilization. Rejecting traditional epistemological theories
which confine knowledge to language, he not only demonstrates how
knowledge is older than civilization (which began with the first
cities some 5000 years ago), but also how the millennia of urbanism
has left its mark on knowledge. In his arguments against epistemology,
Allen explains that non-discursive knowledge cannot be translated
into language-a number of true sentences-because, for example, there
are no grounds for enshrining true sentences about engineering in
order to produce a global condition of knowledge related to
engineering. Otherwise, an engineer would only have to understand
a number of true propositions about engineering in order to become
a successful engineer. But experience shows us that there are
different schools, traditions, and most of all, each engineer has
its own talent and intuition to aid him.
The chapter on Rorty, in the middle of the book, is very useful for
understanding both the link between Allen and his mentor, but also
Allen's redescription of Rorty's conversationalist idea of knowledge.
Although Allen is not convinced that "language is the ultimate
context" for understanding knowledge, he is certain "that
we enjoy no direct, intuitive, spontaneous, unmediated cognitive
contact with anything. Thought, awareness, choice, experience,
intention, and action are invariably mediated: by artifacts, symbols,
preferences, neurology, culture, ecology, evolution." Allen
agrees with Rorty when he states that language was the only thing
taken really seriously in twentieth-century academic philosophy
(despite the analytical/continental division which characterized
it), but he does not think it is possible to "separate language
from the organism that speaks. You cannot separate language from
the neurology that makes speech possible, and you cannot separate
that neurology from the entire evolution that made it possible."
The big difference between Allen and Rorty lies in the fact that
Rorty does not see anything worthwhile in epistemology, whereas
Allen recognizes it as an "academic tradition of bad answers
to good questions."
The questions were good because they stemmed from earlier human
activity which helped constitute the civilized world we live in
now: "philosophy," Allen argues, "has always been
an interrogation of the civilization that embeds it. There is no
occasion for philosophy prior to cities, and the city, its urbanity
and civility and all that they shelter, set the topics for every
enduringly interesting work of philosophy. Knowledge is such a topic
because civilization is an accomplishment of knowledge."
The final part of the book, entitled "Knowledge, Evolution,
Civilization", is where Allen states his two main theories:
On the one hand, "the bio-cognitive structures through which
we apprehend the world are products of the same mechanism that makes
the world the way it is," and, on the other hand, "the
evolution of our species is not the evolution of knowledge, whose
origin is postevolutionary. Cultivating knowledge is not something
we evolved' to do, but something we discovered we can do, superbly,
because of how we did evolve."
The pragmatic nature of Allen's theory of knowledge recalls Dewey,
James, and Heidegger's philosophical temperament; it doesn't bind
knowledge to any process of natural selection, as Neo-Darwinian
theories of knowledge have done. Instead, it recognizes the
"contingency" of civilization. This knowledge, which we
now call "civilization of the West", began many times
over as "the contingently discovered preference of a few,"
and not as a mechanism responding to natural laws. According to
Allen, natural selection didn't uncover our capacity for knowledge;
we "did that ourselves when, well after the evolutionary
emergence of our species, the cultivation of knowledge came into
view as an option. At that moment biological forces or natural
selections were well and truly done with us, and the rest is
everything we made for ourselves."
The fact that it was an "option" may dishearten many
readers who believe that the history of evolution has taken the
only one, predestined course toward truth. But the origin of our
culture is nothing other than the cultivation of "preference":
culture consists of the subjective decision to do things we did not
evolve to do, but "discovered" we could do. The "value
of knowledge" and the "civility of cities" become
two sides of the same problem, and this will determine our future
on earth.
Allen concludes the book drawing considerations from evolutionary
biology, anthropology, archeology, history of cities, art and
technology, in order to show that life in cities-therefore
civilization-is a choice we acted on for the past 5,000 years, and
which recalls that every city has "an architectural actuality"
or "urban net" that continues to determine our future.
The main achievement of Knowing through Civilization is that it
brings knowledge into the greater field of "performative
artifacts" rather than "systematic language" (as
most modern philosophy has done until now). Recognizing Western
philosophy as predominantly epistemological, as fixated on propositional
truth, Allen has convincingly argued that "knowledge is not
belief-plus anything, [nor is it what] is essentially true, [and
neither] does truth explain its value. It is the accomplishment,
at once artistic and technical, of superlative artifactual
performance." This book will help philosophers, biologists,
anthropologists, and many intellectuals understand that their work
and knowledge of the world is not a simple interpretation or
description, but an active production which is dissolving the
objective-subjective cultural division in which Snow and Quine
believed.
|