I was sitting here at my desk, wondering what on earth I
could find to blog about, when I thought to check my blog to see whether any
comments had been posted. Sure enough, I
found a post by Magpie that immediately stimulated a flow of thoughts. Here is what Magpie had to say:
"Prof., Only now I've come to your tutorial
on Mannheim and I find it fascinating.
First, let me explain in my own words (please, bear with me and remember that I'm not a philosopher): In Mannheim's views, "free-floating intellectuals" seem to be characters who, by virtue of their superior knowledge and lack of class attachments, manage to overcome the influence of ideologies. That's why they can see things clearly. Therefore, they can judge what theories are right (or are closer to be right) and can presumably take decisions for the general good.
A few questions about the "free-floating intellectuals": Aren't they the modern day equivalent to Plato's Philosopher-King? And don't contemporary economists see themselves in similar ways?"
First, let me explain in my own words (please, bear with me and remember that I'm not a philosopher): In Mannheim's views, "free-floating intellectuals" seem to be characters who, by virtue of their superior knowledge and lack of class attachments, manage to overcome the influence of ideologies. That's why they can see things clearly. Therefore, they can judge what theories are right (or are closer to be right) and can presumably take decisions for the general good.
A few questions about the "free-floating intellectuals": Aren't they the modern day equivalent to Plato's Philosopher-King? And don't contemporary economists see themselves in similar ways?"
There is a great deal to say about these
observations and questions. First,
Mannheim. In his great book, Ideology and Utopia, Karl Mannheim
begins by introducing us to the extremely troubling idea that frequently, in
public debates about matters of major social, economic, and political importance,
speakers go beyond questioning the facts or arguments of their opponents to
calling into question their very honesty or authenticity. For example, proponents of tax cuts for
business, who claim that such cuts will stimulate growth, are accused of
seeking to advance the interests of the rich regardless of the soundness of the
arguments. The aim of such accusations
is not to defeat an argument but to wound and even destroy the person making
the argument. In response, of course, those
attacked attempt to undermine the reputations of their attackers with similar
exposés of their real motivations.
Mannheim moves from analyses of particular
accusations of hidden motivations and parti
pris to general systemic structures of such unacknowledged motivations,
which he groups into two categories:
systematic exaggerations of the stability and inevitability of a social
and economic order, whose purpose it is to strengthen that order by
representing alternatives to it as impossible or inconceivable -- he calls
these ideologies -- and systematic
exaggerations of the fragility and vulnerability of a social and economic
order, whose purpose it is to weaken that order and encourage those who wish to
overthrow it -- he calls these utopias. [Hence the title of the book.] Mannheim also calls these full-scale
systematic misrepresentations "worldviews" or weltanschuungen. Drawing heavily on the analyses of Karl Marx,
Mannheim argues that the world-view embraced by an individual is a function of
that individual's social and economic position.
So, leaving aside what were once called "class traitors,"
members of the bourgeoisie embrace an ideological world-view that represents
the existing order as eternal and invulnerable, while members of the working
class [once they have been properly liberated from the ideological blinders imposed
on them by their capitalist masters, of course] embrace a utopian world-view
that represents the existing order as ripe for revolution.
But as he broadens the concepts of ideology and
utopia to encompass full-scale weltanschuungen,
Mannheim encounters a problem. His
original motivation in this penetrating analysis was to expose the falsity and
illegitimacy of such attacks ad hominem
on the person of someone advancing an argument in the public debate. But that exposure presupposes that there is
in fact an alternative free from parti
pris, a rational, scientific, academically respectable standpoint from
which arguments may be evaluated on the basis of their facts and reasoning
alone. However, once Mannheim moves to
what he calls the general notion of ideology, to the notion of comprehensive
worldviews, he seems to lose any vantage point from which to offer such
rational critiques. He lacks what
Archimedes called a pou sto, a
"place where he may stand."
[Archimedes' point was that if he had such a place, he could, with a
large enough lever, even move the earth.]
This conclusion, which follows directly from his
analysis, clearly troubles Mannheim greatly, and in response he advances a
position that I, for one, have always considered wildly implausible and fatally
susceptible precisely to a Mannheimian critique: the theory of the "free-floating
intellectual." There are certain
individuals, Mannheim suggests, who have no socio-economic class position but rather
float freely in the interstices between the several classes of bourgeois
capitalist society, and who are therefore uniquely positioned to offer
objective, value-neutral, non-ideological and non-utopian critiques of the flow
of arguments in the public sphere. Who
are these individuals? Intellectuals like
himself.
Well you may snicker. But reflect.
This is exactly the claim made by John Rawls in A Theory of Justice for those on whom the veil of ignorance has
descended in the Original Position.
One is reminded of Martin Jay's wonderful
report, in The Dialectical Imagination,
of what happened when he interviewed the German intellectuals who had emigrated
to America from the Frankfurt School of Social Research to escape the
Nazis. He asked each of them whether
there was any deeper significance in the fact that they were all upper middle
class assimilated German Jews. To a man
[or woman -- he also spoke to Hannah Arendt] they said, "Not a bit." These, after all, were the most sophisticated
social critics in the world, people who were capable of reading deep ideological
meaning into popular songs played on the radio.
And yet they were absolutely blind to their own location in a particular
socio-economic moment of a particular country.
Magpie asks whether these free-floating intellectuals
are the modern counterparts of Plato's Philosopher-Kings. That is indeed a shrewd thrust. Plato, of course, has no usable conception of
the social as distinguished both from the individual psychological and from the
physical or natural, but it is striking that he proposes feeding the lower
orders in his ideal republic a myth of the metals that is patently an early
version of an ideology. Plato can of
course imagine that his philosopher-kings might over time regress to timocratic
rulers, and over several generations descend even to the level of the mob rule
of democracy. But he cannot at all
contemplate the possibility that those who have grasped the nature of the Good
might nonetheless be in the grip of a self-serving ideology.
As for modern mainstream economists, they float
about as freely as limpets! Their particular
self-deception is the belief that mathematics confers upon them freedom from
ideology. Inasmuch as I am about to
spend an entire semester dealing with that particular fantasy, I shall say no
more here.
3 comments:
Prof.
Thanks for the comments! I'll go again through everything later (I've gotta go to work!).
I totally agree on modern day economists being in reality like limpets (more like barnacles, maybe?); but I don't think this is how they see themselves.
Thanks for the long reply, Prof. Very informative, as always.
I am very interested in this subject of ideology. As I am sure you noticed, it has a lot to do with Marxism and the critiques it has suffered from mainstream economists (perhaps you don't know it, but it has plenty to do with Joan Robinson).
Regardless (seeing that you mentioned mathematics), maybe you would prefer to leave this additional question for another opportunity, but, what the heck, let me ask anyway:
It's a very well-known fact that mainstream economists often make an entirely undesirable use of mathematics; that much is not contentious and even many mainstream economists would readily acknowledge it. From being a shorthand language useful in some cases, it has become the reason d'etre of economics for some other economists. A kind of a fetish, where the fact of expressing nonsense in mathematical symbols makes the nonsense sensible.
But I have observed that some critics of mainstream economics seem to take their opposition to the use of economics to what -- to me -- seems like an equally absurd extreme. Without mentioning names (in fairness, here we find some Marxists, too) some critics seem to attribute to mathematics an almost mystical negative power: for them, it's not the assumptions underlying mainstream economics that makes it largely useless for scientific purposes, it's the development of these assumptions by mathematical means that is responsible for that.
I know you have used maths in your own work. Therefore, you see a legitimate use of maths in economics. What would be the limits to this legitimate use, in your opinion?
Oops. Where it reads:
"But I have observed that some critics of mainstream economics seem to take their opposition to the use of ECONOMICS"
It should read:
"But I have observed that some critics of mainstream economics seem to take their opposition to the use of MATHEMATICS"
Sorry.
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