Well, right on cue, the courts stopped Trump from doing
something he thought he had succeeded in doing.
We will see how this plays out.
Needless to say, I am watching closely, but I have virtually nothing to
add to the commentary you all have read, some of it by people genuinely
knowledgeable about Constitutional Law.
Accordingly, I am going to take my own advice and stay cool. Several of you have asked questions about Herbert
Marcuse, and so I thought as a diversion I would write today about my memories
of him. This will not be a theoretical
critique of his work, Lord knows, but a mixture of fairly elementary
observations and personal stories. Think
of it, if you will, as that little dish of sherbet upscale restaurants offer
between courses to cleanse the palate.
Much of what I say here can be found in my autobiography. However, long experience has taught me not to
assume that the world has read that compelling work.
I first met Herbert Marcuse in the fall of 1960, when I was
26 and he was 62. I was at the time
co-teaching a sophomore level tutorial with Barrington Moore Jr. in a new
program I headed at Harvard called Social Studies. Marcuse was teaching at Brandeis
University. He and Moore had become
close friends during World War II while both were working in DC at the OSS,
precursor to the CIA. Moore was on the
Russian Desk and Marcuse was on the German Desk. [Parenthetically, many of the leading social
scientists in the U. S. of all political stripes worked at the OSS during the
war, and after the war, despite any political differences they might have had,
they remained fast friends.]
Moore came from old New England money. He was a direct descendent of Clement Clark
Moore, of “T’was the night before Christmas” fame, and his grandfather had been
the Commodore of the New York Yacht Club.
Barry spent the summers on his boat off the Massachusetts coast with his
wife, Betty, whom he had met at OSS, and his winter vacations
skiing. His proudest boast was that he
had once been asked to join the Alta Ski Patrol. He was tall and thin, and his contempt for
bourgeois capitalist society was as much aristocratic as radical in origins. Barry’s home at Harvard was the Russian
Research Institute because he refused to join the Social Relations Department,
home of Talcott Parsons.
Barry decided that I should meet Herbert, so he and Betty
invited me and my girlfriend [we still talked that way then] to dinner at their
home in a lovely residential part of Cambridge.
Herbert and his wife Inge [widow of Franz Neumann] were the other
guests.
Herbert was a fleshy man with an open face, red cheeks, and
a great shock of white hair. He was rather
imposing at first meeting, and had a very thick German accent. I was almost two generations younger, very
wet behind the ears, but I had one great asset that won him over. To German intellectuals of Marcuse’s generation,
Immanuel Kant was the touchstone, the font of wisdom, the Real Deal. When Marcuse learned that this young
whippersnapper was finishing his first book, on the Critique of Pure Reason, he decided I was o.k. After dinner, while Barry watched with
amusement, Marcuse and I got into an argument about philosophy. Herbert, like many emigré intellectuals from the Frankfurt School, knew next to
nothing about Analytic Philosophy and tended to confuse it with another strange
American aberration, Behavioral Social Science.
At one point, Herbert launched into an attack on Willard Van Orman Quine,
ridiculing Quine’s use of the phrase “The present king of France is bald” to
illustrate the theory of definite descriptions.
I defended Quine, pointing out that the question he was addressing with
that example was one that had also agitated a number of famous medieval philosophers. I must have said something about my admiration
for Quine’s clarity [he had been my undergraduate teacher, and I had taken four
courses and graduate seminars with him before I was old enough to drive.] Marcuse responded by saying that in
philosophy, unclarity is a virtue.
Now, you must understand that Marcuse said this in a thick
accent, and since it flew in the face of everything I had learned in the
preceding ten years, I thought at first that I had misunderstood him. “Did you say that unclarity in philosophy is
a virtue?” “Yes,” Marcuse replied with a
puckish grin. “You are saying that in
philosophy it is a good thing not to be clear?” “Yes,” Marcuse said again, smiling even more
broadly.
At that point I concluded that I had just had dinner with a
madman – a charming, learned, engaging mad man, but a madman none the
less. It was not until four years later,
when Marcuse’s great work, One-Dimensional
Man, was published that I discovered what he had in mind. I think it is worth taking a moment to
explain.
In the late thirties, a group of clued up social scientists descended
on the Hawthorne, IL plant of the Western Electric Company to see whether their
“Operational Research” could do something about labor troubles at the
plant. The complaints of the workers,
they decided, were unhelpfully vague [“wages is too low,” for example, or “the
bathrooms stink”] so they decided to operationalize the concerns of the workers
by asking precise, clear, specific questions about their concerns, concerns which
could then be addressed, one by one, in precise, helpful, operationalized fashion. In One-Dimensional
Man, Marcuse argues that the real source of the worker discontent was the
deep structural exploitation definitive of capitalist economies, exploitation that
affected all of the workers regardless of the particular form in which it was manifested
in each worker’s life. One worker might
have a sick child who needed medicine that his wages did not pay for; a second
might need a more flexible working schedule to accommodate her family
obligations; a third might have weak eyesight that interfered with the
performance of her duties at the speed demanded by the bosses. So long as the workers expressed their
complaints in general, imprecise fashion, they were able to see that they had
common grievances, which made it easier for them to achieve solidarity throughout
the plant and strike for better wages and working conditions. When their problems were operationalized,
worker solidarity was destroyed, because it was made to seem as though they had
nothing in common on which to base that solidarity.
All of which might indeed lead someone to conclude that in
philosophy [a.k.a. social science] unclarity
is a virtue.
Four years after this dinner party, I had moved on, from
Harvard to Chicago and then to Columbia.
One day, I got a call from Barry.
Apparently, he and Herbert had gone to Arnold Tovell at Beacon Press, which
had contracted to publish One-Dimensional
Man, with a proposal for a little book to consist of two essays, one by
Barry on objectivity in social science [he was for it] and the other a chapter
by Herbert on “repressive tolerance” that had never made it into the big book. Tovell said two essays did not make a book,
you needed at least three, so Barry wanted to know whether I would like to
write the third essay, something on Tolerance.
Would I! I was being asked to become a co-author with
Barrington Moore, Jr. and Herbert Marcuse.
I figured my name would be made.
There was one small problem – I had nothing whatsoever to say about the
subject of tolerance. To be honest, I
had never thought about it. But that was
hardly an objection, so I sat down and cranked out an analysis and critique of
Liberalism, which I called “Beyond Tolerance.”
We needed a title for this slender production, so Tovell
called a meeting of the three of us at 25 Beacon Street, the address of the
Press, to brainstorm. We all sat around
a table and fielded ideas, none of which seemed terribly appealing. At last, Herbert, with a straight face,
proposed “A Critique of Pure Tolerance.”
I was appalled. I had recently
published my first book, Kant’s Theory of
Mental Activity, which had received restrained but favorable reviews. “Herbert,” I cried, “if I publish a book with
that title, my name will be mud in the profession!” “Don’t worry,” Marcuse replied with a malicious
smile, “no one will read it.”
Well, Herbert was almost right. Tovell had the brilliant idea of publishing
the little book in hard cover, to get serious reviews, but sized like an
old-fashioned paperback, so that it would be sold in those racks at train
stations and in drug stores where paperbacks were displayed back then. The little book had a stark black cover and looked
like a black version of Mao’s Little Red Book.
Alas Tovell got it backwards. The
book sold like a hardcover, which is to say hardly at all, and was ignored by
reviewers as though it was a paperback.
But then Marcuse’s big book came out just as the “60’s were revving
up. It went viral overseas when Daniel
Cohn-Bendit read the French translation and Rudi Dutschke [“Red Rudi”] read it
in German. Marcuse was hot, so Tovell brought out a new
edition of A Critique of Pure Tolerance,
this time in standard hard and soft covers, and it took off. That first year, the new edition sold 26,000
copies.
Some years later, after I had married my “girlfriend,” fathered
two sons, and moved to Northampton to teach at UMass, My wife and I decided to
drive in to Cambridge to see Barry and Betty Moore. Barry was the godfather of our younger son,
Tobias Barrington Wolff, who was then a darling tow headed three year old known
as Toby. When we got to the Moores’ home
we found that Herbert was there. Herbert
had gone to teach at UC San Diego when Brandeis refused to renew his contract in
1965, and he had recently lost his second wife, Inge. The afternoon was, in its way, a trifle
bizarre. Barry and Betty had never had
children, and Barry had absolutely no idea how to relate to a five year old and
a three year old. All he could think to do with Toby was to talk German to
him! But Marcuse was right in his
element. He picked up one of those old
rotating globes that Barry had on his desk, plunked himself down on the floor,
and spun it around, showing Toby where all the different countries were. Toby was enchanted.
At last, the time came for us to leave. Barry and Herbert walked the four of us to
the curb, where we loaded into our big green Chevy station wagon for the drive
home. As little Toby was about to climb
into the back seat, he stopped, looked up at Marcuse, raised his hand, and said
“Bye, Herbie.”
Marcuse and I crossed paths for the last time fifteen years
later, long after he had passed away. Our
family had moved to Boston so that my wife could accept a professorship at MIT
and I was casting about for a job in the Boston area. Fred Sommers, then the Chair of the
Philosophy Department, went to the Provost to tell him that he wanted to hire
me. The provost said, “What do you want
another Marcuse for?”
It was the greatest professional compliment I have ever
received.
10 comments:
Thank you very much for posting your recollections of Marcuse.
I don't know if you've ever seen the Brian Magee interview with Marcuse. Magee tries to be hostile, but Marcuse's ironic, dry sense of humor (which you note) makes hostility futile. Marcuse is too big a thinker and human being for Magee to take on.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4jFIfJBKdaw
I love that interview Wallerstein, Magee is completely unprepared to actually have a 'debate' with Marcuse.
Have you seen "Marcuse" the character in the Coen brothers film "Hail Caesar!"?
https://www.jacobinmag.com/2016/03/hail-caesar-coen-brothers-marx-clooney/
As someone whose a huge fan of most Coen brothers films (Bartin Fink is top three favorite movies), I thought Hail Caesar was a pile of garbage, and the portrayal of Marcuse was even worse... :/
Chris,
Magee, although conventionally very bright, is simply a more narrow and less creative thinker than Marcuse. I don't even see it as a contrast between two styles of philosophy since there are Marxists who are even less creative than Magee.
I think that with time Marcuse will be increasingly recognized as a first-rate social thinker or philosopher, one of the few of the 1950's and 1960's who is worth reading today.
I agree that it's not a difference of style. Magee is known for being quite critical of the more analytic strains of thought. That said, I've tried reading some of Magee's books, even the ones on Schopenhauer, and I've simply never found him to be an 'impressive' philosopher. But he is a great interviewer.
Very charming recollections. Frankly, it makes for a much needed break with the standard fare.
I know in the actual episode on Schopenhauer too, Magee specifically says Schopenhauer meant some kind of 'energy' or 'force' by 'will', which physics has largely proved correct. That's Magee's claim. But Schopenhauer explicitly rejects will is synonymous with 'enery' or 'force' in the physics sense.
I just googled Magee and he is actually quite an interesting person.
From a working class background, he went to the university on a scholarship. He's not a professional philosopher, as I had imagined. He was actually a Labor MP for one term. Here's the Wikipedia write-up:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bryan_Magee
Here's a recent BBC program where he appears or where perhaps they discuss him: it's not clear from the write-up. I haven't listened to it yet, but will tomorrow.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b073b0nj
For Chris and all those interested in Bryan Magee,
I listened to the BBC podcast entitled "Bryan Magee" and Magee does not appear nor
do they spend more than 5 minutes out of 40 talking about him. I guess the fact that the BBC entitles the podcast with his name indicates Magee's "star-power" in the U.K.
In any case, it's an interesting and at times very critical discussion of philosophy, both in and out of academia today.
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