The
years 2016 and 2017 gives one the suspicion that our society is dysfunctional.
Our political structure is useless, our institutions inept. Faced
with the terror of existence, young people react with violence and
seek certainty Faced with manageable problems such as a austerity and
economic theory our democracy self-destructs. Anger is everywhere;
understanding is nowhere.
Although
a “democratic” society cannot function unless its citizens are
able to rationally debate one another, rationality is missing from
our politics. We assail our political enemies with intractable
opinions and self-righteous anger. An ugly bitterness pervades
everything. Meanwhile, our country is slowly but surely committing
suicide.
It
seems to me that this dysfunctional political dialogue, which stems
from the iron certainty we grant our opinions, is the most pressing
problem confronting us in 2017. In fact, it is a crisis. For without
the ability to carry on a useful dialogue, we cannot solve our
greatest challenges, or even our smallest ones.
This
raises the question: How can we solve this crisis? Because the
capacity to debate requires the capacity to think, I believe the
answer lies in philosophy.
Why
philosophy? Because the study of philosophy, the “love of wisdom,”
creates and nurtures thoughtful minds, minds that can — as
Aristotle suggests — entertain a thought without accepting it. With
a philosophic worldview, a Republican who despises any tax increase
or economic stimulus could at least consider the notion of tax hikes
or Keynesian economics. A Democrat facing antithetical ideas could do
likewise. Thought rather than anger could become the default response
to opposing worldviews.
Indeed,
philosophy can do a great deal to lessen the anger that is growing
like a cancerous tumor in modern America. The tools exist in both
Eastern and Western thought — in the Stoic exhortation to accept
the present as it is, in Buddhist meditation, in the Humanist’s
transcendent appeal to reason, in Kant’s categorical imperative.
Philosophy can help us inculcate virtue for, in the words of
Socrates, “knowledge is virtue.”
While
some philosophies obviously conduce toward peace more than others,
while some philosophers (Marcus Aurelius) seem kinder than others
(Nietzsche), the open-minded study of different philosophies at least
opens one up to the possibility that one is wrong. One realizes, like
Socrates did, that knowledge is anything but certain, that true
wisdom lies in realizing how much one does
not know,
in understanding that our knowledge of the universe (and therefore of
earthly things like politics) is utterly inadequate, perhaps
comparable to the area of a pin’s tip against a table. This
realization makes one less angry when confronted with opposing views,
replacing counterproductive anger with productive curiosity.
Despite
the benefits of the philosophic outlook, we do not cultivate this
mindset in our children. In fact, philosophy is almost entirely
absent from the UK education system schools.. While some young
peiopkle may have heard of Socrates, Plato, or Aristotle, most do not
truly understand their philosophies — much less the philosophies of
men like Descartes, Schopenhauer, or Nietzsche. This is shameful,
because a person who does not understand the history of thought does
not understand the rationality behind our political system.
The
first time I read a philosopher was not until I was abou 30. My
professor assigned Plato’s Republic,
and while at first I (admittedly) did not understand anything,
eventually I became absolutely enamored with this incredible man.
Here was a person who had thought about so many of the same things I
had, albeit thousands of years ago and with much more sophistication
than I could ever muster. What is justice? What is truth? Why do
people suffer? Is there an afterlife? These are the questions that
children ask their parents, the questions that scare us most, and
perhaps because of this fear we do not consider them when we grow up.
I
think this is a great mistake. We should consider these questions.
For by reading philosophy, I became less frightened of them. I no
longer shirked away from contemplating death (thanks Epicurus) or
morality (thanks Kant) or misfortune (thanks Epictetus). More, I
realized that anger — in both politics and everyday life — is
largely a reaction to fear, and that this fear can be lessened
exponentially through the sort of reflection philosophy fosters.
I
don’t know why philosophy isn’t taught in the School system.
Perhaps the subject seems too esoteric or pretentious. Perhaps there
is a fear that philosophy could encroach on the sort of questions
religion purports to answer — “how should one live,” “how
should one die,” and so on. Some parents may feel uncomfortable
with the idea of their children receiving answers to “the big
questions” from Socrates and Plato as well as from Jesus and Paul.
This
fear is unfounded. In general, philosophy does not squander religion;
it merely exhorts one to understand the world by opening one’s
mind. It encourages one to consider multiple possibilities (unlike
our politicians), only accepting the possibility that appeals to
one’s innate sense of reason. In a diseased society that is filled
with so much anger and bitterness — indeed, with so much madness —
we could do worse than expose our children to philosophy. In fact,
such exposure would teach our children to react to problems with an
inquisitive rather than angry mind — a concept that the children in
Congress have not yet grasped.
To
those who say philosophy is impractical (and thus that learning how
to think is impractical) I say: nonsense. Our society is
dysfunctional because we have forgotten how to think, if we ever
truly knew how to think at all. Although we as a society believe we
are in possession of all truth, we are not. To study philosophy is to
learn how woefully ignorant we are, and this knowledge can perhaps
teach us humility, can perhaps suggest to us that the other side may
have some value after all.
So
my point is this: Our diseased political system is in dire need of a
hefty dose of philosophy, and the best way to inject this dose into
American society is to start at the stem — to raise our children to
have a philosophic mindset by teaching philosophy in schools.
In the process we will, slowly but surely, be raising undividualswho possess the capacity to respond to problems with inquisitive rather than angry minds, perhaps ending this suicidal gridlock of post truth in these Brexit times. I hope it is not too late.
In the process we will, slowly but surely, be raising undividualswho possess the capacity to respond to problems with inquisitive rather than angry minds, perhaps ending this suicidal gridlock of post truth in these Brexit times. I hope it is not too late.
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