Imagine a world where people cannot truly know each other. Miscommunication abounds. Well-intentioned remarks offend, while obvious truths are hidden or denied. Certain actions are deemed admirable by some, yet annoying or abhorrent by others. Entire communities enter into downward spirals of evaporative cooling, unproductive bickering, and bitter tribalized feuding.My very immediate reaction to the first sentence was, wait, what other kind of world is there? Maybe the failure of imagination is mine, but I cannot imagine a world where we “truly know each other”, or even truly know ourselves for that matter. One thing you can say for humans, they are complex, and even for the people we know very well, there are always untapped depths.
This is the dystopian mindscape we find ourselves in when we fall prey to the biases and heuristics surrounding mental modeling and communication. What are these flaws in our understanding of each other? Is there a realistic path of self-improvement that can lead us to become better predictors and communicators? Can individual-level skills be parlayed into community-wide improvement?
But let՚s assume that we don՚t take “truly” overly literally. In fact, delete that sentence and I can՚t find anything objectionable at all. Still, I am not sure the idea of accurate representation of other people is the right model for human communication, any more than accurate physical cosmology is the right model for religion. Religion is about participating in ritual community; the truth of the words of a prayer have very little to do with it. And ordinary human communication also has a ritual quality to it, it is about expressing emotions; satisfying needs; finding, signalling, and reinforcing political/tribal realities; passing moral judgement; or simply enacting social roles. People interacting are only incidentally building more accurate models of each other; there is usually something else going on, and that something else has to be recognized and acknowledged.
My reading recommendation: All of Erving Goffman՚s work on strategic social interaction. Start with “On Cooling the Mark Out” and for more, see books like Interaction Ritual and Stigma: Notes on the Management of Spoiled Identity.
(2) Here՚s Scott Alexander making a typically lengthy and tightly-written fret about the fact that people use all sorts of irrational techniques to reinforce their beliefs, that tribalism is both a cause and a consequence of all sorts of questionable kinds of reasoning, and that lot of what should be rational debate is actually just mindless cheerleading for your side or hatred of the other side.
As in the first case, this seems like a great idea but in some respects it misses the point of political speech, which is not primarily about reasoned debate and more about forming coalitions of power.
My reading recommendation: All of Bruno Latour՚s work on the politics of knowledge, starting with Science in Action. Also his bit on Socrates and Callicles in the more recent Pandora՚s Hope.
The authors I am recommending have something in common: they both, in quite different ways, try to deal with the reality that humans are power- and status-seeking creatures well before they are truth- and comity-seeking. And whatever success they have at the latter is built using the machinery developed for the former. Latour and Goffmann both have developed a rich set of methods for describing the relationship between power and knowledge: Goffman applies the vocabulary of drama to ordinary life, and Latour merrily dispenses with normal ontological distinctions so he can describe power alliances between people, ideas, machinery, and nature. Conflict is an essential part of their world-pictures: people and other things have their own interests, the world is a chaos of competing interests, not a well-behaved unity.
This point of view may seem superficially cynical. But the depth of these authors՚ intellectual humanism elevates their work above mere cynicism. It is clear that despite seeing the often dirty and ugly machinery that underlies cognition and society, they still retain fondness for humans and their complex processes. And my argument for reading them is not based on either cynicism or idealism, but realism. They add a layer of depth to our understanding of human social processes.
9 comments:
I didn't much enjoy Ethan's presentation, but I'm pretty sure that he in particular has read some of Erving Goffman's stuff. He's kind of obsessed with seeing things as status transactions.
So then Goffman and Latour are realists without dispensing with the introspection and critical thinking that presumably helped form their alliances to begin with?
It's an interesting tension there. I'll have to check them out.
Seems lately the left is becoming more upfront about the upsides of raw self-interest - in the form of collective self-interest at least - while the right is doubling down on the merits of open-ended inquiry and the First Amendment etc.
Historically it's been conservatives who tout power and what's-in-it-for me…
I'm torn, indulging in partisanship but also finding writing like Scott Alexander's so spot-on when I'm feeling less heated.
Latour and Goffman are not really leftist, not in any standard way anyway. Goffman was a chronicler of the underdog, but more from the standpoint of how individuals cope with oppressive instutitons rather than overthrowing them. Latour's politics are enigmatic.
But leftists (real ones) have never been shy about collective self-interest, it's a basic part of Marxism.
An alternate title for this post was going to be "speaking power to truth".
I thought I'd seen Latour being hawked by lefty imprint Verso.
"Speaking Power to Truth." Nice.
There's something incredibly stubborn, and I believe biological, about out tendency to situate all politics along a single dimension, so one reason you'd seen Latour "hawked by lefty imprint Verso" is that he tends to break out of that sort of classification.
Steve Fuller, who I think would like to be seen as the most radical of social epistemologists, been too much of an apologist of creationists (at least he is widely interpreted that way), he has now according to one online debate "come clean" about being a "non-conformist Christians raised as Catholics" and while he seems to be quite a hardcore Transhumanist, he ties this to "the biblical message that humans are created in the image and likeness of God". He also would like to replace "right and left" with "up and down", though I don't think that will work any better than the famous libertarian "diagonal" reorientation of politics.
I could go on -- so many "conservatives" today would surely be viewed as radical ideologists by iconic ur-conservative Edmund Burke.
Political ideology is in dire need of sorting out into a less squirmy set of definable tendencies.
I would also submit D'Amasio's Descartes Error as one long and convincing argument that instances of "unmotivated reasoning" but that it is a catastrophe, so the distinction motivated/unmotivated is of less help than it seems to many.
I'm trying to grope towards an alternative answer to the question "What's so great about science, and how might it direct us to more sane and productive thinking" in a series:
http://therealtruthproject.blogspot.com/2014/11/what-is-machine-natural-machines-and.html
http://therealtruthproject.blogspot.com/2014/11/finding-your-invisible-elephant-science.html
http://therealtruthproject.blogspot.com/2014/11/global-warming-and-controversy-what-is.html
MT: I pretty certain you had 2 links to Latour, one to a preface -- to Science in Action probably, it was 17 pages PDF, and the other to the Socrates and Callicles chapter. The link to the first is no longer in the article.
P.S.: In previous posting, I meant to say:
instances of "unmotivated reasoning" can be found in nature but that it is a catastrophe
Do you mean the link from the word "realism" towards the end of the post?
Yes thanks, the link on "realism" is the one I could no longer find because I was looking in the wrong place.
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