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Obscurantism

In the fields of philosophy, the terms obscurantism and obscurationism identify and describe the anti-intellectual practices of deliberately presenting information in an abstruse and imprecise manner that limits further inquiry and understanding of a subject.[1] The two historical and intellectual denotations of obscurantism are: (1) the deliberate restriction of knowledge — opposition to the dissemination of knowledge; and (2) deliberate obscurity — a recondite style of writing characterized by deliberate vagueness.[2][3]

The humanist scholar Johannes Reuchlin (1455–1522) actively opposed religious obscurantism.

In the 18th century, Enlightenment philosophers applied the term obscurantist to any enemy of intellectual enlightenment and the liberal diffusion of knowledge.[4] In the 19th century, in distinguishing the varieties of obscurantism found in metaphysics and theology, from the "more subtle" obscurantism of the critical philosophy of Immanuel Kant and of modern philosophical skepticism, Friedrich Nietzsche said that: "The essential element in the black art of obscurantism is not that it wants to darken individual understanding, but that it wants to blacken our picture of the world, and darken our idea of existence."[5][a]

Restricting knowledge edit

 
In the 18th century, the Marquis de Condorcet was a political scientist who correctly perceived obscurantism as a contributing cause of the French Revolution in 1789.

In restricting education and knowledge to a ruling class, obscurantism is anti-democratic in its components of anti-intellectualism and social elitism, which exclude the majority of the people, deemed unworthy of knowing the facts about their government and the political and economic affairs of their city-state.[6][7]

In 18th century monarchic France, the political scientist Marquis de Condorcet documented the obscurantism of the aristocracy and their indifference to the social problems that provoked the French Revolution (1789–1799), which violently overthrew the aristocracy and deposed the monarch, King Louis XVI of France (r. 1774–1792).

In the 19th century, the mathematician William Kingdon Clifford, who was an early proponent of Darwinism, worked to eliminate obscurantism in England after hearing clerics — who privately agreed with him about evolution — publicly denounce evolution as un-Christian heresy. Moreover, in the realm of organized religion, obscurantism is a distinct strain of anti-intellectualism that is independent of theologic allegiance, by which distinction, religious fundamentalism presupposes sincere religious belief in the person, whereas censorship is obscurantism that is based upon the élite power-group manipulating the religious faith of the majority of the population of believers.[8]

Leo Strauss edit

Political philosophy edit

In the 20th century, the American conservative political philosopher Leo Strauss, for whom philosophy and politics intertwined, and his neo-conservative adherents adopted the notion of government by the enlightened few as political strategy. He noted that intellectuals, dating from Plato, confronted the dilemma of either an informed populace "interfering" with government, or whether it were possible for good politicians to be truthful and still govern to maintain a stable society—hence the noble lie necessary in securing public acquiescence. In The City and Man (1964), he discusses the myths in The Republic that Plato proposes effective governing requires, among them, the belief that the country (land) ruled by the state belongs to it (despite some having been conquered from others), and that citizenship derives from more than the accident of birth in the city-state. Thus, in the New Yorker magazine article "Selective Intelligence", Seymour Hersh observes that Strauss endorsed the "noble lie" concept: the myths politicians use in maintaining a cohesive society.[6][7]

Shadia Drury criticized Strauss's acceptance of dissembling and deception of the populace as "the peculiar justice of the wise", whereas Plato proposed the noble lie as based upon moral good. In criticizing Natural Right and History (1953), she said that "Strauss thinks that the superiority of the ruling philosophers is an intellectual superiority and not a moral one ... [he] is the only interpreter who gives a sinister reading to Plato, and then celebrates him."[9]

Esoteric texts edit

Leo Strauss also was criticized for proposing the notion of "esoteric" meanings to ancient texts, obscure knowledge inaccessible to the "ordinary" intellect. In Persecution and the Art of Writing (1952), he proposes that some philosophers write esoterically to avert persecution by the political or religious authorities, and, per his knowledge of Maimonides, Al Farabi, and Plato, proposed that an esoteric writing style is proper for the philosophic text. Rather than explicitly presenting his thoughts, the philosopher's esoteric writing compels the reader to think independently of the text, and so learn. In the Phædrus, Socrates notes that writing does not reply to questions, but invites dialogue with the reader, thereby minimizing the problems of grasping the written word. Strauss noted that one of writing's political dangers is students' too-readily accepting dangerous ideas—as in the trial of Socrates, wherein the relationship with Alcibiades was used to prosecute him.

For Leo Strauss, philosophers' texts offered the reader lucid "exoteric" (salutary) and obscure "esoteric" (true) teachings, which are concealed to the reader of ordinary intellect; emphasizing that writers often left contradictions and other errors to encourage the reader's more scrupulous (re-)reading of the text. In observing and maintaining the "exotericesoteric" dichotomy, Strauss was accused of obscurantism, and for writing esoterically.

Bill Joy edit

 
The computer scientist Bill Joy proposed controlling the public's access to certain data, information, and knowledge, because the public cannot handle the truth.

In the article "Why the Future Doesn't Need Us" (April 2000), the computer scientist Bill Joy, then chief scientist at Sun Microsystems, in the sub-title of the article proposed that: "Our most powerful twenty-first-century technologies — robotics, genetic engineering, and nanotech — are threatening to make humans an endangered species", and said that:

The experiences of the atomic scientists clearly show the need to take personal responsibility, the danger that things will move too fast, and the way in which a process can take on a life of its own. We can, as they did, create insurmountable problems in almost no time flat. We must do more thinking up front if we are not to be similarly surprised and shocked by the consequences of our inventions.[10]

Critics readily noted the obscurantism in Joy's elitist proposal for limiting the dissemination of "certain knowledge" in order to preserve society. A year later, in the Science and Technology Policy Yearbook 2001, the American Association for the Advancement of Science answered Joy's propositions with the article "A Response to Bill Joy and the Doom-and-Gloom Technofuturists", wherein the computer scientists John Seely Brown and Paul Duguid said that Joy's proposal was a form of technological tunnel vision, and that the technologically derived problems are infeasible, for disregarding the influence of non-scientists upon such societal problems.[11]

Appeal to emotion edit

 
The economist Friedrich August von Hayek

In the essay "Why I Am Not a Conservative" (1960), the economist Friedrich von Hayek said that political conservatism is ideologically unrealistic, because of the conservative person's inability to adapt to changing human realities and refusal to offer a positive political program that benefits everyone in a society. In that context, Hayek used the term obscurantism differently, to denote and describe the denial of the empirical truth of scientific theory, because of the disagreeable moral consequences that might arise from acceptance of fact.

Deliberate obscurity edit

The second sense of obscurantism denotes making knowledge abstruse, that is, difficult to grasp. In the 19th and 20th centuries obscurantism became a polemical term for accusing an author of deliberately writing obscurely, in order to hide his or her intellectual vacuousness. Philosophers who are neither empiricists nor positivists often are considered obscurantists[citation needed] when describing the abstract concepts of their disciplines. For philosophic reasons, such authors might modify or reject verifiability, falsifiability, and logical non-contradiction. From that perspective, obscure (clouded, vague, abstruse) writing does not necessarily indicate that the writer has a poor grasp of the subject, because unintelligible writing sometimes is purposeful and philosophically considered.[12]

Aristotle edit

 
Aristotle

Aristotle divided his own works into two classifications: "exoteric" and "esoteric". Most scholars have understood this as a distinction of intended audience, where exoteric works were written for the public, and the esoteric works were more technical works intended for use within the Lyceum.[13] Modern scholars commonly assume these latter to be Aristotle's own (unpolished) lecture notes or, in some cases, possible notes by his students.[14] However, the 5th-century neoplatonist Ammonius Hermiae writes that Aristotle's writing style is deliberately obscurantist so that "good people may for that reason stretch their mind even more, whereas empty minds that are lost through carelessness will be put to flight by the obscurity when they encounter sentences like these".[15]

In contemporary discussions of virtue ethics, Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics (The Ethics) stands accused of ethical obscurantism, because of the technical, philosophic language and writing style, and their purpose being the education of a cultured governing elite.[16]

Kant edit

Immanuel Kant employed technical terms that were not commonly understood by the layman. Arthur Schopenhauer contended that post-Kantian philosophers such as Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling, and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel deliberately imitated the abstruse style of writing practiced by Kant.[17]

Hegel edit

 
G. W. F. Hegel

G. W. F. Hegel's philosophy, and the philosophies of those he influenced, especially Karl Marx, have been accused of obscurantism. Analytic and positivistic philosophers, such as A. J. Ayer, Bertrand Russell, and the critical-rationalist Karl Popper, accused Hegel and Hegelianism of being obscure. About Hegel's philosophy, Schopenhauer wrote that it is "a colossal piece of mystification, which will yet provide posterity with an inexhaustible theme for laughter at our times, that it is a pseudo-philosophy paralyzing all mental powers, stifling all real thinking, and, by the most outrageous misuse of language, putting in its place the hollowest, most senseless, thoughtless, and, as is confirmed by its success, most stupefying verbiage".[18]

Nevertheless, biographer Terry Pinkard notes: "Hegel has refused to go away, even in analytic philosophy, itself."[19] Hegel was aware of his perceived obscurantism and perceived it as part of philosophical thinking: to accept and transcend the limitations of quotidian (everyday) thought and its concepts. In the essay "Who Thinks Abstractly?", he said that it is not the philosopher who thinks abstractly, but the layman, who uses concepts as givens that are immutable, without context. It is the philosopher who thinks concretely, because he transcends the limits of quotidian concepts, in order to understand their broader context. This makes philosophical thought and language appear obscure, esoteric, and mysterious to the layman.

Marx edit

 
Karl Marx in 1861

In his early works,[20] Karl Marx criticized German and French philosophy, especially German Idealism, for its traditions of German irrationalism and ideologically motivated obscurantism.[21] Later thinkers whom he influenced, such as the philosopher György Lukács and social theorist Jürgen Habermas, followed with similar arguments of their own.[22] However, philosophers such as Karl Popper and Friedrich Hayek in turn criticized Marx and Marxist philosophy as obscurantist (however, see above for Hayek's particular interpretation of the term).[23]

Heidegger edit

Martin Heidegger, and those influenced by him, such as Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas, have been labeled obscurantists by critics from analytic philosophy and the Frankfurt School of critical theory. Of Heidegger, Bertrand Russell wrote: "his philosophy is extremely obscure. One cannot help suspecting that language is here running riot. An interesting point in his speculations is the insistence that nothingness is something positive. As with much else in Existentialism, this is a psychological observation made to pass for logic."[24] That is Russell's complete entry on Heidegger, and it expresses the sentiments of many 20th-century analytic philosophers concerning Heidegger.[25]

Derrida edit

In their obituaries "Jacques Derrida, Abstruse Theorist, Dies at 74" (10 October 2004) and "Obituary of Jacques Derrida, French intellectual" (21 October 2004), The New York Times newspaper[26] and The Economist magazine[27] described Derrida as a deliberately obscure philosopher.

In Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity (1989), Richard Rorty proposed that in The Post Card: From Socrates to Freud and Beyond (1978), Jacques Derrida purposefully used undefinable words (e.g. différance) and used defined words in contexts so diverse that they render the words unintelligible, hence, the reader is unable to establish a context for his literary self. In that way, the philosopher Derrida escapes metaphysical accounts of his work. Since the work ostensibly contains no metaphysics, Derrida has, consequently, escaped metaphysics.[12]

Derrida's philosophic work is especially controversial among American and British academics, as when the University of Cambridge awarded him an honorary doctorate, despite opposition from among the Cambridge philosophy faculty and analytical philosophers worldwide. In opposing the decision, philosophers including Barry Smith, W. V. O. Quine, David Armstrong, Ruth Barcan Marcus, René Thom, and twelve others, published a letter of protestation in The Times of London, arguing that "his works employ a written style that defies comprehension ... [thus] Academic status based on what seems to us to be little more than semi-intelligible attacks upon the values of reason, truth, and scholarship is not, we submit, sufficient grounds for the awarding of an honorary degree in a distinguished university."[28]

In the New York Review of Books article "An Exchange on Deconstruction" (February 1984), John Searle comments on Deconstruction: "anyone who reads deconstructive texts with an open mind is likely to be struck by the same phenomena that initially surprised me: the low level of philosophical argumentation, the deliberate obscurantism of the prose, the wildly exaggerated claims, and the constant striving to give the appearance of profundity, by making claims that seem paradoxical, but under analysis often turn out to be silly or trivial".[29]

Lacan edit

Jacques Lacan was an intellectual who defended obscurantism to a degree. To his students' complaint about the deliberate obscurity of his lectures, he replied: "The less you understand, the better you listen."[30] In the 1973 seminar Encore, he said that his Écrits (Writings) were not to be understood, but would effect a meaning in the reader, like that induced by mystical texts. The obscurity is not in his writing style, but in the repeated allusions to Hegel, derived from Alexandre Kojève's lectures on Hegel, and similar theoretic divergences.

Sokal affair edit

The Sokal affair (1996) was a publishing hoax that the professor of physics Alan Sokal perpetrated on the editors and readers of Social Text, an academic journal of post-modern cultural studies that was not then a peer-reviewed publication. In 1996, as an experiment testing editorial integrity (fact-checking, verification, peer review, etc.), Sokal submitted "Transgressing the Boundaries: Towards a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity", a pseudoscientific article proposing that physical reality is a social construct, in order to learn whether Social Text would "publish an article liberally salted with nonsense if: (a) it sounded good, and, (b) it flattered the editors' ideological preconceptions".[31] Sokal's fake article was published in the spring/summer 1996 issue of Social Text, which was dedicated to the science wars about the conceptual validity of scientific objectivity and the nature of scientific theory, among scientific realists and postmodern critics in American universities.[32]

Sokal's reason for publication of a false article was that postmodernist critics questioned the objectivity of science, by criticising the scientific method and the nature of knowledge, usually in the disciplines of cultural studies, cultural anthropology, feminist studies, comparative literature, media studies, and science and technology studies. Whereas the scientific realists countered that objective scientific knowledge exists, riposting that postmodernist critics almost knew nothing of the science they criticized. In the event, editorial deference to "academic authority" (the author-professor) prompted the editors of Social Text not to fact-check Sokal's manuscript by submitting it to peer review by a scientist.

Concerning the lack of editorial integrity shown by the publication of his fake article in Social Text magazine, Sokal addressed the matter in the May 1996 edition of the Lingua Franca journal, in the article "A Physicist Experiments With Cultural Studies", in which he revealed that his transformative hermeneutics article was a parody, submitted "to test the prevailing intellectual standards", and concluded that, as an academic publication, Social Text ignored the requisite intellectual rigor of verification and "felt comfortable publishing an article on quantum physics without bothering to consult anyone knowledgeable in the subject".[31][33]

Moreover, as a public intellectual, Sokal said that his hoax was an action protesting against the contemporary tendency towards obscurantism—abstruse, esoteric, and vague writing in the social sciences:[31]

In short, my concern over the spread of subjectivist thinking is both intellectual and political. Intellectually, the problem with such doctrines is that they are false (when not simply meaningless). There is a real world; its properties are not merely social constructions; facts and evidence do matter. What sane person would contend otherwise? And yet, much contemporary academic theorizing consists precisely of attempts to blur these obvious truths—the utter absurdity of it all being concealed through obscure and pretentious language.

Moreover, independent of the hoax, as a pseudoscientific opus, the article "Transgressing the Boundaries: Towards a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity" is described as an exemplar "pastiche of left-wing cant, fawning references, grandiose quotations, and outright nonsense, centered on the claim that physical reality is merely a social construct".[34] Similarly to whataboutism, obscurantism is used by elevating the readers' prejudices to a grandiose value-laden assumption, belief, principle(s) or pseudoscience that does not deconstruct opposing claims and is stalling a priori and/or asserting confusing jargon or technical speak to describe events, which may deny the real world existence of physical properties.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Thus, an obscurantist is someone who actively opposes enlightenment and consequent social reform.

References edit

  1. ^ Oxford English Dictionary (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. Opposition to inquiry, enlightenment, or reform ... {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  2. ^ Webster's Third New International Dictionary, Unabridged. Merriam-Webster, Inc. 2018.
  3. ^ Webster's New Universal Unabridged Dictionary (1996) p. 1,337.
  4. ^ Buekens, Filip; Boudry, Maarten (2014). "The Dark Side of the Loon. Explaining the Temptations of Obscurantism". Theoria. 81 (2): 126–143. doi:10.1111/theo.12047. hdl:1854/LU-4374622. The charge of obscurantism suggests a deliberate move on behalf of the speaker, who is accused of setting up a game of verbal smoke and mirrors to suggest depth and insight where none exists. The suspicion is, furthermore, that the obscurantist does not have anything meaningful to say and does not grasp the real intricacies of his subject matter, but nevertheless wants to keep up appearances, hoping that his reader will mistake it for profundity. (p. 126)
  5. ^ Nietzsche, F. (1878) Human, All Too Human Vol. II, Part 1, 27. Cambridge University Press; 2 edition (1996). ISBN 978-0-521-56704-6.
  6. ^ a b Hersh, Seymour, "Selective Intelligence", The New Yorker, 12 May 2003, accessed 29 April 2016.
  7. ^ a b Brian Doherty, "Origin of the Specious: Why Do Neoconservatives Doubt Darwin?" 2008-07-25 at the Wayback Machine , Reason Online July 1997, accessed 16 February 2007.
  8. ^ Syed, I. (2002) "Obscurantism". From: Intellectual Achievements of Muslims. New Delhi: Star Publications. Excerpt available online. Retrieved on: 4 August 2007.
  9. ^ "Noble lies and perpetual war: Leo Strauss, the neocons, and Iraq". Retrieved 11 February 2017.
  10. ^ Khushf, George (2004). "The Ethics of Nanotechnology: Vision and Values for a New Generation of Science and Engineering", Emerging Technologies and Ethical Issues in Engineering, National Academy of Engineering, pp. 31–32. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. ISBN 0-309-09271-X.
  11. ^ (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2003-12-31.
  12. ^ a b Rorty, Richard (1989) Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, Ch. 6: "From Ironist Theory to Private Allusions: Derrida". ISBN 0-521-36781-6.
  13. ^ House, Humphry (1956). Aristotles Poetics. Rupert Hart-Davis. p. 35.
  14. ^ Barnes 1995, p. 12.
  15. ^ Ammonius (1991). On Aristotle's Categories. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. p. 15. ISBN 0-8014-2688-X.
  16. ^ Lisa van Alstyne, "Aristotle's Alleged Ethical Obscurantism". Philosophy. Vol. 73, No. 285 (July, 1998), pp. 429–452.
  17. ^ Schopenhauer, Manuscript Remains, Vol. 4, "Cogitata I", § 107.
  18. ^ Schopenhauer, Arthur (1965). On the Basis of Morality, trans. E. F. J. Payne. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, pp. 15–16.
  19. ^ Hegel: A Biography, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000, xii.
  20. ^ See his The German Ideology (1844), The Poverty of Philosophy (1845), and The Holy Family (1847).
  21. ^ See, Dallmayr, Fred R., "The Discourse of Modernity: Hegel, Nietzsche, Heidegger (and Habermas)", PRAXIS International (4/1988), pp. 377–404.
  22. ^ György Lukács's The Destruction of Reason; Jürgen Habermas's The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity.
  23. ^ Wright, E. O., Levine, A., Sober, E. (1992). Reconstructing Marxism: essays on explanation and the theory of history. London: Verso, 107.
  24. ^ Russell, Bertrand (1989). Wisdom of the West. Crescent Books. p. 303. ISBN 978-0-517-69041-3.
  25. ^ Polt, Richard (1999). Heidegger: An Introduction. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0801485640.
  26. ^ "Jacques Derrida, Abstruse Theorist, Dies in Paris at 74". The New York Times. 10 October 2004. Retrieved 11 February 2017.
  27. ^ "Jacques Derrida". The Economist. 21 October 2004. Retrieved 11 February 2017.
  28. ^ Barry Smith et al., "Open letter against Derrida receiving an honorary doctorate from Cambridge University", The Times [London], 9 May 1992.
  29. ^ Mackey, Louis H. (February 2, 1984). "An Exchange on Deconstruction (Reply by John R. Searle)". New York Review of Books. 31 (1). Retrieved 2007-08-17.
  30. ^ Lacan, Jacques (1988). The ego in Freud's theory and in the technique of psychoanalysis, 1954–1955. CUP Archive. ISBN 978-0-521-31801-3.
  31. ^ a b c Sokal, Alan D. (May 1996). "A Physicist Experiments With Cultural Studies". Lingua Franca. Retrieved April 3, 2007.
  32. ^ Sokal, Alan D. (Spring–Summer 1996) [1994 (original version published 1994-11-28, revised 1995-05-13)]. . Social Text. Duke University Press. pp. 217–252. Archived from the original on 26 March 2007. Retrieved 3 April 2007.
  33. ^ Sokal, Alan (May–June 1996). "A Physicist Experiments With Cultural Studies" (PDF). Lingua Franca. p. 2. Retrieved 27 January 2010.
  34. ^ Harrell, Evans (October 1996). "A Report from the Front of the "Science Wars": The controversy over the book Higher Superstition, by Gross and Levitt and the recent articles by Sokal" (PDF). Notices of the American Mathematical Society. 43 (10): 1132–1136. Retrieved 2007-09-16.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Obscurantism at Wikimedia Commons
  • Obscurantism in religion – Islamic Research Foundation International

obscurantism, fields, philosophy, terms, obscurantism, obscurationism, identify, describe, anti, intellectual, practices, deliberately, presenting, information, abstruse, imprecise, manner, that, limits, further, inquiry, understanding, subject, historical, in. In the fields of philosophy the terms obscurantism and obscurationism identify and describe the anti intellectual practices of deliberately presenting information in an abstruse and imprecise manner that limits further inquiry and understanding of a subject 1 The two historical and intellectual denotations of obscurantism are 1 the deliberate restriction of knowledge opposition to the dissemination of knowledge and 2 deliberate obscurity a recondite style of writing characterized by deliberate vagueness 2 3 The humanist scholar Johannes Reuchlin 1455 1522 actively opposed religious obscurantism In the 18th century Enlightenment philosophers applied the term obscurantist to any enemy of intellectual enlightenment and the liberal diffusion of knowledge 4 In the 19th century in distinguishing the varieties of obscurantism found in metaphysics and theology from the more subtle obscurantism of the critical philosophy of Immanuel Kant and of modern philosophical skepticism Friedrich Nietzsche said that The essential element in the black art of obscurantism is not that it wants to darken individual understanding but that it wants to blacken our picture of the world and darken our idea of existence 5 a Contents 1 Restricting knowledge 1 1 Leo Strauss 1 1 1 Political philosophy 1 1 2 Esoteric texts 1 2 Bill Joy 2 Appeal to emotion 3 Deliberate obscurity 3 1 Aristotle 3 2 Kant 3 3 Hegel 3 4 Marx 3 5 Heidegger 3 6 Derrida 3 7 Lacan 3 8 Sokal affair 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 External linksRestricting knowledge edit nbsp In the 18th century the Marquis de Condorcet was a political scientist who correctly perceived obscurantism as a contributing cause of the French Revolution in 1789 In restricting education and knowledge to a ruling class obscurantism is anti democratic in its components of anti intellectualism and social elitism which exclude the majority of the people deemed unworthy of knowing the facts about their government and the political and economic affairs of their city state 6 7 In 18th century monarchic France the political scientist Marquis de Condorcet documented the obscurantism of the aristocracy and their indifference to the social problems that provoked the French Revolution 1789 1799 which violently overthrew the aristocracy and deposed the monarch King Louis XVI of France r 1774 1792 In the 19th century the mathematician William Kingdon Clifford who was an early proponent of Darwinism worked to eliminate obscurantism in England after hearing clerics who privately agreed with him about evolution publicly denounce evolution as un Christian heresy Moreover in the realm of organized religion obscurantism is a distinct strain of anti intellectualism that is independent of theologic allegiance by which distinction religious fundamentalism presupposes sincere religious belief in the person whereas censorship is obscurantism that is based upon the elite power group manipulating the religious faith of the majority of the population of believers 8 Leo Strauss edit Political philosophy edit In the 20th century the American conservative political philosopher Leo Strauss for whom philosophy and politics intertwined and his neo conservative adherents adopted the notion of government by the enlightened few as political strategy He noted that intellectuals dating from Plato confronted the dilemma of either an informed populace interfering with government or whether it were possible for good politicians to be truthful and still govern to maintain a stable society hence the noble lie necessary in securing public acquiescence In The City and Man 1964 he discusses the myths in The Republic that Plato proposes effective governing requires among them the belief that the country land ruled by the state belongs to it despite some having been conquered from others and that citizenship derives from more than the accident of birth in the city state Thus in the New Yorker magazine article Selective Intelligence Seymour Hersh observes that Strauss endorsed the noble lie concept the myths politicians use in maintaining a cohesive society 6 7 Shadia Drury criticized Strauss s acceptance of dissembling and deception of the populace as the peculiar justice of the wise whereas Plato proposed the noble lie as based upon moral good In criticizing Natural Right and History 1953 she said that Strauss thinks that the superiority of the ruling philosophers is an intellectual superiority and not a moral one he is the only interpreter who gives a sinister reading to Plato and then celebrates him 9 Esoteric texts edit Leo Strauss also was criticized for proposing the notion of esoteric meanings to ancient texts obscure knowledge inaccessible to the ordinary intellect In Persecution and the Art of Writing 1952 he proposes that some philosophers write esoterically to avert persecution by the political or religious authorities and per his knowledge of Maimonides Al Farabi and Plato proposed that an esoteric writing style is proper for the philosophic text Rather than explicitly presenting his thoughts the philosopher s esoteric writing compels the reader to think independently of the text and so learn In the Phaedrus Socrates notes that writing does not reply to questions but invites dialogue with the reader thereby minimizing the problems of grasping the written word Strauss noted that one of writing s political dangers is students too readily accepting dangerous ideas as in the trial of Socrates wherein the relationship with Alcibiades was used to prosecute him For Leo Strauss philosophers texts offered the reader lucid exoteric salutary and obscure esoteric true teachings which are concealed to the reader of ordinary intellect emphasizing that writers often left contradictions and other errors to encourage the reader s more scrupulous re reading of the text In observing and maintaining the exoteric esoteric dichotomy Strauss was accused of obscurantism and for writing esoterically Bill Joy edit nbsp The computer scientist Bill Joy proposed controlling the public s access to certain data information and knowledge because the public cannot handle the truth In the article Why the Future Doesn t Need Us April 2000 the computer scientist Bill Joy then chief scientist at Sun Microsystems in the sub title of the article proposed that Our most powerful twenty first century technologies robotics genetic engineering and nanotech are threatening to make humans an endangered species and said that The experiences of the atomic scientists clearly show the need to take personal responsibility the danger that things will move too fast and the way in which a process can take on a life of its own We can as they did create insurmountable problems in almost no time flat We must do more thinking up front if we are not to be similarly surprised and shocked by the consequences of our inventions 10 Critics readily noted the obscurantism in Joy s elitist proposal for limiting the dissemination of certain knowledge in order to preserve society A year later in the Science and Technology Policy Yearbook 2001 the American Association for the Advancement of Science answered Joy s propositions with the article A Response to Bill Joy and the Doom and Gloom Technofuturists wherein the computer scientists John Seely Brown and Paul Duguid said that Joy s proposal was a form of technological tunnel vision and that the technologically derived problems are infeasible for disregarding the influence of non scientists upon such societal problems 11 Appeal to emotion edit nbsp The economist Friedrich August von HayekIn the essay Why I Am Not a Conservative 1960 the economist Friedrich von Hayek said that political conservatism is ideologically unrealistic because of the conservative person s inability to adapt to changing human realities and refusal to offer a positive political program that benefits everyone in a society In that context Hayek used the term obscurantism differently to denote and describe the denial of the empirical truth of scientific theory because of the disagreeable moral consequences that might arise from acceptance of fact Deliberate obscurity editThe second sense of obscurantism denotes making knowledge abstruse that is difficult to grasp In the 19th and 20th centuries obscurantism became a polemical term for accusing an author of deliberately writing obscurely in order to hide his or her intellectual vacuousness Philosophers who are neither empiricists nor positivists often are considered obscurantists citation needed when describing the abstract concepts of their disciplines For philosophic reasons such authors might modify or reject verifiability falsifiability and logical non contradiction From that perspective obscure clouded vague abstruse writing does not necessarily indicate that the writer has a poor grasp of the subject because unintelligible writing sometimes is purposeful and philosophically considered 12 Aristotle edit nbsp AristotleAristotle divided his own works into two classifications exoteric and esoteric Most scholars have understood this as a distinction of intended audience where exoteric works were written for the public and the esoteric works were more technical works intended for use within the Lyceum 13 Modern scholars commonly assume these latter to be Aristotle s own unpolished lecture notes or in some cases possible notes by his students 14 However the 5th century neoplatonist Ammonius Hermiae writes that Aristotle s writing style is deliberately obscurantist so that good people may for that reason stretch their mind even more whereas empty minds that are lost through carelessness will be put to flight by the obscurity when they encounter sentences like these 15 In contemporary discussions of virtue ethics Aristotle s Nicomachean Ethics The Ethics stands accused of ethical obscurantism because of the technical philosophic language and writing style and their purpose being the education of a cultured governing elite 16 Kant edit Immanuel Kant employed technical terms that were not commonly understood by the layman Arthur Schopenhauer contended that post Kantian philosophers such as Johann Gottlieb Fichte Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel deliberately imitated the abstruse style of writing practiced by Kant 17 Hegel edit nbsp G W F HegelG W F Hegel s philosophy and the philosophies of those he influenced especially Karl Marx have been accused of obscurantism Analytic and positivistic philosophers such as A J Ayer Bertrand Russell and the critical rationalist Karl Popper accused Hegel and Hegelianism of being obscure About Hegel s philosophy Schopenhauer wrote that it is a colossal piece of mystification which will yet provide posterity with an inexhaustible theme for laughter at our times that it is a pseudo philosophy paralyzing all mental powers stifling all real thinking and by the most outrageous misuse of language putting in its place the hollowest most senseless thoughtless and as is confirmed by its success most stupefying verbiage 18 Nevertheless biographer Terry Pinkard notes Hegel has refused to go away even in analytic philosophy itself 19 Hegel was aware of his perceived obscurantism and perceived it as part of philosophical thinking to accept and transcend the limitations of quotidian everyday thought and its concepts In the essay Who Thinks Abstractly he said that it is not the philosopher who thinks abstractly but the layman who uses concepts as givens that are immutable without context It is the philosopher who thinks concretely because he transcends the limits of quotidian concepts in order to understand their broader context This makes philosophical thought and language appear obscure esoteric and mysterious to the layman Marx edit nbsp Karl Marx in 1861In his early works 20 Karl Marx criticized German and French philosophy especially German Idealism for its traditions of German irrationalism and ideologically motivated obscurantism 21 Later thinkers whom he influenced such as the philosopher Gyorgy Lukacs and social theorist Jurgen Habermas followed with similar arguments of their own 22 However philosophers such as Karl Popper and Friedrich Hayek in turn criticized Marx and Marxist philosophy as obscurantist however see above for Hayek s particular interpretation of the term 23 Heidegger edit Martin Heidegger and those influenced by him such as Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas have been labeled obscurantists by critics from analytic philosophy and the Frankfurt School of critical theory Of Heidegger Bertrand Russell wrote his philosophy is extremely obscure One cannot help suspecting that language is here running riot An interesting point in his speculations is the insistence that nothingness is something positive As with much else in Existentialism this is a psychological observation made to pass for logic 24 That is Russell s complete entry on Heidegger and it expresses the sentiments of many 20th century analytic philosophers concerning Heidegger 25 Derrida edit In their obituaries Jacques Derrida Abstruse Theorist Dies at 74 10 October 2004 and Obituary of Jacques Derrida French intellectual 21 October 2004 The New York Times newspaper 26 and The Economist magazine 27 described Derrida as a deliberately obscure philosopher In Contingency Irony and Solidarity 1989 Richard Rorty proposed that in The Post Card From Socrates to Freud and Beyond 1978 Jacques Derrida purposefully used undefinable words e g differance and used defined words in contexts so diverse that they render the words unintelligible hence the reader is unable to establish a context for his literary self In that way the philosopher Derrida escapes metaphysical accounts of his work Since the work ostensibly contains no metaphysics Derrida has consequently escaped metaphysics 12 Derrida s philosophic work is especially controversial among American and British academics as when the University of Cambridge awarded him an honorary doctorate despite opposition from among the Cambridge philosophy faculty and analytical philosophers worldwide In opposing the decision philosophers including Barry Smith W V O Quine David Armstrong Ruth Barcan Marcus Rene Thom and twelve others published a letter of protestation in The Times of London arguing that his works employ a written style that defies comprehension thus Academic status based on what seems to us to be little more than semi intelligible attacks upon the values of reason truth and scholarship is not we submit sufficient grounds for the awarding of an honorary degree in a distinguished university 28 In the New York Review of Books article An Exchange on Deconstruction February 1984 John Searle comments on Deconstruction anyone who reads deconstructive texts with an open mind is likely to be struck by the same phenomena that initially surprised me the low level of philosophical argumentation the deliberate obscurantism of the prose the wildly exaggerated claims and the constant striving to give the appearance of profundity by making claims that seem paradoxical but under analysis often turn out to be silly or trivial 29 Lacan edit Jacques Lacan was an intellectual who defended obscurantism to a degree To his students complaint about the deliberate obscurity of his lectures he replied The less you understand the better you listen 30 In the 1973 seminar Encore he said that his Ecrits Writings were not to be understood but would effect a meaning in the reader like that induced by mystical texts The obscurity is not in his writing style but in the repeated allusions to Hegel derived from Alexandre Kojeve s lectures on Hegel and similar theoretic divergences Sokal affair edit The Sokal affair 1996 was a publishing hoax that the professor of physics Alan Sokal perpetrated on the editors and readers of Social Text an academic journal of post modern cultural studies that was not then a peer reviewed publication In 1996 as an experiment testing editorial integrity fact checking verification peer review etc Sokal submitted Transgressing the Boundaries Towards a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity a pseudoscientific article proposing that physical reality is a social construct in order to learn whether Social Text would publish an article liberally salted with nonsense if a it sounded good and b it flattered the editors ideological preconceptions 31 Sokal s fake article was published in the spring summer 1996 issue of Social Text which was dedicated to the science wars about the conceptual validity of scientific objectivity and the nature of scientific theory among scientific realists and postmodern critics in American universities 32 Sokal s reason for publication of a false article was that postmodernist critics questioned the objectivity of science by criticising the scientific method and the nature of knowledge usually in the disciplines of cultural studies cultural anthropology feminist studies comparative literature media studies and science and technology studies Whereas the scientific realists countered that objective scientific knowledge exists riposting that postmodernist critics almost knew nothing of the science they criticized In the event editorial deference to academic authority the author professor prompted the editors of Social Text not to fact check Sokal s manuscript by submitting it to peer review by a scientist Concerning the lack of editorial integrity shown by the publication of his fake article in Social Text magazine Sokal addressed the matter in the May 1996 edition of the Lingua Franca journal in the article A Physicist Experiments With Cultural Studies in which he revealed that his transformative hermeneutics article was a parody submitted to test the prevailing intellectual standards and concluded that as an academic publication Social Text ignored the requisite intellectual rigor of verification and felt comfortable publishing an article on quantum physics without bothering to consult anyone knowledgeable in the subject 31 33 Moreover as a public intellectual Sokal said that his hoax was an action protesting against the contemporary tendency towards obscurantism abstruse esoteric and vague writing in the social sciences 31 In short my concern over the spread of subjectivist thinking is both intellectual and political Intellectually the problem with such doctrines is that they are false when not simply meaningless There is a real world its properties are not merely social constructions facts and evidence do matter What sane person would contend otherwise And yet much contemporary academic theorizing consists precisely of attempts to blur these obvious truths the utter absurdity of it all being concealed through obscure and pretentious language Moreover independent of the hoax as a pseudoscientific opus the article Transgressing the Boundaries Towards a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity is described as an exemplar pastiche of left wing cant fawning references grandiose quotations and outright nonsense centered on the claim that physical reality is merely a social construct 34 Similarly to whataboutism obscurantism is used by elevating the readers prejudices to a grandiose value laden assumption belief principle s or pseudoscience that does not deconstruct opposing claims and is stalling a priori and or asserting confusing jargon or technical speak to describe events which may deny the real world existence of physical properties See also editAnti intellectualism Cover up Cult Disinformation Doublespeak Dumbing down Fundamentalism Greenspeak Paternalism Paywall Perception management Philosopher king Politicization of science Pseudophilosophy Pseudointellectual Psychological manipulation Positivism Scientism WhataboutismNotes edit Thus an obscurantist is someone who actively opposes enlightenment and consequent social reform References edit Oxford English Dictionary 3rd ed Oxford University Press 2004 Opposition to inquiry enlightenment or reform a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Webster s Third New International Dictionary Unabridged Merriam Webster Inc 2018 Webster s New Universal Unabridged Dictionary 1996 p 1 337 Buekens Filip Boudry Maarten 2014 The Dark Side of the Loon Explaining the Temptations of Obscurantism Theoria 81 2 126 143 doi 10 1111 theo 12047 hdl 1854 LU 4374622 The charge of obscurantism suggests a deliberate move on behalf of the speaker who is accused of setting up a game of verbal smoke and mirrors to suggest depth and insight where none exists The suspicion is furthermore that the obscurantist does not have anything meaningful to say and does not grasp the real intricacies of his subject matter but nevertheless wants to keep up appearances hoping that his reader will mistake it for profundity p 126 Nietzsche F 1878 Human All Too Human Vol II Part 1 27 Cambridge University Press 2 edition 1996 ISBN 978 0 521 56704 6 a b Hersh Seymour Selective Intelligence The New Yorker 12 May 2003 accessed 29 April 2016 a b Brian Doherty Origin of the Specious Why Do Neoconservatives Doubt Darwin Archived 2008 07 25 at the Wayback Machine Reason Online July 1997 accessed 16 February 2007 Syed I 2002 Obscurantism From Intellectual Achievements of Muslims New Delhi Star Publications Excerpt available online Retrieved on 4 August 2007 Noble lies and perpetual war Leo Strauss the neocons and Iraq Retrieved 11 February 2017 Khushf George 2004 The Ethics of Nanotechnology Vision and Values for a New Generation of Science and Engineering Emerging Technologies and Ethical Issues in Engineering National Academy of Engineering pp 31 32 Washington DC The National Academies Press ISBN 0 309 09271 X A Response to Bill Joy and the Doom and Gloom Technofuturists PDF Archived from the original PDF on 2003 12 31 a b Rorty Richard 1989 Contingency Irony and Solidarity Cambridge Cambridge University Press Ch 6 From Ironist Theory to Private Allusions Derrida ISBN 0 521 36781 6 House Humphry 1956 Aristotles Poetics Rupert Hart Davis p 35 Barnes 1995 p 12 sfn error no target CITEREFBarnes1995 help Ammonius 1991 On Aristotle s Categories Ithaca NY Cornell University Press p 15 ISBN 0 8014 2688 X Lisa van Alstyne Aristotle s Alleged Ethical Obscurantism Philosophy Vol 73 No 285 July 1998 pp 429 452 Schopenhauer Manuscript Remains Vol 4 Cogitata I 107 Schopenhauer Arthur 1965 On the Basis of Morality trans E F J Payne Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill pp 15 16 Hegel A Biography Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2000 xii See his The German Ideology 1844 The Poverty of Philosophy 1845 and The Holy Family 1847 See Dallmayr Fred R The Discourse of Modernity Hegel Nietzsche Heidegger and Habermas PRAXIS International 4 1988 pp 377 404 Gyorgy Lukacs s The Destruction of Reason Jurgen Habermas s The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity Wright E O Levine A Sober E 1992 Reconstructing Marxism essays on explanation and the theory of history London Verso 107 Russell Bertrand 1989 Wisdom of the West Crescent Books p 303 ISBN 978 0 517 69041 3 Polt Richard 1999 Heidegger An Introduction Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0801485640 Jacques Derrida Abstruse Theorist Dies in Paris at 74 The New York Times 10 October 2004 Retrieved 11 February 2017 Jacques Derrida The Economist 21 October 2004 Retrieved 11 February 2017 Barry Smith et al Open letter against Derrida receiving an honorary doctorate from Cambridge University The Times London 9 May 1992 Mackey Louis H February 2 1984 An Exchange on Deconstruction Reply by John R Searle New York Review of Books 31 1 Retrieved 2007 08 17 Lacan Jacques 1988 The ego in Freud s theory and in the technique of psychoanalysis 1954 1955 CUP Archive ISBN 978 0 521 31801 3 a b c Sokal Alan D May 1996 A Physicist Experiments With Cultural Studies Lingua Franca Retrieved April 3 2007 Sokal Alan D Spring Summer 1996 1994 original version published 1994 11 28 revised 1995 05 13 Transgressing the Boundaries Towards a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity Social Text Duke University Press pp 217 252 Archived from the original on 26 March 2007 Retrieved 3 April 2007 Sokal Alan May June 1996 A Physicist Experiments With Cultural Studies PDF Lingua Franca p 2 Retrieved 27 January 2010 Harrell Evans October 1996 A Report from the Front of the Science Wars The controversy over the book Higher Superstition by Gross and Levitt and the recent articles by Sokal PDF Notices of the American Mathematical Society 43 10 1132 1136 Retrieved 2007 09 16 External links edit nbsp Media related to Obscurantism at Wikimedia Commons Obscurantism in religion Islamic Research Foundation International Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Obscurantism amp oldid 1196332402, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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