Monty Python and Philosophy Gary Hardcastle (mystery books to read txt) đ
- Author: Gary Hardcastle
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No Ambition
As the four situations illustrate, the meaning of the sentence âWhat is going on?â depends on its use, so that its meaning changes as its use changes. Nevertheless, we can make sense of the question used in these ways, whereas we canât make sense of âWhat is going on?â as it occurs in âSpectrum: Talking About Things.â On this both the twenty- and the forty-something Wittgenstein are likely to agree (for different reasons); where they differ is in their conception of and response to nonsense.
Suppose we agree that as the presenter uses it, the sentence âWhat is going on?â makes no sense. If it doesnât, and we can figure out why it doesnât, can we apply that diagnosis to philosophical statements in general and perhaps avoid doing whatever it is that leads to nonsense?
Yes, says the young Wittgenstein. Philosophical nonsense is something distinctive; it is something we can spot and throw away once and for all, after climbing âthrough it, on it, over it.â
Nope, says the older Wittgenstein; sad to say, philosophy isnât like dog-doo. One canât avoid it by stepping over it.
In denying this possibility, Wittgenstein admits that his earlier ambition to wash his hands of philosophy amounts to wishful thinking. Why? Because to be able to avoid nonsense, weâd need to know its characteristics, what it looks like. And as we just saw, the details of context matter to whether the sentence makes sense and what kind of sense it makes. Itâs easy to see how these contexts might be variedâand so the meaning of sentences occurring in themâin infinitely many ways. Given this, who can describe the contexts that will yield philosophical nonsense. Who can say what nonsense looks like?
From the later Wittgensteinâs perspective, the presenter and guests on âSpectrum: Talking About Thingsâ canât predict the ways their conversation might lapse into nonsense. Since their (and our) uncertainty in this regard is inevitable, philosophy has no cure.
How to Patent Nonsense
With this in mind, the later Wittgenstein reshapes both his practice of philosophy and his goals. As in the Tractatus, he continues to use philosophical language to subvert it, but instead of attempting to solve the problem of philosophical nonsense once and for all, Wittgensteinâs later practice is to test particular classes of expressions (color words, for instance) in this and that context in order to reveal the variety of ways sense passes into nonsense. He aims to:
teach you to pass from a piece of disguised nonsense to something that is patent nonsense. (Philosophical Investigations, §464)
Exactly how is this practiceâthis new way of engaging in philosophyâcarried out? Letâs use Monty Pythonâs Flying Circus to make a preliminary point about the very fine line between making people laugh and liberating them from philosophical headaches.
âIs There Life After Death?â
We have, again, a talk show, but now instead of a guest several corpses are âslumped motionless in their seats.â The topic is different as well. The host, Roger Last (John Cleese), asks the question:
Gentlemen, is there a life after death or not?
Sir Brian?
(Silence)
Professor? . . .
Prebendary? . . .
Well there we have it, three say no. (â âIs thereâ . . . Life After Death?,â Monty Pythonâs Flying Circus, Episode 36, âE. Henry Tripshawâs Diseaseâ).
Despite ourselves, we laugh to see corpses dangling off chairs. Why? Perhaps the impiety of laughing at death is a relief, given societyâs unrelentingly solemn attitude towards death; or perhaps we laugh because the bodies are the remains of an aristocrat, an academic, and a clergyman, and who thinks they have much of a pulse to begin with? Plato himself laughs at this in the Phaedo, where he lets fly the quip that you must be dead already if youâre a philosopher. If we reflect also on the attempt to interview dead men on the subject of life after death, we may laugh at the idiotic appropriateness: Who could be better to ask? Who could be worse?
Why else do we laugh at the skit? Some of the humor of the sketch comes from using language in ways it normally doesnât get used. For example, we donât expect corpses to speak or people to speak to them, so the concepts of speaking and asking is out of place here, and itâs incongruous and funny when the host expects an answer, just as it is would be to talk to a lamppost or a mannequin. Similarly, we know that while people use silence meaningfully all the time, in wounded silences, compassionate silences, and so on, corpses do notâin this sense, corpses are not silentâso itâs funny to see someone mistakenly treat the two cases as the same.
âLanguage Gamesâ
So Monty Python derives some of its funniness from incongruous and absurd uses of language; how is this like or unlike Wittgensteinâs philosophy? Certainly, Monty Pythonâs sketches raise (implicitly or explicitly) the kinds of questions about language that the later Wittgenstein poses.
But there is an important difference between the nonsense on which their comedy depends and the nonsense Wittgenstein thinks pervades philosophy. We know that comedy misuses language. We know that we are to laugh at these misuses. To use Wittgensteinâs expression, we understand how the âlanguage gameâ of comedy is played. In practicing philosophy, however, weâre never entirely sure how seriously to take what weâre doingâindeed, weâre often not sure what weâre doing!
Remember this difference as we begin to engage in philosophy as Wittgenstein does, that is, by investigating our uses of concepts taken from specific areas within our language.
âIâd Like to Put This Question to You, Please, Lizardâ
Letâs focus on our language about animals. Monty Python occasionally gives us vicious animalsâwitness the killer sheep in Monty Pythonâs Flying Circus. But the sheep kill only after they become intelligent and human-like, and itâs more typical to find animals appearing supremely indifferent to us. This indifference is, moreover, charming. At least, this is the case in âA Duck, a
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