Monty Python and Philosophy Gary Hardcastle (mystery books to read txt) đ
- Author: Gary Hardcastle
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Oh, no no! Sorry! Just demonstrating! Havenât finished! Havenât started yet. [pauses, and realizes heâs forgotten to use the new pause-gesture] Oh dear! [makes pause gesture] Nearly forgot the gesture! I hope none of you are nipping out into the kitchen getting bits of food out of those round brown mats which the . . .
It doesnât look good. Palinâs being sucked into a self-referential whirlpool of qualifications and explanations. But he refuses to be beaten. He takes a deep breath and begins again.
Good evening [makes pause gesture]. Tonight I want to talk about . . .
This time, all goes well until Palin reaches his eighth word, âabout.â Thatâs when the BBC shuts him down: âWe interrupt this program to annoy you and make things generally irritating.â
What the Fly Saw
After the episode was over, most philosophers would have returned to their nightly reading. Devotees of ordinary language philosophy, specifically, may well have opened Ludwig Wittgensteinâs (1889-1951) Philosophical Investigations to read passages like this:
When I say: âMy broom is in the corner,ââis this really a statement about the broomstick and the brush? Well, it could at any rate be replaced by a statement giving the position of the stick and the position of the brush. And this statement is surely a further analyzed form of the first one.âBut why do I call it âfurther analyzedâ?âWell, if the broom is there, that surely means that the stick and the brush must be there, and in a particular relation to one another. . . .
Or this:
It is easy to imagine a language consisting only of orders and reports in battle. . . . But why should I not on the contrary have called the sentence [in such a language] âBring me a slabâ a lengthening of the sentence âSlab!â?âBecause if you shout âSlab!â you really mean: âBring me a slabâ.âBut how do you do this: how do you mean that while you say âSlab!â? Do you say the unshortened sentence to yourself? And why should I translate the call âSlab!â into a different expression in order to say what someone means by it? And if they mean the same thingâwhy should I not say: âWhen he says âSlab!â he means âSlab!ââ?107
With Palinâs performance fresh in their memory, at least a few of these philosophers must have looked up from their books and thought, âhey, wait a minute!â Palinâs joke, at least in part, was on them. Beneath the silliness of his character and the quality of his performance there lay the outlines of a pointed critique of Wittgenstein and his philosophical legacy, ordinary language philosophy.
This critique is first suggested by Palinâs strikingly Wittgensteinian character and style. Both focus like a laser on words and their use, and both urge us to appreciate the complexities of this âwhole process of talking.â Like Wittgensteinâs prose, moreover, Palin struggled to contain his rapid fire thoughts in the form of a dialogue with himself, in which he makes assertions, interrupts himself, offers objections or corrections, and poses questions and answers. Second, there is something deeply wrong with this Wittgensteinian performance precisely because it has no effect. Consider the Pythonsâ better known satire about Englandâs Ministry of Silly Walks. Humor aside, this sketch offers a disarmingly accurate interpretation of bureaucratic life as a whirlwind of insignificant techniques and pointless procedures (in this case, involving walking). These silly styles of walking are plainly silly and pointless to us, but to the bureaucrats that cultivate and oversee them, they are serious business indeed. Palinâs obsession with linguistic precision, his dedicating all his concentration and intelligence to reducing ambiguity and clarifying meaning, is serious business as well. His skills and acuity make him a model ordinary language philosopher. Yet, like the bureaucrats in the Ministry, he never really achieves anything. For all Palinâs tortured efforts and analysis, he tell us exactly nothing about Hollandâs most famous aperitif.
The Story of Ordinary Language Philosophy: Britainâs Most Influential Philosophical Program
âThatâs not a critique,â ordinary language philosophers might reply. âThatâs the whole point!â Indeed, Wittgenstein argued persuasively that the proper subject of philosophy was not aperitifs or anything else amenable to empirical or scientific study. Rather, the subject of philosophy was language. This is because, Wittgenstein argued, our so-called philosophical problems about nature, ethics, epistemology and so forth are really just tangles or confusions in our language and our linguistic habits. Through proper philosophical analysis they can be untangled and, once they are, they disappear and cease to perplex us. For the philosopher of ordinary language, therefore, philosophy is really a struggle of our own making, âa struggle against the bewitchment of our intelligence by means of languageâ (§109).108 Much as flies find it difficult to find their way out fly bottles designed to catch them, we find it difficult to extricate ourselves from our verbal bottles. Wittgenstein asked himself, âWhat is the aim of your philosophy? And then he answered: âTo shew the fly the way out of the fly bottleâ (§309).
Wittgenstein was not alone in promoting this linguistic revolution in philosophy in Britain. Others such as Gilbert Ryle (1900-1976) and J.L. Austin (1911-1960) took philosophy to be the study of our words and linguistic actions. There were differences and controversies about the proper methods and goals of philosophical analysis. But agreement was at hand that philosophy had found its calling in the analysis of language. A.J.
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