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Understanding these movements is complicated by threefactors: what passes for philosophy in France is distorted by its Anglo-American readership; any ‘movement’ in philoso-phy is partly

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jean-jacques rousseau, wild man of French literature,

harbinger of Romanticism; his polemical demand for

pop-ular legitimation of government inspired the

revolu-tionaries of 1789

auguste comte expounded in the 1830s a positivist theory

of knowledge, and put forward sociology as the newest and most complex of the sciences

henri bergson distinguished experienced time from

mea-sured time, assigning greater reality to the former; parallel to

this was his distinction of the roles of intuition and intellect in

acquisition of knowledge

maurice merleau-ponty argued that a person’s appre-hension of the outside world is a two-way process: each, in different senses, gives meaning to the other

french philosophy

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Understanding these movements is complicated by three

factors: what passes for philosophy in France is distorted by

its Anglo-American readership; any ‘movement’ in

philoso-phy is partly externally constituted by criteria for being a

philosopher; and each influential modern French

philoso-pher has been something other than a philosophiloso-pher too

Paradigmatically, phenomenology is the

presuppos-itionless description of the contents of experience,

with-out any prior ontological commitment to the objective

reality or causal properties of those contents It has both

the quasi-Kantian aim of describing the transcendental

conditions for knowledge and the quasi-Cartesian aim of

providing an ultimate justification of knowledge in the

description of the contents of consciousness or

‘phenom-ena’ By ‘knowledge’ is meant here ‘all knowledge’ and so,

a fortiori, ‘all philosophical and scientific knowledge’.

In the thought of Sartre and Merleau-Ponty this ‘pure’

or Husserlian phenomenology undergoes a Heideggerian

transformation (which is partly anticipated in the later

writings of Husserl) Notably, the Husserlian thesis that

the world of the natural attitude (roughly, ‘common

sense’) may be ‘suspended’ to facilitate a

phenomeno-logical description of consciousness is rejected and the

existential notion ‘being-in-the-world’ substituted The

Husserlian transcendental ego (as ground of the world) is

eliminated as not phenomenologically available and a

notion of bodily subjectivity replaces it (notably in Sartre’s

L’Être et le néant and Merleau-Ponty’s Phénoménologie de la

perception) However, arguably the idea of the

body-subject is also anticipated in the second book of Husserl’s

Ideen zu einer reinen Phänomenologie und

phänomeno-logischen Philosophie.

Existentialism is an attempt to solve fundamental

prob-lems about human existence, notably: what it is to be; the

purpose of being; what it is like to face death; the nature of

anxiety; the burden of responsibility and freedom; the

appropriateness of sexual, political, and religious

commit-ments Existentialism is a reaction against both

meta-physics and the essentialism of ‘pure’ phenomenology Its

principal thesis is that existence is logically prior to essence

and that human essence is not determined a priori but

freely created by human actions Sartre’s ‘existential’

phenomenology is expounded not only in philosophical

works but in plays, novels, short stories, and political

tracts The most brilliant existentialist writer was

Simone de Beauvoir Her Le Deuxième Sexe (1949) explores

the question of the essence of woman: its repressive

con-stitution by men and its possible free concon-stitution by

women

One of the most ambitious projects of post-war French

philosophy was Sartre’s attempt in Critique de la raison

dialectique (1960) to synthesize existentialism and

Marx-ism Marxism and existentialism are prima facie mutually

inconsistent philosophies because, while existentialism

emphasizes the freedom of the individual, Marxism is a

kind of social determinism; existentialism explores the

inside of consciousness and the present moment, but

Marxism is a materialism which entails a theory of history;

Marxism claims a scientific and objective status for its find-ings; existentialism deliberately repudiates this for itself Whether Sartre’s putative synthesis is successful or not, in this effort modern French philosophy was engaged in try-ing to solve genuine metaphysical problems

Since the 1960s French philosophy has been a part of the broadly neo-Kantian anti-metaphysical orthodoxy within which much European and Anglo-American philosophy operates The hallmarks of this paradigm are: the impossi-bility of solving metaphysical problems (but the inevitabil-ity of trying to); the linguistic nature of putative philosophical issues; the minimization of the importance

of consciousness, subjectivity, and the present; the attempt to ‘end’ philosophy and replace philosophical problem-solving by something else: political revolution or reform, an examination of language, writing the history of philosophy, literary criticism, the natural sciences The anthropologist Claude Lévi-Strauss, the psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan, the Marxist structuralist Louis Althusser, and the literary critic Roland Barthes all operate within broadly Kantian assumptions

The most influential French philosopher at the time of writing is Jacques Derrida Although Derrida is frequently thought of as making a radical break with previous philoso-phy, this is in fact far from the case His strategies may be novel within literary criticism, but they are familiar to any-one who has studied Kant, Hegel, Nietzsche, and Heideg-ger All these thinkers are involved, in differing senses and degrees, in a critique of something called ‘Western metaphysics’, and the permutations of that critique have been the ruling philosophical orthodoxy for the last two centuries

Modern French philosophy is usually thought to be a part of ‘modern continental philosophy’, which is con-trasted with Anglo-American ‘analytical’ (or *‘analytic’) philosophy This distinction does not stand up to geo-graphical, historical, and philosophical scrutiny and it is an important task of future philosophy to show this How-ever, while philosophers in the English-speaking coun-tries have usually thought that philosophy (although not a science) should aspire to the rigour and precision of the natural sciences, philosophers in modern France have thought that philosophy should be more like art, more like literature The conspicuous stylistic divergence this has produced has resulted in the illusion of a bifurcation between two philosophical ‘traditions’ and the mistaken idea that there is something radical and distinctive called

*continental philosophy; ‘continental’ and ‘analytic’

Naguib Balandi, Les Constantes de la pensée française (Paris,

1948)

Frederick Copleston, A History of Philosophy (London, 1946–75),

esp vol ix (1975)

Lucien Lévy-Brühl, A History of Modern Philosophy in France, tr G.

Coblence (London, 1899)

J G Merquior, From Prague to Paris (London, 1986).

Herbert Spiegelberg, The Phenomenological Movement (The

Hague, 1960), ii

French philosophy 321

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French philosophy today.Recent French philosophy is

marked by the decline of the master-thinker There has

been no replacement for the Sartre of the 1950s, the

Lévi-Strauss of the 1960s, and the Foucault of the 1970s

Jacques Derrida does continue his immensely productive

career and has interestingly expanded his epistemological

and metaphysical development of deconstructive

read-ings of texts into ethics and politics Also, there are

important philosophers, such as Jean-Luc Nancy and

Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe, who have taken up his dense

and nervously involuted philosophical style But Derrida’s

impact has from the beginning been much greater in the

United States and in literature departments In so far as

there are today ‘major figures’ of philosophy in France,

they are presences from the past such as Emmanuel

Levinas and Paul Ricœur, who are of same generation as

Sartre, but whose thought was long marginalized, in

large part because of its religious roots and implications

( Jewish in the case of Levinas, Christian in the case of

Ricœur)

As early as the 1930s, Levinas helped introduce

Husserl and Heidegger to the French intellectual

scene At first mainly an expositor and critic of their

thought, he gradually developed his own distinctive

philosophical vision, which appeared with full force in his

1961 book, Totality and Infinity Here Levinas claimed that

our concrete experience of other people involves an

absolute ethical obligation toward them, a view developed

in the larger context of his insistence that almost all of

Western philosophy has been contaminated by an

effort to reduce the other (including not only other people

but difference in general) to unifying categories of

sameness Levinas explicitly relates our absolute ethical

obligation to religion, but he is almost obsessively

cautious in denying the adequacy of any of our efforts to

speak about God

Ricœur’s early work (for example, his influential

trans-lation of, and commentary on, Husserl’s Ideas) was also

important for the introduction of phenomenology into

France, and his own philosophical views originated from

his effort to apply the phenomenological method of

care-fully describing our immediate experience to the domain

of freedom, sin, and evil His work on these topics

developed through several volumes, but increasingly

moved beyond phenomenological description to a

hermeneutic standpoint, indebted to Heidegger and

Gadamer, which emphasized the need not just to describe

our experience but to interpret it in a wider literary,

cultural, and historical context Ricœur’s hermeneutic

philosophy provided the basis for his perceptive critiques

of the structuralist and post-structualist philosophies that

dominated France during the 1960s and 1970s

The turn to Levinas and Ricœur has been accompanied

by a revival of interest in phenomenology, although

the focus has been more on Husserl and Heidegger than

on the French existential phenomenologists Sartre and

Merleau-Ponty Here Jean-Luc Marion has done

especially important work, which opens new directions of

phenomenological reflection and connects them with reli-gious themes (Marion is also a major Catholic theologian) Michel Henry and Jean-François Courtine have also con-tributed to the return to phenomenology

The new-found importance of Ricœur and Levinas (and the return to phenomenology) corresponds to a reac-tion against the philosophical and political radicalism asso-ciated with the 1968 student revolution The same reaction underlies the return to broadly Kantian thinking

in the writings of Luc Ferry and Alain Renaut For example,

in their jointly authored French Philosophy of the Sixties,

Ferry and Renaut agree that Heidegger and his followers have undermined the idea of a ‘self-transparent subject that lays claim to mastery of everything that exists’; i.e the transcendental ego of Kantian idealism But they go on to argue against the post-structuralist elimination of the sub-ject as a category of theoretical philosophy and for the reality of an ego that is not metaphysically privileged but embedded in historical reality and nevertheless the sub-ject of ethical rights and responsibilities

Ferry and Renaut also represent an important revival of liberal poltical theory in France Whereas earlier thinkers, from Sartre through Lyotard and Deleuze, seemed to allow no alternatives to leftist radicalism or rightist reac-tion, there is now a striking move to the centre, which has led to a new respect for previously marginalized writers such as Albert Camus and Raymond Aron, and has led important philosophers to see genuine possibilities of co-operation with established governments (Luc Ferry, for example, is currently Minister of Education.) The current French scene also includes a lively interest

in analytic philosophy There are roots for this interest in a long and distinguished French tradition of logic and phil-osophy of mathematics, beginning with Louis Couturat

at the turn of the twentieth century and continuing through Jean Nicod, Jacques Herbrand, and Jean Cavail-lès But this group had relatively little impact, partly because none of its members lived beyond the age of fifty Today, the most prominent French philosopher with a strong commitment to the analytic approach is Jacques Bouveresse, whose earlier work was largely inspired by Wittgenstein, on whom he wrote important commen-taries, and whose thought he used as a basis for his own discussions of epistemology and philosophy of mind More recently, Bouveresse has presented himself as in the line of ‘Austrian philosophy’, which he sees as beginning with Bolzano’s critique of Kant and continuing through Brentano and Meinong to Wittgenstein and the *Vienna Circle This Austrian line ignored Hegel and his idealistic successors, thereby avoiding the philosophical styles and questions that characterize recent ‘continental’ philosophy

More recently, there has emerged a group of younger French analytic philosophers centred on the Centre de Recherche en Epistémologie Appliquée (CREA) at the École Polytechnique, and subsequently at the Institut Nicod Pascal Engel (who did his doctoral work with Bouveresse), Pierre Jacob, and Daniel Andler are just

322 French philosophy today

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a few of the French philosophers who have become

significant contributors to, for example, analytic

philoso-phy of mind, epistemology, and philosophiloso-phy of science

There is no doubt that France is quickly taking its place

in the increasingly international enterprise of analytic

philosophy The question remaining is whether there

will develop a distinctively French school of analytic

philosophy or whether French analytic philosophers

will remain individual contributors to discussions defined

by the dominant interests of American and British

philosophy

A category frequently employed in discussions of

recent French philosophy is that of ‘French feminist

philosophers’ There is no doubt that feminist themes

loom large in the work of major French philosophers from

Simone de Beauvoir to Luce Irigaray and beyond But

much of the work of many important feminist thinkers in

France (e.g Hélène Cixous, Julia Kristeva) is well beyond

the disciplinary boundaries of philosophy, and the work of

the major ‘feminist philosophers’ deserves attention even

apart from their contributions to feminist discussions

Luce Irigaray, for example, is best regarded as a

‘philoso-pher of difference’, in the general manner of Derrida,

Lyotard, and Deleuze Her focus has been on sexual

difference, but in a way that uses feminist issues to

over-come what she sees as limitations in traditional thought

about the most fundamental issues of human existence

Similarly, Michèle Le Doeuff develops her feminist

thought in the context of a historically informed

phil-osophy of science Her work is particularly interesting

because, while originating in the distinctively French

trad-ition of history and philosophy of science (particularly the

work of Gaston Bachelard and Georges Canguilhem),

it also readily engages with Anglo-American work on

science

Finally, mention should be made of two increasingly

influential, if hard to categorize, philosophers: Michel

Serres and Alain Badiou Serres began as a philosopher

of science, broadly in the manner of Bachelard, who

questioned orthodox distinctions between science and

non-science He later developed, in a series of academic

best-sellers, a poetico-philosophical cosmology that

pre-sents a metaphysics inspired by chaos theory and fractal

geometry Badiou likewise combines mathematics and

ontology in a systematic philosophy that challenges the

historicist assumptions of French philosophy of the 1970s

and 1980s and rejects the post-structuralist claim that the

end of philosophy is near

Philosophy without master-thinkers has its

advan-tanges Recent French thought lacks the dramatic and

dis-ruptive originality of thinkers such as Sartre and Foucault,

but it has, in many cases, a stylistic clarity and theoretical

openness that were long missing from the philosophical

scene As in the early years of the twentieth century, early

twenty-first-century French philosophy is less drastically

creative but, perhaps, more able to contribute to the

civility and rationality of its age On the other hand,

there is a real danger that this more subdued mode of

philosophizing will split into various elements (phenom-enology, feminism, analytic philosophy), each merely part of an international discussion, and lose the distinctive flair that has characterized French philosophy for the last

F Dosse, History of Structuralism, tr D Glassman (Minneapolis,

1997)

L Ferry and A Renaut, French Philosophy of the Sixties, tr M.

Catani (Amherst, Mass., 1990)

A P Griffiths (ed.), Contemporary French Philosophy (Cambridge,

1987)

G Gutting, French Philosophy in the Twentieth Century (Cambridge,

2001)

M Lilla (ed.), New French Political Philosophy (Princeton, NJ,

1994)

E Matthews, Twentieth-Century French Philosophy (Oxford,

1996)

frequency theory: see probability.

Freud, Sigmund (1856–1939) Freud is sometimes said to have discovered the *unconscious, but it is not a claim he

made himself The unconscious which he did not discover

is the notion that if those everyday explanations which invoke motives, desires, impulses, etc., and normally carry the implication that the subject is authoritative with respect to them, are extended to cases in which this impli-cation is suspended, behaviour otherwise perplexing can

be explained This notion of the unconscious pre-dates Freud What distinguishes Freud’s unconscious is the notion that when the subject’s loss of authority with respect to his own mental states is due to a process he called ‘repression’, these states are subject to transform-ations which render them unrecognizable by the subject and may have pathological consequences The conviction that, when the subject came to stand to these contents as

to his accessible ones, they were deprived of pathogenic power, yielded a therapeutic method

Two ingredients were added to produce the character-istic Freudian view of the springs of action—sexuality and infancy What gave Freud’s aetiological speculations their further distinctiveness were the diagnostic procedures on which they were based, in particular the use of interpret-ation and free associinterpret-ation When these were applied to dreams, errors, and the behaviour of the patient towards the therapist in the analytic setting (‘the transference’), they uncovered the repressed pathogenic material This material was found to display two invariable features—it dated from infancy and pertained to the subject’s infantile sexual life

At first the pathogenic episodes in question were thought to be sexual molestation (‘the seduction theory’); these were later replaced by the child’s struggle with its own incestuous and perverse wishes (‘the Oedipus com-plex’ and ‘polymorphous perversity’) The transition from the seduction theory to its successor, the infantile Oedipus complex, was facilitated when, during Freud’s self-analysis, an infantile memory of being sexually excited by his mother’s nudity was aroused This helped persuade

Freud, Sigmund 323

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him that the sexual material which had led him to impute

infantile seductions to his patients could have an

alternative source in their self-protectively distorted

infantile incestuous fantasizing The anomaly involved in

accounting for the neuroses of predominantly female

patients by invoking the desires of male infants for their

mothers escaped notice for some time, but eventually

prompted a suspicion that Freud’s aetiological

specula-tions were more remote from clinical experience and

dependent on idiosyncratic pre-occupations than the

tradition acknowledged

The major developments in Freud’s theorizing after the

First World War comprised the replacement of the

ori-ginal division between conscious and unconscious with a

tripartite division into id, ego, and superego (with the

corollary that portions of the ego were unconscious); the

reconstrual of anxiety as the cause rather than the product

of repression; the stipulation that the self-preservative

instincts were themselves libidinal, with the further

exten-sion of the concept of libido to encompass an indeterminate

range of phenomena previously excluded, and the

intro-duction of a death instinct The rationales for these

changes are still disputed and their implications for clinical

practice unclear Attempts to clarify Freud’s

metapsycho-logical speculations or reduce them to consistency have

proved vain to date and the suggestion has been often

made that they be abandoned

Freud’s postulation of a death instinct, an impulse to

return to a pre-organic state of quietude, has in particular

provoked much scepticism It was introduced in 1922, for

a combination of reasons which have been found so

inad-equate that Ernest Jones thought it necessary to impute

the innovation to some personal motive which, Max

Schur maintained, was the death of a beloved daughter in

the influenza epidemic of 1919 The relative contribution

of this episode, and of Schopenhauer’s view that the goal

of life is death, can only be a matter for conjecture Freud

tells us that on his visit to America he was impressed by a

sign which read, ‘why live when you can be buried for

ten dollars?’ This suggests a temperamental affinity with

the notion of a death instinct which may have led him to

overlook its theoretical deficiencies

Freud’s extension of the concept libido to encompass

‘love for parents and children, friendship, love for

human-ity in general, devotion to concrete objects and abstract

ideas’ also occasioned misgivings in some quarters It was

not clear why such impulses should be repressed, or how,

if repressed, they would produce the phenomena of

neu-roses whose apparently minute articulation with sexual

mentation in its previously restricted, carnal sense gave

Freud’s early libidinal accounts of symptom-formation

their persuasive power Some critics felt entitled to impute

the tenacity with which Freud clung to a sexual conception

of libido to some deeply personal compulsion and could

have cited in support the incoherence between his

asser-tion that the majority of mankind feel degraded by the

sex-ual act and are reluctant to perform it and his contradictory

insistence that sexual gratification is ‘one of life’s

culminations’ and that ‘apart from a few perverse fanatics all the world knows this and conducts life accordingly’ During his lifetime Freud was generally regarded as a figure of unquestionable integrity Several more recent memorialists and commentators have offered a less flat-tering picture of someone whose pronouncements were too often dominated by the polemical needs of the moment and whose probity deserted him whenever his more profound interests were at stake f.c

*psychoanalysis, philosophical problems of; Reich; unconscious and subconcious mind

R Dalbiez, The Method and Doctrine of Freud (London, 1940) Ernest Jones, Freud: Life and Work (New York, 1953–7).

M MacMillan, Freud Evaluated (Amsterdam, 1990).

Max Schur, Freud: Living and Dying (New York, 1972).

friendship.Attachment characterized by disinterestedness and esteem Aristotle contrasts friendship proper with rela-tionships entered into for pleasure or advantage, ‘because

in them the friend is not loved for being what he is in himself ’ The philosophical problems of friendship are to

explain: (1) how friendship can be worth while if not for

pleasure or advantage, since, as Aristotle observes, ‘no one would choose a friendless existence on condition of having all the other good things in the world’; (2) how friendship, like family relationships, can generate obligations not had towards those who are not my friends; (3) how it can be justifiable to love you as a friend while withholding friend-ship from others who share the qualities I esteem in you, since to do otherwise is not (for example) to ‘love you for yourself alone and not your yellow hair’ (Yeats) p.g

*loyalty; fraternity; love

L Blum, Friendship, Altruism and Morality (London, 1980).

function. A function takes objects (*‘arguments’) and maps them on to objects (‘values’) For example, the add-ition function defined on the set of natural numbers takes pairs of natural numbers as its arguments and maps each pair, say 2 and 3, on to the value, here 5, which is the sum of the pair Functions are often identified with set-theoretical constructions So the doubling function, with the set of natural numbers as its domain of arguments, is identified with the set of ordered pairs, 〈x,y〉, such that y is

twice x Functions need not be numerical; Frege took

con-cepts to be functions which mapped objects on to truth-values (This has little connection with the non-technical sense of ‘function’, roughly ‘purpose’, which is also, of course, widely used by philosophers.) a.d.o

P Suppes, Introduction to Logic (Princeton, NJ, 1957), ch 11.

functional explanation: see teleological explanation.

functionalism.The theory that the condition for being in

a mental state should be given by the functional role of the state, that is, in terms of its standard causal relationships, rather than by supposed intrinsic features of the state The

324 Freud, Sigmund

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role is normally envisaged as being specified in terms of

which states (typically) produce it and which other states

and behavioural outputs will (typically) be produced by it

when the state interacts with further mental states and

perceptual inputs The theory, pioneered by David

Arm-strong and Hilary Putnam, improves on *behaviourism

because it recognizes that behaviour results from clusters

of mental states, and allows that the term for the state, e.g

‘S’s pain’, refers to a real inner condition which has the

functional role In one version the functional analysis was

supposed to be a priori, and a ground for affirming a

materi-alist *identity theory Putnam proposed it as a scientific

alternative to identity theories, and analysed function in

terms of *Turing machines Discussion has concerned

whether conscious states can be exhaustively analysed in

functional terms A modified version has been suggested

in which function is explained in terms of biological

*consciousness; consciousness, its irreducibility;

inverted spectrum; mind, syntax, and semantics;

dual-ism; Putnam

N Block, ‘Troubles With Functionalism’, in N Block (ed.),

Read-ings in Philosophical Psychology, i (London, 1980).

future:see time.

future contingents.On one definition, a future

contin-gent is a claim about the future, or is the content of a

future-tense indicative sentence On another, it is the

pos-sible truth-condition for such a claim: a future state of

affairs that might or might not obtain It may be argued

that future contingent claims are neither true nor false

until the states of affairs they are used to predict obtain or

*sea-battle argument

Aristotle’s Categories and De Interpretatione, ed J L Ackrill (Oxford,

1963): De Interpretatione, book IX.

William of Ockham, Philosophical Writings: A Selection

(Indiana-polis, 1990)

future generations Do we have moral obligations to

future generations? Most of us believe that we do We are

obligated, for example, not to harm them in certain ways

and also to share the earth’s resources with them in a way

that is just Some theorists have argued that we are

obli-gated to ensure that future generations will exist (or at

least not to prevent them from existing), while others

have claimed that we owe it to them, by controlling

popula-tion growth, to ensure that there are not too many future

people existing at any one time

Moral theories have, however, had notorious problems

in providing an adequate account of the foundations of

these obligations For example, those theories that regard

morality as a set of conventions that it is in our interests to

obey because they facilitate peace and co-operation

can-not ground obligations to future people since the latter

cannot benefit or harm us (except perhaps posthu-mously) And hypothetical contractarianism (*contract, social), to which many theorists have appealed, has been unable to determine who should be included among the contractors who must reach agreement on principles of justice between generations Some have argued that the contractors should all be members of a single generation; others have said that they should include everyone who has ever lived or ever will live; while others have claimed that they should include all possible people Each of these proposals has proven unsatisfactory

Given the problems with approaches of these sorts, many have thought that the best approach is simply to assume that our behaviour must be constrained by a respect for the rights and interests of future people in much the same way that it is constrained by the rights and interests of existing people There are, of course, prob-lems with predicting how our acts will affect future people, what their needs and interests will be, and so on And there is a further question whether, because there are presumably so many of them relative to us, we are entitled

to apply a discount rate to their interests according to their temporal distance from us But it has been thought that these problems are in principle manageable

Views of this sort are, however, all vulnerable to a powerful objection, advanced by Derek Parfit, which is based on the fact that most of the decisions that we make that have a substantial impact on the future quality of life also affect who will exist in the future For the implemen-tation of a social policy has widespread effects on the details of people’s lives—e.g who meets whom, who mar-ries whom, and when people conceive their children These effects help to determine who comes to exist But, if

it is true of a future person that he would not have existed had a certain policy not been implemented in the past, then, unless his life is not worth living, it cannot be worse for him that the policy was adopted Hence even policies that pollute the environment or deplete resources may not

be worse for future people, or violate their rights, since those people may owe their existence to the fact that those policies were implemented

Parfit and others have concluded from this that our obligations with respect to future people must be based, not on facts about how our acts affect individuals for bet-ter or worse, but on considerations that are more imper-sonal in character But traditional moral theories that take

an impersonal form—such as the total and average ver-sions of *consequentialism—have proved to have notori-ously implausible implications when applied to questions concerning future and possible people (*Population.) Hence reflection on our obligations to future generations has resulted in a profound challenge to moral theory itself

j.mcm

Brian Barry, ‘Justice between Generations’, in Liberty and Justice

(Oxford, 1991)

Peter Laslett and James S Fishkin (eds.), Justice between Age Groups and Generations (New Haven, Conn., 1992).

D Parfit, Reasons and Persons (Oxford, 1984).

future generations 325

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326 fuzzy logic

fuzzy logic.Logical system which allows degrees of truth

For example, where ‘1’ denotes truth, and ‘0’ falsity, p

might be true to degree 0.7 and so false to degree 0.3 In

general, if p is true to degree n, then p is false to degree

1 – n Fuzzy logic is a departure from classical logic,

because a proposition may be to some extent both true

and false, and a proposition and its negation to some

extent both true Classical logic, in a sense, is a version of

fuzzy logic, that version in which the only admissible

truth-values in the range from 0 to 1 are 0 and 1

Arguably, fuzzy logic does justice to the intuitive idea that some indicative sentences are not wholly true and not wholly false For example, the claim ‘He is in the room’ seems not wholly true and not wholly false but partly true and partly false if he is leaving the room at the time of

A Kandel, Fuzzy Mathematical Techniques with Applications

(Boston, 1986)

L A Zadeh, ‘Fuzzy Sets’, Information and Control (1965).

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Gabirol, Ibn: see Ibn Gabirol.

Gadamer, Hans Georg (1900–2002) German philosopher

who was a pupil of Heidegger and the leading modern

exponent of *hermeneutics

In Truth and Method (1960; tr London, 1975), he tries to

clarify the phenomenon of *understanding

Understand-ing (Verstehen) contrasts with the explanation

(Erklären) characteristic of the natural sciences

Under-standing is performed both by cultural scientists and by

non-scientists; even natural scientists understand each

other’s speech and writing We understand utterances,

texts, people, works of art, and historical events Earlier

hermeneuticists attempted to refine a methodology for

the proper interpretation of such entities But they failed

to grasp that their own understanding of an object, and the

methodological principles they devised, were historically

conditioned Cultures change over history The

inter-preter of a text from a past culture belongs to and is

conditioned by his own different culture; he is an

‘effective-historical consciousness’ who views the past

and its remnants from a particular *‘horizon’, involving a

particular ‘pre-understanding’ His understanding thus

involves an interplay between past and present, a ‘fusion

of horizons’ Plato, for example, is interpreted differently

by Neoplatonists of the sixth century ad, by

nineteenth-century Germans, and by twentieth-nineteenth-century English

scholars We cannot decide which of these interpretations

is correct, since any verdict we give is historically

condi-tioned and liable to revision by a later age (We cannot

even be sure that our interpretation of past interpretations

is correct.) At best our interpretation can be ‘authentic’,

making the best reflective use of the pre-understanding or

‘prejudice’ from which we inevitably begin Thus we

should explore our own pre-understanding and all the

relations to the world and to history that it involves Our

understanding of the past and its remains not only

depends on, but also promotes, our ‘self-understanding’

In Truth and Method Gadamer begins with the

under-standing of works of art, and several later essays concern

art (The Relevance of the Beautiful and Other Essays

(Cam-bridge, 1986) ) His central concern is the experience of art,

rather than our judgements about art or the intentions

and genius of the artist, and he tries to describe it as

accur-ately as possible The artwork rather than the audience is the pivot of this experience, and thus ‘play’ is a suitable term to describe it, in the sense of a game that ‘tends to master the players’ Truth is not the exclusive preserve of science; thus not only interpretations of art, but the art-work itself, make a claim to truth Works of art are not isol-ated from the world, and the experience of art ‘does not leave him who has it unchanged’ An authentic experience

of it involves not a historical reconstruction of the circum-stances of its original production, but a living relationship

to it which shows that it still has something to say in our epoch

Gadamer devoted several works to the interpretation

of other philosophers, especially Heidegger, Hegel, and Plato His interpretations depend on certain principles which are not universally shared We must take account

of the nature of the text, whether it is, for example, a pol-ished dialogue or a set of lecture notes We must also take account of the context in which a statement is made, its intended audience, and the question which it is designed

to answer For example, an argument in a Platonic dia-logue should not be considered and assessed simply as an isolated argument We should consider its role in the dia-logue, its effect on the specific audience to which it is addressed, and the background question to which it is a response Gadamer thus purports to replace the logic of propositions with ‘the logic of question and answer’ (He

argues, in The Idea of the Good in Platonic–Aristotelian Philoso-phy (1978; tr New Haven, Conn., 1986), that if we

inter-pret Plato and Aristotle in this way we shall see that their thought is in essence continuous and that they have far more in common than is usually supposed.) Despite his admiration for Hegel, Gadamer is at odds with him here: for Hegel, unlike Schleiermacher, Plato’s use of the dia-logue form is an essentially irrelevant adornment for a philosophical system which can be better expressed in

R Dostal (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Gadamer (Cambridge,

2002)

H J Silverman (ed.), Gadamer and Hermeneutics (London, 1991).

G Warnke, Gadamer: Hermeneutics, Tradition and Reason (Oxford,

1987)

J C Weinsheimer, Gadamer’s Hermeneutics (New Haven, Conn.,

1985)

G

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Galen(ad 129–c.200) Greek doctor and philosopher from

Pergamon, Asia Minor Although known principally as a

doctor, he wrote many books devoted to philosophical

topics He advocated the study of logic and the theory of

demonstration as essential for being a good doctor, and

wrote several books on logical theory He also wrote

works concerning causation, psychology, moral

philoso-phy, language, and rhetoric, as well as commentaries on

Aristotle, Plato, Hippocrates, and Epicurus, and polemical

books against the Stoics Most of these are now lost

He probably did not invent the fourth figure of

Aris-totelian syllogistic, but certainly did make one important

contribution to logical theory, in his Introduction to Logic.

He saw that neither Aristotelian nor Stoic logic could

account for the validity of the following inference: a = b,

b = c, therefore a = c To account for its validity, and that

of other arguments like it, he introduced a third kind of

syllogism, ‘relational syllogisms’

Galen thinks that there is a systematic or logical way of

discovering the truths of medicine—i.e the theory of

demonstration But he also concedes that experience plays

a role in the acquisition of medical knowledge It is

there-fore a matter of some interest what his precise position is

concerning how medical knowledge is acquired, and how

it relates to the schools of medicine of his time b.m

Jonathan Barnes, ‘ “A Third Kind of Syllogism”—Galen and the

Logic of Relations’, in R Sharples (ed.), Modern Thinkers and

Ancient Thinkers (London, 1993).

Michael Frede, ‘On Galen’s Epistemology’, in Essays in Ancient

Philosophy (Oxford, 1987).

R Walzer and M Frede (eds.), Galen: Three Treatises on the Nature

of Science (Indianapolis, 1985).

Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) Galileo was an astronomer

and physicist whose influence on the development of

sci-entific and philosophical thought can hardly be

over-stated No retiring scholar but a controversialist at home

in the leading universities and palaces of Renaissance Italy

until condemned by the Roman Inquisition, Galileo

opposed by both word and deed the imposition of

author-ity on the study of natural phenomena, and supported

freedom of inquiry and expression

In opposition to *Aristotelianism, Galileo insisted that

mathematics was at the heart of physics He developed his

laws of motion by introducing careful measurement into

empirical investigations, and combined this with thought

experiments and deductive argument to show that he was

no narrow inductivist or empiricist He then demolished

the naked-eye astronomy that had existed from

prehis-toric times by turning his telescope to the sky, discovering

evidence that was decisive against the

Aristotelian–Ptolem-aic cosmos while supporting Copernicus

The story of Galileo’s conflict with the Roman Church

is well known—how in 1633 he was condemned for

endorsing Copernicanism in his Dialogue Concerning the

Two Chief World Systems (1632), having been forbidden to

do so in 1616 Nevertheless, the standard interpretation of

this story has been disputed by Redondi, who, using

previously unexplored Vatican archives, claims that Galileo’s real crime in the eyes of the Church was not his Copernicanism but his atomist theory of matter, which was incompatible with the doctrine of transubstantiation, and therefore challenged the sacrament of the Eucharist But a potentially capital accusation of heresy against so well known a figure as Galileo would have been a dangerous scandal, so he faced the lesser, trumped-up charges instead Publicly Galileo recanted, but his further scientific work shows that in spite of the real danger he continued to defend the free exercise of human reason and experience and remained a steadfast pioneer of science as a secular vocation, while never wavering in his attachment to

*persecution of philosophers

Peter Machamer (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Galileo

(Cam-bridge, 1998)

Pietro Redondi, Galileo: Heretic (London, 1988).

gambler’s fallacy, or Monte Carlo fallacy ‘Red has come

up a lot recently; so probably it won’t come up next time.’ This is not itself so much a fallacy as just a bad reason The underlying fallacy is to infer from, say, ‘The probability of five reds running is low’ to ‘Given four reds running, the probability of a fifth is low’ The earlier outcomes do not affect the probability of a red next time; or, if they do, they must make it higher, by being evidence of bias in the

game theory The formalized study of rational action in situations where the welfare of each agent in a group depends on how other group members act A game is specified by, for each participating agent, a set of permit-ted strategies and a set of preferences between outcomes Agents are ‘perfectly rational’: in particular, they act so as

to maximize expected utility, where expected utility is a measure of the likely benefit to them of their actions given their preferences between outcomes The game specifica-tion and each agent’s raspecifica-tionality are standardly presumed

to be common knowledge: each agent knows these, each agent knows that the other agents know these, and so on

So each agent acts assuming that the other agents are rational and that they will act on the same assumption Solutions to games standardly prescribe Nash equilibria: each agent’s strategy must maximize expected utility given the strategies of the others t.p

*decision theory

R Luce and H Raiffa, Games and Decisions (New York, 1957).

Gandhi, Mohandas Karamchand (1869–1948) Hindu political activist with the uncompromising religious– philosophical ideal that non-injury is the only means to truth In an age ravaged by two world wars, Gandhi suc-cessfully practised the method of non-violence in mass

*civil-disobedience movements against racism in South Africa and against colonialism and untouchability in India

This method he called satya¯graha or ‘zest for truth’ In

328 Galen

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Gandhi’s moral philosophy, *means and ends form a

con-tinuum, and no end ever justifies large-scale killing In any

conflict, the antagonist should be looked upon as a fellow

searcher for truth He should be won over through

per-suasion and self-suffering, not through deceit and brute

force Such unarmed resistance, far from being passive,

calls for active love and self-control, which eventually

makes individuals fit for political self-government a.c

Joan V Bondurant, Conquest of Violence: The Gandhian Philosophy

of Conflict (Princeton, NJ, 1988).

Garden, the: see Epicureanism.

Gassendi, Pierre (1592–1655) A Catholic priest too often

known to philosophers merely as the author of a set of

objections to Descartes’s Meditations, Gassendi was an

important and influential seventeenth-century figure in

his own right Gassendi used the scepticism of Sextus

Empiricus against Aristotle and *Aristotelianism, though

it is doubtful that he was himself a whole-hearted sceptic

His espousal of Epicurean *atomism, combined with his

voluntarism and consequent empiricism, had a profound

effect on the subsequent philosophy of the century,

strongly influencing both Boyle and Newton Like them,

he was a mechanist, but not a materialist It was largely as

a result of his efforts that atomism was seen as a viable

can-didate for the vacancy created by the increasing

unsatis-factoriness of both the Aristotelian and the Paracelsan

Barry Brundell, Pierre Gassendi: From Aristotelianism to a New

Nat-ural Philosophy (Dordrecht, 1987).

Gauthier, David (1932– ) Canadian moral philosopher

who has specialized in the study of the relationship

between reason and morality He is a leading

contempor-ary proponent of the view, descending from Hobbes, that

morality is based on the long-term self-interest of each

individual, rather than on any inherent concern or respect

for the interests or moral standing of others Gauthier has

tried to develop this ‘contractarian’ approach, and its

determinate implications, using the tools of rational

choice theory, culminating in his influential Morals by

Agreement (1986) Gauthier has also written a series of

intriguing articles that offer radical reinterpretations of

Locke, Kant, and Hume, drawing out their contractarian

elements Gauthier is currently the Distinguished Service

Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh

w.k

*contract, social

David Gauthier, Morals by Agreement (Oxford, 1986).

gavagai:see translation, indeterminacy of.

Geach, Peter Thomas (1919– ) British logician with

wide-ranging philosophical interests An admirer and

expositor of McTaggart Mental Acts (1958) attacks

abstrac-tionism and dispositionalist accounts of mind, and

interestingly modifies Russell’s account of judgement

Reference and Generality (1962) demonstrates the inad-equacy of medieval and modern theories of suppositio or

*denotation Thus in ‘Every soldier swears’, ‘every sol-dier’ does not stand for some entity which is said to swear, but ‘every’ indicates the way in which the predicate

‘swear’ latches on to the subject ‘soldier’ A vigorous defence of Christian morality and *theodicy is given in

The Virtues and Providence and Evil (both 1977) He holds

the controversial view that something could be the same

A, but not the same B, as something (relative identity).

Geach’s style is combative, jargon-free, and exploits for-gotten riches of English vocabulary Elizabeth Anscombe

Harry A Lewis (ed.), Peter Geach: Philosophical Encounters

(Dor-drecht, 1991)

Geist :see spirit.

gender.Term introduced by feminists in order that the social aspect of sexual difference should not be ignored When the difference between male and female human beings is treated as one of ‘sex’, it may be thought to be accounted for biologically Speaking of gender, one acknowledges the socio-cultural determination of the

concepts women and men, and admits a conception of

women and men as distinguished primarily by a difference

*feminism; sex

Christine Delphy, Close to Home (London, 1984), intro.

generalization.As this term is most commonly used, a generalization is an ‘all’ statement, to the effect that all objects of a certain general kind possess a certain prop-erty—for example, the statement ‘All planets move in elliptical orbits’ It is customary to distinguish between

‘lawlike’ and ‘accidental’ generalizations, the one just cited being lawlike whereas one such as ‘All the coins in

my pocket are silver’ is accidental How to analyse this dis-tinction is a disputed issue, but it is widely accepted that only lawlike generalizations support corresponding counterfactual *conditionals Thus ‘All planets move in elliptical orbits’ implies ‘If Vulcan were a planet, it would move in an elliptical orbit’, whereas ‘All the coins in my pocket are silver’ does not imply ‘If this penny were in my pocket, it would be silver’ e.j.l

N Goodman, Fact, Fiction, and Forecast, 4th edn (Cambridge,

Mass., 1983)

generalization, rule of An inference rule of the *predi-cate or functional calculus Let αbe an individual variable andΦ a *well-formed formula The rule is:

FromΦ infer (α)Φ, whereΦ holds for any arbitrary individual

The notation ‘(α)’ represents the universal quantifier and

is read ‘For all α’ Alternative notations are ‘Πα’ and ‘∀α

generalization, rule of 329

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