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Unscientific Postscript
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10839 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
Date : |
7 / 1986 |
3,210 Words |
| Author
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Lee Congdon Lee Congdon writes regularly on modern literature. He teaches
eastern European history at James Madison University. |
DEATH OF THE SOUL
William Barrett
Garden City, New York: Anchor Press/Doubleday 1986
When academic philosophers speak, few outsiders listen. Most professors, you see, "do" analytic philosophy, which, though it was inspired by the powerful minds of G. E. Moore, Bertrand Russell, and Ludwig Wittgenstein, has all too often degenerated into a narrowly technical exercise, far removed from ordinary life. Not only does the analysts' language tend to be cramped and artificial, but their subjects are rarely such as to cause the pulse rate to quicken. Concerning those things that from time to time preoccupy even the most unreflective of men--love, death, courage, suffering, God--they have little or nothing to say. Such words, they patiently explain, are meaningless, in the strict sense that scientific inquiry cannot put them to the test. In their place, they offer us rigorous and sometimes inventively arcane logical investigations and linguistic clarifications. As a consequence, they have widened perceptively the gulf that separates them from lesser mortals; it is the uncommon academic who has the desire, let alone the ability, to enter into discussion with the uninitiated.
This circumstance has always troubled William Barrett, who, in the course of a long and distinguished career, has made it his special mission to engage a wider audience without so much as the appearance of condescension. But then Barrett has not always been an academic. In The Truants: Adventures Among the Intellectuals (1982), his finest book to date, he recalled how, at the end of World War II, he returned home from the European theater and joined the Partisan Review's
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