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    The McMaster Department of Philosophy has now put together the following notice commemorating Barry: Barry Allen: A Philosophical Life Barry…

The Philosophical Lexicon: quaint diversion or instrument of hegemony? (Hellie)

The 2008 update of the Philosopher’s Lexicon is a bit exasperating. A
preliminary concern is that the treatment of continental figures
continues to be shabby — contemptuous and dismissive.

Perhaps a bit more distressing is the PL’s continued heavy slant toward a certain generation of philosophers. It’s hard to find a philosopher
on the list born much after 1950 (the sole exception I find being
Neander, with Korsgaard and Shapiro born in ’52 and ’51, respectively).

This isn’t plausibly due to the unlikeliness of a philosopher’s doing
anything worthy of being immortalized in this way until their late 50s.
First, the previous edition of the PL was compiled in 1987. At the time,
only philosophers born before 1930 were that old, but there are plenty
of entries younger than that (Plantinga, AO Rorty, Searle, Stroud,
Block, Boyd, Chihara, Follesdal, Dennett, Parfit, Desousa, Donnellan,
Dretske, Dworkin, … just to get through the Ds). And second, just to pull a few out of the sky,
surely
such entries as the following are as amusing and informative as many current entries: luddite (a philosopher who likes technology), side (an
aspect of a time-slice), William (a father of a necessary being), to
chalm (to control the behavior of a zombie), to leit (to control the
behavior of an academic discipline).

Much more credible as an explanation is that Dennett, the compiler of
the PL, was himself born in 1942, and the doctrines, peculiarities, and insider humor of philosophers after his generation have largely eluded his attention. Seen in this light, the PL as currently
constituted can be plausibly regarded as a (perhaps somewhat self-congratulatory) joke among
the members of Dennett’s generation.

The top-heaviness of the PL might be thought to be not entirely without negative
consequences. It is natural for an undergraduate major or beginning grad
student to regard the PL as a guide to the stereotypical doctrines or styles of
the most important philosophers; absence from the list, by contrast, would signal
marginality. If so, the PL hegemonizes Dennett’s generation and
marginalizes those who come afterward.

If the PL were a mere samizdat or internet barnacle collecter (deaths of
philosophers, breakup lines of philosophers, and the like), this would
not matter much or at all. But as published by Blackwell, the PL has a sort of
canonical status as capturing humorously the profession’s
self-conception. While the 1987 version was an amusing relic or snapshot
of the field at the time, the 2008 update takes on a somewhat darker tone.

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15 responses to “The Philosophical Lexicon: quaint diversion or instrument of hegemony? (Hellie)”

  1. I totally agree. The 1987 lexicon was funny and really captured something about its time. This one is embarrassing.
    When the link to this version was first published I was very surprised that it was made without any negative comment.
    Thank you for posting.

  2. It seems to me that even if the latest PL is both not funny and not a fair measure of the discipline, the likelihood of serious damage from the one-two punch of Dennett hegemonization and post-Dennett marginalization is negligible because too few people are subject to the influences you mention.

    The general public can survey the internet's assortment of philosophical humor without being able to distinguish the philosophically substantive publishers from the others. So an additional piece of philosophical humor, however bad, isn't a significant problem for them. But you mentioned a more informed group who could make the relevant distinction between a publisher like Blackwell and whoever publishes the "proofs that p".

    An undergraduate philosophy major and especially a beginning grad student are likely to know something about the realities of the discipline and can form judgments about those matters without being unduly influenced by what they surely recognize as an attempt at humor. The combination of properties required for the PL to be troublesome involves a respect for Blackwell, a thorough interest in philosophy, AND a susceptibility to having one's judgments swayed by just about anything one reads. I suppose there may be people like that, but I would be surprised if there were many.

  3. Surely the very idea of a Philosophical Lexicon, regardless of the contingent gen(d)erational specificity of its content, inherently valorizes neo-Platonic logocentricism and hence brutalizes a transformative engagement with the rampant multiplicity of philosophical discourses, especially insofar as the meta-narratival trope of this Lexicon is a contemptuous colonial usurpation of deconstrustive worldplay?

    Apart from them codgers being fogeys that is.

  4. luddite (a philosopher who likes technology)

    This is very good.

  5. This publication certainly reflects Dennett's perspective on the world–which we can hardly regard as a surprise. But budding philosophers' understanding of the shape and contour of their discipline will be determined by the mass of perspectives that they've been exposed to, not any one source of this or any other kind. It's rather like the PGR in that respect. Nothing wrong with having Dennett's voice in the mix. I do, however, agree that Dennett should have recognized that Brian Leiter controls the behavior of our academic discipline.

  6. philosophy grad student

    I respect Benj's opinion on the topic and welcome the discussion he proposes, but I can't really see why bother taking the lexicon this serious. Moreover, as far as I know, anyone else is welcome to write another lexicon encompassing whatever school of thought and/or philosophers he/she likes.

    Do you really want to improve the lexicon? Come up with a lexicon that is funnier. That would be a real improvement… I for one don't mind reading any kind of philosophical lexicon, as long as it's funny.

    Also, I don't think there's any reason for pseudo-sociological criticism of the kind offered by Phil. I say 'pseudo-sociological' because, quite frankly, the language used by this kind of criticism is the same kind of language one finds in texts of writers like Jacques Derrida.

  7. benjful, adj., vindictiveness over not having one's name cited. 'Benjful over the slight, he tried to leit the profession into sharing his point of view.'

    I dunno – did you submit any of those entries? The new Philosopher's Lexicon represents only whatever unsolicited suggestions people happened to give Dennett over the last two decades (I recall he didn't even welcome my suggestions ten years ago, when I made them.) In contrast, there's now officially a call for new entries, and the new edition promises annual updates – I find it unlikely that annual updates will focus on philosophers over 50, but I suppose we can wait and see. If you think it's underrepresented or slights certain people, then offer your own suggestions to submissions@philosophicallexicon.com.

    In any case, I think there is a deeper issue at stake, here. What the Philosopher's Lexicon really needs is not just more and funnier and more representative entries, but more _useful_ ones, like 'quine', 'chisholm', 'outsmart', 'scheffle', 'ziff', 'leit', and, yes, 'benjful'. 'Harmanica' and 'McDowell' are funny enough, but who is going to add them to their working vocabulary?

  8. Heheheh! Nice examples. Solve the problem: write your own rival PL and post it here. Chances are it will get a much wider readership than the Blackwells one.

  9. Initially, I had supposed that this post was intended as a parody. But now I see I was wrong. Why should the PL aspire to be anything more than a somewhat self-congratulatory joke among the members of Dennett's generation? Are department chairs really about to go to their deans and brag that n members of their department appear in the PL?

  10. I agree that the new version of the Lexicon leaves something to be desired. But…a glance at the "Preface to the 2008 Edition" on the main page of the lexicon shows:
    (1) The current edition is not hosted by Blackwell.
    (2) The current editor is Asbjørn Steglich-Petersen. I don't know his date of birth, but according to his webpage he is a Post-Doctoral Researcher and Assistant Professor at Aarhus University with a 2007 Cambridge PhD. This doesn't sound like one of us old fogeys. Current entries were culled from suggestions sent to Dennett and so reflect his interests and network of colleagues, but the new editor might be open to revising the lexicon further.
    (3) Suggestions for expanding the lexicon can be submitted to submissions[at]philosophicallexicon.com. Why not submit yours?

  11. This calls for a Philosophical Wikicon.

  12. "It is natural for an undergraduate major or beginning grad student to regard the PL as a guide to the stereotypical doctrines or styles of the most important philosophers; absence from the list, by contrast, would signal marginality."

    Well, by that measure I'm unnatural since I've never really read the lexicon until today. Some funny stuff, but the new posts are thin, though I doubt any of this is a major problem.

    The measured iconoclasm required for philosophy generally makes philosophers delightfully flippant people. Also, the marginality of the target rarely stops them from cracking jokes. With more traffic to the lexicon through this blog, they'll likely be a better list next year that reflects the wit of my generation. The tone of this post reminds me of a lesson implicit in something from 'The Onion' the other day and seconds some recommendations in the comments above:

    TV Listings

    Ridicule It Yourself

    VH1

    7 p.m. EDT/6 p.m. CDT

    Outrageous, embarrassing, and absurd pop-culture video clips are followed by several seconds of silence, allowing viewers to make their own snarky comments about what they have just seen.

  13. I don't mean to be flippant here, but I (will be entering my third year of PhD work and) had idea the Philosophical Lexicon was published. I thought it was another piece of humor that existed out there on the net.

  14. New word:

    Phillet, v. To be led into missing the facetiousness of a continental parody while reading the leitest blog in philosophy. "The philosophy grad student got philleted."

    PS-Feel free to note that leit makes a nice adjective too.

  15. The dismissal of European philosophasters was part of the original (early 1970s?) version of Dennett's Dictionary (the definition of "merleau-ponty" was typical), but the old lexicon wasn't usually vicious: I believe Dennett got permission from living "honorees" before circulating his definitions. In a way this was unfortunate: there can be genuinely funny but genuinely offensive definitions (I have in mind one that ridiculed an Australian philosopher, now dead, over something he was in reality quite sensitive about). Such definitions can only really circulate by samizdat and word-of-mouth: any attempt to PUBLISH a lexicon like this automatically defangs it!

    (defang: to remove an egregiously eccentric person from a position of influence in an organization or publication, as in "'Philosophia Mathematica' has become an excellent journal since it was defanged in 1993")

    My own wish would be to see a few words that could actually be USED, usefully: I've heard "quine" used as a verb for philosophical denial of existence, and "carnaps" for logical symbols occasionally. I've wished people would define the verb "ture" as "to compute a value of a recursive function!"

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