PAIDEIA
 
 
_Contemporary  Philosophy_ (http://www.bu.edu/wcp/MainCont.htm)  
The Future of Philosophy 
Joachim Jung (1) 
[email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  
 

ABSTRACT: Higher education worldwide is affected by  budget cuts and 
dwindling financial resources. Today, science and scholarship  can only find 
broad 
recognition if their endeavors provide material success.  If subjected to 
the rigours of the market, the humanities do not score  favorably, and it 
seems that in the scale of profit-making disciplines  philosophy ranks last. In 
order for academic philosophy to maintain itself in  these times, two goals 
need to be pursued consistently: a) philosophy should  address problems of 
practical concern — such as society's ethical, social, and  even 
metaphysical needs — presenting them in a commonly accessible fashion; b)  
philosophers 
should draw material from other academic disciplines —  linguistics, 
neurophysiology, archaeology, biology, psychology, mathematics,  astronomy and 
other specializations — for their own speculation, taking  advantage of the 
integrative functions of philosophy to promote the  cooperation between all 
disciplines. The retreat of academic philosophy in our  time is due in part to 
its faulty policy. Nevertheless, there is much evidence  that philosophy as 
a common human activity will endure because it appeals to a  fundamental 
need: to reconsider knowledge and to go on inquiring when  empirical research 
has reached its limits.
     
 
Any discussion of the 'future of philosophy' must needs be a lengthy  
matter. In order to gain a specific starting point, I would like to  restrict 
my 
topic a little by asking: Does philosophy have a future? Is it  likely that 
philosophical research will proceed indefinitely? And is there  any 
well-founded likelihood that our philosophical achievements will still  find an 
interested audience in the next century? A scholar who deals with  contemporary 
philosophy cannot help being concerned about the present  state of his 
discipline. The cuts in funding, the shrinking prestige and  the lack of public 
influence are increasingly affecting the foundations of  academic philosophy. 
A short while ago the American philosopher Martha  Nussbaum (Chicago) 
complained: 'We are portrayed as both lazy and obscure:  when we are not simply 
playing truant from meaningful activity, we are  producing works of interest 
to nobody but one another, and in most cases  not even to one another. 
Academic journals are portrayed as relatively  worthless depositories for the 
uninspired products of the tenure struggle,  the intellectual life as a 
mechanized life in which the grand old  humanistic ideas no longer have any 
validity. To support such  irresponsible unenlightening characters is said to 
be a 
waste of public  and private funding. In our own days, the threat we all 
face is the  termination of funding, which means the loss of a future for many 
of our  students.' (2) 
Lamentations like these are not new. As early as 1935 the German  
sociologist Helmuth Plessner stated that philosophy had lost its functions  and 
was 
mainly concerned with 'fighting against its own superfluousness'.  (3) It was 
some years ago that the German  physicist Gerhard Vollmer expressed himself 
in a similar vein:  'Philosophers have failed to make clear what they can 
really be used for'  (Die Philosophen haben versumt klarzumachen, wozu man 
sie eigentlich  brauchen kann.) (4) Taking up this idea I  would like to pose 
the question: what function does philosophy fulfil?  What purpose does it 
serve in the context of scholarly investigations? And  what benefit can 
society derive from it? A variety of answers can be given  to these questions, 
depending on the ideological point of view of the  philosopher in question. My 
personal view is one that conceives philosophy  as a medium of 
interdisciplinary research. If ideal conditions are  provided, philosophy will 
work as an 
intellectual catalyst among the  academic disciplines, a mediator between 
the humanities and the sciences.  Given proper organization, philosophy works 
as cement linking the  different areas of scholarly investigation. If 
philosophers really  collaborate with practitioners, they will continue to 
fulfil 
a meaningful  function in academic life, just as they did one hundred, two 
hundred years  ago. 
It is no coincidence that I locate philosophy with reference to other  
intellectual spheres. Philosophy is completely dependent on material  delivered 
by various scientific, scholarly or cultural activities.  Philosophy does 
not have any resources of its own at its disposal. Its  business confines 
itself to rethinking and reconsidering facts established  by representatives of 
other disciplines. This mechanism obtains even in an  area where one would 
not expect this to be the case, namely in  metaphysics. Metaphysics 
undoubtedly transcends the realm of scientific  research; however, if one 
traces it 
back to its origins, one will  encounter theological foundations or, in a 
wider sense, the myths and  religious concepts of prehistoric nations. 
Philosophy is dependent on the empirical world and its culturally  
determined interpretations. It gains its raw material from other spheres  and 
rearranges it by setting up cross connections, evolving general  contexts and 
presenting it in a systematic form. A look at political  philosophy may 
elucidate this procedure. If we examine the works of Hobbes  and Montesquieu, 
we can 
state that they obtained the starting points their  reflections are based 
on from the Bible, the writings of ancient  historians, travel reports, 
descriptions of political constitutions and  other sources. They themselves had 
not developed the material they based  their works on. 
However, it is this second-hand existence that makes philosophy  
extraordinarily vulnerable. The function of philosophy was called into  
question when 
sociologists, ethnologists, psychologists, historians,  philologists, 
educationalists and specialists in other social sciences no  longer restricted 
themselves to empirical research but began reflecting  about their subjects in 
a philosophical manner. A gradual process was  depriving the 
tradition-oriented chief-thinkers of their intellectual  domains. Philosophy 
ceased to be 
the privilege of those exercising it as a  profession. The unity of 
philosophy-related disciplines disintegrated. 
As a result philosophy lost a variety of areas that had previously  formed 
an undisputed part of it. As an illustration you may again take up  the 
example of political philosophy I have mentioned above. Today Samuel  
Huntington 
is considered a political scientist, whereas one of his  intellectual 
forerunners, Oswald Spengler, is considered a philosopher by  most 
encyclopaedias. The fact that both thinkers are attributed to  different 
disciplines 
emerges neither from the structures of their system  nor their scholarly 
methods, 
which have a great deal in common. This  allocation results only from the 
fact that the borders of philosophy have  shifted in the past 80 years. In 
Spengler's time Huntington would have  passed for a philosopher, while 
Spengler, if he lived today, would be  labelled as a sociologist or political 
scientist. 
The secession of specific humanities from philosophy has deprived the  
former 'queen of sciences' much of her glamour and influence. But it is  less 
the empirical researchers than the philosophers themselves who are to  blame 
for this process. A short time ago I undertook to investigate the  reduction 
of philosophy in my treatise 'The Corruption of Reason',  (5) which gives 
special consideration to  academic philosophy in the German-speaking 
countries. It is striking that  philosophy in Central Europe has failed to meet 
the 
challenges of  empirical research in an adequate way. Instead of maintaining 
contact with  the sciences and humanities, philosophers withdrew from 
scientific life  and indulged in cultivating allegedly eternal values and 
eternal 
truths.  In post-war Germany philosophers far too often restricted their 
business  to paraphrasing and interpreting the writings of past celebrities. 
The  broad commitment to the history of philosophy has absorbed financial and  
intellectual resources, thus hampering the evolution of creative  
approaches. Most representatives of contemporary German philosophy  conceive 
the 
classics of their discipline as patterns for endless  reproduction rather than 
incentives for new deliberations. The German  philosopher Lorenz Puntel from 
Munich portrayed the situation in his  subject as follows: 'It would not be 
an exaggeration to claim that a  German education in philosophy consists 
mostly in neither more nor less  than a comprehensive education in the history 
of philosophy.  (6) ... Many German philosophers are  incapable of seeing 
and treating a philosophical topic as a purely  systematic topic or problem. 
More often than not they do not address  philosophical questions as 
systematic questions, i. e. in view of their  purely philosophical content 
only, but 
discuss, reconstruct and expose for  the n-th time the opinions of past 
philosophers concerning these  questions, as well as their historical context. 
... What is called  contemporary German philosophy resembles for the most 
part an antique-shop  ratherthan a workshop.' (7)  
It fully suits the situation that in the circles concerned lamentations  
arise on the 'apostasy' of other humanities and — to use a frequent  metaphor —
 'the unfaithful children' who show so little gratitude to the  mother of 
sciences, who brought up all of them. I think that complaints  like these do 
not get us any further. What we need is an active policy  which makes it 
clear that philosophy should be involved in scientific  life. Instead of 
bewailing the faded glory of the past, philosophy should  aim at regaining lost 
territory and reassembling on a common foundation  all the disciplines that 
had previously belonged to it. Academic  philosophy can revive if it serves as 
an interdisciplinary platform where  scholars of any specialization 
exchange information on their approaches to  their own material. By bringing 
together the individual sciences and  humanities and enhancing the 
communication 
between them, philosophy could  regain a reputable position in academic life. 
Philosophy should face the  challenges emerging from the ever advancing 
flux of knowledge. At a time  when neurophysiology and genetic technology are 
making relentless  progress, philosophy no longer has the option of 
withdrawing to a  priori-constructions and concepts of pure reason. How 
inspiring the 
 preoccupation with specific scientific problems can be, has been  
successfully demonstrated by numerous philosophy departments in the United  
States. 
In the past decades American philosophers have developed a number  of 
promising approaches that have preserved their subject from suffocating  in its 
own tradition. 
A second device enabling philosophy to escape from stagnation consists  of 
the permanent appeal to practical life. Philosophers should show  commitment 
to all kinds of topical questions, political and social issues,  as they 
are raised by the mass media. If philosophers adopted the habit of  commenting 
on social questions publicly wherever and whenever they turn  up, the quest 
for the usefulness of their discipline would vanish  automatically. The 
point is only that most representatives of our subject  do not think of 
engaging themselves in topical matters. In France and  Germany academic 
philosophers customarily consider it below their dignity  to address the 
average 
citizen. For them it has always been a mark of  excellence not to meet the 
requirements of the common man. As a result,  philosophy-ridden enthusiasts 
have 
established citzens' initiatives that  aim at treating philosophy in a living, 
problem-oriented manner. In France  philosophical cafs (cafs philo) have 
come into being. They consist of  ordinary coffee houses where non-conformist 
philosophers meet once a week  and give papers with subsequent discussions. 
As a rule, these lectures are  attended by a large audience which represents 
all ages and all layers of  society. The philosophical cafs reveal the 
increased demand for  philosophical discussion and the complete inability of 
the 
academic  establishment to meet it. In Germany philosophical practices  
(philosophische Praxen) have mushroomed. They are founded and conducted by  
professionally educated private persons who set up studios and wait for  people 
in need of philosophical advice. Unlike their French counterparts  the 
German practitioners charge entrance fees or membership fees. In their  courses 
they normally cover a wide range of topics. Great popularity is  enjoyed by 
tuition on psychological issues which approximates to  conventional 
psychotherapy, as well as consultations in management and  economic 
organization. 
What all practitioners have in common is the will  to keep the concrete 
problems of human lif in sight. As the only place you  can learn to swim is in 
the 
water, you can conduct a philosophical debate  only in interaction with 
practical life or scientific research. 
The philosophical cafs and practices arose as counter-institutions to  
academic philosophy, which customarily avoids topical issues, exhausting  its 
business in reading and compiling the philosophical classics. By  saying this, 
I do not of course mean that the preoccupation with the  history of 
philosophy is completely worthless. No doubt the classics  provide a unique 
source 
of inspiration and show how one can tackle  philosophical problems 
methodically. What I oppose is the slavish  imitation and endless repetition of 
dogmas which have proved to be false  or at least dubious. Philosophy cannot 
give 
definite answers nor can it  provide indisputable truths as promised 
throughout the history of thought.  But it does give us incentives and stimuli 
for 
our own reflections. It may  serve 'zur Erhebung and Herzerquickung' (to 
fill us with enthusiasm and  strengthen our hearts) as Edmund Husserl once put 
it.  (8)  
There is some evidence that the number of people interested in  philosophy 
has been continuously growing in recent years. The rise of  philosophical 
narrative and above all the success of Jostein Gaarder's  novels have shown 
that considerable parts of the population are far from  looking on philosophy 
as a declining business. Academic philosophers would  be well advised to 
make use of this boom for their own purposes. The  budget cuts and the decrease 
in appointments as a result are not an  irreversible doom to which they 
must submit. The crisis of  institutionalized philosophy can be overcome if its 
representatives have  the firm will and intelligence to take adequate 
measures. It is no use  putting the blame on science, which is favoured with 
substantial funding  and a wealth of new discoveries. If Descartes, Leibniz and 
Kant were able  to benefit from the science of their times, their successors 
should be in  the position to emulate them. The future of academic 
philosophy, the  question of whether it will revive or continue to decline, 
solely 
depends  on its abilty to adapt to the requirements of our time. The business 
of  philosophy, free rational speculation, is deeply rooted in human 
nature,  and there is no evidence that it will ever come to an end. 

     
Notes 
(1) The author is editor of the philosophy journal "Kontroversen in der  
Philosophie" and assistant professor at the Ludwig Boltzmann Institute for  
Modern Austrian Intellectual History in Vienna. 
(2) Proceedings and Addresses of the American Philosophical Association  
November 1995, Vol. 69, No. 2, p. 144f. Nussbaum refers to the humanities  in 
general but the context does not leave any doubt that philosophy is  meant 
primarily. 
(3) Helmuth Plessner: Die versptete Nation. ber die politische  
Verfhrbarkeit brgerlichen Geistes (1935). Stuttgart 1959 (Kohlhammer), pp.  
150, 176 
(4) Conversation Gerhard Vollmer - Joachim Jung 24.8.1994 
(5) in German as: 'Der Niedergang der Vernunft. Kritik der  
deutschsprachigen Universittsphilosophie', Frankfurt 1997, Campus  Publ. 
(6) Lorenz B. Puntel: The History of Philosophy in Contemporary  
Philosophy: The View from Germany, Topoi 10/1991, p. 147 
(7) ibid. p. 151f. 
(8) Edmund Husserl: Philosophie als strenge Wissenschaft. Frankfurt  1965

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