IAI  News
 
What Philosophy Ought to Do  
(http://iainews.iai.tv/articles/what-philosophy-ought-to-do-auid-483/rss)  

23rd January 2015 

 
Nicholas  Maxwell | Honorary Senior Research Fellow in Philosophy at UCL;  
author of What’s Wrong With Science? and How Universities Can Help Create a  
Wiser World 
 

 
Philosophers should stop paying so  much attention to the history of 
philosophy and start asking humanity's most  fundamental questions

 
 
 
Philosophy is unique. There is no other academic discipline that has  
laboured for so long under such a massive misconception as to what its basic  
task ought to be.
 
 
The proper basic task of philosophy is to keep alive awareness of what our  
most fundamental, important, urgent problems are, what our best attempts 
are at  solving them, and what the relative merits and demerits of these 
attempts are. A  basic task is to articulate, and improve the articulation of, 
our fundamental  problems, and make clear that there are answers to these 
problems implicit in  much of what we do and think – implicit in science, 
politics, economic activity,  art, the law, education and so on – these answers 
often being inadequate and  having adverse consequences for life and thought 
in various ways as a  result. 
Philosophy should also try to help improve our attempted solutions  to our 
fundamental problems, by imaginatively proposing and critically assessing  
possible solutions, all the time making clear, where relevant, that different 
 possible solutions have different implications for diverse aspects of 
life. As a  result of improving our attempted solutions to our fundamental 
problems we may  thereby contribute to the improvement of our lives, and help 
us 
make progress  towards a good world. 
Even though these are the proper, fundamental tasks for philosophy, it 
hardly  needs to be said that none of these tasks can be said to be the 
exclusive domain  of philosophy or academic philosophers. Quite the contrary, a 
central task of  philosophy is to stimulate as many people as possible to think 
about fundamental  problems imaginatively and critically - that is, 
rationally. Philosophy  is not to be characterized, or delineated from other 
disciplines in terms of  who does it, but rather in terms of the fundamental 
character of  the problems being tackled, and perhaps the value of the 
contribution  in question.
 (http://iainews.iai.tv/articles/register)  
 
What, then, are our fundamental problems? Our most fundamental problem of  
all, encompassing all others, can be put quite simply like this: 
How can our human world, and the world of sentient life more generally,  
imbued with the experiential, consciousness, free will, meaning and value, 
exist  and best flourish embedded as it is in the physical universe? 
Some will reject the idea that the ultimate reality behind the natural 
world  is physical in character. For example, there are those who hold that the 
 
ultimate reality is God. In order not to exclude such views in an a  priori 
fashion, as it were, we need a broader formulation of the above  problem: 
How can our human world ... exist and best flourish embedded as it is in  
the real world? 
I interpret the first formulation of this problem in such a way that it  
encompasses all of academic thought, from theoretical physics, mathematics and 
 cosmology, via the biological and technological sciences, to social 
inquiry and  the humanities. It also encompasses all practical problems of 
living 
- problems  facing individuals, groups, institutions, societies, nations, 
and humanity as a  whole. The key idea of this conception of philosophy is 
that philosophy is  concerned to help solve rationally our most fundamental 
problems. 
The moment it is accepted that philosophy has, as its basic task, to tackle 
 fundamental problems, it is clear that philosophy education must be 
transformed.  Instead of learning philosophy via the history of philosophy, 
[actually this is  vital, but it should not be the only approach  -BR Note] 
rather 
one  needs to plunge, from the outset, into the fundamental problem as it 
confronts  us today, relevant background knowledge in physics, biology, 
climate science,  social inquiry and the humanities, politics, economics and 
international affairs  being acquired as one goes along. That the history of 
philosophy is the wrong  way to learn philosophy becomes all the more obvious 
granted the points to be  made below – namely, that much of philosophy in the 
past has been alienated from  concern with our fundamental problems. 
But what exactly does "fundamental" mean here? We can perhaps say that  
problem P1 is more fundamental than P2 if solving  P1 also, at least in 
principle, solves P2, but not vice  versa. This suffers from the disadvantage 
that 
"P1 is more  fundamental than P2" in this sense might just mean that P1  is 
more general. Can we distinguish "more fundamental" from "more general" - 
the  former being stronger? It can be done like this. P1 is more  fundamental 
than P2 if the solution to P1 solves  P2, but not vice versa, and the 
solution to P1 is unified  or coherent in some significant, substantial sense 
of 
these terms, and not just  a jumble of disconnected items. An example of a 
unified or coherent solution is  a unified physical theory that solves a range 
of problems in physics. 
Granted this conception of the basic task of philosophy, it at once becomes 
 clear that philosophy in the university has, as an elementary obligation, 
to  ensure that sustained thinking about our fundamental problems and how to 
solve  them goes on in an influential way within academic inquiry. This is, 
indeed, a  basic requirement for academic inquiry to be rational. Four 
elementary, almost  banal, rules of reason are: 
(1) Articulate, and seek to improve the articulation of, the basic problem 
to  be solved. 
(2) Propose and critically assess possible solutions. 
(3) If the basic problem to be solved proves intractable, specialize. Break 
 the basic problem up into subordinate problems. Tackle analogous,  
easier-to-solve problems, in an attempt to work gradually to the solution to 
the  
basic problem to be solved. 
(4) But if one engages in specialized problem-solving in this way, make 
sure  that specialized and basic problem-solving interact, so that each 
influences the  other (since otherwise specialized problem-solving is likely to 
become unrelated  to the basic problems we seek to solve). 
Sustained thinking about what we may call "global" problems - global  
intellectually, and global in the sense of encompassing the earth and humanity  
as a whole - must go on in universities in a way that influences, and is  
influenced by, more specialized research if rules (1), (2) and (4) are to be 
put  into practice, and academic inquiry is to meet elementary requirements 
for  rationality. Philosophy as sustained thinking about our fundamental 
problems and  how to solve them must be an integral, influential part of 
academia 
if academia  as a whole is to be rational. A quite basic task for 
philosophy, then, is to  ensure, as a bare minimum, that universities are 
organized 
in such a way that  each university has a big, prestigious Seminar or 
Symposium, open to all at the  university from undergraduate to 
vice-chancellor, 
which meets regularly to  explore global problems in a sustained way, and in a 
way that is capable of  influencing, and being influenced by, more 
specialized research. 
>From what I have said so  far, one would expect such global seminars to be 
commonplace in universities  around the world. I know of no university 
anywhere that has such a global  seminar (although attempts have been made, 
recently, in a few universities to  introduce sustained inter-disciplinary 
research into global problems: see, for  example, the _Grand  Challenges 
Programme_ (http://www.ucl.ac.uk/research/grand-challenges)  at my own 
university, 
UCL). 
Academic philosophy has failed dismally to create such a global seminar in  
the university. Even worse, it has made no attempt to do so. Worse still,  
academic philosophy has failed almost entirely to take on the task I have  
indicated above - the task of keeping alive awareness of what our most  
fundamental problems are (as a bare minimum). 
Academic philosophy today does not even recognize, as a fundamental problem 
 of the discipline: What kind of inquiry can best help us realize what is 
of  value in life? or, to quote the title of an article of mine What kind  of 
inquiry can best help us create a good world? 
>From Nicholas Maxwell, Global  Philosophy: What Philosophy Ought to Be 
(Imprint Academic, 1st October  2014), ch. 2, What Philosophy Ought to Be, pp.  
12-17

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