{"title":"Undoing the Psychologizing of the Psychological","authors":"Arata Hamawaki","doi":"10.18192/CJCS.VI7.4291","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"In “Aesthetic Problems of Modern Philosophy,” first published in 1965, and later collected in Must We Mean What We Say?, Stanley Cavell wrote: \nWe know the efforts of such philosophers as Frege and Husserl to undo the “psychologizing” of logic (like Kant’s undoing Hume’s psychologizing of knowledge): now, the shortest way I might describe such a book as the Philosophical Investigations is to say that it attempts to undo the psychologizing of psychology, to show the necessity controlling our application of psychological and behavioral categories; even, one could say, show the necessities in human action and passion themselves. And at the same time it seems to turn all of philosophy into psychology—matters of what we call things, how we treat them, what their role is in our lives. \nFrege, of course, insisted on distinguishing between what is thought in any act of thinking, the content of thought, which he conceived of as having a propositional form, and the thinking of it. A thought is what can be common to different acts of thinking, whether of one’s own or of another. It is thus essentially public, essentially shareable, unowned. By contrast the thinking of a thought is necessarily someone’s, necessarily owned, and so in that sense private. Frege depsychologized logic, by excluding the psychological from it. The logical must bear no trace of the psychological, for if that were not so, there would be nothing that could be true or false—and so no judgment, no belief, no propositional attitude, as thoughts have subsequently come to be called. There would be in Thomas Rickett’s memorable words, merely “mooing.” The first person is consequently banished from the logical order, for a first person thought is constituted by the thinking of it. But in depsychologizing logic as he did, Frege seemed to have psychologized psychology. Thus, in speaking of the Investigations as undoing the psychologizing of psychology, I take it, Stanley meant that it seeks to undo what Frege did. However, this doesn’t mean undoing what Frege undid, that is, erasing the sharp boundary between the logical and the psychological, but rather to not cede the psychological to psychology: what the PI calls for is to further what Frege began, but, as it were, against Frege. In other words, Stanley saw Wittgenstein as reintroducing the first person as essential to the logical order, the order of what we think.","PeriodicalId":342666,"journal":{"name":"Conversations: The Journal of Cavellian Studies","volume":"6 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-06-19","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Conversations: The Journal of Cavellian Studies","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.18192/CJCS.VI7.4291","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
In “Aesthetic Problems of Modern Philosophy,” first published in 1965, and later collected in Must We Mean What We Say?, Stanley Cavell wrote:
We know the efforts of such philosophers as Frege and Husserl to undo the “psychologizing” of logic (like Kant’s undoing Hume’s psychologizing of knowledge): now, the shortest way I might describe such a book as the Philosophical Investigations is to say that it attempts to undo the psychologizing of psychology, to show the necessity controlling our application of psychological and behavioral categories; even, one could say, show the necessities in human action and passion themselves. And at the same time it seems to turn all of philosophy into psychology—matters of what we call things, how we treat them, what their role is in our lives.
Frege, of course, insisted on distinguishing between what is thought in any act of thinking, the content of thought, which he conceived of as having a propositional form, and the thinking of it. A thought is what can be common to different acts of thinking, whether of one’s own or of another. It is thus essentially public, essentially shareable, unowned. By contrast the thinking of a thought is necessarily someone’s, necessarily owned, and so in that sense private. Frege depsychologized logic, by excluding the psychological from it. The logical must bear no trace of the psychological, for if that were not so, there would be nothing that could be true or false—and so no judgment, no belief, no propositional attitude, as thoughts have subsequently come to be called. There would be in Thomas Rickett’s memorable words, merely “mooing.” The first person is consequently banished from the logical order, for a first person thought is constituted by the thinking of it. But in depsychologizing logic as he did, Frege seemed to have psychologized psychology. Thus, in speaking of the Investigations as undoing the psychologizing of psychology, I take it, Stanley meant that it seeks to undo what Frege did. However, this doesn’t mean undoing what Frege undid, that is, erasing the sharp boundary between the logical and the psychological, but rather to not cede the psychological to psychology: what the PI calls for is to further what Frege began, but, as it were, against Frege. In other words, Stanley saw Wittgenstein as reintroducing the first person as essential to the logical order, the order of what we think.
在1965年首次出版的《现代哲学的美学问题》中,后来收录在《我们必须言行一致吗?》, Stanley Cavell写道:我们知道像弗雷格和胡塞尔这样的哲学家试图取消逻辑的“心理化”(就像康德取消休谟的知识的心理化):现在,我可以用最简短的方式来描述《哲学研究》这样一本书,它试图取消心理学的心理化,以表明控制我们对心理和行为范畴的应用的必要性;甚至可以说,它表现了人类行为和激情本身的必要性。与此同时,它似乎把所有的哲学都变成了心理学——我们如何称呼事物,我们如何对待它们,它们在我们生活中扮演什么角色。当然,弗雷格坚持把任何思维活动中的思维,即他认为具有命题形式的思维内容,与思维内容的思维加以区分。思想是不同的思维行为所共有的东西,无论是自己的还是别人的。因此,它本质上是公共的、可共享的、无主的。相反,一个思想的思想必然是某人的,必然是私有的,因此在这个意义上是私有的。弗雷格通过排除逻辑中的心理因素,将逻辑去心理化。逻辑的东西一定不能有心理的痕迹,因为如果没有心理的痕迹,就没有什么东西可以是真或假,也就没有判断,没有信仰,没有命题的态度,也就没有后来被称为思想的东西了。用托马斯·里基特(Thomas Rickett)那句令人难忘的话来说,就是“移动”。因此,第一人称被排除在逻辑秩序之外,因为第一人称思维是由对它的思考构成的。但在他对逻辑进行去心理化的过程中,弗雷格似乎把心理学心理化了。因此,说到《调查》消解了心理学的心理学化,我认为斯坦利的意思是,它试图消解弗雷格所做的事情。然而,这并不意味着要取消弗雷格所取消的东西,也就是说,消除逻辑和心理学之间的尖锐界限,而是不把心理学让给心理学:PI所要求的是进一步推进弗雷格所开始的,但实际上是反对弗雷格的。换句话说,斯坦利认为维特根斯坦重新引入了第一人称对于逻辑秩序,我们思考的秩序至关重要。