The “Demarcation Problem” in Science: What Has Enlightenment Got to Do with It? Part I

Q4 Arts and Humanities Dialogue and Universalism Pub Date : 2022-01-01 DOI:10.5840/du202232110
A. Cook
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Abstract

Steven Pinker’s recent Enlightenment Now (2018) aside, Enlightenment values have been in for a rough ride of late. Following Max Horkheimer and Theodor Adorno’s critique of Enlightenment as the source of fascism, recent studies, amplified by Black Lives Matter, have laid bare the ugly economic underbelly of Enlightenment. The prosperity that enabled intellectuals to scrutinize speculative truths in eighteenth-century Paris salons relied on the slave trade and surplus value extracted from slave labor on sugar plantations and in other areas Europeans controlled. Indeed, deprived of its ugly economic underbelly, Enlightenment was barely conceivable; furthermore, its reliance on surplus value extraction from oppressed labor was accompanied by a racism that, with the exception of the thought of Jean-Jacques Rousseau and a few other thinkers, was arguably inherent to Enlightenment. However, I am not proposing yet another revelation of Enlightenment’s complicity in exploitation of, or disregard for, the Other. Rather, I want to highlight the damage being done today by an insidious strategy of labelling as “pseudo-science” entire domains of non-Western knowledge such as Chinese medicine and Ayurveda, thereby rendering them no-go zones for serious minds. Even though the term pseudo-science had yet to be coined, the beginnings of this tendency are already evident in Enlightenment-era works such as Jean-Baptiste Du Halde’s Description … de la Chine (1735). The perpetuation of this dismissive treatment of non-Western natural knowledge creates a significant obstacle to superseding a “scientific revolution” whose confines have long been burst: it is increasingly recognized that traditional/indigenous knowledge affords a vast reservoir of materials, skills and insights of which the world has desperate need, no more urgently than in response to the covid-19 pandemic.
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科学中的“划界问题”:启蒙与之有何关系?第一部分
除了史蒂文·平克(Steven Pinker)最近的《当下的启蒙》(Enlightenment Now, 2018)之外,启蒙价值观最近也经历了一段艰难的历程。继马克斯·霍克海默(Max Horkheimer)和西奥多·阿多诺(Theodor Adorno)批评启蒙运动是法西斯主义的根源之后,最近的研究(被“黑人的命也是命”(Black Lives Matter)放大)揭露了启蒙运动丑陋的经济弱点。十八世纪巴黎沙龙里的知识分子能够仔细审视思辨真理的繁荣,依赖于奴隶贸易和从甘蔗种植园和欧洲人控制的其他地区的奴隶劳动中提取的剩余价值。事实上,如果没有丑陋的经济弱点,启蒙运动几乎是不可想象的;此外,它对从被压迫劳动中榨取剩余价值的依赖伴随着一种种族主义,这种种族主义除了让-雅克·卢梭(Jean-Jacques Rousseau)和其他一些思想家的思想外,可以说是启蒙运动固有的。然而,我并不是要再一次揭示启蒙运动对他者的剥削或漠视。相反,我想强调一种阴险的策略所造成的危害,这种策略将整个非西方知识领域,如中医和阿育吠陀,贴上“伪科学”的标签,从而使它们成为严肃思想的禁区。尽管伪科学这个词还没有被创造出来,但这种趋势的开端在启蒙时代的作品中已经很明显了,比如让-巴蒂斯特·杜·阿尔德的《中国的描述》(1735)。这种对非西方自然知识的轻蔑态度的延续,给取代早已突破限制的“科学革命”造成了重大障碍:人们越来越认识到,传统/土著知识提供了世界迫切需要的大量材料、技能和见解,其迫切程度不超过应对covid-19大流行。
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来源期刊
Dialogue and Universalism
Dialogue and Universalism Social Sciences-Communication
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
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