Interpretation and Social Criticism (Tanner Lectures on Human Values)

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出版者:Harvard University Press
作者:Michael Walzer
出品人:
页数:108
译者:
出版时间:26 June, 2004
价格:$18.50
装帧:Paperback
isbn号码:9780674459717
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图书标签:
  • 政治哲学
  • 美国
  • 社会学
  • 知识分子
  • 文化研究
  • 哲学
  • 文学批评
  • 社会理论
  • 诠释学
  • 人文主义
  • 文化研究
  • 政治哲学
  • 伦理学
  • 批评理论
  • 思想史
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具体描述

AT LEAST SINCE the Enlightenment,when conventional notions of morality were stood on their heads, the intellectual class has found itself in diligent pursuit of its own elusive Holy Grail: a universal and rational order created, a la Descartes, from nothing. Wherever these folks have managed to put one of their abstractions into practice, of course, the result has been a drastic increase in some form of misery, from the terror of Revolutionary France to the camps of Nazi Germany to the Soviet-inspired Gulags that dot the world today. Yet despite these notorious failures, the idea that only the uncommitted and completely detached outsider can offer a valid moral critique of society has somehow triumphed.

Emanation and return: archive as liberator

Vatican debates Harry Potter

New century, same crisis: Walter Rauschenbusch & the social gospel It's time someone came along todispute this notion, and now someone has. In Interpretation and Social Criticism, Michael Walzer, a professor of social science at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, brings his characteristic blend of horse sense and historical perspective to bear on the issue. "Social criticism,' he says, "is less the practical offspring of scientific knowledge than the educated cousin of common complaint.' It is essentially communal by nature, and thus the best critic is one who "is not an enemy,' one who despite his indictments "want[s] things to go well.'

At the outset, Walzer distinguishesbetween "three paths' of moral criticism: discovery, invention, and interpretation. Roughly, these correspond to religious revelation, philosophical creation, and social adaptation, and Walzer suggests that it is in the give-and-take of the last category that the social critic is most effective. What the social critic has to offer is, as he calls it, "the wisdom of the owl': accepting the given moral framework though possibly--indeed usually --"fiercely opposed to this or that prevailing practice or institutional arrangement.'

The chief objection lodged againstthis view of criticism is that the socially "connected' critic might not have the distance or perspective necessary for genuine criticism; he might, in other words, be too wed to the status quo, out of his own self-interest. This is exactly the charge leveled by "scientific' critics such as Marx, and it does have a certain undeniable validity, as witness the justifications for apartheid in South Africa and (ironically) for the class struggle in the most entrenched and self-interested order of our time, the Communist world.

Walzer has no problem with theidea that criticism requires perspective, denying only that the critic who steps back can ever "step back all the way to nowhere.' In sharp contrast to the "alienated' rebel of today's romantic lore, Walzer's paradigmatic critic is the Old Testament prophet. Walzer points out that the prophets' attachment to the Law and the teachings of Israel did not prevent them from uttering scathing indictments of the society about them. Indeed, their understood attachment to the society gave their message more force.

Walzer's particular favorite amongthese original social critics is Amos, the "first and possibly the most radical of Israel's literary prophets.' Like the others, Amos shuns the notion that he is offering anything new; instead, he is stung to criticism by the violation of the existing law. It is the hypocrisy that enrages, the great divide between what is publicly proclaimed and what is privately practiced. His job is to expose the short-comings in the latter and thus bring the two more into line, and in so doing he follows the critical pattern: He "begins with revulsion and ends with affirmation'--revulsion at the hypocrisy, yet affirmation of the core values.

Although Walzer dismisses both religiousdiscovery and philosophical speculation as models, he is much harder on the latter than on the former. ""Don't be indifferent' is not at all the same thing as "Love thy neighbor as thyself,'' he notes. Even when philosophical constructs are not mealy-mouthed, as in utilitarianism, their inventors tend to "fiddle with the felicific calculus so that it yields results closer to what we all think.' The long and short of it is that critics have to begin somewhere, and Walzer suggests that, rather than go through all these contortions, we might as well begin with what we have.

For the most part, Walzer's argumentsare cogent and wise; but, at 96 pages, cogency is more vice than virtue, an intellectual Chinese meal that leaves the reader hungry for more. True, he says he hopes this will ultimately prove the introduction for a larger volume; if so, he probably ought to have waited. However refreshing his argument here, it exhibits none of the extensive practical examples that characterized his Just and Unjust Wars, nor any of the profound social exegesis of his Exodus and Revolution.

A real judgment, therefore,must await delivery of the promised larger work. In the meantime, we are left with this tantalizing morsel. As Walzer points out, the assumption of criticism today is that some rational trump card will settle the debate once and for all. His own aim is far more modest: to provide the common reference points that allow a debate to get going in the first place.

《观念的辩证:理解与批判的交汇》 导言:意义的迷宫与批判的疆域 本书深入探究了人类理解(Interpretation)的本质及其与社会批判(Social Criticism)之间复杂而动态的关系。我们生活在一个符号、文本和意义无所不在的时代,对世界进行阐释不仅是认知活动,更是权力运作和文化建构的过程。本书的主旨在于剖析阐释如何从一种中立的学术技艺异化为意识形态的工具,以及社会批判如何有效地介入这一过程,揭示隐藏的假设、不公的结构和被压抑的声音。 我们不会停留在现象的表层,而是试图深入理解阐释的形而上学基础——我们如何知道我们所知道的?以及,这种“知道”如何影响我们对“应该如何”的判断?社会批判,在此语境下,并非简单的否定或破坏,而是一种具有建设性的、要求责任的智识实践。它要求我们不仅要理解文本的字面意义,更要理解文本所处的历史、政治和社会场域。 本书的论述分为三个主要部分:第一部分聚焦于阐释学的理论基础与局限性;第二部分探讨批判性思维在不同社会科学领域中的应用范式;第三部分则构建了一个关于“负责任的阐释”的伦理框架,强调知情与行动之间的不可分割性。 --- 第一部分:阐释的本体论与认识论困境 阐释学的传统,从施莱尔马赫到伽达默尔,旨在解决理解的普遍性问题。然而,后结构主义的转向,特别是德里达和福柯的批判,对这种普遍性的主张构成了根本性的挑战。 1.1 意义的流动性与权威的瓦解 文本的意义不再是固定的“宝藏”等待被发现,而是由读者、语境和权力关系共同“生产”出来的产物。我们首先考察“文本性”如何超越文学领域,渗透到法律判决、历史叙事乃至日常交流的每一个层面。阐释的困难在于,当所有的阐释都具有可塑性时,我们如何避免陷入纯粹的相对主义泥潭?本书认为,这种危险并非源于阐释工具本身,而是源于阐释者试图将自己的立场“去历史化”或“去语境化”的努力。 1.2 权力与知识的交织:福柯的遗产 福柯的知识考古学为我们提供了一种强大的工具,用以解构那些被视为“自然”或“客观”的知识体系。我们探讨“话语(Discourse)”如何组织我们的感知和判断。例如,精神病学的分类体系,看似是医学知识的累积,实则是特定历史时期对“非正常”的社会控制机制的制度化。批判性阐释要求我们质疑:谁有权定义什么是真理?这种定义如何服务于特定的社会秩序? 1.3 诠释学的循环:从前见到理解的困境 伽达默尔的“视域融合”(Fusion of Horizons)概念强调了理解的动态性。然而,批判的介入揭示了这一融合过程中的权力失衡。如果一个解释者的视域(例如,占据主流文化或学术地位的视域)在结构上压倒了另一个视域(例如,边缘群体的经验),那么所谓的“融合”更可能是一种同化或吞并。本书仔细梳理了在文化冲突和身份政治背景下,如何识别和抵制这种结构性的阐释不平等。 --- 第二部分:批判作为阐释的校准器 社会批判并非仅仅是指出错误,而是对现有意义结构进行严苛的内部审查,目的是揭示其内在的矛盾和对人类福祉的潜在损害。 2.1 意识形态批判的当代形态 受马克思主义和法兰克福学派(特别是阿多诺和霍克海默)的启发,我们探讨了“文化工业”如何生产出看似解放实则束缚性的意义体系。当代批判不再局限于经济基础与上层建筑的二元对立,而是转向对日常惯例、情感治理和身份建构的微观分析。我们审视“进步”的话语如何掩盖了新的不平等形式——技术依赖、注意力经济中的认知剥削等。 2.2 批判性修辞学:解构说服的艺术 本书将批判视为一种修辞实践。一个成功的批判性论述,必须不仅在逻辑上站得住脚,在说服力上也要能穿透既有的认知框架。我们分析了“中立性”和“客观性”的修辞策略,它们如何被用来掩盖偏见和维护现状。关键在于,识别那些被用来“合理化”不公正的语言模式,并以更具包容性和真实性的语言取而代之。 2.3 经验的政治学:从现象到结构 社会批判必须与具体的、被经验化的现实相连。女性主义批评、后殖民批评等视角的重要性在于,它们坚持从被压迫者的经验出发重新阐释世界。这些批判提醒我们,一个在理论上完美的解释结构,如果不能在实践中改善处于最不利地位者的生存境况,那么它在伦理上就是失败的。我们探索如何将第一人称的“受苦的经验”有效地转化为结构性的批判分析,避免陷入个人化叙事的陷阱。 --- 第三部分:伦理责任与行动的承诺 最终,阐释与批判的交汇点落在了伦理责任上。一个成熟的智识实践,必须对自身行动的后果负责。 3.1 阐释者的谦逊与不确定性 真正的批判需要一种深刻的“认识论上的谦逊”。认识到我们自身的视域是有限的、有偏见的,是进行负责任阐释的前提。本书提倡一种“持续的自我修正”模式,即批判理论本身也应被持续地置于批判之下。这种不确定性并非软弱,而是力量的来源,因为它阻止了批判蜕变为新的教条。 3.2 理论的介入性:从理解到改变 如果阐释仅仅是学术的娱乐,那么批判就失去了其社会意义。本书强调理论的介入性(Interventionist Theory)。理解世界的目的,最终是为了更好地改变世界。这种改变并非宏大革命的预言,而是在我们所能触及的领域内——无论是课堂、媒体还是政策制定中——对不公进行具体的、可操作性的挑战。 3.3 实践的回路:从批判到新的阐释 批判活动本身会产生新的意义和新的社会关系。成功的批判会解构旧的权威,但也必须为新的、更具包容性的意义生成留下空间。这个过程是一个永恒的回路:理解现状(阐释)→发现其内在矛盾(批判)→提出新的可能性的视野(新的阐释)。 本书的最终目标是为读者提供一套锐利的智识工具,使他们不仅能看清世界是如何被解释的,更能积极地参与到对世界的重塑之中,确保阐释的火焰永远燃烧在对公正和平等的追求之上。

作者简介

Michael Walzer (3 March 1935) is one of America's leading political philosophers. He is a professor emeritus at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey and editor of Dissent, a left-wing quarterly of politics and culture. He has written on a wide range of topics, including just and unjust wars, nationalism, ethnicity, economic justice, social criticism, radicalism, tolerance, and political obligation. He is also a contributing editor to The New Republic and a member of the editorial board of Philosophy & Public Affairs. To date he has written 27 books and has published over 300 articles, essays, and book reviews. He is a member of several philosophical organizations including the American Philosophical Society.

Michael is the older brother of historian Judith Walzer Leavitt.

Walzer is usually identified as one of the leading proponents of the "Communitarian" position in political theory, along with Alasdair MacIntyre and Michael Sandel. Like Sandel and MacIntyre, Walzer is not completely comfortable with this label. He has, however, long argued that political theory must be grounded in the traditions and culture of particular societies and opposed what he sees to be the excessive abstraction of political philosophy. His most important intellectual contributions include a revitalization of just war theory that insists on the importance of ethics in wartime while eschewing pacifism; the theory of "complex equality," which holds that the metric of just equality is not some single material or moral good, but rather that egalitarian justice demands that each good be distributed according to its social meaning, and that no good (like money or political power) be allowed to dominate or distort the distribution of goods in other spheres; and an argument that justice is primarily a moral standard within particular nations and societies, not one that can be developed in a universalized abstraction.

In April 2008, Walzer received the prestigious Spinoza Lens, a bi-annual prize for ethics in The Netherlands.

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这本书(沃尔泽:《阐释和社会批判》)不久前翻了翻就还给图书馆了,具体论证也忘了,也许若干年后还能想起的也就是它划分的三种道德哲学类型——发现、发明和阐释——了。 希腊哲人或希伯来先知靠开天眼或天生聪明睿智发现了自然、听到了神的声音;康德等现代哲学家面对现代自...

评分

这本书(沃尔泽:《阐释和社会批判》)不久前翻了翻就还给图书馆了,具体论证也忘了,也许若干年后还能想起的也就是它划分的三种道德哲学类型——发现、发明和阐释——了。 希腊哲人或希伯来先知靠开天眼或天生聪明睿智发现了自然、听到了神的声音;康德等现代哲学家面对现代自...

评分

这本书(沃尔泽:《阐释和社会批判》)不久前翻了翻就还给图书馆了,具体论证也忘了,也许若干年后还能想起的也就是它划分的三种道德哲学类型——发现、发明和阐释——了。 希腊哲人或希伯来先知靠开天眼或天生聪明睿智发现了自然、听到了神的声音;康德等现代哲学家面对现代自...

评分

这本书(沃尔泽:《阐释和社会批判》)不久前翻了翻就还给图书馆了,具体论证也忘了,也许若干年后还能想起的也就是它划分的三种道德哲学类型——发现、发明和阐释——了。 希腊哲人或希伯来先知靠开天眼或天生聪明睿智发现了自然、听到了神的声音;康德等现代哲学家面对现代自...

评分

这本书(沃尔泽:《阐释和社会批判》)不久前翻了翻就还给图书馆了,具体论证也忘了,也许若干年后还能想起的也就是它划分的三种道德哲学类型——发现、发明和阐释——了。 希腊哲人或希伯来先知靠开天眼或天生聪明睿智发现了自然、听到了神的声音;康德等现代哲学家面对现代自...

用户评价

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有效的社会批判应该从一个社会的内部精神资源出发,建立在对共同经验和共同传统的”阐释“上,而不能仅仅站在一种外部异质性的思想立场上。这样的批判才能抓住和表达出一个社会最深切的不满,也因此能赢得人心。

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a gem of thinking about social criticism

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a gem of thinking about social criticism

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有效的社会批判应该从一个社会的内部精神资源出发,建立在对共同经验和共同传统的”阐释“上,而不能仅仅站在一种外部异质性的思想立场上。这样的批判才能抓住和表达出一个社会最深切的不满,也因此能赢得人心。

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on how philosophers should situate themselves in the society; against Rawls

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