Critical Humanism. Ken Plummer

Critical Humanism - Ken Plummer


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and we do this through bounded and bonded families, groups, communities and local social worlds. We clash and we cooperate; these bonds provide the direct canopies of meaning, sentiment and solidarity in our lives. We are the belonging animal. But the ability to connect with others in communities also brings the potential to not connect.67

      5 Societal. We are the human life that flows through societies and their tribes, civilizations and nations. Our challenge is to create social institutions and practices that enable the flourishing of production and work (economy), reproduction and socialization (education, family, religion), communication (language and media) and security and welfare (governance). And through these we achieve practical things like food distribution, transportation, housing and good health, all interconnected with one another. We connect to each other through societies.

      6 Cultural. We are the animal who weaves complex ‘ways of living’ – bringing values and stories – across the world. We are the linguistic, symbolic, manipulating, communicative, cultural animal. Ultimately, we are also the animal that creates symbolic cultures, ways of living, that are necessarily messy and murky. These bring issues of values and power relations. Establishing relations of symmetry and asymmetry, power expands or concentrates the degree of freedom and control exerted over lives. All life might be guided and shaped by certain rules; and many animals have a sort of sensitivity to other life. But only humans invent elaborate cultural frames of values; only they can develop ethical and normative orders organized through legal and power relations. Our cultures become sites of struggle over value and emancipation – of what it means to lead the good (or bad) life. We are elaborate linguistic animals capable of manipulating symbols in complex ways to produce historically based value systems. But cultures usually also have material foundations. We connect to others through these cultures.

      7 Worldly. We are the animal that finds other tribes and creatures living on the earth. We look to become a worldly animal as humanity becomes globalized. We get to know these other strangers living in other parts of the world. A cosmopolitan attitude is in the making. We have to live with each other. There is life beyond the little world we live in.

      8 Cosmic. And finally, we are a planetary animal connected to the cosmic universe or multiverse. We are a lunar, cosmic animal. A hallmark of our being human in the world is that we look up to the heavens and down to the oceans and can see our insignificance in the vastness of the cosmic order. Excitingly, in many ways hard to fathom, we are connected with this vastness of planetary things. These days, with the help of satellites, we can just click on Google Maps to see and sense our close interconnectedness.

      There is more than all this. Very significantly, we become, each one of us, a uniquely different human being. Remarkable to behold, like all life, the billions of us are each distinctly different from one another and connect to one another in uniquely different ways. A distinctively different and unique life story can be told by each and every life. Humans alone develop a personal and heightened self-aware consciousness of these unique differences. This can become the basis for tensions as well as conflicts. But also surprise and amazement. Consider your own life: even as it remains enmeshed in connections, nobody can ever live a life quite like you. Ever.

      1 1 Anne Phillips, The Politics of the Human (Cambridge University Press, 2015). For a recent analysis, see Daniel Chernilo, Debating Humanity: Towards a Philosophical Sociology (Cambridge University Press, 2017).

      2 2 Marcus Morgan, Pragmatic Humanism: On the Nature and Value of Sociological Knowledge (Routledge, 2016), ch. 2. Morgan also enumerates some seven responses to this recurrent death of man/humanity/humanism.

      3 3 See John Dewey, ‘What Humanism Means to Me’, in Jo Ann Boydston (ed.), John Dewey: The Later Works, 1925–1953, Volume 5: 1929–1939 (Southern Illinois University Press, 2008), p. xxxi.

      4 4 See Lawrence Grossberg, Cultural Studies in the Future Tense (Duke University Press, 2010), p. 20ff.

      5 5 William Du Bois and R. Dean Wright provide an overview of the development in the USA in ‘What is Humanistic Sociology?’, The American Sociologist, 33/4 (Winter 2002): 5–36. In its earliest days it was associated especially with Florian Znaniecki, Charles Cooley, Margaret Mead, Jane Addams and Charles Wright Mills.

      6 6 Identified mainly with some of the Frankfurt School intellectuals, such as Erich Fromm, Erik Erikson and even Theodor Adorno in some of his work. See for example, Kieran Durkin, The Radical Humanism of Erich Fromm (Palgrave Macmillan, 2014).

      7 7 See Introduction, note 4.

      8 8 Louis Menand provides an outstanding history of early pragmatism in The Metaphysical Club: A Story of Ideas in America (HarperCollins, 2001). He discusses, among others, Charles Sanders Peirce, William James, Jane Addams and John Dewey. Of the later pragmatists, see Sidney Hook, Pragmatism and the Tragic Sense of Life (Basic Books, 1975).

      9 9 Alfred McClung Lee, Sociology for Whom? (Oxford University Press, 1978), pp. 44–5.

      10 10 See Edward W. Said, Orientalism (Penguin, 2003 [1978]), p. xx; see also Said, Humanism and Democratic Criticism (Palgrave, 2004).

      11 11 More recently, sociologist Daniel Chernilo, in Debating Humanity: Towards a Philosophical Sociology (Cambridge University Press, 2017), has approached the problem another way. With a careful scrutiny of major theorists from just one particular discipline (sociology), he shows how humanist ideas – like responsibility (Hans Jonas), reflexivity (Margaret Archer) and language (Jürgen Habermas) – develop in their work. Here, a multiplicity of key words for humanity could be traced back to such discussions.

      12 12 Steven Pinker, Enlightenment Now: The Case for Reason, Science, Humanism and Progress (Allen Lane, 2018).

      13 13 See Pankaj Mishra, ‘Grand Illusion’, New York Review of Books, 19 November 2020, pp. 31–2.

      14 14 A small sampling of this work, which I draw on here, includes: Raewyn Connell, Southern Theory: The Global Dynamics of Knowledge in Social Science (Polity, 2007); Boaventura de Sousa Santos, Epistemologies of the South: Justice against Epistemicide (Paradigm, 2014) and The End of the Cognitive Empire: The Coming of Age of Epistemologies of the South (Duke University Press, 2018); Bernd Reiter, Constructing the Pluriverse: The Geopolitics of Knowledge (Duke University Press, 2018); Marisol de la Cadena and Mario Blaser, A World of Many Worlds (Duke University Press, 2018); Arturo Escobar, Pluriversal Politics: The Real and the Possible (Duke University Press, 2020).

      15 15 See de Sousa Santos,


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