{"title":"Introduction: place and the philosophy of race","authors":"R. Sundstrom","doi":"10.1080/1090377042000195985","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Over drinks at a philosophy of science conference in Birmingham, Alabama, a philosopher of science who has contributed important work in the philosophy of biology and the metaphysics of human kinds asked me what considerations of social space add to philosophy of human categories. But, all things considered, what a question to ask in Birmingham! What do considerations of space add to our understanding of human categories? His question was motivated by simple and innocent curiosity, for the majority of the work in that area had simply been concerned with group intentionality, conditions for social facts, and the possibility of social reality between the subtle shades of various conceptions of nominalism. Just a few miles away from our lunch table were Kelly Ingram Park, the sixteenth street Baptist church, and the jail-cell in which Martin Luther King, on scraps of paper, penned “Letter from Birmingham City Jail.” Really, the question should be: How can we understand human categories, or even human experience, without the inclusion of social space and geography? In Birmingham, how can one talk so casually about “human kinds,” even if it is a most technical and removed notion, and not think of race and the experience of segregation? It is already incredible that we dare not remember that we are on land ethnically cleansed of its indigenous peoples. In Birmingham, in Alabama, in the US, on our planet since 1492 (at least), how can we understand race—in its earliest forms or as scientific racism—without considering place? It is no wonder that the American public pays its philosophers no heed. What could we possibly say that is worth anything if we cannot understand Birmingham amidst our philosophy? This special section of Philosophy and Geography collects six papers that in various ways bring together philosophy, race, and place. Together, these papers theorize the","PeriodicalId":431617,"journal":{"name":"Philosophy & Geography","volume":"25 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2004-02-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Philosophy & Geography","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/1090377042000195985","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
Over drinks at a philosophy of science conference in Birmingham, Alabama, a philosopher of science who has contributed important work in the philosophy of biology and the metaphysics of human kinds asked me what considerations of social space add to philosophy of human categories. But, all things considered, what a question to ask in Birmingham! What do considerations of space add to our understanding of human categories? His question was motivated by simple and innocent curiosity, for the majority of the work in that area had simply been concerned with group intentionality, conditions for social facts, and the possibility of social reality between the subtle shades of various conceptions of nominalism. Just a few miles away from our lunch table were Kelly Ingram Park, the sixteenth street Baptist church, and the jail-cell in which Martin Luther King, on scraps of paper, penned “Letter from Birmingham City Jail.” Really, the question should be: How can we understand human categories, or even human experience, without the inclusion of social space and geography? In Birmingham, how can one talk so casually about “human kinds,” even if it is a most technical and removed notion, and not think of race and the experience of segregation? It is already incredible that we dare not remember that we are on land ethnically cleansed of its indigenous peoples. In Birmingham, in Alabama, in the US, on our planet since 1492 (at least), how can we understand race—in its earliest forms or as scientific racism—without considering place? It is no wonder that the American public pays its philosophers no heed. What could we possibly say that is worth anything if we cannot understand Birmingham amidst our philosophy? This special section of Philosophy and Geography collects six papers that in various ways bring together philosophy, race, and place. Together, these papers theorize the
在阿拉巴马州伯明翰举行的一次科学哲学会议上,一位在生物哲学和人类形而上学方面做出重要贡献的科学哲学家在喝酒时问我,对社会空间的考虑给人类范畴的哲学增加了什么。但是,考虑到所有的事情,在伯明翰问这个问题是多么困难啊!对空间的考虑增加了我们对人类类别的理解吗?他提出这个问题的动机是简单而天真的好奇心,因为在这个领域的大部分工作都只是关注群体意向性、社会事实的条件,以及在各种唯名论概念的微妙阴影之间的社会现实的可能性。离我们的午餐桌只有几英里远的地方是凯利·英格拉姆公园(Kelly Ingram Park)、第十六街的浸信会教堂(Baptist church)和马丁·路德·金(Martin Luther King)曾在那间牢房里用碎纸写过《伯明翰市监狱来信》(Letter from Birmingham City Jail)。实际上,问题应该是:如果不包括社会空间和地理,我们如何理解人类的类别,甚至人类的经验?在伯明翰,人们怎么能如此随意地谈论“人类”,即使这是一个最专业、最古老的概念,而不考虑种族和种族隔离的经历呢?令人难以置信的是,我们不敢记得我们生活在被土著人民种族清洗的土地上。在伯明翰,在阿拉巴马州,在美国,在我们的星球上,自1492年(至少)以来,我们如何理解种族——在其最早的形式或作为科学的种族主义——而不考虑位置?难怪美国公众对哲学家们不屑一顾。如果我们不能在我们的哲学中理解伯明翰,我们还能说什么有价值呢?《哲学与地理》的这个特别部分收集了六篇论文,这些论文以不同的方式将哲学、种族和地方联系在一起。总之,这些论文理论化了