生存的政治

Lara M. Trout
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引用次数: 20

摘要

真诚、善意的人怎么会无意中延续基于种族、性别、性取向或其他社会政治因素的歧视呢?为了解决这个问题,劳拉·特劳特采用了查尔斯·s·皮尔斯哲学中一个被忽视的维度——人的化身——以突出皮尔斯的思想与当代社会批评工作之间的兼容性。当身体在皮尔斯哲学的情感维度(包括感觉、情感、信仰、怀疑、本能和习惯)中占据重要地位时,这种兼容性在皮尔斯和社会批评学术中都被忽视了。特劳特将peirean情感置于后达尔文主义的背景下解释了无意歧视,并利用当代神经科学家安东尼奥·达马西奥(Antonio Damasio)的工作来促进这一背景运动。因为孩子们脆弱、天真、依赖他们的看护人生存,他们必须相信看护人关于现实的证词。这种依赖,再加上强化历史上占主导地位的观点的社会规范(如异性恋、男性、中产阶级和/或白人),助长了在成年后无意识地发挥作用的歧视性习惯的内化。《生存的政治》将皮尔斯和社会批评带入对话。一方面,皮尔斯的认识论、认识论、现象学和形而上学与对身心、情感与理性、自我与社会相互关系的社会批判见解相吻合。此外,皮尔斯的认识论理想是对知识和现实进行无限包容的探索,这意味着对排他性偏见的否定。另一方面,在女权主义和种族理论方面的研究表明,皮尔斯无限包容的社区理想的应用,可能会被历史上占主导地位的群体(如经济特权群体、异性恋者、男性和白人)在童年时期内化的无意识的排斥习惯所破坏。特劳特对这一应用问题给出了一个珀尔斯式的回应,他既承认无意识歧视的“盲点”,又建议建立一个公共的补救网络,包括爱、批判性常识、科学方法和自我控制。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Politics of Survival
How can sincere, well-meaning people unintentionally perpetuate discrimination based on race, sex, sexuality, or other socio-political factors? To address this question, Lara Trout engages a neglected dimension of Charles S. Peirce's philosophy - human embodiment - in order to highlight the compatibility between Peirce's ideas and contemporary work in social criticism. This compatibility, which has been neglected in both Peircean and social criticism scholarship, emerges when the body is fore-grounded among the affective dimensions of Peirce's philosophy (including feeling, emotion, belief, doubt, instinct, and habit). Trout explains unintentional discrimination by situating Peircean affectivity within a post-Darwinian context, using the work of contemporary neuroscientist Antonio Damasio to facilitate this contextual move. Since children are vulnerable, naive, and dependent upon their caretakers for survival, they must trust their caretaker's testimony about reality. This dependency, coupled with societal norms that reinforce historically dominant perspectives (such as being heterosexual, male, middle-class, and/or white), fosters the internalization of discriminatory habits that function non-consciously in adulthood. The Politics of Survival brings Peirce and social criticism into conversation. On the one hand, Peircean cognition, epistemology, phenomenology, and metaphysics dovetail with social critical insights into the inter-relationships among body and mind, emotion and reason, self and society. Moreover, Peirce's epistemological ideal of an infinitely inclusive community of inquiry into knowledge and reality implies a repudiation of exclusionary prejudice. On the other hand, work in feminism and race theory illustrates how the application of Peirce's infinitely inclusive communal ideal can be undermined by non-conscious habits of exclusion internalized in childhood by members belonging to historically dominant groups, such as the economically privileged, heterosexuals, men, and whites. Trout offers a Peircean response to this application problem that both acknowledges the "blind spots" of non-conscious discrimination and recommends a communally situated network of remedies including agapic love, critical common-sensism, scientific method, and self-control.
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