Emeritus
professor of philosophy at Princeton Harry Frankfurt’s book – On Bullshit, was
a surprise best seller a few years ago. Given the public musings of our
recently installed President, I thought it time to revisit the main idea of the
book.
Frankfurt starts his book
by jumping right in: “One of the most salient features of our culture is that
there is so much bullshit.” This is a truism, but it provides small comfort to
those of us forced to listen to so much of what is said by politicians,
generals, clergy, and other uninformed citizens. It is seems no pain is too
severe for them to inflict on those with relatively well-ordered minds.
But what is bullshitting
and in what ways it is similar to, and different from, lying? Here are the
basics as Frankfurt sees them:
1) Both liars and
bullshitters (bsers) want you to believe that they are telling the
truth.
2) And both want to get away with something.
2) And both want to get away with something.
Major Differences
Liars –
1) Liars engage in a
conscious act of deception.
2) Liars know the truth, but attempt to hide it. (that’s what they want to get away with.)
3) Liars spread untruths, but they still accept the distinction between the truth and false.
2) Liars know the truth, but attempt to hide it. (that’s what they want to get away with.)
3) Liars spread untruths, but they still accept the distinction between the truth and false.
Bsers
1) Bsers do not consciously
deceive.
2) Bsers just don’t know or care about the truth. (that’s what they want to get away with.)
3) Bsers ignore or reject the distinction between truth and falsity altogether.
2) Bsers just don’t know or care about the truth. (that’s what they want to get away with.)
3) Bsers ignore or reject the distinction between truth and falsity altogether.
(Notice that what the liar
says is necessarily false. If I stole your wallet or know that Jupiter is
a gaseous planet, and claim otherwise, then what I’m saying is false. But if I
have no idea of what I’m talking about, and then make various claims my
bullshit might turn out to be correct.)
To reiterate the main
point. Liars know the truth and try to hide it; bsers don’t know or care
about the truth and try to hide their lack of commitment to it. Thus
bullshitting is more like bluffing or faking. Surprisingly, Frankfurt thinks
bullshit is more dangerous than lies because it erodes the possibility of
the truth existing and being found. As he puts it:
It is impossible for someone to lie unless he thinks he knows
the truth … Producing bullshit requires no such conviction. A person who lies
is thereby responding to the truth, and he is to that extent respectful of it.
When an honest man speaks, he says only what he believes to be true; and for
the liar, it is correspondingly indispensable that he considers his statements
to be false. For the bullshitter, however, all bets are off … He does not
reject the authority of the truth, as the liar does, and oppose himself to it.
He pays no attention to it at all. By virtue of this, bullshit is a greater
enemy of truth than lies are.
Bullshit is unavoidable whenever circumstances require someone to
talk without knowing what he is talking about. Thus the production of bullshit
is stimulated whenever a person’s obligations or opportunities to speak about
some topic are more excessive than his knowledge of the facts that are relevant
to that topic.
Brief reflections –
I accept the basic distinction between knowing the truth and lying
about it, and not knowing or caring about the truth, and then trying to impress
people by talking about things you know nothing about.
I’m less
convinced that bullshitting is worse than lying. To clarify, consider the
following:
1) I am scientifically
literate. Therefore I know that biological evolution is true beyond any
reasonable doubt. If I lie about
this—say because I think that will make you more likely to
contribute to my political or religious cause—then I subvert the truth.
2) I am scientifically
illiterate. Therefore I don’t know if evolutionary theory is true or false. If
I bullshit about
this—say because I want you to think that I know what I’m talking about—then I
ignore the truth.
In these two cases I think
lying is worse than bullshitting because the liar always subverts the
truth whereas the the bser might inadvertently tell the truth.
But if the bser not
only doesn’t know or care about the truth, but rejects the very distinction
between the two, if
the bullshitter believes that there is no truth, then
bullshitting is worse. A world that denies the existence of truth is a far
worse one that still accepts the difference between truth and falsity.
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