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Transcending the Realism/Anti-Realism Divide in the Philosophy of History

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 February 2017

Abstract

In this essay an attempt is made to transcend the divide between realists and anti-realists in the philosophy of history by proposing an alternative account of understanding the past, one based on the nature of testimonies, specifically their scope and depth. This is done through a critical engagement with the works of prominent realist and anti-realist philosophers of history (Bevir/Lorenz and Ankersmit/White, respectively); other philosophers working on relevant topics such as epistemology, and historians who have written on historical method. The alternative account thus developed is then tested by applying it to the case of the Historikerstreit, the bitterly waged historian's struggle concerning the history and legacy of Nazism. On the surface it appears to affirm the anti-realist position that posits historical narratives as being inherently normative/aesthetic given the inadequacies of the ‘thick’ realist position, but upon closer scrutiny it demonstrates the merit of my alternative, testimony-based ‘thin’ realist account.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 2017 

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References

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13 Op. cit. note 6, x, 11–12, 29.

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15 Op. cit. note 10, 139. However, as I discuss below as well, partly under pressure from critics he was forced to concede to realists the existence of what he termed ‘modernist events’ such as the Holocaust, which are absolutes that do not fall under the category of normative judgement (op. cit. note 10, 129–130). Lorenz argues that this concession undermines his anti-realist stance, which requires one to go all the way (op. cit. note 5, 328). I tend to agree with this, though I believe White was merely conceding this point for, somewhat ironically perhaps, strategic, normative reasons.

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40 Op. cit. note 33, 309–310; op. cit. note 5, 317–319. Bevir levels the same critique against the anti-realists (op. cit. note 3, 30), and I believe they are right in this respect as elaborated in the following sections.

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53 For the philosophical importance of this exclusion with respect to maintaining a realist position in the philosophy of history see Ginzburg, Carlo, ‘Just One Witness: The Extermination of the Jews and the Principle of Reality’ in idem, Threads and Traces: True False Fictive (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2012), 165179 Google Scholar. As Ginzburg notes there (169), the denial is not a philosophically interesting point except to illustrate the ‘principle of reality’ underlying the field, just as the denial of the existence of gravity or the existence of flat earth theories does not undermine the normal consensus on these matters existing in the scientific community, also derived from our first-order realist beliefs emanating from our being in the world. As noted by Quine the same holds true for the obverse, the affirmation of epistemological and ontological foundationalism (op. cit. note 51, 9–10).

54 Op. cit. note 3, 25.

55 Op. cit. note 5, 317–319.

56 Op. cit. note 11, 316.

57 Op. cit. note 7, 37.

58 Op. cit. note 3, 29.

59 Ibid., 31.

60 Ibid., 37.

61 Op. cit. note 4, 19.

62 Op. cit. note 1, 11–12.

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70 Op. cit. note 1, 13; Op. cit. note 63, 286. Anthropologists such as Jack Goody have done extensive analyses of non-literate communities, but this is another matter entirely as its possibility is premised on the production of direct testimonies by others who observe their practices. Non-literate communities lacking such an externality, and not being in the vicinity of a literate community, are literally without history except through the oral traditions passed on over many generations, which are on the level of indirect rather than direct testimonies where it concerns the remembrance of events extending beyond one's direct experiences, which is what witness accounts require. See Goody, Jack, The Interface Between the Written and the Oral (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1987)Google Scholar.

71 Op. cit. note 64, 147.

72 Op. cit. note 53.

73 Ibid., 169; Op. cit. note 64, 255.

74 Op. cit. note 10, 132–133.

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77 Op. cit. note 76.

78 Op. cit. note 4, 18–19, 80. One can even say, speaking with Habermas, that it contains a performative contradiction, in that the past is being described when at the same time the epistemological possibility of the means of viably describing the past (via first-order truth-claims contained in testimonies) is being denied or undercut. In Habermas's own technical vocabulary: ‘A performative contradiction occurs when a constative speech act k(p) rests on noncontingent presuppositions whose propositional content contradicts the asserted proposition p’. See Jürgen Habermas, Moral Consciousness and Communicative Action (Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press), 80.

79 In relation to the possibility of reconstructing the nature of testimonies – which are affected by the social conditions of their production though not reducible to them – this means to take on the post-foundational approach of rejecting absolute objectivity (be it obtainable via a monistic method such as linguistic contextualism or otherwise), and instead taking it on as a regulative ideal (op. cit. note 4, 33–34).

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86 Op. cit. note 4, 18–19.

87 Op. cit. note 7, 12, 237.

88 Op. cit. note 80, 93–94.

89 Op. cit. note 33, 313.

90 Op. cit. note 33, 318.

91 Op. cit. note 33, 318–319.

92 Ibid., 313.

93 Ibid., 318–319.

94 Ibid., 318.

95 Op. cit. note 47.

96 Op. cit. note 84, 337; op. cit. note 7, 12, 237.

97 The historiography of which is littered with contention that often maps onto ideological differences, like Marxists against liberals.