Nagel's Last Word
Michael P. Rosenberg
Thomas Nagel's attack on subjectivism is rooted in his view that objective
truth is something that cannot be doubted. There are certain elements rooted
in logic and language which cannot be escaped -- such as logical truths,
and mathematics. He describes language not as a contingent process,
but as logic itself, or a system of concepts to which any language-user
must conform. He also claims that language is not thought, but rather is
an essential tool of it, and consequentially, logic is a linguistic tool
we use to describe our thoughts and engage critically ourselves and others.
As Nagel suggests, when you offer a criticism of someone, what you have
offered is an external and a seemingly non-universal point of view.
For this reason, we are inclined to believe that this view, your view,
constitutes your own opinion of this other person. From this, one
could conclude that some of our moral, political, and cultural convictions
are merely subjective.
However, this view of subjectivism breaks down as we take into account
the notion of self-awareness. The pure externality evaporates when
we pose the question, “what are we relying on in ourselves to form that
view?” Nagel claims that these “subjective" convictions are rooted
in an inescapable objectivity – inescapable precisely because we cannot
understand thought from the outside. The very concept of subjectivity
demands an objective framework in which the subject is located and the
special perspective is described. So your "subjective criticism"
of the person was in fact based on premises rooted in objective reason.
Nagel does not deny a system of conventions, nor does he deny that grammar
and punctuation require conformity to the linguistic community in an objective
sense. What he does claim is that the validity of those thoughts,
those inescapable thoughts that language enables us to express, has its
basis in those particular conventions and usages. What is meant by criticism
is rooted in convention, while the thought that inspired the premises of
the critical sentences is inescapably grounded in objective reason.
The last word in the debate must lie in some unqualified thoughts about
how things are, and such thoughts cannot be regarded as mere "psychological
dispositions." The subjectivist gives the last word to justifications,
which end in language. Nagel gives the last word to the justifications
themselves. The justifications are involved in the recognitions which
subordinate them, and are implicated in the process of creating such justifications.
Thus, Nagel gives the last word to objective reason, since it is required
to substantiate any subjective thoughts at all.
‡ §
Michael P. Rosenberg is a student at Brandeis University
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