Metanexus Chronos. 2004.04.15. 4,410 Words."This is a truly inter-disciplinary work that breaks through artificial
boundaries and challenges us to rethink our conventional categories," writes
Hava Tirosh-Samuelson in her review of Randall Collins' book "The Sociology of
Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change." Tirosh-Samuelson
presented this paper at a recent strategic planning session of the Metanexus
Board of Directors. Part one of this three part review is a summary of this
monumental piece of the sociology of intellectual movements -- "outstandingly
comprehensive in its scope" -- that covers 2,500 years of intellectual activity
and attempts to "expose the principles that govern the birth, maturation,
flourishing, and decline of intellectual networks all over the world." According
to Tirosh-Samuelson, Collins structures the dynamics of intellectual traditions
with interrelated elements and laws such as "cultural capital," "the law of
small numbers," and a dialectic of intellectual creativity.
In part two, also included below, Tirosh-Samuelson critiques Collins' analysis
from her position as an intellectual historian of the Jewish tradition. Her main
points of contention center on sources, time periods, and categorization, as
well as the general absence of women from this study of 2,500 years of
intellectual discourse. In the forthcoming part three, Tirosh-Samuelson will
discuss how the principles of analysis in Collins' work are useful tools to
assess the complex dialogue of science and religion.
Dr. Hava Tirosh-Samuelson is a Professor of History in Arizona State University. She was born in Kibbutz Afikim, Israel in 1950. She holds a Ph.D. in Jewish Philosophy and Kabbalah from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1978), and a BA in Religious Studies from SUNY in Stony Brook, New York (1974). Prior to joining the faculty of Arizona State University, she taught at Indiana University (1991-1999), Emory University in Atlanta (1988-1991), Columbia University in New York (1982-1988), and Hebrew Union College in New York (1980-1982). In these institutions she has taught courses in Jewish history, Jewish philosophy and mysticism, and Western religions for graduate and undergraduate students.
Prof. Tirosh-Samuelson’s research focuses on medieval and early-modern Jewish intellectual history, with an emphasis on the interplay between philosophy and mysticism. She has published articles in academic journals, such as AJS Review and Science in Context, and book chapters in volumes such as History of Jewish Philosophy (Routledge, 1997), The Cambridge Companion of Medieval of Jewish Philosophy (Cambridge University Press, 2002), and The Jewish Studies Bible (Oxford University Press, 2003). Her book – Between Worlds: The Life and Work of Rabbi David ben Judah Messer Leon (SUNY Press, 1991) – received the Arnold Viznitzer Award of the Hebrew University for the best work in Jewish history for 1991. Her most recent book is Happiness in Premodern Judaism: Virtue, Knowledge and Well-Being in Pre-modern Judaism (Hebrew Union College Press, 2003). She is also the editor of Judaism and Ecology: Created World and Revealed World (Harvard University Press, 2002) and Women and Gender in Jewish Philosophy (Indiana University Press, 2004).
In addition to her academic position, Prof. Tirosh-Samuelson has taught for the Wexner Heritage Foundation and has served as scholar-in residence in Reform and Conservative congregations throughout the US. She sits on the editorial boards of Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy and Studies in Medieval and Renaissance History and the Advisory Boards of Hebrew Union College- Jewish Institute of Religion, the Metanexus Institute on Science and Religion. She is also a member of the Forum on Religion and Ecology.
--Editor
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Randall Collins, The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual
Change (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2000).
Hava Tirosh-Samuelson
Department of History
Arizona State University
I. What is the book about?
I would like to thank Dr. William Grassie for bringing to our attention Randal
Collins, The Sociology of Philosophies: A Global Theory of Intellectual Change.
This is an exceptionally erudite, comprehensive, and insightful book that I
find especially useful for this board. The book constructs the history of
several intellectual traditions that have existed longest in world history.
Geographically the book encompasses the civilizations from China and Japan in
the East, to Europe and England in the West, and the vast region in-between.
Temporally the book spans about twenty five hundred (2,500) years, beginning
with the ancient Greek philosophers of 600 BCE, through the schools of ancient
and medieval China, India, and Japan, to the intellectual developments in the
Greco-Roman world, medieval Christianity, Islam, and Judaism, and finally the
developments in Western world in the modern period. Within this immense scope,
the book refers to hundreds of individual philosophers, scientists, religious
figures, translators, commentators, and educators. Their key ideas, written
texts, and organizational activities gave rise to intellectual networks whose
dynamics is the subject matter of the book.
Collins attempts to expose the principles that govern the birth, maturation,
flourishing, and decline of intellectual network all over the world. To do so
he poses the following questions: How do network emerge? Why do they emerge at
a particular point in time? What is the intellectual identity of founder of a
given network and how does it help to explain the orientation of the network?
How do members of a given intellectual networks relate to each other? How do
intellectual networks interact with each other? What accounts for the creativity
of a network and/or its decline? What are the main literary products of network
and how have they evolved over time. Through quantitative and qualitative
analysis, Collins attempts to outline the laws that govern the rise and fall of
intellectual network.
The book is outstandingly comprehensive in its scope. It covers diverse
religious traditions such as Judaism, Islam, Christianity, Buddhism,
Confucianism, Jainism, Hinduism, Shintoism, as well as diverse philosophical
schools, including Platonism, Aristotelianism, Skepticism, Stoicism, Kalam,
Kabbalah, Spinozism, Cartesianism, Kantianism, Utilitarianism, and Logical
Positivism, to mention just the most notable ones. Within each of these
religious traditions and intellectual strands, individual contributors and
subgroups, or networks, are delineated and discussed to various degrees of
detail, conveying the richness and complexity of the tradition under
consideration. By differentiating between "major" and "minor" thinkers and
identifying the various members of the network with specific locations, the
reader is provided with a spatial-temporal mapping of intellectual life
worldwide. This book is can be viewed as a narrative attached to a global atlas
of intellectual life in human history.
Methodologically the book belongs to "sociology of knowledge." This is a
contextual approach to intellectual activity that insists on the embedded nature
of all forms of thinking and mental acts. Thinking is never done in a vacuum
but in a specific institutional setting that is inseparable from a given
material base. Even when philosophers entertain the most abstract concepts such
as Being, Nothingness, or God, they do so in a given social context. Thinking
is a social activity par excellence. Not only it is carried out by language,
which is itself a social product, thinking is a product of a community, and
thinking requires material support.
Therefore, analysis of intellectual activity must pay attention to the social
reality that gives rise to it and the institutional setting in which it is
carried out, be it a school, a university, a monastery, a princely court, or a
state bureaucracy. The sociological approach to intellectual activity entails
that understanding intellectual activity can never be divorced from other
aspects of society, such as politics, economic, and education. By taking all
these factors into consideration, Collins has given his reader a rich, "thick
description" of global intellectual activity and elicited the principles that
account for the emergence, growth, demise, and afterlife of intellectual
traditions.
Collins's mapping of intellectual activity worldwide is based on enormous
erudition and wide ranging scholarship in the academic disciplines of history,
religious studies, Asian studies, philosophy, science, and education. This is a
truly inter-disciplinary work that breaks through artificial boundaries and
challenges us to rethink our conventional categories. Thus the distinction
between "East" and "West," between "religion" and "philosophy," or between
"science" and "philosophy" disappear. Instead, Collins shows how philosophical
debates that take place centuries apart in different parts of the world from
ancient Greece, through medieval India, to modern Europe have much in common,
grappling with a shared fundamental theoretical quandary. Concerned with
accounting for intellectual changes, Collins gives us a dynamic picture of
intellectual activity: ideas are not frozen in time; they have a life of their
own, governed by principles that Collins attempts to delineate on the basis of
quantitative and qualitative analysis.
The basic unit of intellectual life is the intellectual network. Collins
defines intellectual networks as communities comprised of individuals who are
engaged in face-to-face encounters as well as in textual interpretations. While
much of the interaction among members of intellectual community is oral, he
tells us that "intellectual communities arose historically at the same time as
public systems of writing" (p. 27). "Intellectuals, as a community [are]
uniquely oriented toward writing .... [They] could only come into existence with
the text-distribution structure. Their ideals of truth and wisdom are the
central sacred objects of this structure." Intellectual network, then, are in
the business of generating, disseminating, and interpreting texts. Membership
in a given intellectual network is of two kinds: on the one hand, there are
face-to-face exchanges either between master and his disciples or membership of
a given family. Much of the book consists of spelling out the personal
relationship among members of a given network. But network is also more loosely
understood to comprise of textual interpretation by people who have never met
each other. The act of interpretation itself generates a given intellectual
network as an "on-going chain that will be further repeated, discussed, or
augmented in the future."
The privileging of textual interpretation in the evolution of intellectual life
has two consequences. First, it means that to analyze intellectual traditions
we need to understand their seminal, authoritative texts, or canons, and pay
attention to the process that brought the canon into existence as well as to the
process that perpetuated the canon through the act of interpretation. Thus
within a given intellectual tradition, or intellectual network, not all members
and not all texts are of equal standing; some are more central than others,
resulting in the distinction between "major" and "minor" contributors within a
given network. The so-called "minor" contributors may be in some way derivative
or dependent on the "major" ones, but the former are no less important than the
latter. To understand the evolution of a given intellectual network one must
explore both types of contributors. For the history of the tradition under
consideration, the minor ones are extremely important.
Second, within a given intellectual communities there are various "intellectual
rituals" that shape the solidarity of the group. The canonic texts of the group
function as "sacred objects" that shape up the identity of the group, delineate
the consciousness of its projects, and generates "peculiar kinds of speech acts"
(p. 28). The identity of the group is forged by the link to the shared past.
As Collins put it: "their own ideas have been formed by the chain from the past;
the situation before them is merely one more link in that formation" (p. 28).
This means that in order to understand a given intellectual network one must pay
close attention to its history. Only through historical inquiry that situates
ideas in their temporal context, can one understand how ideas emerge,
proliferate, transform society, or influence world views. Given the centrality
of the past in shaping the collective identity of the intellectual network,
Collins arranges his vast material chronologically. For me this is one of the
most important messages of the book, a point to which I will return toward the
end of my remarks.
Within a given network, Collins focuses on three related elements: "creativity,"
"emotional energy," and "cultural capital." "Creativity" implies "new ideas,"
but Collins also reminds us that very often "intellectual creativity comes from
combining elements from previous products of the field" (p. 31). Creativity,
then, is not only about innovation and new directions but synthesis and even
syncretism. "Cultural capital," is understood by Collins to consist of having
learned a certain powerful paradigm as well as solving puzzles generated by this
paradigm and creating new ones. Cultural capital is transmitted from one
generation to another due to writing and it growth over time because of on-going
interpretation. And "emotional energy" is defined by Collins as "the surge of
creative impulse that comes upon intellectuals or artists when they are doing
their best work. It enables them to achieve intense periods of concentration
and charges them with the physical strength to work long periods of time" (p.
34). By contrast, "depression" or "writer's block," means "shifting of one's
attention away from intellectual projects and back onto the everyday world."
(p. 35). These categories are used throughout the book to characterize and to
measure the creativity of different individuals, networks, or ages. Thus a
creative age is one which facilitates "one's own discoveries" and in which
"great intellectual work is carried out which creates a large space on which
followers can work" (p. 32). High levels of creativity become crystallized in
symbols that circulate through the intellectual field, energizing whoever can
most closely attach to them." (p. 36). Very often, the most creative
individuals of a given network themselves become the symbols of an entire system
of ideas.
How do intellectual networks evolve over time? Collins' analysis of the massive
data revolves around three principles: a) the nexus of creativity and conflict;
b) the law of small numbers, and c) the material basis of intellectual life.
Let me say a few words about each one.
In a good Hegelian fashion, Collins treats intellectual life dialectically:
"intellectual creativity is a conflict process." (p. 81). The conflict may
emerge within a given network, even in relationship between masters and
disciples, or in the relationship between opposing networks. Conflict,
competition, debate, polemics are all good, as far as Collins is concerned,
since they refine ideas, challenge creators to a higher level of self-awareness,
push thinkers to ever more sophisticated abstractions and subtle speculations.
Conflict energizes, gives birth to new ideas, and opens up new vistas for
further developments. Conflict is the life line of creativity.
Yet conflict is not infinite: as positions become diversified and ever more
subtle, the second law of intellectual life begins to operate: "the law of small
numbers." This law states that "there is room for three to six positions to
command public attentions" (p. 446). Six is the upper limit and three is the
lower limit. When the upper limit is violated, as it happens occasionally, the
weaker positions will be consolidated or amalgamated according to the law of
small numbers, but consolidation too has its limits. Fewer than three entails
stagnation and lack of growth. If I understand it correctly, the "law of small
numbers" is not a description of what is always the case, but rather the optimal
situation that captures a healthy, properly flourishing intellectual
environment. The range of 3 to 6 spells what is neither "too little" nor "too
much" but rather "just right," reminding us of Aristotle's celebrated doctrine
of the mean.
The nexus between creativity and conflict and "the law of small numbers" operate
in-tandem, because intellectual life takes place in a finite, material world.
Institutions depend on material wealth that supports them, whether the wealth
comes from land holdings, commerce and trade, taxation, or inheritance. And
since the production and perpetuation of wealth are intrinsically related to
politics, intellectual life stands at the intersection of politics and
economics. As the case of India shows, "external politics favors one or another
organizational base within which intellectuals build their network; inside the
dominant base, factions divide to take up the lion's share of the space
available under the intellectual law of small numbers, while factions on the
weakening side ally into syncretism" (p. 177). The book provides massive data
from across the world to explain in detail the interplay between intellectual
activity, social institutions, economic and politics.
II. Critique of Collins's Analysis in Light of Judaism
So far I told you what the book is about. Now let me turn to the second part of
my response by looking more closely at one section of the book. Let me preface
my somewhat critical comments with a disclaimer. To properly respond to
Collins's work, one must know at least as much as he does. I definitely do not
command his vast knowledge, since I am not conversant in the history of Eastern
religious traditions discussed in the book. My specialization is the Jewish
tradition, a tradition into which I was born and which I have chosen as the
focus of my academic career. Since Judaism gave rise to Christianity and Islam,
I also know these two traditions, especially their medieval and early-modern
chapters, but not with the same depth. I will reflect on Collins's claims from
the vantage point of what I know best.
The methodology:
As an intellectual historian of the Jewish tradition, I resonate with Collins'
approach to intellectual activity. I also seek to understand ideas in their
socio, economic, cultural, and political context, and I never lose sight of the
identity of knower and the context for the production of knowledge. As an
intellectual historian of Judaism, I was particularly pleased to read Chapter
Eight of Collins's work devoted to the interplay between Islam, Judaism, and
Christendom in the Middle Ages. The chapter explores how Greek philosophical
and scientific ideas were absorbed by the three monotheistic traditions, how
Jewish, Islamic, and Christian scholars fructified each other, and how each of
them gave rise to distinctive educational institutions. By portraying the
interwoven relationship between these three civilizations we move gain a richer
and more accurate understanding of Western thought, precisely because it is less
Eurocentric and less Christocentric. As Collins tells the story, the Jews
emerge as major players, especially in medieval Spain, functioning as
transmitters and mediators of culture.
Needless to say, since I devote my life to the study of Jewish life in the
Middle Ages I was quite pleased to read Collins's reconstruction. Yet, as a
specialist in this field, I also find some problems with Collins's account.
Collins derives his information about Jewish thought from the works of other
scholars, especially Isaac Husik, Shlomo Pines, and Colette Sirat. Until 1997,
these were the standards overviews of medieval Jewish philosophy and Collins was
right to rely on them for factual data. Since then, a better reference work has
come out -- Daniel H. Frank and Oliver Leaman (eds)., History of Jewish
Philosophy (New York: Routledge, 1997). While some of the essays support
Collins's sociological approach to intellectual activity, they also make clear
why Collins's analysis is limited because his information is derived from older
scholarship, especially Collete Sirat's A History of Jewish Philosophy in the
Middle Ages (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1985). Here are three
areas where Collins's work could have benefited from the more recent analysis.
Sources of information:
Following his sources, Collins clearly delineates between Jewish networks that
follow Kalam, Neoplatonism and Aristotelianism. While these categories still
inform the organization of Frank and Leman work, we must realize that there is
no simple identity between a given intellectual identity and the thought of a
given thinker. Yes, some thinkers fit neatly into these categories - such as
Saadia Gaon, Ibn Gabirol, and Abraham ibn Daud respectively -- but in the 13th,
14th centuries, and 15th centuries the categories do not work so neatly.
Medieval Jewish thought is really a fusion of Neoplatonic and Aristotelian
elements. The map out the intellectual networks we need much more subtle tools,
such as copying practices that establish manuscript tradition. The most helpful
scholarship that could help substantiate Collins's work is done by Malachi
Beit-Arie, Benjamin Richler, Israel Ta-Shma, Tzvi Langermann, and others,
including Collet Sirat, who trace the dissemination of manuscripts in medieval
Jewish communities. In other words, Collins's generalization about the dynamic
of Jewish life are based on rather schematic, albeit generally true,
scholarship of earlier decades. To really do the sociology of Jewish thought in
the Middle Ages would necessitate attention to different studies and different
practices.
The use of labels:
Another problem concerns the labels of "cosmopolitan" and "nationalist" which
Collins ascribes to Maimonides and Halevi respectively. Yes, it is true that
Maimonides' privileging of the intellect and his reliance on non Jewish sources,
especially Aristotle and Alfarabi, could lead one to view him as a
"cosmopolitan." But we need to remember that for Maimonides, intellectual
perfection, or happiness, is possible only for those who live in the just
society, the one established by revealed law, or the Torah of Moss. The
privileging of the Torah makes Maimonides' position much more ambivalent.
Conversely, Judah Halevi's "nationalist" interpretation is not devoid of
science, but actually reflects a certain scientific-philosophic tradition in
medieval Islam, the blend of Hermeticism and Neoplatonism espoused by the
Brethren of Purity. Once again, when one examines closely medieval Jewish
intellectual networks, the story is much messier and more complex than the neat
structural analysis provided by Collins.
A glaring omission:
The best case study to examine Collins's generalizations about the role of
personal relationships in intellectual networks, the link between intellectual
activity and social location, and nexus of conflict and creativity was the
Maimonidean Controversy of the 13th century. Yet, surprisingly this topic
receives very little attention, again because the sources at his disposal did
not pay sufficient attention to the social context of intellectual activity.
When we examine the controversy in detail and pay attention to the acting
personae and personal relationships, it become harder to fit the data into neat
generalizations. It is especially difficult to assess the Maimonidean
Controversy in terms of Jewish creativity. On the one hand, one can say that
Kabbalah came to the fore as a self-conscious movement in order to curb the
spread of Maimonidean rationalism. In this regard, conflict enhanced
creativity. But on the other hand, one can also argue that the ban on the study
of philosophy under 25 signals the decline of Jewish creativity in terms of the
sciences, even though it will take at least 400 years before this loss of
creativity becomes patently evident. In the short run, the ban on the study of
philosophy did not hamper Jewish creativity; in fact, the full absorption of the
Aristotelian-Averroian corpora took place in the decades after the ban was
imposed. In other words, the nexus of conflict and creativity in medieval
Jewish philosophy requires further, much more detailed analysis than the one
offered by Collins.
Judaism is not limited to the Middle Ages:
Collins focuses on medieval Jewish philosophy as a case study of the principles
of intellectual networks, relegating other intellectual networks (e.g., the
German Pietists and the kabbalists of Spain and Provence) to the indexes. Yet,
we all know that Jewish intellectual life did not begin in the Middle Ages, but
at least with the rabbinic movement which flourished from the first to the sixth
centuries CE. Collins leaves the six centuries of that movement and its
enormous literary output out of his analysis. I suspect that Collins chose not
to apply his analysis to the rabbinic corpus because the material poses
intractable methodological difficulties. Even though we have hundreds of
individuals identified by name, a given name does not necessarily mean an actual
person, but rather an intellectual tradition ascribed to that person.
Therefore, it is quite misleading to take the anecdotal and try to construe a
sociological-structural analysis on its basis. Does the law of small numbers
work for the rabbinic corpus? Is the dialectic of conflict and creativity
supported by the literary sources at our disposal? I do not know, but I am
inclined to believe that many scholars of rabbinic Judaism today will be very
hesitant to apply Collins's sociology of knowledge because they insist that the
material is a vast literary construct rather than a picture of a given social
reality. The move from literary text to social context, which Collins's take
for granted, will be resisted by many scholars of rabbinic Judaism.
As much as Collins omits the pre-medieval material, so does he excludes the
post- medieval story of Jewish intellectual life. After 1600 we barely hear of
Jews. Yes, there are some allusions to Kabbalah in the Renaissance, to Spinoza,
and to Mendelssohn. Occasionally, as in case of Husserl, we are told that a
person was born Jewish and converted to Christianity either in childhood by the
parents or later in life. But the peculiar role of Jews in modern intellectual
life simply disappears from view. The story of modern philosophy, as Collins
constructs it, highlights the mathematization of philosophy (as Arthur Hertzberg
has noted, this may have been directly related to the Emancipation of the Jews),
the loss of faith among those seeking integration in Western society and
culture, and the shift of intellectual energy from the study of the Talmud (a
highly abstract activity) to the study of mathematics and the natural sciences.
It seems to me that the analysis of mathematization of philosophy in the
modern period could be enriched if the Jewish background of some noted
mathematicians and physicists is highlighted.
What about women?
Obviously when one covers 2500 years of intellectual activity, seven major
religious traditions, scores of intellectual networks, and hundreds of
individuals, one must leave a lot out and cannot possibly do justice to the
material under consideration. There is one particular omission, however, which
concerns me most, not as a Jew but as a Jewish woman. Only five female
philosophers are mentioned in the book - Ann Conway, Catherine Cockburn, George
Elliot, Madame de Stael, and Julia Kristeva. Collins, I must admit, anticipates
this challenge from his readers and in the introduction he raises the questions
"where were the women?" In the Introduction he mentions four women, whose names
appear again later in the book. Yet, in truth, this book is but another
illustration that the story of philosophy is "His-story" rather than
"Her-story." This is not a cheap shot on my part simply to waive the feminist
"party card" and rebuke Collins for not consulting the massive material that has
been collected about the work of female philosophers from ancient Greece to the
present. Rather, my point is that Collins's exclusion of the women from the
sociological analysis distorts his reconstruction of intellectual networks.
How can one discuss Sartre while omitting Simon de Bauvoir, or Nietzsche without
a reference to Lou Andreas-Salome, or Jacques Lacan without a reference to Luce
Irigaray? These women are not only crucial to the analysis of the ideas of their
male counterparts, they are essential to the critique of their ideas as well as
the reception of those ideas. There can be no global theory of intellectual
change without paying attention to the dynamic between men and women, and
without recognizing that at least half of social reality in which all
philosophic activity is embedded includes women.