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The torture of an unphilosophical life The mind deserves a task worthy of its powers

Albertina Museum, Vienna, Austria.

Albertina Museum, Vienna, Austria.


December 26, 2024   6 mins

Even if you haven’t read Robert Musil’s unfinished modernist masterpiece, The Man Without Qualities, you probably agree that it has a great title. If you have read it, I’m sure you agree, because the novel returns obsessively to the theme of how its main character, Ulrich, can’t quite get his act, or, more fundamentally, his personality, together. But I’ve come up with an even better title. I think Musil should have called his novel The Man Without Philosophy.

I acknowledge, in offering this improvement, that over the course of the novel Ulrich explicitly espouses a life-philosophy; moreover, he even fashions his own name for this philosophy, “essayism”. Essayism is a mode of living whose characteristic expression is a stretch of novel and insightful reflection, “explor[ing] a thing from many sides without encompassing it”. The essayist lives a life of thoughtful observations. Ulrich lives that life, and so does Musil, who is much more interested in filling his novel with thoughtful observations than with any of the usual contrivances of plot or character development. Ulrich recoils against being “a definite person in a definite world”, and instead leverages his mind’s bottomless capacity for re-evaluation to emulate the infinite changeability of “a drop of water inside a cloud”. Ulrich describes his relationship to ideas: “they always provoked me to overthrow them and put others in their place.”

For Ulrich, as for Musil, “there was only one question worth thinking about, the question of the right way to live.” Isn’t that, in its very essence, a philosophical project? Yes. But there is good reason, nonetheless, to insist that Ulrich is a man without philosophy, namely, the fact that both Musil and Ulrich insist on it, over and over again. Ulrich acknowledges that in his predicament, “he could have turned only to philosophy” but the problem was that philosophy “held no attraction for him”. Again and again: “he was no philosopher.” He took a “somewhat ironic view of philosophy”, because, decades before the novel opens, he had already given up hope of actually finding the right way to live: “our thoughts cannot be expected to stand at attention indefinitely any more than soldiers on parade in summer; standing too long, they will simply fall down in a faint.” The result is that “he was always being provoked to think about what he was observing, and yet at the same time was burdened with a certain shyness about thinking too hard”.

Thinking hard makes sense if you want answers; it makes less sense if the highest reward you anticipate from your intellectual efforts is surprise. The difference between a philosophical life and an essayistic one is that the former aims at knowledge, while the latter aims at novelty. The characteristic positive response to an essay is: “I hadn’t thought about it that way before”; the essayist’s chief enemy is boredom. Ulrich “always did something other than what he was interested in doing” to ensure his unpredictability, even to himself. The essayist is a responsive, reactive creature, always aware of the standard way of looking at things, and always on the alert for the path of least resistance to some alternative point of view.

In Musil’s telling, the life of an essayist is a tortured one, because it is the life from which philosophy is, not only absent, but, much more specifically, missing. When you look at Ulrich, all you see, at first, is a glib intellectual who smiles at his own clever reflections; but eventually you discern that beside this cheerful and self-confident man there walks, as Musil calls him, “a second Ulrich”. The second Ulrich, “the less visible of the two”, is “searching for a magic formula, a possible handle to grasp, the real mind of the mind, the missing piece,” but he is struck dumb, unable to find any words to express himself. Musil says this man “had his fists clenched in pain and rage”. Ulrich the philosopher is trapped inside Ulrich the essayist.

Musil himself turned down an academic job in philosophy, much to the chagrin of his family, in favour of writing a book of thoughtful observations. The book, and the character of Ulrich, show us what it is like to be a thinker without a quest: perpetually idle in spite of all one’s ceaseless, restless intellectual activity.

Ulrich is a serial womaniser whose relation to women is analogous to, and therefore gives us insight into, his relation to ideas. Early in the novel he describes an evening with one of his lovers using two images: the first is a “ripped-out page” from a book. The evening, although enjoyable, didn’t connect to any larger narrative. Ulrich was not looking for a wife, or to start a family; he just likes being around them, until he doesn’t — and this means that his romantic evenings fail to add up, like a series of vacations. The second image, even more striking, is that of a tableau vivant: a frozen drama, where actors pose motionless to recreate a famous scene. Imagine, for example, an actress playing the role of Medea standing over her children with a knife. Musil describes such a moment as “full of inner meaning, sharply outlined, and yet, in sum, making absolutely no sense at all”. The tableau vivant makes no sense because you would never hold a knife like that, still, poised, hovering over someone: that position only makes sense in the context of other positions, into which it is integrated as a motion. This is an apt description of what happens when ideas are forced to do the work to which they would only be suited if you did not remove any possibility of ever “wholly encompassing some subject matter”. When you chop human love, or human thought, into pieces, the effect is similar to chopping a human body into pieces: horrifying.

“I was afraid that if I looked carefully, I would discover that there really were no answers out there.”

Musil fought in the First World War; during the Second World War, the Nazis banned his books and he lived in exile with his Jewish wife in Switzerland. He died in 1942, leaving The Man Without Qualities, which he had been obsessively revising for decades, unfinished. It is a remarkable fact about the novel that Ulrich, Musil’s alter ego, sets foot in neither war. The novel opens in August 1913, and in over a thousand pages it never manages to traverse the 11 months to the start of the First World War. Musil knew something of the atrocities of dehumanised modern warfare and the brutality of totalitarian oppression, but they were not his subject matter. Instead, he wanted to report, firsthand, on what he had seen earlier, back when times were supposedly good, a realisation so disturbing that not even two subsequent world wars could distract him from it: “there is just something missing in everything.” In bad times, short-term goals crowd your field of view; it is precisely when times are good that you are in a position to take a step back and notice that the big, long-term goal, the one that is supposed to hold everything together, is what has gone missing.

I read The Man Without Qualities for the first time when I was in graduate school in Classics, and within a year, I had left that programme and switched to philosophy. Why, given that I had been devouring philosophical texts since high school, didn’t I major in it in college, or pursue it after college? I don’t think I could have put it this way at the time, but: I was afraid. The fear was partly an insecurity about myself — that I wouldn’t measure up, that I had nothing to contribute, that I was not worthy to walk the esteemed corridors of philosophy — but the other part, the deeper part, was a fear about philosophy. I was afraid that if I looked carefully, I would discover that there really were no answers out there. As long as I never tried to find the right way to live, I couldn’t definitively say it didn’t exist. I’m not claiming that Musil reassured me that it did. No, what The Man Without Qualities gave me was a vivid and terrifying glimpse of the life of thoughtful observations; Musil was my ghost of Christmas future. I would have to, somehow, find in myself the resources to believe that inquiry was possible, both for human beings in general, and for me in particular, because, as scary as the prospect of failure was, I had just seen something scarier.

You could think of a mind as having a dial that is usually turned way down, except on those occasions when we need to solve a specific problem, but even then, we only turn it up a little. What would happen if you set it to maximum, all the time? It would chew through everything — through our usual self-justifications, through the conceit of inevitability that attaches to our habits and customs, through the thin scaffolding of reason that holds life together. Such a mind would become, as Ulrich once describes himself, “a machine for the relentless devaluation of life”. The only way to avoid this result is to give the mind a task worthy of its powers, by presenting it with the sorts of questions one can, without shyness, think hard about. But that entails some hope of arriving at answers. This is one way to think about philosophy: a safe space for the unfettered operation of mind.


Agnes Callard is Associate Professor of philosophy at the University of Chicago. Her most recent book, Open Socrates, will be published on 15 January.

AgnesCallard

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Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
9 days ago

The author uses a novel to try to explain something about the human mind, and i can see what she’s getting at.
She invokes two different approaches and tellingly, describes philosophy as “a safe space for the unfettered operation of mind” as opposed to an untethered approach as characterised by Musli. (I’m tempted to call him muesli, as a scattering of all kinds of ingredients.)
So what i find interesting is how the internet is changing the way our consciousness works; or rather, how we allow it to work. The scatter-gun approach with lack of lengthy concentration is an obvious parallel with browsing, allowing a huge number of ideas to flit through our heads.
To cut to the chase, the question is: what should we do with consciousness? It can be both a blessing and a curse, a tool to advance ourselves and our species whilst also creating a void to be filled with potential harm and falsehood. When young, many find themselves becoming captured by ideology as a means to fill that void (see yesterday’s essay by Mary Harrington) until the realities of life intrude. Some never escape that trap (see any essay by Terry Eagleton).
It just feels like something vital is changing. We’re becoming far more aware of these issues than hitherto, as both the intellectual space freed up by mechanisation and the pace of life expands, whilst our output into – and receptivity to – the internet creates an externalisation for us all, a kind of universal consciousness, along the lines envisaged by Teilhard de Chardin, or perhaps a less holistic way.

AC Harper
AC Harper
7 days ago
Reply to  Lancashire Lad

Perhaps  philosophy provides “a safe space for the unfettered operation of mind” – but there are many philosophies, religions and political systems of thought competing for attention. Strangely none of them converge on a single truth, possibly because there will always be people motivated to break any emerging consensus for all sorts of ‘reasons’.

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
6 days ago
Reply to  AC Harper

Thank you, but do not all things in fact converge on a single truth? Is it not love in its unlimited expressions, in its eternal and universal utility?

Norfolk Sceptic
Norfolk Sceptic
2 days ago
Reply to  UnHerd Reader

Doubling Down, continually, is a limited version of ‘unlimited expressions’, and even that ends in unintended consequences, which disrupts any Eternal, Universal Utility.

T Bone
T Bone
8 days ago

I thought this was a fascinating piece. Exactly consistent with how the Old Testament describes human nature.

Jonathan Andrews
Jonathan Andrews
8 days ago
Reply to  T Bone

Upvoted, not least because I don’t understand why you received downvotes without a comment to explain what you got wrong.

Dave Canuck
Dave Canuck
8 days ago
Reply to  T Bone

So does Star Wars

Billy Bob
Billy Bob
6 days ago
Reply to  Dave Canuck

Star Wars is more realistic though

Saul D
Saul D
8 days ago

A classic example of why I dislike philosophy – the idea that you will be able to understand everything if you just think hard enough. Reality is much more complex than that.

Jonathan Andrews
Jonathan Andrews
8 days ago
Reply to  Saul D

It is also self indulgent; you can’t think much about these things if you’re up at six to get to work

Henry B
Henry B
8 days ago

Golly. If only someone had thought to make a distinction between the active and contemplative lives, and to observe the value of leisure and contemplation for any human life that aspires to be anything but merely slavish.

laurence scaduto
laurence scaduto
8 days ago
Reply to  Saul D

Agreed.
Even the very concept of truth is a bit ridiculous. In many, if not most, areas of inquiry there simply is no possibility of landing on a singular, undeniable truth. The complexity is what makes our world so interesting.
For instance, what is the meaning behind the name “Boxing Day”? I’ve already seen three different explanations in my email today. So, this question, which first occurred to me fifty years ago, is still up for debate.
Note: It’s likely that the first uses were a) oral, not written and b) very local. The people involved are long gone. I think.

Richard Craven
Richard Craven
8 days ago

2+2=4 is pretty straightforward, I think.

Thor Albro
Thor Albro
8 days ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

Yes, I believe Aristotle tried to drill down to the basic, uncontroversial truths starting with “A=A”.

Mark Kennedy
Mark Kennedy
6 days ago
Reply to  Thor Albro

‘Identity,’ logic’s most fundamental axiom: whatever a thing is (A, B, P, X… whatever), it is whatever it is.

Michael Lipkin
Michael Lipkin
8 days ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

The clue is in most but not all
However, when there are multiple interpretations available for a set of evidence, not all interpretations are equal. It seems to be not that simple to assess which is the best interpretation, one useful tool being Occam’s razor.

J 0
J 0
8 days ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

Not in BLM land it doesn’t.

ChilblainEdwardOlmos
ChilblainEdwardOlmos
8 days ago
Reply to  J 0

Being that I am currently at the Trona Pinacles in California which is on Bureau of Land Management land, your comment took me a second to realize that you’re not commenting on thar BLM land. Hahaha!

Pedro the Exile
Pedro the Exile
8 days ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

Not if you are off the Post Modernist persuasion or you subscribe to the white patriachal approach to maths-its whatever you want it to be-which is great unless you are doing a job that requires mathematical precision!!

David B
David B
8 days ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

That’s axiomatic, rather than the truth.

Richard Craven
Richard Craven
6 days ago
Reply to  David B

Are you saying that it’s not true that 2+2=4?

Norfolk Sceptic
Norfolk Sceptic
2 days ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

It can be true, assuming the digits are numbers.

If they are strings, ‘2’ + ‘2’ = ’22’

What is true, isn’t true, always. Someone will come up with the same question, but in a different context. But the original will likely still stand.

Michael Lucken
Michael Lucken
1 day ago

Anybody capable of reading this understands they are numbers and therefore the concept represented is always true. Only a deliberate misinterpretation would say it is not. If we didn’t all agree and assume such notation represented numbers mathematics would be nigh on impossible. If it was intended to represent a string that would need to be clarified in accordance with the conventions of our common language and one way of doing that is enclosing in quotation marks as demonstrated yourself. ‘2’+’2′ means something completely different than 2+2.

Last edited 1 day ago by Michael Lucken
Andrew Wise
Andrew Wise
1 day ago
Reply to  Michael Lucken

No one told Microsoft (if you’ve ever programmed in VB you have to be very careful )

laurence scaduto
laurence scaduto
7 days ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

There is a difference between a simple fact and a complex truth.

Mark Kennedy
Mark Kennedy
6 days ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

Straightforward, but like all analytical truths–things true by definition–not very interesting. According to the conventional meanings arbitrarily assigned to the symbols in the equation, as far as equivalence is concerned ‘2+2’ is just another way of saying ‘4’–or ‘3+1,’ ‘9-5,’ etc. This doesn’t tell us any more than what we already had to know in order to use the symbols correctly in the first place.

Norfolk Sceptic
Norfolk Sceptic
2 days ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

Beware of: ‘2’ + ‘2’ = ’22’

Mark Kennedy
Mark Kennedy
6 days ago

(?) It doesn’t follow from our frequent inability to ascertain what’s true that the concept of truth is itself ridiculous. As for ‘complexity,’ this is a comparative term: it would make no sense to situate things on a complexity continuum that didn’t offer both lesser and greater complexity alternatives. Plus if simple things aren’t themselves interesting, at what point in the complexity hierarchy does interest make its appearance, and if there, why not earlier or later?

Surely what your thus far unsuccessful quest for the meaning of ‘Boxing Day’ should turn your attention to isn’t any opacity in the concept of truth but the very nature of explanation itself, and its limitations. If you wonder how an animal knows how to do something despite no other animal having taught it, for example, and someone suggests, “That’s its instinct”–swell! That clears that up! Now you know how and when to use the word ‘instinct’ appropriately in an English sentence; but are you any wiser than before? In fact, you’ve been given a mysterious black box where an explanation should be; and yet, we accept such black boxes as ‘explanations’ all the time. As long as we can stick labels on things, enabling us to tidy them away into the right closet, our desire for order is appeased and we don’t inquire further. Poke around too closely in those closets, though, and the world can suddenly reveal itself to be much less satisfactorily explained than we thought.

Last edited 6 days ago by Mark Kennedy
Dave Canuck
Dave Canuck
8 days ago
Reply to  Saul D

Reality is complex because every individual lives his own reality, reality is a mix of family and societal background, genetics, experiences, what you read and learn, culture, interactions with others, religion or lack of, urban or rural ilfe, etc. There are many different realities, that’s why no one agrees on anything.

Steve Ridout
Steve Ridout
5 days ago
Reply to  Dave Canuck

I respectfully disagree with the notion of many different realities. There are many different perceptions of reality.Yes, reality is complex, and ultimately unknowable, in total, in this incarnation. We perceive reality through the lens of the inputs you described. Consequently, we interpret reality with varying degrees of correctness and incorrectness simultaneously.

Richard Littlewood
Richard Littlewood
8 days ago
Reply to  Saul D

What you have described is not philosophy at all. Some sort of pastiche of someone thinking.

Norfolk Sceptic
Norfolk Sceptic
2 days ago
Reply to  Saul D

PPE (and History) graduates are why we have rampant NET Zero policies.

Susan Grabston
Susan Grabston
8 days ago

The art of thinking has withered on the vine in recent decades. Having been surprised at a request to teach critical thinking to PGs, a data search showed no mandatory twaching of this skill in the Russell group, with creative thinking consigned to schools of management entrepreneurship/ innovation modules. Doubtless a focus on certification over education has not helped, but senior academics are now discusslng whether AI jeopardises even this functional outcome and what can be done (central exam halls ar the obvious answer but resisted because of the cost relative to the Covid virtual option – univeersities being a profit maximising racket these days).
We need to start thinking again, to become excellent secondary data researchers, build inductive/deductive skills and enjoy the freedom of our own conclsions. And to do that we have to make the time for reflection. I saw a hopeful shift in last year’s UG cohort, and I hear this years are more Why (is that so) than How (do I get a first).

Jonathan Andrews
Jonathan Andrews
8 days ago
Reply to  Susan Grabston

Your comment is very interesting. In the light of your words I wonder what you think of my (self serving) thoughts.
So, I teach mathematics and statistics at a pre/first year university level and believe that students should be able to do pen and paper calculations. For example, work out the variance by first principles for say five data points. Any big data set, shove it into a calculator.
Am I silly? Is there any value in this?

James Kirk
James Kirk
8 days ago

Not at your level but I’ve had occasion, with younger people, to revisit the lost mysteries of arithmetic. They complained it hurt their heads. I used to ask them what it was like to go to the gym after a long absence. That Maths is the mental gym? Train hard, fight easy stuff.

Michael Lipkin
Michael Lipkin
8 days ago

At school we used log tables, I used to write down the numbers as powers after taking the log, e.g. if the calculation involved taking the log10 of 5.2 I would write down 10^0.716 for that number. Helped me to remember what it meant. I don’t think anyone else did that. Even then most students were just going through the motions.
Not sure how useful this is at University level.

William Loughran
William Loughran
7 days ago
Reply to  Michael Lipkin

You must be as old as I am. You said:
Not sure how useful this is at University level.
It is of historical and theoretical value for young engineers to known their heritage.
Log tables were useful for engineers before they were elegantly encapsulated in the slide rule. What an absolutely brilliant and elegant mechanical device for advanced mathematical calculations. It took quite a long time for computers to surpass it.

William Loughran
William Loughran
8 days ago

You’re posing at least two questions here: will it have pragmatic value for young peoples careers – the mundane question; or more importantly for me, will it provide them with pleasure and satisfaction throughout their lives like some find in killer sudoku, the Times crossword, learning other languages, or playing with recursive structural equation models in the social sciences. There is incredible value for those who find it thrilling, or even just fun.
I’m long retired from teaching mathematics and statistics, but I still savour them – and intellectual play in general.

James Kirk
James Kirk
8 days ago
Reply to  Susan Grabston

Perhaps a cycle is being broken? First requirement is an inspirational teacher, next the inspired who will grow to pass it on.

Richard Millard
Richard Millard
8 days ago

I read TMWQ 50 years ago and it had a similar effect on me as listening to Like a Rolling Stone by Bob Dylan around the same time –

How does it feel, how does it feel?

To be without a home

Like a complete unknown, like a rolling stone

Neither author tries to offer a solution, or even a signpost, but the effect was to inspire me on the path to “relentless” discovery, honesty, self-knowledge and the realisation that the answers to the questions Musil & Dylan pose lie not in more “thinking” but in the realm of the heart, where experience and observation go much deeper than words and concepts. Dylan’s challenge had me travelling through 30 countries over the following years, but it was only later that I was fortunate enough to learn that the journey / challenge is actually more about undoing and realising what a wonderful life we ‘simply’ have, than embracing some convoluted (or even ‘sublime’) philosophical “truth”. As Socrates has it, “Know thyself” .

AJ Mac
AJ Mac
6 days ago

Nicely put. Though Dylan might be allergic to the very idea an encapsulated Life’s Philosophy, I’d guess he does have a sense of mission and purpose, and with some kind of through-line, though changing shape over the decades. To communicate that sense of questing, maybe, and to call out beauty and bravery as well as injustice, suffering, and sorrow. And to make much of it sound good—though many have disputed that. In Dylan’s body work, the emphasis is toward the grim and sorrowful, but with many notes of mercy and gladness (more so during some decades than others). The fact that he remains quite silent about his own inner motivations and even seems pretty uninterested in exploring them is part of his mystique, and legacy. But he doesn’t seem like a mere leaf blowin’ in the wind.

It takes different breeds of seekers to help feed the hungry spirit of the world—or somethin’ fancy like that. If nothing else, Dylan is clearly a noteworthy original of lasting impact.

Steven Somsen
Steven Somsen
8 days ago

Living only in the mind breeds impotence. Your heart or gutfeel can give your life direction and then one should commit oneself to act on this. That gives experiential knowledge, the only true knowledge. The rest is mental masturbation.

Richard Craven
Richard Craven
8 days ago

I read TMWQ twice twenty or thirty years ago, and always understood Ulrich’s intellectual prostration as a metaphor for the teleological vacuum besetting the Austro-Hungarian empire on the eve of its eclipse. (For the record, I was also a decidedly second rate analytical philosopher, and quit academia the day I got my PhD.)

Hugh Bryant
Hugh Bryant
8 days ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

Bravo RC! Humblebrag of the year. Love it!

Richard Craven
Richard Craven
8 days ago
Reply to  Hugh Bryant

Hai thang yow!

Philip Stott
Philip Stott
8 days ago
Reply to  Richard Craven

also a decidedly second rate analytical philosopher” – ouch!

James Kirk
James Kirk
8 days ago

There’s philosophy and being philosophical. You can peer at a drop of water in a cloud but it has condensed from the gas of water vapour and is about to fall earthwards. To do this one needs to be close up. A medium sized cumulus weighs 200 tonnes, one needs to be miles back from it to appreciate its majesty, its weight is counter intuitive but a small aircraft can fly through it barely impeded. Best avoided, big brother cumulo nimbus has a fearsome engine raging inside it
A big cloud looks as if it is heading somewhere, has a purpose. It has, it’s heading to where conditions are suitable to redistribute the world’s water. No volition beyond the prevailing wind ‘seeking’ to balance air pressure. It’s part of an auto balancing system but what did the primitives think before science appeared?
A primitive, a child even, will know clouds rain but not that they are completely made up of water. With experience the child grows and expands its purview.
The point? Learn to fly something. You’ll have something new to consider beyond the skill and the machine itself. Look out of a passenger aircraft window and smile at people who say we’re overcrowded. Ponder the narrow minded. Become philosophical over their philosophy, or lack of.

Richard Littlewood
Richard Littlewood
8 days ago
Reply to  James Kirk

One of your primitives who predates our science is Aristotle. He said the cloud has a purpose, to provide rain.
He wouldn’t have agreed with your idea that its purpose is to redistribute the world’s water. That is not a purpose for him, nor for me as far as I can understand it, and so is not true. It is, using Aristotle’s ‘primitive’ terminology, purely incidental, and to him, of no account.

James Kirk
James Kirk
6 days ago

Therein lies your philosophy. You live in the desert and dismiss, begrudge others’ clouds. You miss the point. I dare say you now know more about clouds than before. Look up today, a huge cloud over your head, all you see. There’s still a stratosphere and more above. Both you and Aristotle don’t see the wood for the trees. A shame with centuries between you.

Richard Littlewood
Richard Littlewood
5 days ago
Reply to  James Kirk

I am making the point that Aristotle sees further than you, and had the terminology to criticise and correct what you said.

Michael Lipkin
Michael Lipkin
8 days ago

What about those philosophers who believe that have found the answer to how people should live? Here’s a few: Marx, Lenin, Mao, Stalin, Pol Pot etc.
Better hope that you never find the answer!

Ralph Faris
Ralph Faris
8 days ago

The essay by Agnes Callard managed to explain the difference between a life guided by the pursuit of serious self reflection, a moral code by which one might try to live and a life that was “a machine for the relentless devaluation of life.” In that former mode, one might as Callard notes be frightened of what one might find in such a serious pursuit of meaning, or truth and perhaps simply see the whole activity as overwhelming us. But at far as I can tell, she nonetheless comes down on the side of those brave enough to inquire, to seriously question ourselves, even in the face of arriving at some revolting conclusions–a task for which philosophy is uniquely suited. Musil, for all his interest in different experiences really is aptly described “what happens when ideas are forced to do the work to which they would only be suited if you did not remove any possibility of ever wholly encompassing some subject matter”. All in all, her essay takes dead aim at Musil’s glibness and deeply cynical approach to living. Under the description she offers, Musil is unarmed without philosophy–something he considers uesless. Too bad for him.

Benjamin Perez
Benjamin Perez
8 days ago

Reading this article made me wish that, hope that, Agnes Callard would write a piece for UnHerd on Fernando Pessoa’s very interesting (philosophical, anti-philosophical?) work The Book of Disquiet. (A brother can dream.)

Jon Hawksley
Jon Hawksley
8 days ago

When I studied Philosophy over 59 years ago I concluded Western Philosophy’s search for truth was doomed to go round in circles and it should be focussed on choice. Since then the choices available to humans have multiplied and their capacity to make them has diminished. It will disappear completely with a reliance on AI in LLMs that mimic the lowest common denominator of the past thoughts of humans. At first aimlessly and then mindlessly.

Bored Writer
Bored Writer
8 days ago

Don’t mean to be intentionally cruel but this is pretentious twaddle. “All that can be said can be said clearly.” Where’s Wittgenstein when you need him.

David B
David B
8 days ago
Reply to  Bored Writer

The Tractacus is unreadable.

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
6 days ago
Reply to  David B

Wittgenstein might reasonably ask: What do you mean by that?

M B
M B
8 days ago

It could be a variant of „the dependence effect” you mentioned another time: by giving information about Robert Musil’s book, you create the need to read it.

Judy Englander
Judy Englander
8 days ago

…..

Timothy Denton
Timothy Denton
8 days ago

Thank you for explaining to me why I find Robert Musil unreadable

Robert
Robert
8 days ago
Reply to  Timothy Denton

That’s funny. I gave up halfway through the article. I had no idea who Musil was and now I’m not at all interested in finding out.

Janet Baker
Janet Baker
8 days ago

I have a family member who is like this character. He collects trivia about far distant stars and arcane mathematical equations, but never researches the dangers of Diabetes 2. I once casually quoted to him a stanza from Bob Dylan’s Tombstone Blues, which I think makes the same point as the essayist, and he was highly offended:
Now I wish I could write you a melody so plain
That could hold you dear lady from going insane
That could ease you and cool you and cease the pain
Of your useless and pointless knowledge

Richard Littlewood
Richard Littlewood
8 days ago

All the best books do teach you how to live. This is one to avoid it seems.

Paul Boire
Paul Boire
6 days ago

As philosopher Ed Feser has shown, we in the west have literally lost our minds since Ockham’s absurd nominalism, Hume’s self refuting “fork” ideology, Kant’s incoherent antirealism, Descartes’ forgetting about that of which he thought and the train crash of disconnected postmodernism. The answer, preposterous as it might seem to claim in this wasteland, is in Final Causality and the realistic metaphysical foundation of Thomism. Sanity. Final Cause is the ultimate shaper of all reality; God.. all is moved by love. We are definable by the ends we seek. https://www.amazon.com/Thomass-Aristotelian-Philosophy-Nature-Obsolete/dp/1587314320

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
6 days ago
Reply to  Paul Boire

Well… he hasn’t “shown” anything; rather, he’s put forward an argument that we can either agree or disagree with, in part or in whole.

Paul Boire
Paul Boire
6 days ago
Santiago Saefjord
Santiago Saefjord
6 days ago

Ultimately only a handful of people are able to be true philosophers, because it is a destabilizing and mind altering endeavor.
Many more would be much better suited to following ideas rather than leading, not entering in any such dangerous intellectual exercise at all… much better for them to conquer intuitively, if at all, than to enter the intellectual labyrinth and ruin themselves.
As Nietzsche said: “Beware that, when fighting monsters, you yourself do not become a monster. For when you gaze long into the abyss. The abyss gazes also into you.”

Tyler Durden
Tyler Durden
5 days ago

I’d still position Alain Badiou and Jordan Peterson as the key thinkers of the Left and Right over the past 20 years.
Some might rightly mention Sloterdijk, and I would say that Zizek has been invaluable in bringing Lacan’s thought back into the culture in lieu of the Anglo academy’s rather toxic obsession with Deleuze and Guattari since the 1990s (they being another prop for the Judith Butler post-structuralist complex).