Philosophy in Germany
Simon Critchley and Axel Honneth
SC: Simply as a way of initially organizing our discussion, we both
agreed to read a short article by Dieter Henrich that appeared in Merkur
in his philosophy column, 'Eine Generation im Abgang' ('A Passing Generation').1
Henrich rightly claims that a change of generations is coming to an end in
German philosophy, which is most clearly marked by the retirement of Jürgen
Habermas in 1994 and the death of Hans Blumenberg in 1996. But we might also
speak of a wider generational change that would include Karl- Otto Apel, Ernst
Tugendhat, Michael Theunissen and Niklas Luhmann, as well as figures like Otto
Poeggeler and Robert Spaemann. Almost all of this generation are now retired,
and it is at the moment unclear who and what will take their place.
As Henrich explains, the oldest and the youngest of this generation are only
separated by about fifteen years, and most of then came out of three
philosophical schools - Bonn, Münster and Heidelberg. Gadamer's name, and his
brand of urbane Heideggerianism, should also be mentioned in this postwar
conjuncture, although he precedes the generation we are talking about. Before
moving on to the question of how the contemporary philosophical scene looks in
Germany, we might perhaps begin with Henrich's description of what the 'passing
generation' had in common. First and foremost, despite their obvious
philosophical and ideological differences, what they shared was a common
context: the overwhelming presence of the trauma and catastrophe of National
Socialism. Thinking of Habermas, if one reads a fascinating early piece from
1961 on 'Der deutsche Idealismus der jüdischen Philosophen' ('The German
Idealism of Jewish Philosophers'), it reveals the postwar philosophical ambition
to reconcile Jews and Germans.2 But Henrich puts the issue in the following
terms:
With these considerations in mind one has really understood what
the first task of young philosophers in postwar Germany had to be: essentially
they worked in order to maintain or restore the worldwide credibility of
thinking in the German language. Alongside music, philosophy was for a long
time the most significant cultural export good of Germany. Since Kant, German
philosophy has distinguished itself through a basic style of investigation
that always ended in a synthesis in answer to questions of principle, limit
and life.3 To this demand for synthesis, we might also add the
requirement of universalism and the method of rational argumentation. So it
would seem that it is through a rationally achieved synthesis with a
universalist scope that German philosophy responds to the catastrophe of
National Socialism; and this is combined with an overwhelming fear of relativism
and irrationalism, which always seems to go together with the fear of reducing
the wissenschaftlich ('scientific') character of philosophy, or the
reduction of philosophy to what Henrich calls 'Literarisierung' ('making
literary'). In your view, is this a fair characterization of German philosophy
in the postwar period?
AH: Yes, I think it is to a certain degree, but maybe it is not broad
or differentiated enough. As is indicated by the Habermas article you mentioned,
there was not only the search for the restoration of a certain kind of
credibility; there was also from the beginning among some of that postwar
generation the ambition to address and clarify the moral disaster of National
Socialism. There was therefore not only the attempt to regain the great German
tradition in the sense of the Kantian heritage but also to regain or overcome
the separation from the Jewish tradition, which was highly specific and
extremely important for the whole of German philosophy at the beginning of the
century. This was not only an enterprise of Habermas, but others too, who
attempted to reconstruct the specifically Jewish element in German philosophy.
If you take the example of someone like Michael Theunissen, he spent a lot of
energy in his first major work - the book on the Other - reconstructing the work
of Martin Buber, and that was intentional.4 It was meant to overcome the
separation between the Jewish tradition and the German situation after the
Second World War. This is something totally excluded from the picture given by
Henrich.
The other thing that he underestimates is, let us say, the moral dimension of
the early period of German philosophy after the Second World War, after the
disaster or catastrophe. This is something best described by Karl-Otto Apel in a
famous article which I strongly recommend.5 There Apel describes his own
enterprise - namely, the search for a universal ground for moral principles of
respect and autonomy - as a response to, and a clarification of, the moral
dimension of the disaster. So there was also the moral dimension in that whole
postwar period, and this is also not clearly enough indicated by Henrich. That
is very closely connected with people in Bonn. I mean, if you take the three
universities mentioned by Henrich, then one should be careful to differentiate
between these places. For example, it is interesting that in Münster from very
early on - the middle of the 1950s I think - there were several people trying to
come into contact with Carl Schmitt. It is hard to explain why suddenly, in a
group of younger people, there was this interest in the work of Schmitt when
they were all aware that he had been deeply involved in the fascist juridical
administration. These people were no longer connected to the fascist world; they
were trying to be liberals, democratic liberals. I think one can explain this
interest in Schmitt because he was the only one who participated in fascism who
never publicly regretted having done so. This made Schmitt quite singular
because all the others - Gehlen and even Heidegger - were either silenced by
their involvement, or very quickly became converts to the new regime. So, to
complicate Henrich's picture, this interest in Schmitt at Münster, which came
out of the circle of Joachim Ritter, led to a very fruitful, although not
unproblematic, relation to the prewar past. All I want to say is that Henrich's
picture is not differentiated enough. I think it is rather simplistic to say
that the main ambition of postwar German philosophy was to regain credibility;
there were so many other motives, moral motives. There was also the motive of
finding one's place in a culture increasingly influenced by the United States.
One should not forget the continuation of the Heideggerian tradition to an
incredible degree in the postwar period. In Bonn, where Habermas and Apel were
students, the influence of Heidegger was striking. Habermas and Apel started as
what we might call left Heideggerians. If one adds these additional elements to
Henrich's picture, then I think it is basically correct.
SC: OK. But what about the desire for synthesis that Henrich talks
about. Does this define the postwar period of German philosophy?
AH: Yes. I think what was still very important, and almost seen as
self-evident in that period, is that any philosophical enterprise requires
synthetic power. I wouldn't reduce that requirement uniquely to Kant's
philosophy, as it is a very traditional idea of German philosophy that you have
to construct your own system. You have to find your own theory, your own
philosophical position. This was a requirement not explicitly formulated but
deeply internalized. So it was true that almost all the main figures in the
generation we are speaking of had the strong belief that they had to formulate
their own systematic philosophical position during the next ten or twenty years.
This was indeed as it has been in the prewar period, where you had Husserl or
Nikolai Hartmann or Heidegger; where you not only had philosophical teachers and
professional philosophers, but strong philosophical positions connected to
specific persons. Each one stood for a whole programme, and you could describe
the philosophical landscape with reference to persons who represented clearly
demarcated positions, discrete forms of synthesis. It was clearly understood
that in order to find your own synthetic position, your own new and original
position, you had to rework the philosophical tradition. Originality was the
requirement both before and after the war.
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