Conversations with Tyler - Kwame Anthony Appiah on Pictures of the World

Episode Date: July 31, 2019

Born to a Ghanaian father and British mother, Kwame Anthony Appiah grew up splitting time between both countries — and lecturing in many more — before eventually settling in America, where... he now teaches philosophy at New York University. This, along with a family scattered across half-a-dozen countries, establishes him as a true cosmopolitan, a label Appiah readily accepts. Yet he insists it is nonetheless possible to be a cosmopolitan patriot, rooted in a place, while having obligations and interests that transcend one's national identity. He joins Tyler to discuss this worldly perspective and more, including whether Africa will secularize, Ghanian fallibilism, teaching Jodie Foster, whether museums should repatriate collections, Karl Popper, Lee Kuan Yew, which country has the best jollof rice, the value of writing an ethical advice column, E.T. Mensah, Paul Simon, the experience of reading 173 novels to judge the Man Booker prize, and what he's learned farming sheep in New Jersey. We're coming to New York City! Join us for a live podcast recording with Alain Bertaud on September 9th. To learn more and register for the event, click here. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Recorded June 12th, 2019 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter  Follow Kwame on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox. 

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Starting point is 00:00:03 Hi, everyone. This is Jeff, producer of conversations with Tyler. I'm excited to announce that the show is coming to New York City. So I'd like to invite you to join Tyler and special guest, Alain Berto, on September 9th for a live recording of the podcast. Come have a drink, meet fellow fans, meet me and the rest of the CWT team, and hear the conversation Tyler wants to have with Elaine Berto, not the one you want to have. Now, if you don't know Alain Berto, he wrote one of Tyler's favorite books of the past year. It's called Order Without Design, How Market Shapes Cities. It draws on over five decades of Berto's urban planning expertise in 40 cities across the world. He's one of the most interesting thinkers in urbanism and what you might call market urbanism today.
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Starting point is 00:01:28 bridging the gap between academic ideas and real-world problems. Learn more at Mercadis.org. And for more conversations, including videos, transcripts, and upcoming dates, visit Conversations with Tyler.com. I'm very honored to be here today with Kwame Anthony Appiah, and let's just jump right in. I have some questions about Ghana. Why are there so few atheists in Ghana? Well, I think maybe for the same reason
Starting point is 00:02:05 that there were very few atheists in much of the world until relatively recently. I mean, atheism is a relatively modern phenomenon, at least the form of atheism that we sort of see around us. So there are lots of Christians in. Ghana. There are lots of Muslims in Ghana, and there are lots of believers in traditional religions, which are sort of polytheistic, though they tend to have a high god. So that's sort of one big god and there's an earth goddess and then a bunch of other gods. I think probably one reason
Starting point is 00:02:35 why people haven't given it up is because nobody argues against it. And again, that's a relatively modern thing to have people in public arguing against theism. I don't mean, I mean, obviously there were atheists in the ancient world, but, but in, but in, you know, but in, you know, Since the rise of the Abrahamic religions, there haven't been a lot of atheists except until recently anywhere. Do you think West Africa is proving to be an exception to the secularization thesis, which is coming to many parts of the world, many parts of the Middle East, phenomenally religious, there's not a lot of belief. But West Africa seems different, Nigeria also.
Starting point is 00:03:11 Yes, huge amounts of very successful growing religious denominations, especially, as in many places in the world, the Wahhabi version of Islam, the kind of Pentecostal version of Christianity. So born again, Christians, charismatic churches, lots of singing and dancing, people being taken with the spirit and that kind of thing. So I guess it's certainly not going in the direction of secularization as far as I can see in the sense of moving away from church life or mosque life and moving away from belief. That's not happening. And marriage across different religions seems especially common in West Africa. Why is that? And have those background cultural factors in some way shaped your own views? That's a good question. I think, yes,
Starting point is 00:03:57 so my uncle Aviv, who was a Sunni Muslim, was married to my aunt, Grace, who was, who was a Methodist. My parents were a different Christian denomination, so that's not terribly exciting, but they certainly didn't, they didn't even go to the same church, actually. They went to different churches. That's relatively common in Ghana, both for Christian couples to go to different churches and for people to marry people who are not Christians, and Muslims to marry people that are not Christians, and so on. I think it just shows something about the character of the belief, which is that it's, in an odd way, though this is somewhat been changed by the arrival of Christian, American Christian tele-evangelism and Wahhabism. But fundamentally, the key thing is belief in and kind of relationship with the spiritual world. so that it's not very much, as long as you agree about that, the rest is kind of details
Starting point is 00:04:58 and also people have the view, which I think is a reasonable view if you're a theist, which is who knows exactly what the truth is about these things, they're very complicated, the idea that you get in early Christianity that it's incredibly important to insist on a long, long list of beliefs, some of which are philosophical and impossible to understand, and transubstantiation, consubstantiation, weird stuff like that, that's not very common. People are very relaxed. And the insistence that things are very complicated, that sounds like you, right? In other contexts.
Starting point is 00:05:28 Yes. No, I mean, I think that's certainly my view. And I think this idea that kind of fallibilism, the thought that, well, I might be right, I might be wrong, that's actually quite a garnet attitude. People, in a way, I think, understand how hard it is to get to know. things, especially about this sort of thing, about invisible spirits and faraway gods. So they are not likely to be super confident about anything outside their own experience. So they may be confident that they themselves have had conversations with Jesus or something like that.
Starting point is 00:06:05 But the idea that the rest of it is sort of going to be easy to figure out, I think is not a very widespread idea. And to some extent, it pervades people's life. So in other areas of belief, people are kind of willing to think, well, I'll go to the doctor if I get sick, but if he doesn't do anything, I'll go to the traditional healer. It's true. Like a portfolio approach. It's a portfolio approach. To many things.
Starting point is 00:06:28 Yes, yes. And do you have that? I think that I, I mean, officially I do because my official position, I suppose, is that because all of our best pictures of the world are slightly wrong, we can't rule out a picture just a. on the grounds that it's wrong, inconsistent with some other picture that we have, because maybe that the part of the other picture that is inconsistent with is one of the wrong bits. So we'd better work with as many pictures as we can, or as we can manage, which is obviously that's the main limitation, it's just our capacity to hold on to too many pictures,
Starting point is 00:07:00 because none of our pictures is going to be perfectly right. Of all of your pictures of the world, which one do you think is least wrong? I think my everyday common-sense, middle-sized object view of the world is the one that's least likely to be wrong, It's least likely to be wrong that there are tables and chairs. And the very sort of thing that modern, in a way, modern philosophy begins by making us wonder whether we know about Descartes makes us wonder, do we know about these middle-sized everyday dry goods, as one philosopher once called them. So that I think it's very unlikely that I'm wrong about. Which is most likely to be wrong, even if you think it's true, right?
Starting point is 00:07:34 There's something most likely to be wrong. Probably some of my views about what the best science is. What would those views be? Well, I'm sort of, you know, I think believe in the standard deliverances of modern genomics, but I suspect that we're going to learn lots and lots of stuff in there that we now believe is not quite right. But not just incomplete, but wrong. Like what core views or models of yours are most likely to be wrong? So my inclination is to believe about the basic physical structure of the world that some mixture of the quantum theory and the theory of relativity can be made to work.
Starting point is 00:08:16 But we've been trying to do that for a very long time, basically since they were invented those two theories. And we haven't had a huge amount of success. And what people seem to think currently is the most plausible way of reconciling them strikes me as, A, incredibly difficult to understand. stand string theory and be something that a reasonable person might doubt. But if you ask me what I think the best current physical theory is, I'm going to say string theory, but with a sort of confidence that's probably below half. Take Pan-Africanism. Do you think in the broader course of history this will go down as merely a 20th century idea, or is Pan-Africanism alive and well today? Pan-Africanism involves two different big strands. One is the
Starting point is 00:09:03 the diasporic strand. And the word pan-Africanism and the pan-African congresses were invented in the diaspora by people like Sylvester Williams from Jamaica and W.B. Du Bois from the United States and Padmore. That idea of a diasporic African identity seems pretty lively in the world today, though it's not very, it doesn't produce much actual politics or policy. But the sense of solidarity of people of African descent of the African diaspora seems pretty strong to me. But strongest outside of Africa in a way, right? Yes, where it began. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:40 In Africa, I think, on the one hand, that most contemporary sub-Saharan Africans do have a sense of themselves as belonging to a kind of African, a black African world. But if you ask them to do something practical about it, like take down borders or, you know, do more political integration, I don't know that that is going to go anywhere anytime soon, which I regret, because I think for lots of reasons it would be, you know, my sister and her husband live in Lagos. If they want to go to a car by road, they have to cross the border between Nigeria and Benin, the border between Benin and Togo, the border between Togo and Ghana, and at each of those borders, they probably have to interact with people who are going to try and
Starting point is 00:10:25 extract an illegal tax on them. Easier to fly to London, right? Much easier to fly to London. Much easier to fly to London back to a crowd. That's crazy. And we've had these weird things. On the one hand, there's probably a million Ghanaians in Nigeria, living Ghanaans citizens. On the other hand, we've had massive expulsions from each country,
Starting point is 00:10:42 not recently, but in the past, nearly a million Nigerians expelled by Dr. Busier in the early 70s and then a Nigerian expulsion later. And these weren't hugely unpopular. So you can get people to be quite now. Nationalistic within Africa, even though there's kind of a broad sense that we're all part of one thing That doesn't really include the Maghreb and North Africa and the Arab-speaking parts of Africa in quite the same way, and that's because of the legacy of racial pictures Maybe you could explain Ghanaian history to me in a nutshell, so if I read about Ghana today, it's commonly cited. There's a relatively high degree of national unity or identity. Politics is fairly coherent, but
Starting point is 00:11:28 If I go back and I look at history not that long ago, there are coups in 1966, 1972, 1981, instability, ethnic tensions in 1994, why has Ghana now appear to be such a stable nation state and not too long ago, such an unstable nation state? Well, I think the first question is the really puzzling one. The earlier instability is not too surprising, after all, Ghana was created in 1957, and I don't just mean that it was decolonized in 1957. the country of Ghana is the union of the former British Togo land with the Gold Coast in 1957 as a result of a plebiscite in Togo in the mid-50s.
Starting point is 00:12:09 So it's younger than I am, the country, that it has a strong sense of national anything. That's the big surprise, I think, not the other way around. There are various theories about this. I think one of the most interesting is that because most of what's now in Ghana, at least west of the Volta Lake, once river, was at one point or rather within the ambit of the Asante Empire, which is something that goes back to the 18th century, and which radiated trade out from Comasi in the central southern Ghana,
Starting point is 00:12:42 you know, for hundreds of years. It's sort of integrated economically, it's been integrated economically for quite a long time. And people know each other. They may speak different languages. There are 80 languages spoken in Ghana, But people have been speaking, Tree, the Asante language, which has dialects on the coast as well, and in between. People who have had it as a second language since long before the British took over,
Starting point is 00:13:08 which you have to remember happened in the 20th century. The final, the final Asante War, Anglo-Asante War, was in the first decade of the 20th century. So my father, my father's father, was born before British rule in Asante and died after. British rule and the santa. It lasted less than his lifetime. So that whatever shapes that region, I don't think it can be those 90-odd years of that, because it seems deeper than that. I think the political stability is, it can be credited to a significant achievement on the part of a man, namely President Rawlings, Jerry John Rawlings, who is not someone I hugely admire in every way, but he came in in one of those coups. He was a military ruler for a while. He's
Starting point is 00:13:54 civilianized the country and he actually probably with the assistance of Kofi Annan, who was then UN peacekeeping head and used Ghanaian troops a lot. He reprofessionalized the Ghanaian military to think of itself as a military and service of a civilian power and not as people who might come in from time to time to correct political mistakes. And ironically at the end of his two terms when he lost, he sort of appealed to the army and they said, no, you taught us that we don't do that. So you lost. The other guy should come in. And we've now had a whole set of cycles of the two main parties oscillating back and forth, winning and losing.
Starting point is 00:14:31 And I think now, whereas there was celebration in the streets in coups in the past, now people would be really angry if the military intervened. And I don't know that they could get away with it. I mean, there would be bloodshed and horrible stuff. And they know that. So I think that is the result of political learning, watching what happens when you do things with coups and discovering that it doesn't get much better if you do it that way and deciding to go.
Starting point is 00:14:54 with the patience that's required for democracy. In the data, British background colonies seem to do better than French, Spanish, or Portuguese. Do you have a sense of why that might be? It's not something I've thought about. But say in the Caribbean Barbados has been relatively prosperous. People have looked at this at Singapore and many other examples. I mean, I think, so I, you know, as we're extrapolating out from the place I know best, which is Ghana. One thing that happened in the British colonies was that a middle class was created that was not wholly dependent upon the state, whereas the kind of middle class in the Francophone countries of West Africa was mostly you got middle class status by being a civil servant or a lawyer or something by having some kind of relationship with the state.
Starting point is 00:15:46 that goes with the fact that in the British colonies tertiary education starts earlier already there was a university college in the Gold Coast before independence whereas there wasn't in Senegal which is the most sophisticated of the West African French states so I think that's part of it there was this prosperous that they were people who'd made money in things like farming and forestry maybe as mediators in the gold trade, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:16:18 And they were not, you see, the French, I mean, the sort of schema story, the cartoon story is the British do indirect rule, the French do direct rule. The British, therefore, leave in place the institutions of chieftaincy if they exist or create them if they don't. The French sort of wipe all that away and create their own structures. Maybe the continuity of political institutions through the colonial people. period so that the King of Shanti is still in place in the middle of the Republic of Ghana, maybe that's another thing that helps to explain the existence of a kind of stability
Starting point is 00:16:56 that's independent of the formal state, because he's not, he's recognized by the state, he's a member of the House of Chieves, but his authority and his legitimacy has nothing to do with the Republic of Ghana. It's older and deeper than that. So that may be another thing. I mean, that doesn't really apply to Singapore, of course. That is to say, the British didn't use indirect rule in Singapore, so I don't know what the story is there. I suspect the story in Singapore is three words, Li, Kuan, Yu, but... And a very good location at the right time. Well, good location, wonderful economic location in terms of being a major port city in a massively growing area of the world,
Starting point is 00:17:37 with populations speaking the two great trading languages of the world, Chinese and English, and so on. So I think Singapore has been lucky in many ways. I think it was lucky in its leadership. I'm not a big fan of the kind of authoritarian side of Bikuan Yew, but they owe him a lot. If cosmopolitanism is so wonderful, why are we today seeing a resurgence of nationalism? What's unsatisfying about cosmopolitanism?
Starting point is 00:18:02 Well, I want to say first that for me, it's really important to insist that you can be a cosmopolitan patriot, that you can be rooted in a place, care about it in a special way and still be a citizen of the world and think that you have obligations and concerns and interests that transcend your national identity. So I'm not the kind of cosmopolitan who's opposed to national identity. And that's an important part of the answer because the kind of cosmopolitan who does want to drag people away from their roots is, I think, got no chance of persuading most people. And they're not going to persuade me. And I'm officially a cosmopolitan.
Starting point is 00:18:38 So why would I expect them to persuade people who have less reason to be cosmopolitan than I do? And I say I have reason to be cosmopolitan because I, you know, my parents are from two different continents. I have my three youngest members of my family are my half Russian, my half Namibian and my half Nigerian great nephews and nieces. And their grandparents include a Norwegian, Ghanaian and an English woman, as well as Russians and Namibians. So, of course, in my family life, of course I'm going to be interested in everywhere in the world and feel that I have connections with it. But I think that if you make cosmopolitanism about rejecting the local, that won't work. I think most of us are like to be connected with a place or a couple of places and to feel rooted in them. So the idea that cosmolans are rootless, I think, is just a mistake or have to be.
Starting point is 00:19:29 Why has so much of the world turned away from things connected with other places? so migration and globalization as an economic phenomenon, which they see as posing threats to their economic stability. Well, partly I think because they've been encouraged to think so, even though I think it's just objectively false that globalization has been terrifically bad for many of the people who are most nationalist at the moment. And part of it is that the elites that led globalization
Starting point is 00:19:56 or that led integration in Europe paid almost no attention to the views. They weren't listening. They thought it was obvious what they were doing was good. And so they paid absolutely no attention to the tensions and difficulties that were produced. But does listening work? Doesn't a kind of appeasement often make things worse? Well, I don't think the right thing to do was appeasement.
Starting point is 00:20:20 I think the right thing to do was to solve the problems that were being blamed on globalization or Europe by the people who were upset, which means more should have been done in terms of government policy in the north of England. to improve employment, things like that. I think that that would have been. But even if that's a good idea, what if it's just the case that, say, the rise of China lowers the global status of the West, it means stagnant middle-class wages in many places,
Starting point is 00:20:48 and those things are just facts. We could have done a number of choices differently, but at the end of the day, people will be upset about that and turn back to nationalism. Well, so I agree that the relative position of the North Atlantic societies is obviously in decline. England in particular.
Starting point is 00:21:06 Relative one. But these are still very, very rich societies. And so part of the question is whether what goods there are being fairly shared among the people in these societies. And if they don't think they are, which I think is a reasonable judgment, then they will worry more about stagnation of income than they do if they think that it's look look you know incomes were no doubt stagnant during the second world war in england but people felt hey we're engaged in this common enterprise together so of course that's okay and also we're
Starting point is 00:21:43 we're sharing the burdens fairly where there's nobody's getting away with with anything or nobody's and in fact there was deep resentment of people who profiteered in in wartime so i think that it's possible to run a society even a society that's sort of coasting that doesn't doesn't see growth in the incomes of middle and working class people, I think it's possible to do that, to manage that in a way that feels fair, that makes the burdens feel fairly shared, and that if you do that, there's the possibility of getting people to see that closing off to the world is only going to make things worse. And that's the big thing we have to persuade people of, that it isn't making things better, Brexit isn't making things better for middle class incomes
Starting point is 00:22:28 in Britain. Is cosmopolitanism not only compatible? with nationalism, but in a way quite parasitic upon it, and in a sense the parasite is being ejected a bit. So think back to your boyhood in Kumasi. You have all these different groups, and you're trading with them. You see them every day, and that works great. But there's some central coherence to Ghana underlying that. You go to Lebanon today. That central coherence seems to have been gone for some time, and you could call Lebanon a cosmopolitan place, but it's not really an advertisement for Lebanon the way it's worked out. So are we just moving to an inequituality? where the parasitism of cosmopolitanism is now being recognized for what it really is?
Starting point is 00:23:07 I mean, I don't like the metaphor of the parasite. But yes, I do want to insist that cosmopolitanism, look, cosmopolitism, as I said, it's not only requires in a certain sense, or the right kind of cosmology, requires a kind of rooted, rootedness. But its point precisely is that we are celebrating connections among different places, each of which is rooted in its own something, each of which is rooted in its own something, each of which has its distinctive virtues and interest, each of which has its own history.
Starting point is 00:23:37 And we're making connections with people for whom that place is their first place, just as I am in a place, which is my first place. So, yes, cosmopolitanism requires, I think, national sense of solidities that are not global, and that's why, as I say, you can be a cosmopolitan patriot. Now, if the nationalist says, okay, but why do we need anything beyond national citizenship, the answer is we have a world to manage, the economy works better if we integrate,
Starting point is 00:24:13 and for most of us, not everybody, but for most of us, interaction with others is really interesting and rewarding. And a lot of what we value here, a lot of what we value about our own stuff, our own national stuff, is actually the result of dialogue with other places. Shakespeare's most famous play is about a Dane. Japan's most famous poet, Matsuo Basho, is a Buddhist. That means he's connected with India. He wrote in a script that was invented in China. So that a lot of what we value most in the here turns out to be connected with the there.
Starting point is 00:24:49 And so if we were to break off from everywhere, as from time to time societies do. Japan broke off for a while. At the end of the Ming Dynasty, China broke off for a while. This was not good for the development of those societies. Just from an internal point of view, it wasn't good. Should a cosmopolitan be concerned that so many of the world's marvelous cultural objects are so concentrated in a relatively small number of museums and a relatively small number of countries, almost exclusively Western? Yes. So the British Museum, should they send back what they have? I think what the British Museum should do is, well, I think they are doing,
Starting point is 00:25:27 which is to be part of the leadership of a movement in the world of museums, to say the key questions about the great objects are access questions, not ownership questions. If we fuss about ownership, we'll never make any progress. Let's agree that the challenge is to make a world in which everybody in the world is from time to time close to a significant body of seriously-interested. interesting objects. And that means that the British Museum should be sharing as it does, but it should be doing it more. It means that, and I think sending back, of course, is exactly the wrong solution, because sending back means you send all the Malian stuff to Mali. Well,
Starting point is 00:26:08 the trouble with Mali is not that it doesn't have Mali and stuff. It's that it doesn't have Italian Renaissance stuff. It doesn't have Chinese pottery. It doesn't have tapestries woven by the Aztecs. It doesn't have lots of the world's great treasures. Better to think about the task as being a task of collectively curating the world's collection for everybody and figuring out how to share more of it in places where it'll be accessible, more closely accessible to some of the people in the world who don't have access to anything now. That would be my ambition. But more Dogen artworks than Mali would be a good start, right? There could be a museum with 200 of them. Maybe they wouldn't be taken care of as well. But isn't that up to people in Mali?
Starting point is 00:26:50 to decide what's the risk return trade-off and they simply ought to be sent back. They were probably purchased under duress in some cases taken. So I don't think that I don't agree with you that it's up to them. It's not up to them. These things matter to all of us and they should be their care and concern should be concern for everybody. It should be part of the job of the global community to think together about how to manage these things.
Starting point is 00:27:17 Now, obviously, from time to time, particular objects, are in the trust of various public and private institutions in particular countries, and those countries should make sure that they perform the duties that come with having such a trust. But no, I don't think it's just up to them. And just to take the case of the Dogon material, much of it is religious material from a religion that nobody nowadays, hardly anybody in practices anymore, because Mali is way more Muslim than it was in the French colonial period as a result of interesting processes which we could discuss.
Starting point is 00:27:52 As a result, it's a bit like the situation that there was in Afghanistan under the Taliban. They were, as possessors of the Afghan state, trustees of a whole bunch of stuff that they thought of as idols. And some of what they did was destroy stuff because they thought it was idols. Now, fortunately, as a result of the good sense of a lot of curators in Afghanistan who hid stuff from the Taliban, they didn't succeed in destroying as much as they could have. But the thought that the Taliban is in charge of whether we should look after Buddhist material that happens to be in Afghanistan, I think is a mistake. I think, in other words, I really do think of these things as, as it were,
Starting point is 00:28:33 belonging to all of us, humanity, this is the cosmopolitan attitude to these things, and that, of course, states, as with all cosmopolitan obligations, states play a central role in ensuring that they're met. and so each state has responsibility for the stuff on its territory. But it doesn't have special rights to determine what happens to things just because they happen to be on its territory, any more than the Italians have any special right to decide that Etruscan stuff is bad and therefore we're going to not care for it.
Starting point is 00:29:04 That would be right. Of course they haven't decided that. But if they were to, it wouldn't be sensible to say, well, because it's in Italy, the Italians are entitled to do what they like with it. They're not. Now, in the middle of all these dialogues, we have a segment called Overrated versus Underrated, and I toss out a few names or ideas, and you tell me if you think they're overrated or underrated. But these will be easy. Are you ready?
Starting point is 00:29:26 Okay. Carl Popper. That's not easy. I don't think he's overrated. But is he underrated? No, I think he's rated about right. Okay. Kant's third critique.
Starting point is 00:29:40 Underrated. Why? Because most people in the world haven't any idea about it. and it's a really important document. And amongst philosophers? I think philosophers give way more weight to the first critique, and maybe that's right, but not as much more weight than they do. E.T. Mensa, overrated or underrated.
Starting point is 00:29:59 Garnang and High Life. Garnet. High Life. You know, I haven't asked anybody about him in Ghana recently. I hope he's not underrated. He's one of the great Garnier-N treasures. I certainly think that if he is highly rated, that's perfectly correct. Garnier taxi drivers in Washington still know who. If that's any indication.
Starting point is 00:30:15 Well, then that's terrific because I think that kind of high life was one of Ghana's great contributions to cosmopolitan global culture. Paul Simon's Graceland album, how is it aged? I don't think pop music generally ages well, so it's fine, but I don't think it's as important as it seemed at the time. Why doesn't pop music age well? Well, I think because it's meant to be, for the moment, it's not meant to be constructed with the kind of care and detail that goes into making. the kinds of works that endure. Afro-futurism, overrated or underrated? Overrated.
Starting point is 00:30:51 Why? Because that kind of slogan, I think, doesn't help do anything. But the notion that there's some new way to think about African or Pan-African identity by looking forward rather than backward, that's not a useful idea. Manifested through science fiction, cinema, it seemed to inspire a lot of people. Well, it inspires a lot of the kind of people that you and I would know about. But if you want to know what's really kind of being consumed by mass publics in Africa,
Starting point is 00:31:27 I don't know that Afrofuturism would count as one of the things. But say Black Panther, maybe not in Africa, but I'm sure it was pirated in Africa as well. That's had a major impact on many millions of people I've watched it, felt in some way motivated or inspired. Was the vision behind that movie a mistake in some way? I think it was a very sentimental film which sought to, it's a bit like the way in which the pyramids figure in Afrocentrism, that is to say, the reality is that Africa did not develop advanced technologies
Starting point is 00:32:04 in the remote past and build on them. And I think a fantasy in which they did doesn't really help us to think about Africa's future. What was it like teaching Jody Foster? She's a very smart woman. What struck you about her? Well, she was a very smart woman. She was very engaged with thinking about at that point. I don't know what she thinks about now. She wrote a wonderful senior thesis about Tony Morrison, which I admired. A few comparisons I'll toss out. Gwen versus Augustus John. Which painter do you prefer? I know it's conventional now to prefer Gwen John, but I still think that the best Augustus John paintings are pretty amazing, and I'm not sure that I think that about anything of Gwen Johns.
Starting point is 00:32:46 James Brown or Fayla Couty? I think I'm a James Brown man by a smidge. Mark Twain or Harry at Peter Stowe? Mark Twain. Why? Well, he's much funnier, for one thing. He has a wider range. He's an essayist and a humorist as well as a novelist. In all of those ways, he's a more interesting writer. Harriet Beatish, though, had a huge influence through one book, a huge and positive influence, which I'm glad about, but as a literary figure, I think Twain is obviously superior. And here's the question that will really get you in trouble. Does Ghana or Nigeria have the better Jolof Rice? I think that the answer is that the best Jolof Rice in West Africa may not be in either Ghana or Nigeria, but I'll stick with my own preference for Garnan,
Starting point is 00:33:38 but that's probably just a question of what you're used to. I'm going to have some next weekend, so I'll be in China. No, no, I'm going to be in England, but my niece WhatsApped me an hour ago and said, I'm going to bring Jull off Rice. Oh, great. And I thought, well, that's cool. Some questions about philosophy. Just sort of standing on one foot, briefly.
Starting point is 00:33:57 How would you position yourself in the philosophic canon? I think of myself as someone whose main contribution is to notice things of interest in philosophical work and draw them to the attention of a public that's wider than the public that already knows about them, the philosophical world that already knows about them. I think also I happened to be in a place and a time in the early 80s in New Haven, Connecticut at Yale, where there was a possibility of making a kind of connection between analytic philosophy, the kind of philosophy I was trained in, and questions in. African and African-American studies.
Starting point is 00:34:39 And to the extent that there is a field of, subfield of African-American studies that's philosophical, I think I can claim to have more or less started it. Of course, there are ancestors like Du Bois, but in terms of thinking about how a philosophical training should be brought to bear in thinking about African-American stuff, that I think I definitely was one of the first people. I think I had the first appointment in philosophy and African-American studies in the world. And that was luck.
Starting point is 00:35:06 I mean, it was Yale that thought of making it. that appointment. I didn't invent the job. But it made me, it gave me a challenge. How can you take this training you've had, which has no, nothing at all to do with race or gender or sexually orientation or anything else. And how can you take that and bring it to bear and thinking about things that are central to African-Aragan. I'm really lucky that I was faced with that question just as a teacher, because I had to teach things and I had to teach philosophy courses in African-regnesty. I think I was really lucky. And I think that it was sort of obvious that there was lots of material that could be brought to bear. So to the extent that I sort of have a
Starting point is 00:35:43 place in the, a tiny place in the history of the subject, is probably at that intersection. How can we bring more diversity, racial and otherwise, to philosophy? What concretely should we do? Well, the challenge is that, so I don't remember the numbers exactly, but it's something like this. Men and women enter undergraduate philosophy at about the same rates, but women leave faster. and so that by the end of college, there are more males and females in most philosophy majors. And the same thing happens in – so there's about a third, I think. So obviously that means that in graduate school there's probably about a third of women to start with, but again, more of them leave.
Starting point is 00:36:25 So clearly we're doing something wrong because it isn't that women are not equally interested in the subject because they arrive. But they may have more common sense, right? Philosophers are underpaid relative to their smarts. And at some point you might just say, gee, why am I doing this? You might, but I don't think that that's what's going on. I think that the, so just on the paid question, philosophers are the best paid of humanities measures. So if you're going to stick in the humanities and you're just interested in income, you should probably be a philosopher. But obviously, you wouldn't commit yourself to a life in philosophy if money was the main thing in your life, the thing you cared about most.
Starting point is 00:37:02 So I think they leave because, so there's some psychological evidence about this. One reason I think, and Sarah Jane Leslie, who's now a dean at Princeton, but she's a philosopher and psychologist has thought about this. One reason is that there's been a tendency in analytic philosophy to treat the question of how people perform early in the subject as an indication of whether they have this thing, this it, that can make for good philosophy. Truth is, as in most things, the good philosophers are people who work hard and who maybe have some psychological traits, but they're pretty widely distributed in the population.
Starting point is 00:37:50 What happens then is that in the first process of developing as a philosopher, you meet these teachers who's explicitly or implicitly, communicate the thought that if you don't do well in a paper, it's not their fault. It's because you don't have it. And this is a place where women do seem to be more sensible than men. That is, if they get indications that they're in an activity where they're not going to do well, they wisely moved something where they think they will. men, boys and young men are more likely to resist a little bit and to insist on trying again. That seems to be the evidence.
Starting point is 00:38:32 So since it's false that there's some it that people have that makes them successful in philosophy, we should not be communicating this. And so the most important practical thing is to say to all people who teach undergraduate philosophers, don't say that, explain to them that if they don't do well on their first paper, probably because they haven't worked hard enough, or they didn't ask enough help from the teacher or the teaching assistants, that if they push on,
Starting point is 00:39:00 they're likely to get better. So I think at that stage, that's a really important thing. But then we have to worry about the next stage, I think, at the graduate level, we have a climate committee in our department that thinks all the time about making sure that everything about the climate and the department is not putting off for women, racial minorities,
Starting point is 00:39:18 trans people, and so on. gay people, anybody who might, for one reason or another, feel alienated, we spend a lot of our time making sure that we don't do the things that alienate them. Another whole category of people who can be alienated by college experience are people who come from backgrounds where they don't have parents who went to college or who don't have very much money in their background. Interacting with people who do, that can be an unsatisfying or unpleasant experience unless the people that you're interacting with are thoughtful people. So we try as hard as we can. to be thoughtful about these things.
Starting point is 00:39:52 And I'm saying we do it in my department, but all the departments, all the serious departments, would be doing this now. Does it matter if philosophic realism is true? Well, mattering is a two-place relation. Things matter to somebody. It matters to me, but it wouldn't have mattered to my mother,
Starting point is 00:40:11 and I think my mother was a perfectly satisfactory human being for it's not having mattered to her. I mean, she knew that I wrote a book about realism. I'm glad to say she didn't ask me to explain it to her, not because she wasn't smart, but because she wasn't interested. Now, you write a column for the New York Times called The Ethicist, and you give people ethical advice. To what extent you think advice, in any context, including that, is mainly a placebo, that people feel they've gotten advice, they feel stronger, they feel more confident,
Starting point is 00:40:39 they may go ahead and do what they want to anyway. You've benefited them, but advice is something other than actual advice. Well, honestly, the main thing I think I'm doing in the column is helping everybody accept the person who wrote the letter to think about some ethical question, which is for them not likely to be an urgent one in the way it is for the letter writer. For the letter writers, of course, I don't give advice that I think will do them any harm, but I'm not usually feeling that the advice I've given them is either ever, A, very different from what they would have done without my advice, or B, really truly satisfactory, because if I were in the business of advising, as opposed to writing an advice column,
Starting point is 00:41:24 which is not being in the business of advising, I would want to know more in almost every case about their situation. So if they came to me with the question, the first thing I'd say is tell me more about this, tell me more about that, and so on. But the convention is that the letter is all I get, and while the fact checkers at the times do call people up to make sure that everything in the letter is true, they don't allow me to ask them questions.
Starting point is 00:41:48 So I think that, you know, in real life, a lot of the function of advice is actually the one you identified. It's just being a sounding board, it's listening, the person's going to do something. But it's helpful to be heard. It's helpful to articulate the problem for yourself. The advice function, the thing that the advisor says may not be hugely important. There's some evidence that people who know just a little about financial literacy do worse than people who know nothing at all, because they then think they can go out and make investments. But until they know a lot, that may be counterproductive. Do you ever worry about that with advice? If I thought that I was the only resource for the people who were writing the letters, I wouldn't write the column.
Starting point is 00:42:33 So I know, I think all I'm trying to do is to identify something in the question that strikes me as worth. thinking about, mostly as I say, not for the person who wrote to me, but for the million other people are going to read it. And so I've never had a question where I thought, if I answer this with what I think is the best advice I have, there's a risk that something bad will happen. I've never had that happen. Do you think there's a risk that people just feel inadequate, that they know somewhat what's the right thing to do? They ask you, you confirm their intuition, and then they're like, oh my goodness, I already knew I'm not up to that, but now society is really telling me, you know, I'm not up to that.
Starting point is 00:43:15 And they just go away feeling bad. Possible. I mean, as I say, I get zero information beyond the letter, and perhaps surprisingly people don't often communicate with me or try to communicate with me about what I've said, especially the people who asked the question. So it's possible that it makes people feel bad. But I think, so what I imagine is,
Starting point is 00:43:38 that there are many reasons why people write in. One is they just want to, as it were, write it down. They want to think about, they've got a problem. They think, if I just write out this question, I'll get clearer about what my situation is, and maybe this guy will even help me get a little bit clearer. But I think a lot of them are people who've had an argument with somebody about what they should do, and they want me to take sides. And they don't explicitly say that, and they don't tell me what the other side is usually, though occasionally somebody says, well, my wife thinks this and I think that. So I think of sometimes as the function of my answer is to be something that on Sunday morning gets slapped down on the breakfast table. See, he agrees with me, all that gets hidden
Starting point is 00:44:16 away because I don't agree with you and you don't want whoever it is you're arguing with to know that the Times ethicist has taken their side. But as I say, I think it's really important that I don't believe that anybody who was in serious difficulty should think of writings at the New York Times and waiting perhaps months for an answer is a sensible way to seek a solution. The main function of the column, from my point of view, as I say, is to get out ideas for thinking about the big things that happen in everybody's life,
Starting point is 00:44:50 questions about confidentiality, loyalty, the balancing of interests, whether, what difference your relationship with a person makes to what you owe to them, these sorts of things, which I think philosophy has a lot to say about and it's useful for people to think about whether or not they're currently facing a question of that kind. What do you think is the next undervalued moral revolution on its way,
Starting point is 00:45:17 say within the next decade? I shouldn't have a standard answer to that, but I don't. I think that we're seeing that there's a long tradition in Muslim moral thought of making each of us, at least each Muslim, responsible for the moral lives of other Muslims in a certain way. It refers to a passage in the Quran about commanding right and forbidding wrong. I think this society was, when I came here 30-something years ago,
Starting point is 00:45:50 very much a society in which people were sort of thought that you left other people to do their own moral thing, and that now there's an interesting change going on that people feel inclined to sort of intervene in the moral lives of, even of strangers, and to say what they think about it, maybe not to coerce them, of course, into doing anything in particular, but at least to express a view. If that takes hold, it will be a huge revolution in the moral life of our society. And what in our behavior will change the most, say within 10, 15 years?
Starting point is 00:46:22 You mean if that happens? If that happens? If it continues. Well, I think a lot of, there'll be a lot more what I now call bystand. interventions in social life, that will mean that probably there'll be a lot less, I think, sexual and racial and homophobic harassment, because bystanders are very useful in dealing with that kind of thing. That will be good. I mean, a lot of people now witness those kinds of things, and they think it's wrong, but they don't say anything because we have this idea that, as I said, that everybody's responsible for their own moral life kind of thing. So, you know, if that were to take off, it would be a big,
Starting point is 00:46:58 change. It would have downsides as well as upsides as these changes often do because there's a reason why in the Muslim case the tradition says that while you should do this, you shouldn't, for example, be too nosy about what other people are doing because then the balance would shift too far in the other direction. And there are people who would respond to a change like that by sort of nosily poking about in other people's lives. And I think there's a place. for moral privacy as well. So I think like all these things, it's likely to go too far at some point.
Starting point is 00:47:34 Now, for our final segment, we cover your life. I sometimes call this the Kwamey, Anthony Appia, production function. Simple question, you were a child. You met Richard Wright, Richard Baldwin. What was that like? I don't remember. You don't remember?
Starting point is 00:47:46 I don't remember my childhood. I got very, very sick when I was eight and spent several months in hospital, and I have zero memories of anything before that, unfortunately. And when you were in the hospital, Nekrumah walked past your hospital bed. Do you remember that? I do remember that. What was that life? I was recovering at that point. That was very exciting. I knew he'd put my father in prison, but he was still the president of our country.
Starting point is 00:48:10 And it was very exciting to have him there. And I was kind of upset that he was with the Queen of England, and she greeted me, and he didn't. And I was kind of upset that he didn't say hello. Since, you know, he'd been a very close friend of my parents. He was going to be the best man at their wedding when he became a leader of government business in Ghana. So he sent somebody else. but so they'd been very close. So even though he was my father's imprisner, I think I remember feeling that he should have not tapped his foot
Starting point is 00:48:39 and looked at the ceiling, which is basically what he did. What did you say back to the queen when she greeted you? Well, of course, the queen in hospitals tend to ask this slightly daft question, which is how are you? And the answer should always be when I'm in hospital, so, you know, but of course I said I was very well. the thing that got me in trouble was that the Duke of Edinburgh who had visited my hometown Kumasi
Starting point is 00:49:01 without the queen previously and had met my mother turned around as he was leaving and said give my regards to your mother which is a conventional thing for members of the royal family to say about somebody that about somebody they met before and that got at that point the president realized that he knew who I was and later what was it like having was it an uncle a great uncle as king uh had both um because the my great uncle was succeeded by my uncle. They're very different to me because my great-uncle was this incredible charismatic symbol of assentiness and we would sometimes go up and see him with my mother and my sisters on a Sunday after church. We would just go and sit and chat to him. But he was,
Starting point is 00:49:42 it wasn't like sort of chatting with a member of the family. He was, he was a very grand figure. He was always dressed in these amazing Asante-Kentai robes. So that was kind of exciting. and you were awed by him. The next King of Santi, who had been, whom I knew as a child, as Uncle Matthew, before he became king, was someone, you know, when I was a kid, I hung out with him, I walked around,
Starting point is 00:50:12 we walked around hand in hand when I was a kid and so on, I knew him very intimately. So while it was also the case that somehow being invested with this job that made him seem a little bit magical still, he was still fundamentally just my uncle Matthew. Did you know your British grandfather at all when he was... Alas, no, he died before I was born. In fact, died before my parents were married.
Starting point is 00:50:34 Yeah. He was... My mother always said about him that everybody... Because he was the Chancellor of the Exchequer in Britain and in charge of a period of austerity after the war, that everybody always had this image of him as this kind of austere and figure incapable of enjoyment. But in fact, she said he had...
Starting point is 00:50:54 He had lots of fun. Churchill picked up on this way of thinking about my grandfather when he said, there but for the grace of God goes God, he said about my grandfather. He was very religious, he was very pious, but he wasn't humorless, and I think people got the impression that he was. What do you learn from having a sheep farm in New Jersey? I learn that it is possible to be a happy creature that doesn't know about Donald Trump and doesn't worry about the fate of the world.
Starting point is 00:51:21 My sheep are, we feed them properly, and they have access to water and they can run around and there are no big dogs to scare them or wolves or anything like that, no predators. And their lives seem happy. And when I'm visiting them, I sort of feel that you can, I'm reminded of the possibility of a kind of untroubled existence. Do you think it helps your work to have two very distinct physical habitats to do things in?
Starting point is 00:51:48 I think it is. How does that work? I mean, so, for example, the column, I almost always were. on the column at the weekend in the living room of our house in New Jersey. I work for six or seven hours maybe just with the laptop and the questions and occasional cups of coffee. And that's kind of a very productive space for me. I get that done in that way. Here in New York, I almost never get anything done in either of my offices. I have an office in the law school and an office in the philosophy department. But in this very room too, I also sometimes sit with my laptop. And again,
Starting point is 00:52:23 I can sit for six or seven hours and write things. I've actually almost never done a column in this space for some reason. So that's usually writing lectures or articles or reviews. I have a beautiful study in New Jersey and I've never managed to write a single word in it. It somehow doesn't work for me. I'm a lovely desk and I'm surrounded by a lovely library of books and there's a fireplace and so on, but it just doesn't work. The place that works is sitting in a living room.
Starting point is 00:52:53 with a laptop on my lap. I love the novel Milkman, by the way. What have you learned from chairing the Booker Prize? That fiction in English is in great shape. There are just lots of wonderful novels. I read 173 novels for that. Did that make you a better reader or a worse reader? I don't think you should read novels
Starting point is 00:53:14 in the way you have to read them for that purpose because I did read them all. I mean, that is to say, I read every page of almost all. I lie. I did not read every page of one of them. which was awful. But at some point, you just know you don't like it. You're not going to give the prize to a book which has a great second task.
Starting point is 00:53:30 Right. The whole book has to be good. Yes. But still, we felt, the judges felt, that we owed it to these people to read them right through. So we did. And I wouldn't urge, you're reading very, very fast because you've got less than a year and you've got to read all these books. And you are reading with a question in mind, which is not the question you normally have in mind
Starting point is 00:53:52 when you read a novel, which is is this worthy of this prize. And it's a funny frame of mind. One of the good things about it is that there's a... So you read 173, then you make a long list of 13. And those you can then read again at a reasonable rate in the last part of the summer. And then once you've picked the six,
Starting point is 00:54:10 you get to read those again. So the finalist you've read three times, and the last two times you've read them at a reasonable rate. So you've read them in a sort of normal way. But it's... You know, there are books that I read for that that I'm going to read again because I didn't feel I read them properly. And you're now on a committee for an architecture prize, is that correct?
Starting point is 00:54:30 Yes. And do you visit sites? How does that work? It's all done through. So there are architects or designers who actually visit the sites, but they produce very extensive reports. So we picked the finalists, the 20-something finalists, by looking at portfolios.
Starting point is 00:54:48 And then there's a presentation of each building over a series of days and so on, and that's how the choices are made. And how effective do you think prizes are in stimulating achievement? Or is it mainly for the readers or the viewers? They know where to go. I don't think anybody writes a book because they might get a literary prize. I don't think that wouldn't be good enough reason to write a novel. But fame and fortune could be a reason, right?
Starting point is 00:55:12 Samuel Johnson at least claimed that's why he wrote. Yes, and sometimes it reads like it. So I think literary fiction is not written by people who are looking for fame and fortune. The author of Milkman, she was living in a small apartment, didn't have very much money. When asked what she would do with the prize money, she said, pay off my debts. She's someone, Anna Burns has a vocation to write these novels. She writes him in a very particular way. She says they come to her, she waits for them, and then she writes stuff down, and sometimes
Starting point is 00:55:52 she knows it's working, and sometimes it isn't, and so on. She has a very particular picture of what she's up to. I don't think people like that are motivated by anything like this, but it doesn't mean there isn't anybody who's motivated in that way. I think that recognition is part of the important structure of the literary world, and prizes, big and small, are an important part of that. I don't think they're unimportant. I think it's good to do them. I'm not a big fan of, so I'm also, I'm the chair of the prize committee for the Begruen Prize, which is a philosophy prize, which is a million dollars a year, which tends to go to people who've had a long career. Like Charles Taylor, right?
Starting point is 00:56:28 Charles Taylor or Martha Nussbaum, people who, well, people who started doing what they were doing long before there were any prizes, so it can't have motivated them. So I think certainly for the Booker, the reason I agreed to do it, and it involved, you know, flying to London once a month and a lot of stress, reading all those novels is because of its function for the readers. What the Booker does is it creates a conversation in England over the summer about 13 books
Starting point is 00:56:57 and then people get really excited about which six are going to be picked and there's another conversation about the six including conversations in which people say that Changes are idiots and they miss something important, which is good because that comes into the conversation too and then the winner. And again, all over England people are talking about this book and people who wouldn't have read it, read it.
Starting point is 00:57:17 And since it's a great book, that's a good outcome. Last question. Let's say a very smart 19-year-old comes to you, maybe at NYU, and they say, well, I want to be the next generation's version of you, in some way, but of course different. What advice do you give them, ethical or otherwise? I think what I say is life is not the kind of thing you can plan. You can't have a sort of life.
Starting point is 00:57:45 plan, which is the terms on ethicists use in your back pocket. I was a medical student when I went to university. I was going to be a doctor till I was 20. Then I realized that I really loved philosophy, but I didn't become a philosophy undergraduate because I thought I was going to be a philosophy graduate student. I became a philosophy undergraduates because I wanted to do more philosophy, and then I was going to go home and figure out what to do with the rest of my life. I went home, spent a year in Ghana and the job I got was teaching philosophy at the University of Ghana. That made me realize that I liked the teaching, which I hadn't done before, obviously, as an undergraduate and so on. So I would say, be prepared to discover what's both in you and
Starting point is 00:58:27 out there in the world. Don't have some picture of how you want it to happen, because that isn't very, that's very unlikely to work. Have, have, have, be attentive to the world around you, be attentive to what you discover about yourself as you go along, match the two together. I didn't set out to make, I didn't set out to make, make any kind of impact. I just was interested in the subject and wanted to do more, wanted to write more, wanted to think more, wanted to teach more. I think that, um, too much reflection on the kind of effects of, of your work, as opposed to just on the work itself is probably not a good idea. You should just do it and hope that it will have uptake.
Starting point is 00:59:11 And the final thing I'll say is that there are many, many kinds of uptake. So there are people whose uptake is almost entirely within professional philosophy who are doing wonderful, important work, which will never be explained probably to people outside because there are things you need to know, modal logic or tens or calculus or something if you're a philosopher of physics, that aren't ever going to be explained to everybody. That work is very important too. That sort of work, the work that isn't easily explained to the rest of the world,
Starting point is 00:59:44 is in the background of the work that does get explained more widely. So I feel very much, as it were, standing on the shoulders of perhaps not giants, but anyway, pretty large people who are not visible outside the subject. but without his work. In other words, the work is the product of the community of scholars, and you're just one tiny proboscis on that vast amoeba of philosophy. And there's stuff right in the middle, there's the nucleus, and in there people are doing things that nobody's ever going to be able to figure out outside the amoeba itself.
Starting point is 01:00:25 Don't look for any particular kind of impact. Do the best work you can, and if it's good work, it will have to be able to figure out. some kind of impact, maybe not in the world, outside philosophy, but in philosophy. And also hold on to the, hold on to the thing that should have brought you in in the first place, which is your own desire to understand things. I'm always, in the end, what I'm doing, even when I'm answering those questions, is figuring out what I think, which is the only way I know how to make a contribution, is just to figure out the best answer you can come up with in the available time to the question that presents itself to you. And these,
Starting point is 01:01:08 the questions in philosophy that present themselves to me seem very urgent to me, even if some of them have answers that are, you know, for the ages. And I'm mostly working on them because I want to know the answer myself. Guamai, thank you very much. Thank you. It's great to talk to you. Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler. You can subscribe to the podcast in iTunes, Stitcher or your favorite podcast app. And if you like this podcast, please consider rating it on iTunes
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