Conversations with Tyler - Rebecca Kukla on Moving through and Responding to the World

Episode Date: January 2, 2019

Before she ever studied them as an academic, Rebecca Kukla was fascinated by cities. Growing up in the middle of Toronto, she spent her days walking the city and noticing the way people and place inte...ract. That fascination stayed with her, and motion, embodiment, and place has become a subtle through line in both her professional philosophy and personal interests. In her conversation with Tyler, Kukla speaks about the impossibility of speaking as a woman, curse words, gender representation and "guru culture" in philosophy departments, what she learned while living in Bogota and Johannesburg, what's interesting in the works of Hegel, Foucault, and Rousseau, why boxing is good for the mind, how she finds good food, whether polyamory can scale, and much more. We're coming to San Francisco! Join us for a live podcast recording with Sam Altman on January 28th. To learn more and register for the event, click here. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Recorded November 16th, 2018 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler 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 Hello, everyone. I'm very excited to announce a forthcoming public event. This will be a conversation with Sam Altman of Y Combinator. Yes, the Sam Altman, the great, amazing judge of talent. This will be January 28th, downtown San Francisco. For details, please visit Conversations with Tyler.com. Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, bridging the gap between academic ideas,
Starting point is 00:00:38 and real world problems. Learn more at arcadus.org. And for more conversations, including videos, transcripts, and upcoming dates, visit Conversationswithtyler.com. Today I am here with Rebecca Kukla, who is a professor of philosophy and a senior research scholar and the Kennedy Institute of Ethics at Georgetown. She has formal academic training not only in philosophy, but also in geography, health policy, wine, classical ballet, and she can be able to. competes is a nationally sanctioned amutor in powerlifting and boxing. Her two main books are, first, mass hysteria, medicine culture, and mother's bodies, and second, yo and low, the pragmatic topography of the space of reasons, co-authored with Mark Lance. She has a forthcoming book,
Starting point is 00:01:36 City Living, How Urban Spaces and Urban Dwellers, make one another coming out from Oxford University Press. And overall, her main areas of research expertise are Social Epistemus, philosophy of language, applied philosophy of science, bioethics, and feminist and anti-oppressive thought. Rebecca, welcome. Thank you for having me. Let me start with a very simple question about feminism. What would be a rhetorical disadvantage that many women are at that even say educated or so-called progressive men would be unlikely to see? A rhetorical disadvantage that we're at. That's a fascinating question. I think that there is almost no correct way for a woman to use her voice and hold her body to project the proper kind
Starting point is 00:02:26 of expertise and authority in a conversation. I think that there's a massive, I don't even want to call it a double bind because it's a multidimensional bind where if we sound to feminine, sounding feminine in this culture is coded as frivolous and unsurious. If we sound too unfeminine, then we sound like we are violating gender norms or like we are unpleasant or trying to be like a man. I think that almost any way in which we position ourselves, if we try to be polite and make nice, then we come off as weak. If we don't make nice, then we're held to a higher standard for our appropriate behavior than men are. I think there's almost no way we can position ourselves so that we sound as experts. So oftentimes the content of our words matters less than our embodied.
Starting point is 00:03:16 presentation as a woman. And do you think there's a rhetorical disadvantage that even most women are educated women would be unlikely to see? You mean that they would be unlikely to see about themselves, right? Like, not just about other women. Yeah, I actually think that everything I just as much or almost as much for women as for men. I think we're all trained up really early, regardless of our own gender, we're all trained up extremely early on hearing male voices as authoritative and seeing masculine self-presentations as authoritative. And so we don't see them as authoritative in women either, whether or not we are women. It was actually a real eye-opener for me. A lot of times women will get advice to do things like not up-talk, where you end your
Starting point is 00:04:05 comment with what sounds like a question, right? That's up-talking and women do it more than men do. And we're told that it sounds weak and open-ended. Or we're told not to talk in a high voice, because high voices are coded as non-authoritative and unsurious? And I sort of accepted all that advice until somebody pointed out to me one day that the prior question is, why do we hear high as less serious than low, right? Before we even get to that point, why do high voices sound unsurious to us and why does up-talking sound unsurious to us? So I think at a very basic, basic level that even women don't generally question, just everything that's coded as feminine comes off as less authoritative. And I really want to make sure to add on here or bring back in the point that
Starting point is 00:04:47 plenty of women are not particularly feminine. So it's not like we can just avoid this by not coming off as feminine, because if we don't come off as feminine, then there are a whole other set of penalties that we're subject to, that we come off as violating norms or as just hard to understand or as, you know, I don't want to use a bad word on the air, but as meriting various gendered insults that get thrown our way a lot if we don't uphold those norms. So let's say it's public discourse and a woman is speaking or writing and leads with the words quote, speaking as a woman, dot, dot, dot. You as a philosopher, when is this a valid way to introduce a point and when is it not? It's a fantastic question and there are so many levels of
Starting point is 00:05:29 complexity and how to answer it. I'm trying to choose. So I think that is it okay if I sort of wind back and go back 20 years and then make my way back to the question? So I think that 20 or 30 years ago, a lot of feminist philosophers were just starting what's now known as standpoint epistemology, which is a version of epistemology that in its sophisticated form I'm very sympathetic with. But in its early relatively unsophisticated form, the idea was that women, just in virtue of belonging to the group women, had a particular perspective coming out of their set of experiences that, was not substitutable by somebody who hadn't had that set of experiences. So it was very important to include women's voice, quay women, so that they could represent this perspective and this set of experiences. I think that over the years, the idea that there is a thing, no matter how much you pair back, that there is a thing that is women's common experiences or women's common
Starting point is 00:06:33 perspective has become increasingly debunked, including among feminists, almost nobody would stand up for that anymore. Everybody understands that every woman is different and that women's experience are inflected by their race, class, body shape, ability level, age, region of the country, just innumerable details that are going to intersect with and shape their experience. So there isn't such a thing as the woman's perspective. So you might think that that means that there's never a point to saying speaking as a woman, blah, blah, blah, blah, because you can never speak for women, so why speak as a woman? But I do think that there are times. where a conversation is going on in a way that universalizes a male positioning, and it helps
Starting point is 00:07:19 to intrude into that conversation and say, look, there are other people in the room who don't have the position that you are presuming. Now, that doesn't mean that we all have the same position as one another, but it does mean that there's a usefulness to reminding people rhetorically sometimes that what might seem like a universal position is not in fact a universal position. So speaking as a woman might just mean speaking as not the kind of man who all of you are right now presuming is the neutral case or not even noticing that you're taking as the neutral case. Kate Mann's recent book, Down Girl, if I understand it properly, one argument is that misogyny is best thought of as a kind of enforcement structure for sexist norms. So there were like good
Starting point is 00:08:04 women who follow certain norms and then quote unquote bad women who don't follow those norms and violate them. And the misogyny is a kind of punishment on the so-called bad women to strengthen the norm. Do you agree with that perspective or not? In broad outlines, yes. Is it the best way of understanding misogyny? What percentage of misogyny is it explaining to be an economist for a moment? That's fair. Okay, so to be both a philosopher and an economist for a moment, I think that as a philosopher, what I'm going to say is that terms like misogyny, as they're used in lay language, don't have single neat meanings. People's actual uses of them on the ground are messy and conflictual and so on. So when we say, is this the proper understanding of misogyny, we always have to
Starting point is 00:08:51 understand that as a kind of a normative or a prescriptive project as much as a descriptive project. What we're saying is, is this the most useful, productive way of understanding misogyny? understanding that there's going to be lots of other things that people mean by it that don't fall under this heading and lots of other things that we could have called misogyny that aren't going to fit it and so on. But is this a productive strategy? And if that's how I'm understanding the question, then I think, yes, I think it's a very productive understanding of misogyny that's going to go a long way towards making clear a lot of social phenomena. And the reason I like it, what I like most about it, so I disagree with Kate Mann in some of the details. But what I really appreciate most, about her account is that misogyny becomes about social structures and social norms, rather than about particular men having particular icky ideas or intentions in their head. In general, I think trying to figure out what's going on inside people's heads or what they're feeling or what they're intending is kind of morally uninteresting and epistemologically impossible. We never know what's going on in people's heads. And in fact, the empirical evidence shows that people, we don't
Starting point is 00:10:02 know what's going on in our own heads very well. You can prove that people don't understand their own intentions. They're the contents of their own minds very well. So I think understanding misogyny has hateful attitudes towards women or ill intentions towards women is a non-starter. What I love about Professor Mann's version is what she wants to say is, look, misogyny is a system of social norms that are embedded in our practices and in our environments and our institutions that serve to punish women who step out of their proper gender roles and keep women in various ways in the primary role of serving men's needs. And that part, at that level of generality, I think, is extremely helpful. What are the systematic cognitive biases in the American understanding of pregnancy?
Starting point is 00:10:48 Okay. Topic change. In a way, but not quite. No, yeah, that's fine. I just, I was waiting for more misogyny. This is a kind of misogyny, I guess. Yeah. So I think that there's a long, so this was what my first book, Mass Hysterio, was about. I think that we have a centuries-old way of conceiving the pregnant body and the task of pregnancy that has led to some really profound distortions in how we understand pregnancy, and particularly how we understand what pregnant women should do, what their responsibilities are, and how we give advice to pregnant women. And in particular, we have seen, so one part of it is arguably just true and not the part
Starting point is 00:11:37 that I really pick on, which is that pregnant women are responsible with their bodies for creating the next generation of people, right? So in some sense, the pregnant body has a kind of a civic responsibility, which is really distinctive. Out of that pregnant body is going to come a person who is going to belong to the next generation. And so there's been this sort of longstanding idea that goes back several hundred years that the pregnant body creates the body politics. So we all have a collective investment in how that process goes. So far, so good.
Starting point is 00:12:07 At the same time, though, pregnant women's bodies have been seen as profoundly untrustworthy. I think because women and women's bodies have been seen as profoundly untrustworthy, right? women have been seen as easily swayed by hormones and emotions, as fragile, as easy to tempt into various kinds of bad behaviors, as not really understanding science very well, so as not knowing how to regulate their bodies, as being undisciplined and so on. And so we've developed this kind of double idea that women's bodies are super risky, but also have this incredibly important task. And as a result, I think we've developed all kinds of science and norms and advice based around this idea that women have to be hyper-disciplined and hyper-controlled at all times,
Starting point is 00:13:00 particularly when they're pregnant, or things will go terribly, terribly awry. So if you go back a couple hundred, this is my favorite example of this. If you go back a couple hundred years, there was this supposedly scientific concept of the maternal imagination. And the idea was that if pregnant women saw things or felt things or encountered things during their pregnancy that got them all riled up, it would directly mark the body of the fetus. So, like, if they really craved strawberries, their fetus would have a strawberry birthmark. Or the most hilarious one is if they found themselves accidentally lusting after a black man, their baby would turn out black. So there was this idea that we had to completely control women's environments and keep them in a nice, calm, you know, low stimulation environment throughout their pregnancies so that they didn't destroy their fetus because they were so weak and prone to these things. I think this, even though very few people would claim that directly anymore, that mentality continues now.
Starting point is 00:13:58 There's this idea that pregnant women can't get too emotional or the stress will destroy their fetus or they can't eat too much or they're going to turn their fetus into a future obese person. whole other conversation or they can't. I mean, they're supposed to regulate how much sex they have, when they have sex, what they eat, what they breathe, what they wear. There's this wonderful quote in a famous pregnancy book that says, with every single bite that you put in your mouth, you should be asking yourself, does this bite help my baby or am I just doing it for my own selfish end? So this is like literally each time you put a piece of food in you, you're supposed to be self-regulating. And this has led to advice that's not only, unfollowable for women, but to get more directly back to your question, I think it leads people to
Starting point is 00:14:45 see pregnant women as constantly involved in this high-risk project that requires intensive risk management. And this has led to all kinds of unfollowable advice and bad science. And just guilt, right? An enormous guilt, because it's impossible. Because if you were to follow all these prescriptions at once, you would have to just not leave your room, and then you would be accused. of not getting enough exercise and harming your baby that way. So, I mean, you literally can't do all the things that you're supposed to do at the same time. So it just, it leads to advice that is overdisciplinary and is punitive, but is also just scientifically not grounded in the facts. It's based
Starting point is 00:15:25 in this mythology that women have this pure, perfect being in them, but they're likely to wreck that being at every moment, and their job is to bring risk down to zero despite their dangerous bodies. The women who don't breastfeed, why don't they? And how rational a decision is that? Well, it depends where they are and who they are to a large extent. There's a huge worldwide emphasis on trying to get women to, as they put it, exclusively breastfeed, as in no bottles, nothing other than breast milk. Sometimes the advice is a year, sometimes the advice is two years. If you live in a developed country with decent medical care and a clean water, supply. There's not really any interesting evidence that breastfeeding benefits your baby after, certainly not after the first few weeks, but maybe not even after the first few days. There is pretty good evidence that those first few days of colostrum have a good immune effect, even on babies who are in otherwise privileged situations. So I think that women who manage to get a few
Starting point is 00:16:29 days of breast milk into their baby, if they live in a developed country, have done everything from the point of view of helping their baby that they need to do. And after that, it should just be a matter of whatever works for their lifestyle. Of course, on the other hand, if you're in a developing country with a poor water supply and formula that you make based on the water is going to be dangerous and formula is expensive and so forth, then compromising your ability to breastfeed by a bottle supplementation may in fact be a really bad choice, because if you stop being able to breastfeed, you're going to be stuck doing this much more expensive riskier thing that you might not be in a financial or physical position to do safely. So I think there are good reasons to encourage breastfeeding
Starting point is 00:17:16 and to fight back against the marketing of formula in precarious developing world countries, but really no reason here. Now, as to why women here don't breastfeed, when they don't, it heavily tracks race. It heavily tracks class. To me, the most obvious overwhelming reason why women in the United States often don't breastfeed is that we have six weeks of unpaid leave and no further maternity leave. So it's just literally physically hard to do. We're getting better but aren't that great at giving women safe spaces to breastfeed. You know, it's wonderful that there's been a movement to let women breastfeed in public. But honestly, a lot of women don't want to breastfeed in public because it's stressful and it's awkward and they don't want to do that. And so giving women more
Starting point is 00:17:59 basis to do it, giving them more privacy, giving them more time off work would, I think, be the main things that would increase breastfeeding rates. I think the really important point about breastfeeding in this American context is every woman has already gotten the message over and over and over again that breastfeeding is better for their baby. They know that already. So trying to guilt them into it or give them that message over and over again is pointless and guilt-inducing. If they're not breastfeeding, it's because there are other barriers that are making it hard for them to do, And the fact of the matter is they're harming their baby virtually zero by not breastfeeding. And in fact, if they breastfed a little at the beginning, they're arguably harming their baby zero.
Starting point is 00:18:39 So our approach should be the twin approach of supporting breastfeeding better and then leaving women alone when they choose not to do it for whatever reason or can't do it for whatever reason. Let's try a few questions about philosophy as a field. What's most boring about philosophy as a field? So many things are boring about philosophy as a field. field. What's most boring about philosophy as a field? So philosophy is changing really, really fast, but sometimes I have to remind myself that it's not changing as fast as I think it is because I'm in something of a philosophy sub-bubble. I mostly talk to people who I find interesting and who find me interesting and we all find each other interesting. And so it's sometimes I have to remind myself that
Starting point is 00:19:22 there's a whole world of philosophy out there that isn't changing as fast as it feels like it is. But I think, so, you know, talking about the discipline as a whole and not necessarily the parts of it that are changing, I think the most obviously boring thing is that philosophers have, for ages, not only have they not felt any pressure to deal with the real messy empirical world as they find it and to take empirical data and empirical science into account and to worry about what's actually happening in messy reality. But on the contrary, there's actually been, it's been prized to not get your hands dirty in that way. The kind of philosophy that manages to maximally abstract away from anything recognizable as a messy, real-world empirical situation has been the kind of philosophy that has been most lauded and received the most privilege in the field. And so, you know, if you can find a way to talk about, you know, fundamental ethical questions or fundamental metaphysical questions in a way that translates, it all into formal propositions and little toy thought experiments and never ever gets its hands dirty with any of the complexities of everyday life, then traditionally you're the one who's doing philosophy in its purest form, right? The most aprior, the most formal, the cleanest kind of
Starting point is 00:20:44 philosophy. People who do that kind of philosophy congratulate themselves regularly about how clear they are. And in fact, I think to anybody except one another, they're not clear at all. They've created this internal, jargonistic, abstract language, which is utterly impenetrable to anybody other than the few people who are using it with tortured sentence structures. And I think that their self-congratulatory clarity is a kind of an ideological myth. On the other hand, I think this is changing enormously. I think there are all kinds of parts of philosophy that are becoming more and more vibrant and attracting more and more people, where the whole point is to start with the world and what it is that we can say about the world.
Starting point is 00:21:25 world and how we can intervene on that world and to let ourselves get our hands dirty and to take the responsibility of reading science and reading social science and making sure that what we're saying is responsive to empirical reality. So to me, philosophy is getting a lot less boring as long as I stick to my friends. Should there be more cursing in philosophy? So if yo and low are meaningful expressions, what about curse words? I'm a bad person to ask because, well, so I was once giving a seminar at Penn State, and it was a two-hour seminar, and I was like an hour and a half into giving it. And because I thought that I wanted to be this very responsible person, I turned to the people in the room, and I said, you know, I don't know what the norms are here. Would it be okay if I said the F word, except I didn't say the F word?
Starting point is 00:22:15 I actually said the F word. That's almost not even a curse word. Yeah, right, exactly. And the room cracked up, and I didn't understand why they were laughing. And finally somebody said, oh, well, you've already dropped it. it like 12 times. You just didn't notice. So I'm a bad person to ask about profanity because I use profanity so constantly and fluently and automatically, then I also, I often don't notice when I'm using it. However, to take your question more seriously, yes, I think that, let me try to give you a more serious
Starting point is 00:22:46 philosophy answer. One of my main interests and one of my longest standing research programs, as you hinted is in speech act theory. In thinking about language, not in terms of what particular words mean, not in terms of their semantics, but instead thinking about what philosophers call the pragmatics of language, namely, what do particular acts of speaking actually do? How are they interventions on the world? So simple examples of speech act theory is that assertions and imperatives do different things. If I assert something to you, I've now tried to transmit a piece of information, but if I issue an imperative, I've now tried to transmit to you an obligation. I'm trying to make you do something, which is just a different act, right? Or if I warn you, that's a different
Starting point is 00:23:30 kind of act. Again, if I name you, that's a completely different kind of act. So I think that cursing and profanity is a whole domain of speech acts that has all kinds of interesting and subtle social effects that just can't be substituted for by non-cursed words. You can take the curse words out, but then you have lessened the performative and pragmatic power of our language. And different curse words used in different ways have really different kinds of effects. And those effects can be, you know, anything, any kind of speech act can be misused or used well. So yes, profanity can be used to harm and to pointlessly offend or to lessen a conversation. But it can also be used strategically to carry out all kinds of social.
Starting point is 00:24:19 functions and shifts in social space that we just can't substitute with other words, even if those words have the same meaning, because even if they have the same meaning, their pragmatic force isn't the same. So to me, cursing is a rich toolbox. I try with dubious success not to overuse it, but it's a toolbox that I'm not willing to give up. And I think that more and more philosophers would probably agree with that. There's more and more work on profanity, taking it as a serious philosophical topic, which I'm excited to see. Anecdotally, it's often suggested that there's more sexual harassment in philosophy than many other areas of academia. Do you agree? And if so, what's the sociological reason
Starting point is 00:24:59 why this is the case? Yeah. I honestly, I would be really careful before saying whether I agree or not, because I'm only in philosophy. And I don't know how people are making those comparisons. I'm not in philosophy. I think totally, it seems true to me that there's much more in philosophy than economics. I mean, anecdotally, we've certainly had more than our share of stories and scandals, right? And it's very hard to know if that's because we have more sexual harassment or if that's because we're more interested right now in reporting it. Like if our little Me Too movement started earlier than in other fields or it's... There may be lower monetary rewards to good behavior.
Starting point is 00:25:40 Yeah, right. If you're an economist and you stay out of scandal, you can perhaps earn more money than a philosopher could. That's actually a great point. Yeah, I mean, there hasn't, yes, the incentive structure has been very messed up about all of this. And so, yeah, I just don't know if it's that we have more of it or if it's that the culture around reporting it and gossiping about it is more. But in a way, it doesn't matter, right? Because we have a lot of it, which is really your point. So the comparative doesn't matter. I mean, why do we have a lot of it? Philosophy is a dramatically less gender-balanced feel than any of the other social sciences or human beings. and then most of the STEM fields, the numbers in philosophy are pretty dire. But what's most interesting about them is that as feminist philosophy has been on the rise and as consciousness about gender issues in the academy has been on the rise, our numbers haven't changed all that much. If you go back and look like 30 years or 50 years even, the percentage of women who say make full professor, for instance, is not that different than it's ever been. There are
Starting point is 00:26:45 more female graduate students now, but how that translates into changing the discipline is unclear. So, I mean, I think part of it is just the very boring fact that it's a male-dominated field, right? And male-dominated fields are likely to have more sexual harassment, it seems to me, because there's more of that male culture that's unchecked. I do think also that, and I want to say publicly that not all departments are like this, and my department at Georgetown is very much not like this, so I don't want this to be heard as about my department. But I do think in many departments in philosophy, there's a kind of a guru culture that goes on where there are people at the top of the field, the big stars of the department, who are usually male just
Starting point is 00:27:28 statistically, for the reasons I said, who have more power than they even understand that they have, and everybody feels a very deep need to please them and do what they say and so on. And so the power relations, the whole power setup is just ripe for exploitation. There was just a case that I'm sure you heard about that was not in philosophy, despite the fact that it keeps being reported as if it was in philosophy, where it was a woman who had that star status, Vita Ronell, and she was the one who was grotesquely harassing her students and using her status as the kind of guru star of the department to do it.
Starting point is 00:28:08 So I don't even think that it's just men who exploit that position, but I do think that in philosophy, it's mostly men who are in a position to do that to start with. Ultimately, I don't have a really deep explanation for why we have so many scandals, but it is depressing. I mean, I've just found out again and again that even departments that I thought were functional when you really start talking to people, and especially when you really start talking to graduate students who are not men, you find out more and more depressing stories about just how willing people are to exploit their positions in the department. I mean, I think that in departments that have graduate students, I mean, it's just such a weird relationship already, right? It's an adult supervising another adult.
Starting point is 00:28:51 The second adult tends to be younger, but they're an adult. The graduate students are around for years. They're in these intense working relationships with the professors. It's easy if you're a professor to feel like that relationship is a socially equal one because you're just hanging out with another adult who's interested in your field, whereas the graduate student is hyper aware of the fact that you can make or break their lives and that it's not an equal relationship. And so a lot of those power differentials get hidden from the person wielding the power. And I just think it's an extremely easy position to exploit. And we've got thousands of years of this idea of, you know, the wise old professor being this kind of erotic figure that gets.
Starting point is 00:29:30 pulled into all of these dynamics. But it's been a really toxic, difficult time over the last, I don't know, 10 years in philosophy. And I hope it's getting better from all of this. Let's try an exercise. I'm going to call out the names of various philosophers or thinkers and just give us your brief take on what's interesting in them or if you want, you can attack them. How's that? Okay. And if I haven't heard of them, should I admit that? It's up to you. Let's start with Hegel. Have you heard of him? Yes, I've heard of Hagell. What's your take?
Starting point is 00:30:02 So I'm supposed to say, let's just go over the rules again. What's interesting in Hagle? What's interesting in Hagle? Okay. You ask card questions. This is why you're good at your job, right? I think Hagle's fascinating. And I think the main idea in Hagle that is fascinating is that any cultural moment or a set of ideas or
Starting point is 00:30:25 set of practices is always internally contradictory in ways it doesn't notice that there are tensions built into it. And that what happens over time is that those tensions bubble up to the surface and in the course of trying to resolve themselves, they create something newer and better and smarter that incorporates both of the original sides. That was a much more Higalian way of putting it and I wanted it to come out. But basically the idea that going out and looking for consistency in the world is hopeless. Instead, what we should do is figure out how the contradictions in the world are themselves productive and push history forward and push ideas forward is what I take to be the key, interesting Higelian idea.
Starting point is 00:31:11 Michelle Foucault. How well is it held up? Oh, you're asking me the people I mostly love. But empirically, a lot of doubt has been cast upon it, right? On the details of his empirical genealogical stories. Yes. Yes, but I think the basic Foucaultian picture, which is let's reduce Foucault to just two little bits here, right? One basic piece of the Foucaultian picture is that power is not a unified, unilateral top-down thing. Power expresses itself in all of the little micro-interactions
Starting point is 00:31:46 that go on between people and between people in their environments all the time, right? So power isn't about a big set of rules that's imposed on people. Power is about all of the little things that we do with one another as we move through the world and all of those add up to structures of power rather than being imposed top-down. I think that has been, at least for me and for many other people, an incredibly fertile, productive way of starting to think about social phenomena. The other bit of the Foucaultian picture that I think is incredibly important is the idea that a lot of this happens at the level of concrete, fleshy bodies in material spaces, right?
Starting point is 00:32:28 So power isn't sets of abstract rules. Power is the way that we are trained up when we are little kids to hold our legs in a certain way or to hold our face in a certain way or to wear certain kinds of clothing. Power is the way that schools are built with desks in rows that enforces a certain direction of the gaze and so on. I mean, I could go on and on, but the way that the materiality of our bodies and our habits and our environments is where power gets a hold and where our social patterns and norms are grounded, rather than in some kinds of high-level principles or laws is also, I think, very fertile. And that's independent of the details of his genealogical stories, because, yeah, he does seem to have played fairly fast and loose with actual historical details in a lot of cases. The re-emergence of the Stoics into public discourse, most of all in Silicon Valley, but not only. I don't know that I have an opinion on that one. That one's one that I know is out there,
Starting point is 00:33:28 but that hasn't penetrated actual professional philosophy much, I've got to say. Heidegger, I've looked at every page of Heidegger is being in time. I'm not sure I can say I've read the book. What's in there? What's in there? Okay. I have an incredibly emotional and vexed relationship to Heidegger. I no longer, I used to publish on Heidegger, and I don't. to anymore. That was a conscious choice that I made. This is not yet a direct answer to your question, but I will answer your question. We always knew Heidegger was a Nazi. Philosophers for many years had this line, which was that, oh yeah, politically he was a Nazi because everybody was, but it has nothing to do with his philosophy. I think that was just wellful obtuseness on the part of people
Starting point is 00:34:12 who wanted to read him and take him seriously. I think that more and more has, you has come out showing just how deeply held his Nazi convictions were and that it was not just him going along with the crowd. It was stuff that he deeply believed. And in a lot of books that don't get read as much, he explains in detail the ways in which Nazism shaped his ideas. And I think that now that we have entered an era in which there are real live Nazis crawling out of the woodwork and having a serious voice in public discourse, my intellectual labor is finite. And I've just decided I'm not willing to spend any more of it on a Nazi. That said, back in the day, I took Heidegger really seriously, and I found him a really
Starting point is 00:34:55 important thinker. I'm trying to think of what the, a cute little nugget of take-home summary of being in time might be. It's like the Monty Python skit summarized Bruce. Yeah, right. Okay. So this is, you know, any of my Heidegger friends who hear this are going to think this is a ridiculously oversimplified caricature.
Starting point is 00:35:15 But I'm going to do it anyway. I think that the core idea of being in time is that to understand what something is, ontologically, is not a question that can be answered unless we understand the context in which we're asking the question. So if what you're trying to do is physics, then you're going to break the world into the kind of objects that are useful for doing physics. you know, independent objects that have the properties that physics needs them to have. If what you're trying to do is, to use a very high-to-gearing example, build a chair, then you're not going to break the world into the objects of physics. You're going to break the world into the tools that would be useful for you to build a chair.
Starting point is 00:36:08 So you're going to think of the world in terms of things like hammers and saws and nails, and you're not going to care that much what the physical structure of the ham. is. What you're going to care about is that the hammer is a good thing to use for making a chair at this moment, for banging in and nail. So thinking of things in terms of their tool-like functions versus thinking of them as physical objects are just two kinds. It's not like one is more right or one is more wrong. It's also not some sort of spooky subjectivism. It's just recognizing that our useful ontological categories are indexed to what we're in the midst of trying to do. And furthermore, thinking of other people is yet another category, right? So it's not most useful to think of other people as physical objects or as tools. It's most useful to think of other people as entities who are engaged in certain kinds of projects and self-reflections and so on. And that's a whole separate ontology where it's not really an interesting question to think about how that does or doesn't reduce to a physicalist ontology or some other kind of ontology. With that at all comprehensive,
Starting point is 00:37:11 I think so. Okay. Let's try Rousseau's Reverie's of the Solitary Walker. Oh, I have nothing but positive things to say about Rousse's Referees of the Solitary Walker. So the question is, why is it important? Why is it important? I feel like almost nobody but me understands how important it is. Rousseau is probably my favorite writer from the entire history of philosophy. And one of the things I most love about Rousseau, and that has been really influential on me, is that for him, the style of writing and the mode of writing is not separable from the content of what he wants to convey. So he wrote dialogues, he wrote traditional philosophy works, he wrote books and composed entirely of letters, you know, epistolary novels, he wrote operas, he wrote in pretty much every, he wrote autobiographies, he wrote in pretty much every genre. and each of those genres is designed to make certain kinds of philosophical points possible.
Starting point is 00:38:15 They're not separate from the content of what he has to say. Reveries of a solitary walker, you know, there's more to say about it than I'm going to be able to say here. But the most noticeable thing about it is that it's a special kind of autobiographical book that I don't think anybody had written before where he's autobiographizing, as it were, as he moves through space, as he walks. And so he's reflecting on how his own relationship to what's around him and his own movement through space shapes who he understands himself as being, what he can see, what he can't see.
Starting point is 00:38:53 And I think that this idea that place and location and movement have a constitutive impact on what we can think, what we can see, how we can philosophize is an incredibly deep and moving insight. And just to see why this is important, compare it to somebody like Descartes who starts his meditations famously by saying, well, I want to do good philosophy. So what I'm going to do is I'm going to lock myself in the room and I'm going to close the windows and I'm not going to move. I'm going to make sure I can't see anybody else who's going to distract me and that I can't hear anything because I just want a completely blank solitary environment so I can think clearly. That's a very specific kind of location, right?
Starting point is 00:39:36 There's all kinds of fascinating assumptions built into the idea that you do your best thinking when you're sitting still in a blank room not talking to anybody else. And I think for hundreds of years, most philosophers never even thought to question the basic shape of Descartes idea there, right? That basically philosophy was a thing you did when you weren't distracted by the world or other people and everything was staying the same so that you could just have your abstract thoughts. Rousseau comes along and very intentionally and explicitly inverts Descartes and says, I can only do philosophy when I'm moving through the world
Starting point is 00:40:10 and noticing things like my feet hurt when I go up this hill and that guy over there won't talk to me because he thinks I'm weird. What's that about? And this kind of responsiveness to the world around him and to the other people around him and to his motion as he travels is integral to the philosophy he can do. And it's a much deeper inversion of the sort of Cartesian solitary model of thinking than people notice. When you talk with your graduate students, do you sit down with them or do you go for walks with them? Really, both. Great question. I do all kinds of very
Starting point is 00:40:42 different things with my graduate students depending on what we need to do. So sometimes we go out and meet in a busy coffee shop because I feel like that will be helpful. Sometimes we sit in my quiet office. honestly I've had graduate students who I've boxed with pretty seriously and we've talked about dissertation work in between rounds in the boxing gym as we're punching each other, which is pretty embodied. So yeah, I think that's a great question and I never really thought of it that way until you asked me the question, but I do go out of my way to sort of change up the environment and the motion depending on what kind of conversation I think it's useful for us to have. And in particular, I find that what I have to talk about philosophically with my graduate students or other people,
Starting point is 00:41:22 is dependent on what city I'm in, too, just dependent on the entire physical environment around me and what kind of stimuli I'm experiencing. From a philosophical point of view, why is boxing good for you? And who's the philosopher with the best theory of exercise? From a philosophical point of view, why is boxing good for me? I don't know if this is technically from a philosophical point of view. But here's two things. One is, I think philosophers who only do philosophy and nothing else tend to be kind of bad, boring philosophers, closely related to everything I've already ended up saying today and closely related to what I just said about Rousseau. So I have a new colleague this year at Georgetown, Femi Taiwo. He just finished his Phyllis, at UCLA. Fantastic young philosopher.
Starting point is 00:42:11 And he gave an interview recently, and one thing he said really stuck out for me, which was, that so many philosophers think that philosophy is about responding to other texts and other people, and they forget that it's first and foremost about responding to the world. And I think that if you just do philosophy, you kind of literally don't have material. Like you can read other people's philosophy books and respond to them, but you don't have any actual rich, juicy material. And so for me, having a lot of other things in my life other than philosophy has always been where I've got. I mean, imagine if you were a stand-up comic and all you did is sit there and try to write comedy all day long, right? You wouldn't have any material. I don't actually think it's very different. Philosophers and comedians have almost the same job, which is to come up with sharp, penetrating, quirky insights about the world. And so you need to be out there in the world. And so I've always had a lot of things that I've done other than philosophy that have mattered to me intrinsically for their own sake, but also instrumentally, I think they've made my philosophy better. So boxing falls under that general category. The other thing is, though I don't regulate my emotions very well unless I can exhaust myself, honestly.
Starting point is 00:43:21 And I just, I write better and work better and think better, and I'm a calmer and more level-headed and smarter person if I have managed to get out my rather large amount of energy and aggression. And so it's extremely helpful for me to sort of exhaust myself in the ring many times a week in order to do the rest of what I'm supposed to do. This may in fact be a segue from Rousseau and boxing, but how is it you ended up working on urban geography? It's just the consistency of Rebecca Cucla. It looks like a deviation from philosophy, but it's actually the next logical step.
Starting point is 00:43:55 You started walking with Rousseau. You got to a city and you thought, this is the place here are my thoughts, or how did that go? Yeah, I mean, I think that actually there's been a really skillful narrative behind this interview so far. I mean, you keep on engaging me on topics where. I end up talking about the importance of place and motion. So long before it ever occurred to me to do a degree in geography, I was always just fascinated by the role of place. It seemed to me that there was this turn going on in philosophy that sort of has been going on since I was a graduate student who kind of started in the 90s,
Starting point is 00:44:33 where philosophers got really interested in embodiment. They suddenly remembered that we have bodies. And so they started doing all this work thinking about the role that being embodied plays in what it is to be a person, to be a thinker, how we think, what we perceive, and so on. But those bodies were always still, like, oddly displaced bodies. They were like bodies that weren't anywhere in particular. And philosophers' examples were always things like opening a doorknob or something like these very abstract, minimal interactions with the world. Whereas to me, a key feature of being embodied is that you're embodied somewhere. and the somewhere that you are is this endlessly complex concrete space. And I think that has a huge impact on all of these questions to do with subjectivity, agency, free will, perception,
Starting point is 00:45:21 how we perceive danger, how we perceive safety, and so on. So I've always been interested in that. Separately, I've just kind of non-academatically always been obsessed with cities. I grew up smack in the middle of a giant city. I loved it. It gave me freedom. I started exploring it very young. This is Toronto. Yeah, this is Toronto. I grew up smack in the middle of Toronto, which was a very usable city for a young kid. And completely non-academically, exploring cities, eating in cities, getting to know cities has been my favorite thing to do for as long as I can remember. Just walking for hours and hours and hours in cities, there's just really nothing that I would prefer to do than that.
Starting point is 00:46:01 A few years ago, I started working on what started out as this very just sort of traditional philosophy book. thinking about how material spaces and the people who live in those spaces constitute one another. So I was thinking about using things like some ecological niche theory and from philosophy of biology and some other material like that, some work from phenomenology to talk about how we are inherently shaped by the places that we are in, but that likewise what people do is modify their spaces and their places and give them new meanings and change them in the ways they need to make them suit their needs. So there's a kind of a symbiotic relationship, a niche building relationship between places and people. And it seemed to me most interesting to think about how that worked
Starting point is 00:46:51 in urban spaces where you've got a whole lot of people in really complex space bumping up against one another. You spent time working in Johannesburg, South Africa, right? What did you learn there? I try to think how to boil it down to a single answer there. At the philosophical level, Obviously, you know facts about South Africa, right? Yeah, no, no, no, I understand. South Africa, so the reason I was studying South Africa in particular is because through my geographic work, I've been studying what I call repurposed cities, which are cities that were very definitively built materially to support a particular social and economic and political
Starting point is 00:47:29 regime that keeps people separated in various ways and flowing in various ways and so on. And then my question is, well, when that regime, ends kind of abruptly and the city gets filled up with new people living in new ways that aren't suited to that material form, how does that thing I was just talking about happen, right? How do they rejig and remake their space to make it suit them? And conversely, how does this old, found space shape what they can do with it? So I was interested in Johannesburg as a post-apartheid city and trying to figure out, I mean, almost nobody, you know, Johannesburg is mostly an immigrant city now. It's a very small percentage of the people who live there are South African.
Starting point is 00:48:06 It's flooded with all kinds of people from all over Africa who are not who the city was built to house. And so it's got to repurpose itself in this very rapid, dramatic way. I guess if I had to take a philosophical punchline out of that experience, it's that apartheid was a system of top-down segregation and division and surveillance. And now the city doesn't have that, but it has substituted it with all kinds of, bottom-up strategies for self-onclaving and division and drawing lines and territories between groups and between people so that in a lot of ways the city is as divided and segregated as it ever was, but in new ways. So I think that one lesson to take out of it is that when people repurpose space, they don't necessarily repurpose it in the direction of inclusivity and harmony and so on. Sometimes
Starting point is 00:49:03 they repurpose it in ways that are just going to introduce. new kinds of divisions. That said, that sounds really negative. And I have to say, I found Johannesburg this incredibly creative, vibrant, gorgeous, exciting city. And I really loved being there, but at the same time, there's just no denying that it's an incredibly fractured troubled space. And it's fascinating to see the way people are of their own accord fracturing it rather than healing it in a lot of cases. What was interesting about Medellin, Colombia? Oh, I was actually in Bogota. Oh, Bogota. Yeah. Bogota was amazing. I didn't know so much what to expect when I went to Bogota, but it is, so clearly it's just a physically,
Starting point is 00:49:44 absolutely beautiful city. It may be the most beautiful city I've ever seen in terms of combining nature and artifice. It's got these spectacular soaring sky rises and this gorgeous colonialist architecture, all kind of up against the backdrop of the Andes, and it's just, it's lush and it's super dramatic and beautiful. But I guess what I was not expecting was just how functioning. that city seems to be. I mean, it's just an incredibly easy city to walk around, to be in, to explore, to eat in. It was an extremely welcoming city. It had the largest and most vibrant gay neighborhood that I might have seen in almost any city. The street art in Columbia was fantastic. I guess they have a new mayor who has gone out of his way to encourage street art to sort of loosen up the street art. graffiti laws and also to bring in street arts. So the city is turning into this huge palette. And I guess the main way that it surprised me was that I didn't realize that I had stereotypes about South American cities, but I suppose I did and I suppose I expected it to be kind of
Starting point is 00:50:53 a little bit dysfunctional and hard to manage and rough going. And it was just such a model of a well-run city at this point. It was really inspiring. Is Tampa, Florida underrated? Yes, it's certainly underrated. Tampa is another really complicated city. So I lived there for several years. I think a lot of people go to Tampa and they either go there for business and end up in the suburbs at these sort of corporate business parks that are terrible, or they have retired relatives around there who are living in gated communities that are terrible. Or they go to the beach, which is whatever it is, it's the same as the beach everywhere in this country. But if you actually go into the of Tampa into inner city Tampa. It's an incredibly distinctive city. It has a long history as a center of labor activism. It's incredibly racially diverse. It was a place where, you know, it was a cigar city originally, and it's filled with Cubans and Central Americans and Caribbean and also Romanians and Jews and Italians and Spanish folks. And they all came together and they all created this kind of distinctive of Tampa culture that actually really has its own food and its own music, which is just a mixture
Starting point is 00:52:06 of all of these things. And when you're in the middle of Tampa, you almost feel like you're in a different country. I mean, it's so lush and it's so weird and it's so not organized. There's almost no city planning there whatsoever. So you're in the city and you're in the middle of a business district, but there will be chickens walking by and there'll be like waterbirds wandering across your path and there'll be geckos climbing up things. And it's all very tropical and exotic.
Starting point is 00:52:32 and evocative, and at the same time, it has this really vibrant culture on the ground that almost nobody knows about, because when they think of Tampa, they just think of this sort of bland city that you get around the edges. So I think not only is it underrated, but it's really kind of hidden and under explored. It's one of the few spots in the states that I feel has not really been mined yet compared to other urban areas. How do you figure out where to eat in Washington, D.C., where you live? How do I figure out where to eat here? What's your model of the process of where good places are distributed? So I live right in the middle of D.C., not in the suburbs.
Starting point is 00:53:09 And I actually find D.C. proper, a totally fine but not especially inspiring place to find food. There's a lot of very medium food in D.C. D.C. is an interesting city because most of the interesting food is way out in the suburbs. I don't drive, and so for me to get out to the suburbs, it's a whole project. But really, if I want good food, that's what I need to do. I think that in the city of D.C. itself, there's so much pressure to cater to the common denominator because mostly you have people having meetings, constantly having meetings, right? And there are meetings where nobody wants to offend anybody else because they're trying to make a political deal
Starting point is 00:53:50 or they're trying to settle a case or whatever it is. And so they want the food to sort of be adequate and respectable but intrude minimally into their experience. and if you want to find good food, you have to get away from all the meetings, and you have to get out into the smaller ethnic enclaves in the suburbs. And then, I mean, I'm not sure how much you want me to say about my process of finding food. But for me, it's this really complicated balance of reading user reviews, knowing which user reviews. I have a good sense for which ones should be written off as ignorable and which ones are worthwhile. I find that places that have too many user reviews are usually bland, and places that have too
Starting point is 00:54:35 few are not as good of a bet, so you want to maximize the right number of user reviews of the right kind, and you want to make sure that the food is appropriate to the ecology of the neighborhood it's in, right? That it's not, you know, an Ethiopian restaurant in a Thai neighborhood or whatever it may be. Those are less likely to be good. So, yeah, it's a complicated calculus for me, but I find eating in D.C. itself just fine. But I get more excited. when I get to eat in other places. Let's try a question about game theory. How well would polyamory work if everyone did it?
Starting point is 00:55:07 Would it work better or worse compared to now, where a relatively smaller number of people are doing it? So I know that as an economist, you don't want me to introduce extra assumptions, but I feel like I need to. So you'd have a thicker market, right? But you might have less informed or less well-specialized people doing it.
Starting point is 00:55:23 And which of those is more important? Yeah. So, I mean, I think one of the reasons right now why polyamory works very well for a lot of the people who do it is, and this is directly addressing what I think you're getting at, is because since it's a small non-standard community, people really, in order to make it work, they have to do a lot of critical self-reflection studying to figure out what the norms should be. You can't just fall into polyamory right now. if you're going to do it, you have to explicitly sit there and think, what am I trying to get out of this?
Starting point is 00:56:02 And then you have to explicitly negotiate with partners and future partners. What are our shared norms? What are our expectations? Nothing can just be taken for granted the way it can for, you know, traditional heterosexual monogamous or purportedly monogamous relationships. I think that for most straight monogamous people, there's very little thinking about what their, you know, fundamental relationship and sexual values and norms are and what their boundaries are, they just sort of go with the flow, or to get back to your, Heidegger would say,
Starting point is 00:56:34 they just find themselves thrown. They just find themselves in the midst of the norms and carry on. So your question about scaling, it super depends on how it scaled, right? If it became a thing that everybody did, and in the meantime, what had built up and become just the unreflective norm were a bunch of, you know, crappy, misogynist, exploitative practices, then it would be worse. If it scaled up and it scaled up in such a way that the unreflective, widespread norms were better and thoughtful and more enlightened, then it would be better. So I don't have an in-principle question to whether scaling would make it better or
Starting point is 00:57:14 worse. To me, it's all about how those norms would end up developing organically and through reflection and discussion and what kind of sexual ecology we would end up with. I mean, I think the sexual ecology we have right now in the broader culture is pretty messed up in a lot of ways. We could end up with a better one, or we could end up with one that recreated a lot of those forms of being messed up and just turned out to be exploitative. It's very hard to guess in advance. In some game theoretic models, having groups of three people is especially destabilizing. Four or five, six people, you can have more cooperative. Do you agree with that or not? Yeah, I mean intuitively, that feels right to me. You mean with respect to relationships and
Starting point is 00:57:57 sexual little sexual ecologies. Yeah, I think three is hard. So this is my completely anecdotal unscientific response. I think three is hard to make work. Yeah. Because, yeah, like you always have an odd number and each person is a third of the whole dynamic. So there's nothing like, you know, major major majorities that can be taken into account. It's tricky. Two last questions. First, what was it like having dinner with Bernie Sanders? It was a really long time ago, and I was really young, and it was really fun. So this was when he was a congressman in Vermont, and he had this adorable series. He loved academics, and so he would just have these dinners with academics, where he just wanted people to come and have dinner and say interesting things near him.
Starting point is 00:58:51 And my overwhelming impression of him was at that point, and this is 25 years ago, that he was just incredibly approachable and genuine. He was doing this because he just really liked the company of academics and didn't get it very often. So the dinners, I mean, they were political in the sense that we debated political issues, but I never felt like I was being, you know, used as a tool in the Bernie machine or anything like that. It really just felt like he wanted to talk to people. And I, as a very, very young, just starting out academic, felt just incredibly excited and privileged. to be among all of these enthusiastic and intellectual lefties who were all, you know, yelling at one another and getting super excited about the rebirth of socialism or whatever it may be. It was really fun. And what was it like seeing a movie with David Cronenberg and what, in fact, is his best film? For me, it's Dead Ringers, if you're wondering. Yeah. So it wasn't like much seeing a movie with him. I was working in a movie theater and the movie theater hosted a lot of premieres, especially Canadian premieres. This was a in Canada, and he was there, and, you know, I was young and excited that he was there,
Starting point is 00:59:55 but there was no great take-home story about our interaction or anything. I have a total soft spot for the David Cronenberg movies that were just, you know, out and out over-the-top exploding stuff and high drama. So I loved scanners, and I loved videodrome. I love all the ones where it's just, like, gross stuff coming out of other stuff and so on. I don't have a highly theoretical reason for that. I just, I like movies that are extreme. And I love that he was willing to be just incredibly low-budget extreme in his imagery back in the day.
Starting point is 01:00:28 That was what was most fun for me. Rebecca Coupla, thank you very much. Thank 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 and leaving a review. This helps other people find it. the show.

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