Monday, August 04, 2008

World Philosophy Congress

This past week the 22nd World Philosophy Congress opened in Seoul, South Korea. It happens every five years. The last one occurred in Istanbul and the one before in Boston.

I first learned of the World Philosophy Congress from an article in The New York Times, about the one in Boston in 1998. It had been held in Boston before, in 1926, one of the few occasions it had taken place outside Europe. For some reason The New York Times article choose to call the event The World Philosophy Congress but its correct title is the World Congress of Philosophy. The first congress took place in Paris in 1900. Today, since 1948, the event takes place under the auspices of UNESO, a United Nations agency, and the International Federation of Philosophical Societies.

Out of curiosity I looked up the history of the WCP to fine out who or how it started. I found nothing about its origin. But I was thinking that since the first one was held in Paris four years after the first modern Olympics were held in Paris there was a connection between the two events, seeing that first Olympics occurred in Greece as did the first philosophizing. It is also casually interesting that Athens bid to host the WCP in 2008, hoping to take it back to the home of Philosophy, but lost out to Seoul. Perhaps it will be announced in Seoul that Athens will get it next. (Seoul held the Olympics in 1988.)

The get-together that took place in Boston was the last one of the 20th century. The theme at that congress was "philosophy educating humanity" and the single question under discussion, appropriately, was "What have we learned from philosophy in the 20th century". (The theme in Seoul was "rethinking philosophy today" and in Istanbul "philosophy facing world problems".) Surprisingly nobody answered the question, some avoided it by talking about 'truth' instead and others got hung-up on the meaning of 'we'.

That kind of behavior is what gives philosophy a bad name among ordinary people and why so many considered it unimportant in the goings on of human affairs. And that's what Julian Baggini of the Guardian, who was covering the WCP opening in Seoul, was saying in an article. He suggested that anybody with a PhD who wants to get a job should keep quite about it. However he defended philosophy. He says that although philosophy is generally consider unimportant in culture, nonetheless, it is all over the place, in thinktanks, politics, science, journalism and ethic committees.

In that case, since philosophy has mostly been hidden from the public in other professions, then there must be things we have learned from it without knowing. What is philosophy about anyways? It is about talking things out and putting theories into practice. If that is the case we have learned a lot from philosophy in the 20th century, in subtle ways. We entrench human rights through philosophical discussion. Einstein philosophizing gave us a better understanding of the universe and physics. Freud philosophizing probed the human psyche so that we could understand ourselves and become better functioning human beings. Philosophical discussions have expanded our minds and made us more tolerant and worldly. And philosophizing about the advantages of democracy has facilitated its expansion around the world.

That reminded me of a question somebody asked: "What could Freud have to do with sustaining democracy?" It was explained like this: "If you're going to ask people to govern themselves then it's important that they know themselves. It is not only the leaders who, in a democracy, need a Freudian awareness of the dark side of the psyche. All men and women should comprehend their proclivities for destruction and self-idealization in order to make the best informed choices."

The World Congress of Philosophy may be to some a waste of time. However it is another means of inoculating the world from future conflicts, by just getting people to know each other better and to discuss their differences. Governments have not always been that good at healing the world's problems. So it’s good to see non-government agencies like the WCP taking up the slack and making a difference, by making people talk to each other and in the process become more conscious of the world's needs and aspirations.