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Authors: John Kaag

American Philosophy

BOOK: American Philosophy
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For Carol

 

The Library is a wilderness of books.

—Henry David Thoreau, Journal, March 16, 1852

 

PROLOGUE: MAYBE

Harvard University's Holden Chapel always struck me as an appropriate place to die. The forty-foot brick structure, which is the university's third-oldest building, has no front windows. Above its entrance are four stone
bucrania
, bas-relief ox-skull sculptures of the sort that pagans once placed on their temples to keep away evil spirits. On April 15, 1895, when William James was asked to address an audience of young men at the Georgian chapel, it was already more than 150 years old, a fitting setting for the fifty-three-year-old American philosopher to contemplate what he had come to believe was the profoundest of questions: “Is Life Worth Living?”

It was a place—and a question—I became intimate with in the spring of 2008. I'd spent months scouring Harvard for the origins of American philosophy. I was at Harvard on a postdoc at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences—a temporary reprieve from the permanent unemployment my loving but practical family was sure would follow after I finished my Ph.D. in philosophy—and I wasn't about to squander the unexpected opportunity to prove them wrong. The aisles at Widener Library, just steps from Holden, are altogether fifty miles long. In the autumn of that year, I'd walked their entire length. When I eventually came up empty, I trotted across the Yard to Houghton Library, where rare books and manuscripts are kept, and combed through the personal papers of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Charles Sanders Peirce. Still nothing. It was only November, I told myself: early days. Research fellowships are for searching—and searching and searching. I hunkered down in my cubicle at Widener and tried to eke out the manuscript I was supposed to be writing on the confluence of eighteenth-century German idealism and American pragmatism. Things were progressing, albeit very slowly.

But then, on an evening in the spring of 2008, I gave up. Abandoning the research had nothing to do with the work itself and everything to do with the sense that it, along with everything else in my life, couldn't possibly matter. For the rest of my year at Harvard I assiduously avoided its libraries. I avoided my wife, my family, and friends. When I came to the university at all, I went only to Holden Chapel. I walked past it, sat next to it, read against it, lunched near it, sneaked into it when I could—became obsessed with it. James had, as far as I was concerned, asked the only question that really mattered.
Is life worth living?
I couldn't shake it, and I couldn't answer it.

For centuries, philosophers and religious thinkers, from the twelfth-century rabbi Maimonides to the seventeenth-century Englishman John Locke, had coolly articulated the belief that life, for any number of unassailable reasons, was worth living. In the thirteenth century the Dominican friar Thomas Aquinas argued that all things—be they amoebas or human beings—have a natural life cycle put into place by an intelligent designer. Far be it from any of God's creatures to disrupt it. Immanuel Kant's argument, five hundred years later, was less theologically speculative. Rational beings, he said, have a duty not to destroy our own rational capacities. In Kant's words, “[S]uicide is not abominable because God has forbidden it; on the contrary, God has forbidden it because it is abominable.”

William James had pondered the abominable since at least his early twenties. By many accounts, he'd hit rock bottom in 1871, at the age of twenty-nine. As I sat on the still-frozen ground outside Holden in 2008, I had to agree—my twenty-ninth year was about as bad as it gets. One of the sketch pads I'd found in Houghton contained a self-portrait James drew in red crayon—a young man, seated, hunched over, with an inscription over the figure:
HERE I AND SORROW SIT
. Most of the reasons his philosophical predecessors offered to persevere in life bored James to death. To him, they were little more than clichéd maxims, out of touch with the particularities of depression and crisis. Still, he was well aware that such arguments had served as the existential anchor for an untold number of happy lives. Indeed, during his lecture in Holden Chapel he observed that his audience, a group from Harvard's Young Men's Christian Association, brimmed with what he often called “healthy-mindedness,” a psychological and moral disposition that all but affirmed the conclusions of Aquinas and Kant.

The Harvard YMCA had been established in 1886 as an evangelical society. Most of the members of James's audience believed that the Bible is the Word of God and Jesus is Savior and Lord. The question of life's worth, for these devout men, was settled well in advance of any lecture. Denying the value of human life was blasphemy, and the ultimate form of this denial—suicide—an unspeakable sin. But James suspected that this affirmation of human life, as emphatic as it was universal, ignored the experience of a growing number of people who weren't so sure about the value of their own lives.

James, by then quite famous as the father of American psychology and philosophy, was one of these people—“sick-souled,” as he put it. My own soul, from adolescence onward, had never been terribly robust, and that rainy spring it had taken a turn for the worse. James knew something the faithful often miss: that believing in life's worth, for many people, is a recurring struggle. He'd overdosed on chloral hydrate in the 1870s, just “for the fun of it,” as he wrote to his brother Henry, to see how close he could come to the morgue without actually going there. James was not alone in his curiosity. A decade later his colleague Edmund Gurney, founder of the Society for Psychical Research, took the experiment with life and death too far, testing what turned out to be a fatal dose of chloroform. In response to Gurney's death, James wrote to his brother once again. “[This death] make[s] what remains here seem strangely insignificant and ephemeral, as if the weight of things, as well as the numbers, was all on the other side.”
The other side
. As in: No. Life is not worth living.

No, as it turns out, is an answer that has much to recommend it in a place like Holden Chapel. Religious services were moved out of the building in the 1780s, and in the next century it served as a chemistry lab and classroom for the nascent Harvard Medical School, where cadavers were dissected.
The Gross Clinic
, painted by Thomas Eakins in 1875, gives some idea of the nature of surgery at the time. In it, several doctors perform an operation on a child, working without gloves as their patient's insides fester in the open air. The patient's mother sits nearby in horror, covering her face in a futile attempt to escape what James understood all too well: At the end of the existential day, we are all a bunch of smelly carcasses. James would have been aware of the chapel's gory medical history as he pondered life's worth with the YMCA.

*   *   *

On March 11, 2008, I watched my father die. His liver was in bad shape. His esophagus was shot to hell. Saying you have esophageal squamous cell carcinoma is often a very long way of saying you drank too much, which my father did. At the end, tragically, ironically, he couldn't even swallow. The same thing that beat up his liver and throat also destroyed his family. I didn't much like him. So I surprised myself when I accepted my stepmother's invitation to watch him die on a snowy evening at a hospital in Buffalo, New York. But there he was, swollen hands, puffy face, no breath—something out of Dr. Gross's clinic. It all seemed like a cruel joke. Maybe life
was
worth living. But maybe you would live only to die surrounded by a distraught second wife and your estranged and dry-eyed sons.

The truth is, I'd often imagined—and occasionally fantasized about—my father's demise. In my dreams, at the brink of death, he'd finally realize how short life actually was, how one could mess it up, squander the opportunity to be deeply and irrevocably responsible. The shadow of death, I imagined, had that sort of power. And so, at the end, he'd talk to me like a loving father would to his son. He would convince me that our brief time together hadn't been a hollow, painful waste. He'd tell me how not to become a drunk, or a deadbeat husband, or a runaway father.

Of course, none of this happened. When I got to the hospital, he was already largely gone, as silent and unconscious as he'd been for most of my life. There was no great sense of closure, no teachable moment. Just the painful confirmation of all my suspicions, that life was pretty much meaningless.

James entertained this grim possibility rather seriously. When faced with unshrinking hardships, he told the audience at Holden, we're inclined to believe not in “the old warm notion of a man-loving Deity, [but] that of an awful Power that neither hates nor loves, but rolls all things together meaninglessly to a common doom.” Not even the protective
bucrania
can save us. “This,” he continued, “is an uncanny, a sinister, a nightmare view of life, and its peculiar
unheimlichkeit
, or poisonousness, lies expressly in our holding two things together which cannot possibly agree.” On the one hand, we cling to the hope that our world is both rational and meaningful; on the other, we may eventually come to see that it is neither. We have great expectations for our lives, but we die in the wintry hellhole of Buffalo or get hacked up on tables in Holden Chapel.

James could have told his audience at Holden that life was planned out in advance and that lasting existential meaning was ensured by a benevolent and all-knowing God; that, as Leibniz argued in the seventeenth century, we live in the best of all possible worlds; or that we have a moral duty to go on even if it turns out that this world is, at root, evil. He could have tried to sugarcoat my trip to Buffalo, to tell me that despite all appearances, life was
necessarily
meaningful. In other words, he could have lied. But he didn't. Instead, he answered life's most difficult question in the most honest way possible: “Maybe,” James said.

BOOK: American Philosophy
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