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editorial
from the editor
4 P hilosophy has always had gender
equality issues. Most lists of the greats
would be entirely male until the
twentieth century, although the same
could be said of music or the visual arts. More
recently, the profession has remained male
dominated. Evidence indicates that there is a
more representative mix among the younger
talent rising up the universities, but this hasn’t yet
translated into anything approaching equality at
the highest levels.
For us, this presents difficult challenges. I
find it embarrassing, for example, that this issue’s
forum, on the legacy of the Enlightenment (see
p64), is entirely written by men. How could I have
let that happen?
There are several reasons. One is that tpm’s
self-set mission has always been to reflect what is
going on in the world of philosophy, for better or
worse. If that means reflecting a male-dominated
discipline, so be it.
Nevertheless, that does not mean we can
wash our hands of all responsibility for any
inequality that might lead to. In realisation of this,
I am personally in favour of affirmative action, but
not positive discrimination. As I understand it, the
latter would require us to consider the merits of
female contributions to the magazine according
to a different, less rigorous, standard than we
would male ones. This seems wrong. In so far as
we have a responsibility and mission to put
together the best magazine possible, it would sell
readers short if we included articles of lesser
merit to even out the gender mix. Perhaps worse,
unless such a policy were secret, I think that
would be insulting to the women who did appear
in the magazine, as there would always be the
nagging doubt that they would not have been
published if we didn’t need token females.
Affirmative action is crucially different. What
it means is making an extra effort to encourage or
invite female contributors of the required
standard. I approve of this, but it has not been
easy to put it into practice. One reason is simply
that, like many small periodicals, we are not
exactly over-staffed, and there simply aren’t the
time and resources to make much extra effort to
do anything, above the already Herculean one to
put together four issues a year. So, given the
status quo, most articles end up being written by
men.
But over a decade of publishing this
magazine, I have also found women less inclined
to accept invitations to contribute than men. I did
try to get women to write for this issue’s forum, for
instance, but none said yes. Why this might be so
is not clear, but since it is so, can we really be
blamed if, as a result, the gender balance is not as
it ideally would be?
I’m genuinely unsure about how best to deal
with this problem, and your advice and opinions
are most welcome. In the meantime, I’m pleased
to say that we have two new columnists starting
with us this issue, both are women (Ophelia
Benson, p18 and Jean Kazez, p116), and both are
here entirely on merit and not to make up the
numbers. I hope you enjoy their contributions,
and all the others in this issue.
tpm3RD QUARTER 2008 news
Goethe gets down to business
OVER RECENT YEARS, philosophy has increasingly been
seen as a source of transferable thinking skills, relevant to a
broad range of professions and work needs. Melbourne Business
School has done its bit to substantiate this claim by
appointing John Armstrong in the newly created position of
philosopher-in-residence. The job was created to offer students
and faculty at the business school what the University hopes
will be a useful set of intellectual skills.
The Melbourne school's dean, John Seybolt, said in announcing
the appointment that lessons in leadership can be learned from
CEOs and managers and also from Plato, Goethe and “a
philosopher-in-residence who can transfer knowledge in an
accessible and enjoyable way.” Armstrong, of the University
of Melbourne’s department of philosophy, told tpmthat
philosophers themselves aren’t fully aware of the merits of their
discipline when it comes to asking people to explain what
they really think and why, and asking them to take on board
intelligent disagreement and
John Armstrong
either answer it or adjust their
own positions. He thinks this is something that a lot of
businesses need, and know they need.
He suggests that business should consider the possibilities
of educating desire, not in the sense of stimulating false wants
through advertising, but by asking what it would be
genuinely good for people to want and then to ask how it is
possible to supply that efficiently and effectively – and make a
profit. “The more intelligent you
are, the more likely you are to want to do good in the world.
Talent recruitment in business already faces the problem of
holding onto people who want money andvirtue.”
Armstrong thinks interaction with business is rewarding for philosophy. “Philosophy has a lot to gain when serious thinkers manage to extend their experience of the world and bring that constructively into their understanding. Much of the time philosophy is drawing surreptitiously on experience, and the broader and better digested that experience, the better the philosophy.” Armstrong urges that “because philosophy is a beautiful and noble pursuit it ought to be much more potent in the world. I'm terrified that a certain kind of shyness, dressed up as dignity and aloofness or just professional preoccupation, could rob the world of something it desperately needs. Intellectual grace is in such short supply. But for philosophy to be potent in the world, philosophers need to find ways of getting intellectual grace to speak to the ordinary and messy
3RD QUARTER 2008tpm 3RDQUARTER 2008tpm
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