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            <title>巴迪乌：作为传记的哲学</title>
            <link>http://wen.org.cn/modules/article/view.article.php/962/c12</link>
            <description><![CDATA[学科: 思想<br />关键词: 巴迪欧， 巴迪乌， 传记， 哲学与政治， 阿尔及利亚战争， 萨特， 拉康， 阿尔都塞<br />摘要: 2007年11月13日的演讲。英文录像链接<p>巴迪乌英文演讲录像：</p>
<p><a rel="external" title="http://www.lacan.com/badioumigelabrieu07.html" target="_blank" href="http://www.lacan.com/badioumigelabrieu07.html"><a href="http://www.lacan.com/badioumigelabrieu07.html" title="http://www.lacan.com/badioumigelabrieu07.html" rel="external">http://www.lacan.com/badioumigelabrieu07.html</a></a></p>
<p>Nietzsche wrote that a philosophy is always the biography of the  philosopher. Maybe a biography of the philosopher by the philosopher  himself is a piece of philosophy. So I shall tell you nine stories taken  of my private life, with their philosophical morality.</p>
<p>The first story, which is about the beginning, is the story of the father and the mother.</p>
<p>My  father was an alumnus of the &Eacute;cole Normale Superieure and agr&eacute;g&eacute; of  mathematics: my mother an alumna of the &Eacute;cole Normale Sup&eacute;rieure and  agr&eacute;g&eacute;e of French literature. I am an alumnus of the &Eacute;cole Normale  Sup&eacute;rieure and agr&eacute;g&eacute;, but agrege of what, of philosophy, that is to  say, probably, the only possible way to assume the double filiation and  circulate freely between the literary maternity and the mathematical  paternity. This is a lesson for philosophy itself : the language of  philosophy always constructs its own space between the mathematics and  poetry, between the mother and the father, after all.</p>
<p>Someone saw  that very clearly, my colleague, the French analytic philosopher  Jacques Bouveresse, from the Coll&egrave;ge de France. In a recent book in  which he paid me the&nbsp;honor&nbsp;of  speaking of me, he compared me to a five-footed rabbit and says in  substance: &quot;This five- footed rabbit that Alain Badiou is runs at top  speed in the direction of mathematic formalism, and then, all of a  sudden, taking an incomprehensible turn, he goes back on his steps and  runs at the same speed to throw himself into literature.&quot; Well, yes,  that's how with a father and a mother so well distributed, one turns  into a rabitt.</p>
<p>Now the second story : about mother and philosophy.</p>
<p><span style="color: rgb(0, 0, 102);">It's a complete explanation of my presence today with you.</span></p>
<p>My  mother was very old and my father was not in Paris. I would take her  out to eat in a restaurant. She would tell me on these occasions  everything she had never told me. It was the final expressions of  tenderness, which are so moving, that one has with one's very old  parents. One evening, she told me that even before meeting my father,  when she was teaching in Algeria, she had a passion, a gigantic passion,  a devouring passion, for a philosophy teacher. This story is absolutely  authentic. I listened to it, obviously, in the position you can  imagine, and I said to myself: well, that's it, I have done nothing else  except accomplish the desire of my mother, that the Algerian  philosopher had neglected. He had gone off with someone else and I had  done what I could to be the consolation for my mother's terrible pain &mdash;  which had subsisted underneath it all even until she was eighty-one.</p>
<p>The  consequence I draw for philosophy is that, contrary to the usual  assertion according to which &quot;the end of metaphysics&quot; you know, is being  accomplished, and all that, philosophy precisely can not have an end,  because it is haunted, from within itself, by the necessity to take one  more step within a problem that already exists. And I believe that this  is its nature. The nature of philosophy is that something is eternally  being bequeathed to it. It has the responsibility of this bequeathal.  Your are always treating the bequeathal itself, always taking one more  step in the determination of what was thus bequeathed to you. As myself,  in the most unconscious manner, I never did anything as a philosopher  except respond to an appeal that I had not even heard.</p>
<p>The third story is about the famous notion of engagement.</p>
<p>I  arrive in Paris in 1955, during the beginning of the war in Algeria.  The horrors of this war that are today coming into the open - mass  murders, torture, razzia, systematic rapes - were well known to  everyone. Nevertheless, we were a small number in 1955, a very small  number to want stop these horrors, to be against the war in Algeria. We  demonstrated, from time to time, boulevard Saint-Michel, shouting &quot;Peace  in Algeria!&quot;, and when we got to the end of the street, the police were  waiting for us, striking us with their cloaks, and we were joyfully  knocked senseless. What is strange is that we could not say anything but  this: we have to do it again. And yet, I can tell you this, the  &quot;pelerine&quot; cloak is not particularly gay. I even think I prefer to be  clubbed. But we had to do it again, because that's what the pure present  is: wanting the end of this war, as few as we were to share this  wanting. I drew the conviction that philosophy exists if it takes charge  of the quick of the contemporary. It is not simply a question of  engagement, or a question of political exteriority, but that something  of the contemporary is always raw, and philosophy must testify to this  raw or take place within it, however sophisticated its intellectual  production be.</p>
<p>The story number four is about love and religion.</p>
<p>Before  coming to Paris, I lived in a province, I am a provincial who came to  Paris a bit late. And one of the traits that characterized my provincial  youth is that a majority of the girls were still raised in religion.  These girls were still kept or reserved for an interesting destiny.  Which gave an important figure to the masculine parade: the different  manners to shine in front of these girls still pious, the principal of  these being to refute the existence of God. This was an important  exercise of seduction, both because it was transgressive, and  rhetorically brilliant when one had the means of doing it.</p>
<p>Before  conquering their virtues, the souls had to be yanked out of the Church.  Which of the two is the worst, that's for the priests to decide. But  out of this comes the idea, that I had very early, that the most  argumentative, the most abstract philosophy also always constitutes a  seduction. A seduction whose basis is sexual, no doubt about it. Of  course, philosophy argues against the seduction of images and I remain  Platonist on this point. But it also argues in order to seduce. We can  thus understand the Socratic function of corruption of the youth.  Corrupting youth means being seductively hostile to the normal regime of  seduction. I maintain and I repeat that is the destiny of philosophy to  corrupt the youth, to teach it that immediate seductions have little  value, but also that superior seductions exist. In the end, the young  man who knows how to refute the existence of God is more seductive than  the one who could only propose to the girl. a game of tennis. It's a  good reason to become a philosopher.</p>
<p>This is what has become the  place of the question of love, as a key question of philosophy itself,  exactly in the sense it already had for Plato in Symposium. The question  of love is necessarily at the heart of philosophy, because it governs  the question of its power, the question of its address to its public,  the question of its seductive strength. On this point, I believe I have  followed Socrates's very difficult direction: &quot;the one who follows the  path of total revelation must begin at an early age to be taken by the  beauty of bodies&quot;.</p>
<p>The fifth story is a marxist one.</p>
<p>Naturally,  my family tradition was to the left. My father had bequeathed to me two  images: the image of the anti-nazi resistant during the war, and then  the image of the socialist militant in power, because he was mayor of a  big French town, Toulouse, for thirteen years. My story is the story of a  rupture with this sort of official left.</p>
<p>There are two periods  in the history of my rupture with the official left. The last, well  known, is May 68 and its continuation. The other, less known, more  secret and so even more active. In 1960 there was a general strike in  Belgium. I will not give the details. I was sent to cover this strike as  a journalist - I was often a journalist, I have written, it seems to  me, hundreds of articles, maybe thousands. I met mine workers on strike.  They have reorganized the entire social life of the country, by  constructing a sort of new popular legitimacy. They have even edited a  new money. I assisted at their assemblies, I spoke with them. And I was  from then on convinced, up till this day I am speaking to you, that  philosophy is on that side. &quot;On that side&quot; is not a social  determination. It means: on the side of what is spoken or pronounced  there, on the side of this obscure part of common humanity. On the side  of equality.</p>
<p>The abstract maxim of philosophy is necessarily  absolute equality. After my experience of mine workers strike in  Belgium, I have give a philosophical order to myself : &quot;transform the  notion of truth in such a way that it obeys the equalitarian maxim, this  is why I gave the truth three attributes:</p>
<p>1) It depends on an irruption, and not on a structure. Any truth is new, this will be the doctrine of the event.</p>
<p>2)  All truth is universal, in a radical sense, the anonymous equalitarian  for-all, the pure for-all, constitutes it in its being, this will be its  genericity.</p>
<p>3) A truth constitutes its subject, and not the inverse, this will be its militant dimension.</p>
<p>All that, in a still total obscurity, is at work when I meet in 1960 the Belgium mine Workers.</p>
<p>The story number six is a very moral story.</p>
<p>After  68, during what we can call the red years, when we invented new things,  when we created bonds with peoples that we did not know, when we were  in the conviction that an entirely other world than that of our academic  destiny awaited us, we entered into a political enterprise with a good  many people, - and some of them, me included, continue this new  political enterprise.</p>
<p>But what really struck me, the experience I  wish to speak of here, is the experience of those who, starting with  the middle of the 1970s, renounced this enterprise. Not only did they  renounce this enterprise, but they entered into a systematic renegation  that, starting with the new philosophers, from the end of the 1970s,  little by little establish themselves, spread and dominate. And this is  planted in philosophy like an arrow. It is a question in itself: How is  it possible that one can cease being the subject of a truth? How is it  possible that one return to the routine of the world This question  nourishes my conviction that what is constitutive of philosophy is to  stay not only within the vividness of the event, but within its  becoming, that is, within the treatment of its consequences. Never to  return to structural passivity : That is properly constitutive of  philosophy as thought. It is what I simply called fidelity. And fidelity  forms a knot, it is a concept that brings together the subject, the  event and truth. It is what traverses the subject with regard to an  event capable of constituting a truth.</p>
<p>Here again I think of  Plato. At the end of Book IX of the Republic, Socrates responds to the  objection that the ideal city which he had traced the plan of would  probably never exist. This is a massive objection that the young people  make: &quot;All that is magnificent, but we don't see it coming!&quot;. Socrates  responds more or less like this: that this city exists or may one day  exist is of no importance, because it is only its laws that must dictate  our conduct. That is the principle of consequence. And it is not a  question that is inferred from a problem of existence or inexistence.  It's our philosophical duty : to continue.</p>
<p>It's my story seven  which is an erotic story. This is what is expended by all biographers.  Will you be disappointed? I will stay within the discreet erotic genre. A  &quot;soft&quot; story.</p>
<p>Just like everyone, in the 50s and 60s, we were  tormented by sexuality. This torment is certainly stil very perceptible  in my first novels, Almagestes, in 1964 and then Portulans in 1967. But  literature is a filter here. In the end, this trouble is foreign to  philosophy strictly speaking., in conformity to its great classical  tradition. I would say that I learned little by little why. It is  certain that sexual situations are fascinating, and it is also certain  that the formalism of these situations, the erotic formalism is  extraordinarily poor. And all its force depends on a repetitive  injunction, with variations of little amplitude. I would say then that  little by little in life a relation of charmed connivance is established  with this formalism. Finally neither transgressive fascination, nor the  repression of the superego are really at their place in this affair.  All that is delicious, and, after all, without great consequence for  thought. I have come to conclude philosophically, that as acute as this  pacifying charmed connivance might be, at least for me, desire is not a  central category for philosophy, and cannot be. Or rather desires only  touches philosophy - just as well as jouissance - as bodies are seized  in love. That is why, from this long crossing through sexual torment the  final result is, as I had already said for other reasons, that love,  and not desire, must instantly return into the constitution of the  concept.</p>
<p>The story number eight is a formal story, or a story concerning forms.</p>
<p>I  said, on the subject of the erotic injunction, &quot;formalism&quot;, and I said  it as a philosopher. Because I deeply believe that what permits a  singular truth - amorous as well as political &mdash; to touch philosophy is,  in the end, its form. In this sense, I would sustain that the only  philosophy is formalist. Perhaps in the sense of Plato when he says:  &quot;the only veritable thought is in forms&quot; &mdash; what is often translated by  &quot;Idea&quot; is better rendered by &quot;form&quot;. And I believe that the creation of  concepts lies in this: philosophy conceives the singularity of theorms  of truth. And there again, we have a Platonic program. Why Platonic?  Dialectics is the science of forms. And form is, in philosophy,  singularity. It is, as Socrates says in Phaedo, &quot;the unique form of what  remains identical to itself.&quot;</p>
<p>From this we have an intimate tie  between philosophy and mathematics (a tie strongly thematized by Plato  himself.) If the philosophic concepts are in the end the form of the  concepts of truth, then they must support the proof of formalization.  Whatever this proof be. All the great philosophers have submitted the  concept to an overwhelming, speculative form of formalization. I think  this is why mathematics must have remained a passion for me? I  scrutinize this precisely - in mathematics: What is thought capable of  when it is devoted to, pure form? As the literality of form? And the  conclusion I have progressively drawn is that what it is capable of,  when it is ordained as pure form, is thinking being as such, being as  being. Which gives my provoking formula according to which effective  ontology is nothing else than constituted mathematics. Which, obviously,  in the eyes of the psychoanalyst, means that my desire is only there to  sublimate the image of my mathematician father.</p>
<p>The final story, the story number nine, is about my masters.</p>
<p>Philosophy  is a question of mastery, and this in a triple sense. First because it  belongs in effect to what Lacan called the discourse of the master. Then  because it supposes, in its very subjectivity, the encounter with a  master. Finally and lastly, because if we look closely at it, philosophy  always ends up by constituting a discourse that is ordained to a  principal signifier, a master signifier, such as is, in my thought, the  signifier &quot;truth. In the three cases, philosophy is a question of  mastery; So, biographically, who were my masters?</p>
<p>During the  decisive years of my education, I had three masters: Sartre, Lacan and  Althusser. They were not masters of the same thing.</p>
<p>What Sartre  taught me was simply, existentialism. But what does existentialism mean?  It means that you must have a tie between the concept on the one hand  and on the other the existential agency of choice, the agency of the  vital decision. The conviction that the philosophic concept is not worth  an hour of toil if, be it by mediations of a great complexity, it does  not reverberate, clarify and ordain the agency of choice, of the vital  decision. And in this sense, the concept must be, also and always, an  affair of existence. That is what Sartre taught me.</p>
<p>Lacan taught  me the connection, the necessary link between a theory of subjects and a  theory of forms. He taught me how and why the very thinking of  subjects, which had so often been opposed to the theory of forms, was in  reality intelligible only within the framework of this theory. He  taught me that the subject is a question that is not at all of a  psychological character, but is an axiomatic and formal question. More  than any other question!</p>
<p>Althusser taught me two things: that  there was no object proper to philosophy &mdash; this is one of his great  theses &mdash;, but that there were orientations of thought, lines of  separation. And, as Kant had already said, a sort of perpetual fight, a  fight that was constantly begun again, in new conditions. He taught me  consequently the sense of delimitations, of what he called the  demarcation. In particular the conviction that philosophy is not the  vague discourse of totality, or the general interpretation of what there  is. That philosophy must be delimited, that it must be separated from  what is not philosophy. Politics and philosophy are two distinct things,  art and philosophy are two distinct things, science and philosophy are  two distinct things. Finally, I was able then to keep all my masters. I  kept Sartre despite the disregard he was object of for a long time. I  kept Lacan despite what must really be called the terrible character of  his disciples. And I kept Althusser despite the substantial political  divergences that opposed me to him starting with May 68. Crossing  through the possibility of oblivion, the dissemination of disciples and  the political conflict, I succeeded in conserving my fidelity to three  disparate masters.</p>
<p>And I maintain today that in philosophy  masters are necessary; I maintain a constitutive hostility to the  tendency towards democratic professionalization of philosophy and to the  imperative that is rampant today and humiliates youth: &quot;Be little, and  work as a team.&quot; I would also say that the masters, must be combined and  surmounted, but finally, it is always disastrous to deny them.</p>
<p>It's  the end, now. And when I am at my wits' end, my trick is to pass the  stick on to the poet. I have chosen the poet of my adolescence. Saint  John Perse. With him, I can speak of another dimension of life, the  companions, the companions of existence.</p>
<p>The companions of the  poet are different from the companions of the philosopher. The  companions of the philosopher are the different societies within which  the question of a truth is at least posed. The companions of the poet  are often the companions of his solitude, which is why Saint John Perse  enumerates them as companions in exile, at the moment when he himself  must go into exile. And aftet the enumeration of his companions, he  returns to his solitude, and he says that:</p>
<p>Stranger, on all  the beaches of this world, with neither audience nor witness, press to  the ear of the West a seashell without memory:</p>
<p>Precarious host on  the outskirts of our cities, you will not cross the sill of Lloyds,  where your word is not honored and your gold has no title...</p>
<p>'I shall inhabit my name' was his response to the questionnaires of the port;</p>
<p>And on the tables of exchange, you have nothing but trouble to produce,</p>
<p>Just as these great moneys in iron exhumed by lightning.</p>
<p>&quot;I  shall inhabit my name&quot;: this is precisely what philosophy tries to  render possible for each and every one. Or rather, philosophy searches  for the formal conditions, the possibility for each and every one to  inhabit his name, to be simply there, and recognized by all as the one  who inhabits his name, who, by right of this, as inhabiting his name, is  the equal of anyone else.</p>
<p>That is why we mobilize so many  resources. That is also what our monotonous biography can be used for:  to constantly begin again the search for the conditions by which the  proper name of each one can be inhabited.</p><br />]]></description>
            <author>人社</author>
            <pubDate>Sat, 14 Mar 2009 00:50:24 +1600</pubDate>
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