Academic Persona Types?

1 Comment

Throughout this long deveopment, from 600 BC to the present day, philosophers have been divided into those who wished to tighten social bonds and those who wished to relax them.  With this difference, others have been associated.  
The disciplinarians have advocated some system of dogma, either old or new, and have therefore been compelled to be, in greater or lesser degree, hostile to science, since their dogmas could not be proved empirically.  They have almost invariably taught that happiness is not the good, but that ‘nobility’ or ‘heroism’ is to be preferred.  They have had a sympathy with irrational parts of human nature, since they have felt reason to be inimical to social cohesion.  
The libertarians, on the other hand, with the exception of the extreme anarchists, have tended to be scientific, utilitarian, rationalistic, hostile to violent passion, and enemies of all the more profound forms of religion.  
This conflict existed in Greece before the rise of we recognise as philosophy, and is already quite explicit in the earliest Greek thought.  In changing forms, it has persisted down to the present day, and no doubt will persist for many ages to come.

 — Bertrand Russell ‘The History Of Western Philosophy’ (pp21-2)

One Comment (+add yours?)

  1. eldon
    Mar 22, 2011 @ 10:31:54

    It is a great error to be superior to others….It is such pride as this that makes a man appear a fool, makes him abused by others, and invites disaster. A man who is truly versed in any art will of his own accord be clearly aware of his own deficiency; and therefore, his ambition being never satisfied, he ends by never being proud.

    — Yoshida Kenko (Essays in Idleness) c. 1330

    i think bertrand has given us a fatal dualism there. i am always wary of any typology that permits of only two selections – if not this, then that. cannot we find a typology of academic personas with several categories of overlapping criteria of identification?

    in any case, this division of dogmatarians and libertarians seems well exemplified in present day american politics… and perhaps here (in australia i mean), amongst media spruikers [i have been watching my twitter stream, Q&A, media watch and other means of filtering the fabula which is everyday politicking and media].

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