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William E. Connolly's Politics of Complexity: A Critique

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2017

Abstract

In recent years, William E. Connolly has argued that the phenomenon of complexity in the physical sciences carries radical implications for political theory: namely, that political theorists should now be revising their concepts of agency, responsibility, and freedom. This very recent project of Connolly's has not (yet) attracted much opposition. Here I offer a critique of Connolly's argument which focuses on three key areas: (1) how he interprets and deploys “evidence” from physical science; (2) his theory of “creative freedom”; and (3) the impact that his recent philosophy has on the idea of the intellect. I argue that Connolly's scientific evidence is not what he claims it is; that the theory of “creative freedom” he offers fails; and that his critique of the intellect fails in theory, and would be highly damaging in practice.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © University of Notre Dame 2017 

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References

1 Connolly, William E., The Terms of Political Discourse (Lexington, MA: Heath, 1974)Google Scholar; Connolly, , Politics and Ambiguity (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1987)Google Scholar; Connolly, , Political Theory and Modernity (Oxford: Blackwell, 1988)Google Scholar.

2 Matthew J. Moore, “Political Theory Today: Results of a National Survey,” paper delivered at APSA meeting, Toronto, 2009. Available at http://ssrn.com/abstract=1463648.

3 Leys, Ruth, “The Turn to Affect,” Critical Inquiry 37, no. 3 (2011): 434Google Scholar. See also Dumm, Thomas L., “Connolly's Voice,” in The New Pluralism: William Connolly and the Contemporary Global Condition, ed. Campbell, David and Schoolman, Morton (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2008), 77Google Scholar.

4 Connolly, William E., Why I Am Not a Secularist (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1999)Google Scholar; Connolly, , Neuropolitics: Thinking, Culture, Speed (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2002)Google Scholar. For Connolly's own account of how and why he has turned his attention to neuroscience, see Neuropolitics, xiii. Some features of this change of direction appear in earlier works as well, as in some of the essays that comprise The Ethos of Pluralization (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1995)Google Scholar. Connolly writes there that the “micropolitics” he pursues “supports the macropolitics of pluralization” (xxvii; see also xii–xv).

5 Chambers, Samuel A. and Carver, Terrell, ed. William E. Connolly: Democracy, Pluralism and Political Theory (London: Routledge, 2008), 85104 Google Scholar. See also Connolly, Neuropolitics, 128–30; and Connolly, William E., A World of Becoming (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2011), 84Google Scholar.

6 Ethos, xiii–xiv.

7 Connolly, Secularist, 57; Connolly, World, 127; Connolly, William E., The Fragility of Things (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2013), 178Google Scholar.

8 World, 5.

9 Fragility, 9.

10 World, 45.

11 World, 43; see also Chambers and Carver, William E. Connolly, 85.

12 World, 6, 39, 40, 68; Fragility, 29, 85.

13 Fragility, 29.

14 For examples see World, 15, 18, 77–78; and Fragility, 33–34, 81–97.

15 Neuropolitics, 1; Fragility, 156.

16 Fragility, 35.

17 World, 80; see also 38.

18 World, 35.

19 World, 44.

20 World, 7; see also, 9, 12, 17–19, 20, 27, 30, 37–39, 43, 83, 136–37, 146–47, 149, 155–56, 171–73; and Fragility, 26.

21 Fragility, 29.

22 World, 37.

23 Fragility, 30.

24 For a good discussion of Connolly's position on the relation between theory and practice, see Morton Schoolman, “A Pluralist Mind: Agonistic Respect and the Problem of Violence toward Difference,” in The New Pluralism, 28–32.

25 World, 7, 17.

26 World, 10.

27 World, 21, 25, 148.

28 World, 148.

29 World, 47–48.

30 World, 64.

31 World, 148–50; Fragility, 135.

32 World, 29.

33 See Connolly, William E., Identity\Difference: Democratic Negotiations of Political Paradox (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1991), 111–14Google Scholar; see also 95–122; and Ethos, xxiv–xxx.

34 Redhead, Mark, Reasoning with Who We Are: Democratic Theory for a Not So Liberal Era (Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield, 2014), 280Google Scholar.

35 World, 168.

36 See Secularist, 133–36.

37 Fragility, 179–80; World, 139–40; Secularist, 55. See also Connolly, William E., Capitalism and Christianity, American Style (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2008), 63Google Scholar.

38 World, 66.

39 Capitalism, 44; see also 51–54; and World, 12, 13, 61; and Fragility, 18, 28, 39, 125, 127, 133, 138–39, 147, 170–80, 204n4. “Resentment” and “affirmation” feature heavily in Connolly's recent work. Connolly means the resentment one might feel when the world is discovered or claimed to be different from what one might have wanted (see World, 112). He very often describes, for example, the resentment of a “nonprovidential” world (Capitalism, 41, 58), and of time (Capitalism, 57; World, 106, 119–20).

40 World, 41, 135–47.

41 Ibid.

42 Fragility, 136–37.

43 Fragility, 38; see also 182.

44 Fragility, 179–95; see also World, 143–44.

45 Fragility, 40, see particularly 130–37; and World, 41.

46 World, 57.

47 Neuropolitics, 106; World, 41.

48 World, 26; see also 57.

49 World, 12, emphasis added. The witness Connolly calls most often in connection with this necessity is Stuart A. Kauffman: see World, 12, 20–21, 23–24, 26, 28–31, 37, 165, 173; and Fragility, 29–30, 83, 161, 163, 218n8, 221, 222n22.

50 See World, 22.

51 World, 24.

52 World, 24; see also Hayward, C. R., “Ethics, Politics, and the Limits of Reason,” Political Theory 43, no. 2 (April 2012): 240Google Scholar.

53 World, 27; see also Secularist, 3.

54 World, 7.

55 World, 21, 23, 24.

56 Secularist, 120, 174.

57 World, 25.

58 World, 25; see also 15, 25, 27, 32, 82; and Fragility, 128.

59 Fragility, 84–85, emphasis added; see also Neuropolitics, 1–21.

60 World, 150; see also Neuropolitics, 75.

61 World, 23.

62 See Collingwood, R. G., The New Leviathan: Or Man, Civilization and Barbarism (1942) (Oxford: Clarendon, 1992), 100Google Scholar.

63 Fragility, 34.

64 World, 7.

65 World, 27.

66 World, 25.

67 World, 23.

68 World, 64.

69 World, 76, 78.

70 World, 82; see also 27, 64; and Fragility, 127–30.

71 World, 123.

72 World, 27.

73 World, 21–22, emphasis added.

74 World, 22.

75 Fragility, 14.

76 World, 25.

77 See, however, Hayward, “Ethics.” Ruth Leys's critique (“The Turn to Affect”) is aimed chiefly at Brian Massumi, though Connolly is also discussed (459–63).

78 Finlayson, Alan, ed., Democracy and Pluralism: The Political Thought of William E. Connolly (Abingdon: Routledge, 2010)Google Scholar; Campbell and Schoolman, eds., The New Pluralism.

79 See Redhead, Reasoning with Who We Are, 292.

80 Ibid., 310–12.

81 See World, 6, 39, 40, 68; and Fragility, 29, 85.

82 Respectively: World, 144; 11, 145; 144; Fragility, 38–39; World, 145; 146; 26; Fragility, 167; World, 15–16.

83 The term “macropolitical” is Connolly's own: Ethos, xxvi.

84 For a neat explanation of the role of James in Connolly's “deep pluralist” project, see Chambers and Carver, William E. Connolly, 85–104.

85 Wagner, Geoffrey, Wyndham Lewis: A Portrait of the Artist as the Enemy (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1957), 9Google Scholar.

86 Deleuze, Gilles, Bergsonism, trans. Tomlinson, Hugh and Habberjam, Barbara (New York: Zone Books, 1991)Google Scholar.

87 See World, 44, 105.

88 Lewis, Wyndham, Time and Western Man (1927) (Santa Rosa, CA: Black Sparrow, 1993), 232–33Google Scholar.

89 See World, 68–92.

90 World, 13.

91 Fragility, 29.

92 Hobbes, Thomas, Leviathan: or the Matter, Forme, & Power of a Common-Wealth Ecclesiasticall and Civill (1651) (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2008), 915 Google Scholar.

93 From this same premise Hobbes concludes that while the individual “person” is concrete and natural, groups are artificial—the same position that Connolly criticizes George Kateb for holding: see Secularist, 139.

94 See Leys, “Turn to Affect,” 469.

95 Ibid., 450.

96 Ibid., 443.

97 Ibid., 436.

98 Ibid., 458.

99 Ibid., 443.

100 Fragility, 178; see also World, 11.

101 Connolly, William E., “The Complexity of Intention,” Critical Inquiry 37 (2011): 791–98Google Scholar.

102 World, 9–12.

103 World, 148.

104 Kauffman, Stuart A., Reinventing the Sacred: A New View of Science, Reason, and Religion (New York: Basic Books, 2010), ixGoogle Scholar.

105 Neuropolitics, 93.

106 World, 7.

107 Neuropolitics, 93.

108 Connolly probably ought to have been extra aware of this. He writes of René Girard: “Girard claims that his readings vindicate his theory of desire; but it must also be said that his theory of desire gives shape to those readings. It may be impossible to avoid such a (hermeneutic) circularity, but the dogmatism with which Girard presents his interpretations of myth and desire alike does belie the problematical standing such circles bestow upon them” (Ethos, 51).

109 Leys, “Turn to Affect,” 452–59.

110 See Neuropolitics, 33, 83; and World, 46, 49, 50, 58, 82, 151.

111 Neuropolitics, 2; see also 7, 9; World, 12, 43; and Fragility, 161.

112 World, 45.

113 World, 48.

114 Neuropolitics, 7.

115 Neuropolitics, 61.

116 Ibid.; see also Fragility, 118–19.

117 Neuropolitics, xiii; World, 12.

118 Neuropolitics, xiii.

119 World, 24.

120 Ibid.; for Connolly's similar use of yeast see 28.

121 Neuropolitics, 33.

122 See Neuropolitics, 34–35.

123 Neuropolitics, 36.

124 Ibid.

125 Neuropolitics, 76.

126 Neuropolitics, 91.

127 Neuropolitics, 90.

128 Capitalism, 70.

129 Secularist, 28–29; see also 36, 40, 181.

130 Secularist, 27.

131 Ayer, A. J., Language, Truth and Logic (London: Penguin Books, 2001), 9Google Scholar.

132 Neuropolitics, 94.

133 Fragility, 71–80.

134 Fragility, 74; see also 79.

135 Fragility, 78–79.

136 Fragility, 75; for a note on the “Nietzschean” origin of this side of Connolly's recent work see 174; and also Dumm, “Connolly's Voice,” 77.

137 Fragility, 75.

138 Fragility, 77–78.

139 Fragility, 76.

140 World, 75.

141 Fragility, 145.

142 World, 75; see also 27.

143 Fragility, 79.

144 World, 21; see also 27; and Fragility, 160, 163, 167.

145 World, 41, 58, 91; Fragility, 71–72.

146 World, 113.

147 Fragility, 148.

148 World, 28.

149 Fragility, 146.

150 Fragility, 181; see also 46.

151 Fragility, 181.

152 See Ethos, 49–62; and Fragility, 135.

153 Ethos, 49–62.

154 World, 27.

155 World, 22, 82.

156 World, 123; see also 97.

157 “Becoming Plural” was the title of a 2007 conference on Connolly's political thought hosted by the Department of Politics and International Relations at Swansea University, UK. See Political Theory 35, no. 2 (2007): 239Google Scholar.

158 See Fragility, 135.

159 See World, 21–22, 25.

160 Fragility, 145.

161 World, 29.

162 MacIntyre, Alasdair, After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory (Notre Dame, IN: Notre Dame University Press, 1984), 204–25Google Scholar.

163 Lewis, Time and Western Man, 166–67.

164 See Lewis, Wyndham, The Art of Being Ruled (1926) (Santa Rosa, CA: Black Sparrow, 1989), 130Google Scholar.

165 Lewis, Time and Western Man, 341.

166 See Ethos, 49–62.

167 Fragility, 182–89.

168 Hobbes, Leviathan, 111.

169 Neuropolitics, 10, 36, 59.

170 Neuropolitics, 17; see also 21, 66.

171 Neuropolitics, 94; see also World, 31, 39–40, 64; and Fragility, 99–120.

172 World, 31.

173 World, 39.

174 Neuropolitics, 10, 23, 77, 94.

175 Ethos, 65–74; World, 4, 46–51, 55.

176 Neuropolitics, 20, 13, 65, 98; World, 54, 64; Fragility, 86.

177 Neuropolitics, 27, 83.

178 Neuropolitics, 58; World, 6.

179 Fragility, 77; see also 39.

180 Collingwood, The New Leviathan, 99.

181 Connolly in fact mentions the individual's capacity to “decide” in passing. His discussion of what this involves, however, is relegated to an endnote, and deflects the question: see World, 26, 182n12.

182 World, 148.

183 See World, 23.

184 Capitalism, 105–8.

185 See Ethos, xv–xix.

186 Fragility, 179.

187 Fragility, 39.

188 Capitalism, 94.

189 See World, 15.

190 World, 8. For specific names see Connolly's “Acknowledgments” sections: World, 178–79; Fragility, 197–99.