miércoles, 28 de febrero de 2018

Deeper into Bullshit


Deeper into Bullshit 

G.A. Cohen

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2. Two Species of Bullshit

I should like to explain how this chapter reached its present state. I read Frankfurt’s article [i.e. Harry Frankfurt, “On Bullshit”] in 1986, when it first appeared. I loved it, but I didn’t think critically about it.


Having been asked to contribute to the present volume, I reread the article, in order to write about it. I came to realize that its proposal about the “essence” of bullshit worked quite badly for the bullshit … that has occupied me. So I wrote a first draft which trained counter-examples drawn from the domain of the bullshit that interests me against Frankfurt’s account. But I then realized that it was inappropriate to train those examples against Frankfurt, that he and I are, in fact, interested in different bullshits, and, therefore, in different explicanda. Frankfurt is interested in a bullshit of ordinary life,1 whereas I am interested in a bullshit that appears in academic works, and, so I have discovered, the word “bullshit” characteristically denotes structurally different things that correspond to those different interests. Finally, and, belatedly, I considered, with some care, the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) account of “bullshit”, and, to my surprise, I discovered (and this was, of course, reassuring) that something like the distinct explicanda that I had come to distinguish are listed there under two distinct entries.2