Robert Pippin
Robert Buford Pippin is an American philosopher. He is the Evelyn Stefansson Nef Distinguished Service Professor in the John U. Nef Committee on Social Thought, the Department of Philosophy, and the college at the University of Chicago.
Education and career
Pippin grew up in Jacksonville, Florida, in a lower working-class family of four: his father, Ramon Pippin; his mother, Rita Doris Pippin; and his brother, Richard "Chilli" Pippin.; no one in his family had attended college, and his father, the son of a sharecropper, left school after the sixth grade. He was encouraged by a high school teacher to attend Trinity College in Hartford, Connecticut, where he earned his BA in English in 1970. Though he initially aspired to be a fiction writer, he developed a deep interest in philosophy through the influence of several charismatic teachers. Pippin went on to earn his M.A. in Philosophy in 1972, and subsequently his Ph.D. in Philosophy from Pennsylvania State University on August 31, 1974, writing a dissertation on Kant’s theory of form under the direction of Stanley Rosen.Before moving to Chicago, he taught for a number of years in the department of philosophy at UCSD, where he counted Henry Allison and Herbert Marcuse among his colleagues. In 2009 he held the Spinoza Chair of Philosophy at the University of Amsterdam. That same year, he was elected to the American Philosophical Society. Since 2014 he is PhD honoris causa at Uppsala University, Sweden. He currently resides in Chicago with his wife Joan. They have two adult children, Drew and Lauren.
In 2016 he became a member of the German Academy of Sciences Leopoldina. In 2019 he was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship.
Philosophical work
Pippin is best known for his work on Hegel, but he has also published articles and books on Kant, Nietzsche, Proust, Hannah Arendt, Leo Strauss, Henry James, and on film.His 1989 book Hegel's Idealism: The Satisfactions of Self-Consciousness was a major contribution to Hegel studies. In it Pippin portrays Hegel as a thinker with fewer metaphysical commitments than are traditionally attributed to him. Hegel's claims about the "Absolute" and "Spirit" are interpreted in a more epistemological vein. A central thesis of Hegel's, according to Pippin, is that epistemology is metaphysic because to be is to be determinately intelligible. Much of Hegel's project, in Pippin's reading, is a continuation rather than a reversal of the Kantian critique of dogmatic metaphysics. Hegel is not doing ontological logic, but is doing logic as metaphysics, which is a continuation of transcendental logic. Logic as metaphysics is the science of pure thought, or the thought of thought.
For Pippin, Idealism as common to both Kant and Hegel, simply means that the subjective conditions for conceptual schemes are the necessary conditions of possibility for objective knowledge.
According to Pippin's non-metaphysical interpretation of Hegel, the Hegelian "Geist" is not a divine spiritual being, and accordingly Hegel's idealism is not a defense of monistic pantheism. According to Pippin, the Hegelian "Geist" should be understood as the totality of norms according to which we can justify our beliefs and actions. The important point is that we cannot justify anything except in such a normative logical space of reasons. So no kind of distinctively human rational cognition and action is articulatable or intelligible independently of such norms. In a phenomenological-hermeneutical jargon, these norms constitute a horizon, a perspective in which we can make anything intelligible to ourselves. Additionally, these norms are socio-historically articulated. Geist is the dynamic process of these norms and their transformations in human history. Hegel calls different articulations of these norms "shapes of spirit". It should be added that any shape of spirit could collapse under the pressure of internal or external forces which lead to a crisis for the authority of those norms. But because of the actual plurality of shapes of spirit any account of human agency which is socio-historical is in danger of getting into relativism. So Hegelian idealism is not a kind of return to pre-Kantian and pre-critical dogmatic metaphysics, but is trying to go beyond the Kantian critical project on the one hand, and historicist critiques of Kantian transcendental philosophy on the other.
These ideas could be attributed to many other philosophers, such as Herder, Heidegger, Gadamer, and MacIntyre. But according to the non-metaphysical interpretations of Hegel there is a distinctive feature of the Hegelian approach - mutual recognition as the condition of free, self-determined and so authentic rational agency - which can transcend the alleged dangers of socio-historical relativism or, on the other hand, returning to dogmatic metaphysics or trans-historical subjectivity.
Such a revisionist reading of Hegel has gained a following, inspiring important works by Terry Pinkard, Paul Redding, Diego Bubbio and others, as well as influencing less historically oriented philosophers of mind such as John McDowell and Robert Brandom. A similar movement to interpret Hegel as a "category-theorist" has been inspired in Germany by Klaus Hartmann.
In Pippin's 1991 Modernism as a Philosophical Problem: On the Dissatisfactions of European High Culture, he develops what he calls a socio-cultural corollary to his 1989 work. He enters the debate on the legitimacy of the modernist project and the possibility of post-modernity. Still claiming to be interpreting Hegel, Pippin tries to defend modern, prosaic bourgeois society. Nonetheless, he admits that, and attempts to explore why, the dominant high culture of that society has been one of what might be termed self-hatred: he ranges from Flaubert and later modernist avant-gardes to the intellectual trends of New Historicism and Derridean deconstructive thought. Generally speaking, Pippin's argument is that modernity is "never-ending", that it is an attempt to bring greater rational transparency to all of our social practices and that much of the self-hatred of modern high culture is motivated by attempts to bring such transparency to areas where it had previously not existed. This process may never be completed but once it is begun, it cannot be stopped.
Books
- Kant's Theory of Form: An Essay on the 'Critique of Pure Reason'.
- Marcuse: Critical Theory and The Promise of Utopia, eds. R. Pippin, A. Feenberg, C. Webel. MacMillan, Bergin and Garvey, 1988.
- Hegel's Idealism: The Satisfactions of Self-Consciousness,.
- Modernism as a Philosophical Problem: On the Dissatisfactions of European High Culture.
- Idealism as Modernism: Hegelian Variations.
- Henry James and Modern Moral Life.
- Hegel on Ethics and Politics, eds. Robert Pippin and Otfried Höffe, Translated by Nicholas Walker, Introduction by Robert Pippin.
- Die Verwirklichung der Freiheit, foreword by Axel Honneth and Hans Joas.
- The Persistence of Subjectivity: On the Kantian Aftermath.
- Nietzsche, moraliste français: La conception nietzschéenne d'une psychologie philosophique.
- "Introduction" to Thus Spoke Zarathustra, and edited with Adrian Del Caro.
- Hegel’s Practical Philosophy: Rational Agency as Ethical Life.
- Nietzsche, Psychology, and First Philosophy.
- Hollywood Westerns and American Myth: The Importance of Howard Hawks and John Ford for Political Philosophy.
- Hegel on Self-Consciousness: Desire and Death in the Phenomenology of Spirit.
- Fatalism in American Film Noir: Some Cinematic Philosophy.
- After the Beautiful: Hegel and the Philosophy of Pictorial Modernism.
- Interanimations: Receiving Modern German Philosophy.
- The Philosophical Hitchcock: "Vertigo" and the Anxieties of Unknowingness.
- Hegel's Realm of Shadows: Logic as Metaphysics in Hegel's Science of Logic.
- Filmed Thought: Cinema as Reflective Form.
- Metaphysical Exile: On J. M. Coetzee's Jesus Fictions.
- Philosophy by Other Means: The Arts in Philosophy and Philosophy in the Arts.
- Douglas Sirk: Filmmaker and Philosopher.
- The Culmination: Heidegger, German Idealism, and the Fate of Philosophy.