Damon Horowitz: Philosophy in prison

166,177 views ・ 2011-11-28

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00:15
Meet Tony. He's my student.
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00:17
He's about my age,
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00:19
and he's in San Quentin State Prison.
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00:22
When Tony was 16 years old,
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00:25
one day, one moment,
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00:28
"It was mom's gun.
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00:30
Just flash it, scare the guy. He's a punk.
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00:32
He took some money; we'll take his money. That'll teach him.
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00:34
Then last minute, I'm thinking, 'Can't do this. This is wrong.'
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00:37
My buddy says, 'C'mon, let's do this.'
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00:39
I say, 'Let's do this.'"
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00:44
And those three words, Tony's going to remember,
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00:46
because the next thing he knows, he hears the pop.
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00:48
There's the punk on the ground, puddle of blood.
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00:50
And that's felony murder --
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00:52
25 to life, parole at 50 if you're lucky,
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00:54
and Tony's not feeling very lucky.
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00:57
So when we meet in my philosophy class in his prison
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01:00
and I say, "In this class, we will discuss the foundations of ethics,"
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01:04
Tony interrupts me.
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01:06
"What are you going to teach me about right and wrong?
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01:08
I know what is wrong. I have done wrong.
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01:11
I am told every day,
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01:13
by every face I see, every wall I face, that I am wrong.
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01:16
If I ever get out of here, there will always be a mark by my name.
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01:19
I'm a convict; I am branded 'wrong.'
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01:21
What are you going to tell me about right and wrong?"
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01:24
So I say to Tony,
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01:27
"Sorry, but it's worse than you think.
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01:30
You think you know right and wrong?
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01:32
Then can you tell me what wrong is?
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01:34
No, don't just give me an example.
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01:36
I want to know about wrongness itself, the idea of wrong.
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01:39
What is that idea?
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01:41
What makes something wrong?
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01:43
How do we know that it's wrong? Maybe you and I disagree.
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01:46
Maybe one of us is wrong about the wrong.
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01:48
Maybe it's you, maybe it's me -- but we're not here to trade opinions;
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01:50
everyone's got an opinion.
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01:52
We are here for knowledge.
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01:54
Our enemy is thoughtlessness. This is philosophy."
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01:58
And something changes for Tony.
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02:03
"Could be I'm wrong. I'm tired of being wrong.
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02:06
I want to know what is wrong.
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02:08
I want to know what I know."
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02:10
What Tony sees in that moment is the project of philosophy,
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02:13
the project that begins in wonder --
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02:15
what Kant called "admiration and awe
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02:17
at the starry sky above and the moral law within."
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02:20
What can creatures like us know of such things?
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02:22
It is the project that always takes us back to the condition of existence --
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02:25
what Heidegger called "the always already there."
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02:28
It is the project of questioning what we believe and why we believe it --
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02:31
what Socrates called "the examined life."
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02:33
Socrates, a man wise enough to know that he knows nothing.
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02:36
Socrates died in prison,
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02:39
his philosophy intact.
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02:42
So Tony starts doing his homework.
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02:44
He learns his whys and wherefores, his causes and correlations,
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02:46
his logic, his fallacies.
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02:48
Turns out, Tony's got the philosophy muscle.
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02:50
His body is in prison, but his mind is free.
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02:52
Tony learns about the ontologically promiscuous,
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02:54
the epistemologically anxious,
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02:56
the ethically dubious, the metaphysically ridiculous.
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02:59
That's Plato, Descartes, Nietzsche
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03:01
and Bill Clinton.
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03:03
So when he gives me his final paper,
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03:06
in which he argues that the categorical imperative
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03:08
is perhaps too uncompromising
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03:10
to deal with the conflict that affects our everyday
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03:12
and challenges me to tell him
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03:14
whether therefore we are condemned to moral failure,
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03:16
I say, "I don't know.
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03:18
Let us think about that."
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03:20
Because in that moment, there's no mark by Tony's name;
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03:22
it's just the two of us standing there.
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03:24
It is not professor and convict,
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03:26
it is just two minds ready to do philosophy.
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03:28
And I say to Tony,
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03:30
"Let's do this."
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03:33
Thank you.
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03:35
(Applause)
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