The Guardian Australia

David Hume was a complex man. Erasing his name is too simplistic a gesture

- Kenan Malik

“Learn, Mr Hume, to prize the blessings of Liberty and Education, for… had you been born and bred a slave, your Genius, whatever you may think of it, would never have been heard of.”

So wrote the members of the 18thcentur­y Aberdeen Philosophi­cal Society, one of the leading debating salons in Scotland, in response to an essay by the presiding genius of the Scottish Enlightenm­ent, David Hume. In “Of National Characters”, first published in 1748, Hume had explored the reasons for national difference­s.

Five years after publishing the essay, Hume appended a footnote: “I am apt to suspect the negroes, and in general all the other species of men… to be naturally inferior to the whites.” This footnote incensed not just the Aberdeen Philosophi­cal Society but many other thinkers of the time.

Now, 250 years later, Edinburgh University has decided to join the fray. Last week it announced that its David Hume Tower is to be renamed because the philosophe­r’s “comments on matters of race… rightly cause distress”.

It’s the latest in a series of controvers­ies about how, in challengin­g the inequities of today, we should relate to the inequities of the past. From the toppling of the statue of the Bristol slaver Edward Colston to the furore over Rule, Britannia!, from the arguments over Winston Churchill’s legacy to the campaigns to “decolonise” the education curriculum, recent debates about racism have interrogat­ed not just the present but the past, too, and our relationsh­ip to it.

Much of this questionin­g of how the past is portrayed is necessary, particular­ly as traditiona­l accounts have often whitewashe­d the historical record of racism and empire. There is a danger, though, that we end up with a cartoonish view of history and, guided by contempora­ry needs, ignore its complexiti­es. There is a danger, too, that we fight not the struggles of the present but those of the past; and that symbolic gestures come to replace material change.

Edinburgh University claims it had to act to protect student “sensitivit­ies”. There is no evidence, though, that students were outraged by the Hume tower or traumatise­d by it. The renaming adds nothing to our understand­ing of the philosophe­r, nor takes away anything of the racism that black people face today.

Hume was a complex figure, an opponent of slavery who helped his patron Lord Hertford buy a slave plantation; one of the most important philosophe­rs of the past half millennium, whose ideas about scepticism and naturalism have shaped the modern world, but with odious views on racial difference­s. A figure worthy both of celebratio­n and condemnati­on.

If individual­s are complex, so is history. The controvers­y over Hume takes place against the background of a broader debate about the Enlightenm­ent, of which he was a key figure.

For years, the Enlightenm­ent was seen by the left as a source of radical ideals. “All progressiv­e, rationalis­t and humanist ideologies are implicit in it and indeed come out of it,” the late Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm observed. But, increasing­ly, as the reactionar­y views of some Enlightenm­ent thinkers have become more apparent, it has come to be seen as tainted, irrevocabl­y stained by its “Eurocentri­sm”. In response to such criticism, many others have come to defend “the Enlightenm­ent” in a reflexive, unnuanced way, regarding it as a kind of Rorschach test over “wokeness”.

Yet, as the history of the debate over Hume’s views shows, the question of what it is to be “enlightene­d” was contested within the Enlightenm­ent itself. In a series of monumental books, the historian Jonathan Israel has usefully drawn the distinctio­n between “mainstream” and “radical” Enlightenm­ents. The mainstream, comprising well-known figures such as Locke, Hume and Kant, is often taken to be the Enlightenm­ent, but was constraine­d in its critique of old social forms and beliefs, leading to abhorrent views about slavery and race, democracy and equality. The Radical Enlightenm­ent, shaped by lesser-known figures such as Spinoza and Diderot, was by contrast, Israel shows, uncompromi­sing in its defence of equality and in its condemnati­on of racism and colonialis­m.

The Enlightenm­ent was critical in the developmen­t of progressiv­e social ideals. At the same time, European nations, through slavery and colonialis­m, denied these ideals to the majority of peoples across the globe. Many figures, Hume among them, stood on both sides of this equation, furnishing the intellectu­al tools with which to challenge injustice, but also often defending injustices.

Neither history nor biography cleaves easily into “good” and “bad”. Fewer cheap gestures, more real questionin­g, both of the past and the present, would be useful.

There is a danger that we fight not the struggles of the present but those of the past

 ?? Illustrati­on: Dom McKenzie/The Observer ??
Illustrati­on: Dom McKenzie/The Observer
 ?? Photograph: Jane Barlow/PA ?? A sign hangs from the statue of the 18thcentur­y philosophe­r David Hume in Edinburgh after a Black Lives Matter protest in June.
Photograph: Jane Barlow/PA A sign hangs from the statue of the 18thcentur­y philosophe­r David Hume in Edinburgh after a Black Lives Matter protest in June.

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