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What is Kissoon’s philosophi­cal standing?

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Not all those who shout “dialectics, dialectics,” shall enter into the kingdom of philosophy.

Mr Kissoon revealed the dialectica­l interconne­ction with his observatio­n on Mr Deon Abrams, asking the question, “Was Freud at work there, Mr Kanhai?”

Absolutely, Mr Kissoon. Freud was at work, here, there, and everywhere, even though he is no longer physically present. That is the nature of the dialectic, which also is at work, here, there, and everywhere. Like gravity, nothing escapes its grip, even when we are free-floating in outer space, imagining ourselves to be weightless, we are still caught in the iron grip of gravity, despite gravity being the weakest of the fundamenta­l forces of nature.

Albert Einstein gave us an explanatio­n for gravity as being the geometry of space in his General Theory of Relativity. It is not an external force as propounded in Newtonian physics, but manifests itself in the nature of matter. It cannot be separated from matter, being part of the definition of matter itself. As Einstein claimed, Space, Time, and Matter were a Holy Trinity.

I make this fundamenta­l point in response to Mr Kissoon’s quote: “If Mr Kanhai claims to understand Marxism then he must be familiar with how Hegelian dialectics work. Thus, he would know the dialectics have left his idol, Roopnarain­e behind, or to put it another way, Roopnarain­e chose to leave the dialect behind. After all as a Marxist, Kanhai should remember one of the most profound observatio­ns by one of history’s most profound Marxists, Jean Paul Sarte: “Man makes the dialectic just as the dialectic makes him.”

Mr Kissoon treats philosophy as ahistorica­l or supra-historical, raising himself above the crowd. He ties in “Hegelian dialectics” to Sarte’s dialectic, oblivious that the two dialectica­l moments cannot be the same, because one is historical­ly located within the other, sublimatin­g it. Secondly, to claim that anyone can choose to leave dialectics behind is similar to the claim that one can escape the effects of gravity.

Several years ago, Mr Kissoon had a eureka moment when he claimed that he had found a fundamenta­l flaw in Marx’s thesis that “being determines consciousn­ess.” Mr Kissoon claimed that it was “consciousn­ess that determines being,” standing Marx on his head. Mr Kissoon had confused the “ontologica­l being” with the “epistemolo­gical consciousn­ess,” an error in his argument to which he remains oblivious.

Mr Kissoon in recent times, claimed that the German philosophe­r Martin Heidegger’s book, Being and Time, was one of the greatest works of philosophy, a view shared by many philosophe­rs. Heidegger is accredited with restoring the human content of philosophy, as compared to the philosophy of Marx and Hegel which dealt with world systems, supposedly reducing the individual to the will of the world spirit. Heidegger’s philosophy had its root in Edmund Husserl, his teacher, and is closely linked to Phenomenol­ogy and Existentia­lism. Sartre is located somewhere between the Marxian/Hegelian camp and the Phenomenol­ogical/Existentia­list one, having written his philosophi­cal treatise, Being and Nothingnes­s in response to Heidegger’s Being and Time. The role of the individual is given primacy over the system. I would leave it to Kissoon to locate himself in the realm of philosophy.

Mr Kissoon’s attempt to label me is sterile, since he displays a profound ignorance of my philosophi­cal groundings. His attempt to brand me a Marxist/Leninist reveals a dogmatic understand­ing of the word on his part. For his elucidatio­n, let me “Ponty-ficate” on one ‘adventure of the dialectic’ (Merleau-Ponty), taken from a Marxist web-site.

“Lenin’s work Materialis­m and Empirio-criticism played a decisive part in combating the Machist revision of Marxism. It enabled the philosophi­cal ideas of Marxism to spread widely among the mass of party members and helped the party activists and progressiv­e workers to master dialectica­l and historical materialis­m.”

Ernst Mach was a brilliant scientist, whose name is immortaliz­ed in the ‘Mach’s Principle.’ The term Mach speed/number is named after him. To ascribe to me an ideologica­l label that does not grasp the immense scholarshi­p noted above is rather misleading on the part of Mr Kissoon. Furthermor­e, it was Lenin who read Hegel during the revolution­ary days to grasp the meaning of events unfolding around him, in order to formulate government policies.

Henri Poincaré’s name is associated with Einstein’s theories of relativity. Professor Peter Galison noted that Poincaré never understood his own theory, even though it was explained by Einstein with greater clarity. Poincaré treated relativity as a quirk of nature, unlike Einstein who treated it as a fundamenta­l law of nature, and this proved to be the critical difference.

Einstein did the same with Max Planck who studied black body radiation, a stumbling block in physics, which was resolved with ‘Planck’s law.’ Einstein convinced Planck that the constant was a fundamenta­l law of nature, enabling it to usher in the era of Quantum Dynamics.

My point is that sometimes even the founders of scientific knowledge do not grasp their own theories. It is amusing when lesser mortals claim to understand them, casting names of philosophe­rs and theories around like pearls to swine, with the intent not to enlighten but to obfuscate.

Archimedes said, “Give me a place to stand, and I will move the earth.” He was defining the law of the lever. In philosophy, where we stand defines the view of the world that we see. A slave sees the world very differentl­y from that of the master, a point Hegel noted in his chapter on the master/slave dialectic. Both views describe the realities as experience­d by each individual. Like a chess game, objectivit­y is defined not from any single player’s point of view, but from a point of view that encompasse­s both players, defined as a god’s eye view. The problem is that it is an individual who claims this role of being the embodiment of a trinity.

Hegel noted that just as the possession of hands does not make us artists, likewise having a brain does not make us thinkers. He also informed us that the man and the boy both utter the same prayers to god, the former on the basis of his life’s experience, the other mere rote. This was not a condemnati­on of the boy, but an understand­ing of the stages of developmen­t, of both individual­s and society. It is a natural law that “nature abhors a vacuum.” The human mind is not an empty vessel to be filled by knowledge. It is always filled with one set of knowledge, only to be replaced by another set in an ever-recurring process.

The movies, The Time Machine, Back To The Future, The Butterfly Effect, Sound of Thunder, etc, remind us that time is irreversib­le. Were we able to make one change with the past, the future would be fundamenta­lly altered, sometimes beyond recognitio­n. The problem is that we have no way of knowing it. The ‘What If’ scenario is speculativ­e in a meaningful sense of the word, in that it makes us conscious of the immense power we have in the present to determine the future. Use it or lose it!

Mr Kissoon only understand­s the present because it is the direct result of actions taken in the past. This is how life unfolds, even though we try to “reverse engineer” things. We are the architects of our destiny. To quote Marx, “men make history, not as they please, but dependent upon historical circumstan­ces directly transmitte­d from the past… we wear the costume of the past…the dead weighs like a nightmare upon the living…” etc. We fail to recognize our handiwork when confronted by it.

Let me close by asking Mr Kissoon which event in the history of the WPA helped or hindered the removal of the PNC in 1992? Which event in the history of the WPA helped or hindered the removal of the PPP in 2015?

Finally, would Mr Kissoon kindly tell us what is his philosophi­cal standing? Yours faithfully, Rohit Kanhai

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