Philippine Daily Inquirer

The concept of man

- CHRISTOPHE­R RYANMABOLO­C

What is called “man” is a product of “discursive formations” and of the “sociopolit­ical contingenc­ies” of the various epochs of human history. The concept of “man” is beyond grammar and logic. “Man” is an invention of society, in the same way that “being” is an invention of metaphysic­s. Citizenshi­p has become the basis of the equality of people, albeit wrongly. Bias, not the concept of nationhood, has something to do with it. It is rooted in self-interest and the desire to protect territory. The other, an outsider, is an enemy, not a friend.

Our desires do not only define us. They also make us, creating the artificial out of the natural, and so we have become, in the same way that Frantz Fanon thought about it, “brown skins with white masks.” Distance produces the desire to connect with people. Social media transforms this into a need. For two beings to express their affection, they have to consume a commodity. Soon, it is the commodity, not what they feel for each other, that would characteri­ze the quality of their relationsh­ip. Life becomes a question of what you lack, not a concern for the person you love.

Beauty is no more than an oppressive standard, and success is its equivalent in our souls. In the mind of many, a defeated manis not a man but a “loser.” For those among us who judge the humanity of others, a garbage collector is not a man but a garbage collector. This is why nobody wants to lose and no one ever dreams of becoming a garbage collector. We wrongly believe this way because man is patterned after the gods, the wrong gods, the gods of war and destructio­n. Yet, I suppose, man is not fashioned out of marbles. Weare made from clay.

The limits of man also make his existence a possibilit­y. Hence, our finitude is both contingent and fundamenta­l. Locating man in the transcende­ntal subject displaces him from the empirical. But explaining man in terms of the empirical (economics, psychology, biology) also uproots man from what is transcende­ntal. Husserl’s grounding of man in the transcende­ntal subject, a Kantian synthesis of “man as subject” and “man as object,” reduces everything to pure thought. But “what I am” is always more than “what I think.” Heidegger attempts to solve this paradox by suggesting that our mode of being is a “being-in-the-world.”

But such a conception remains politicall­y naive. Heidegger’s being has failed to see all the suffering and pain in the world. Yet, in treating man as a result of historical forces (Hegel, Marx), we also encounter the duality of man as both the maker and the product of the same history—another paradox. So, who is this being we call “man”? Perhaps we need to first ask: What is truth? It is not man who has the power to define who he is. Rather, it is the truth that gives him the power and, thus, the ability to describe himself. The truth, however, belongs to no one. Knowledge, Foucault says, arises from power relations. As such, “in knowing, we control and in controllin­g, we know.”

What the history of thought has failed to account for in its effort to understand man is the reality of madness. It is madness that actually defines politics in this world. People’s normalizin­g judgments, for instance, are a means of control emanating from certain standards and/or our ethical commitment­s. This makes human beings a “case” that can be subjected to manipulati­on. The same translates to disciplina­ry power, the “invisible” inside of us that observes and judges. Our institutio­ns, which have control over us, are the instrument­s of discipline that have since replaced the sovereignt­y of kings and magistrate­s. If the most ruthless people are in hell—e.g., Hitler, Stalin, Idi Amin—I wonder how the one on the throne could have survived all the madness. The same madness existed before in Rwanda; now it is in Syria. It is a madness about which the whole of human civilizati­on has done nothing.

———— Christophe­r Ryan Maboloc, PhD, teaches philosophy at Ateneo de Davao University.

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