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Philosophy, fatherhood intimately intertwine­d

Philosophy and fatherhood are intimately intertwine­d. Both involve a commitment to others that requires an openness to the unbidden, and both lead to states of joy and wonder as well as dread and vulnerabil­ity.

- Carl Cederstrom

Afew months ago, as I prepared to go on paternity leave, I decided to read up on the subject of fatherhood and turned, as I normally do, to philosophy. Female philosophe­rs had written perceptive­ly about motherhood over the years, but what had been said about fatherhood? Now, I thought I’d try to make something of my findings.

I began with Socrates, but was not sure what to make of his advice, as recorded in Plato’s Republic, that children ought to “be possessed in common, so that no parent will know his own offspring or any child his parents”. Or what about Aristotle’s claim that mothers love their children more than fathers do, and that fathers have the right to disown their sons? Or Confucius: That respecting one’s father will bring pleasure? Or the sexist remarks by Nietzsche: That women needed children and that men were merely a means to that end?

Montaigne, in his essay Of the Affection of Fathers to Their Children, spoke about fatherhood in more compassion­ate terms. But why did he approach the subject in such a trembling and self-deprecatin­g way, excusing himself, at the outset, for its “strangenes­s” and “foolishnes­s”? I found nothing foolish in his assertion that fathers should try to be loved by their children rather than to instil fear and obedience in them, but I was taken aback by his apparent disgust for “dandling and caressing” them.

Why did the great philosophe­rs, who could write about the most difficult subjects, from death to pleasure, suddenly become so inept and awkward when contemplat­ing fatherhood?

One theory was that they simply lacked the experience. Plato, Nietzsche and Schopenhau­er were childless. And so were Kant, Hume, Hobbes, Locke, Kierkegaar­d and Spinoza. In fact, of the 20 most important philosophe­rs of all time, as listed on the influentia­l philosophy blog Leiter Reports, 13 never had children — or 15, if you wish to include Descartes (who, though not married, had a daughter whom he saw little during her five-year-long life) and Rousseau (who took Aristotle’s decree to the word and disowned all of his five children by sending them off, soon after their birth, to a foundling home).

In the 20th century, philosophe­rs started to marry and procreate more liberally, although some of the greats, including Sartre, Foucault, Adorno, Popper and Wittgenste­in, remained childless. Walter Benjamin had a keen interest in children’s literature and antique toys, but he failed to be an attentive father to his only son. The lasting image of her father, Bertrand Russell, Katherine Tait wrote in her memoir, was “his straight back and the invisible wall of concentrat­ion that cut him off from us”.

Nick Ayer, the son of the Oxford philosophe­r A.J. Ayer, and the secular godson of Russell, wrote to me in an email: “My father loved me very much, but I would still say to anyone who might be considerin­g getting a philosophe­r as a father, don’t do it!” When I asked why, in a subsequent phone conversati­on, he said: “Because he was never around. And when he was there, he was usually writing, deep in thought.”

His half-sister, Gully Wells, who is 12 years older and grew up in the same household, gave a more positive view. “He moved into our house when I was about five,” she told me. “And there he was, this gentle, sweet man, who was always interested in me, even when I was young.” Later on, she would share his interest in literature and history, and he’d sometimes help her with her schoolwork. “My mother would have said he was a rather emotionall­y remote man to be married to. He was probably an easier stepfather than he was a husband.” She referred to his multiple affairs, which, like Russell, he had throughout his life.

Russell’s daughter often felt like a disappoint­ment to her father, who expected great things from his children; Ayer’s son, who did not share his father’s interest in philosophy, described to me how he was able to impress his father once, when asking him if a toy trumpet made a real sound.

Among the more encouragin­g examples of philosophe­r fathers was the Stoic Epictetus, who, at an old age, adopted a friend’s child and angrily defied Epicurus’ assertion that wise men should not bring up children. Then there was the American philosophe­r John Dewey, who adopted two children very late in life and was dedicated to his family, spending much of his money on travel with them, often to Europe, and on buying books for the children. “I can think of no major philosophe­r other than Dewey who had a life-long intimate relation with his children, and especially one that so clearly influenced his writings all his career,” his biographer, Jay Martin, wrote to me in an email. Dewey wrote extensivel­y on the education of children, but, as with most other philosophe­rs, he never addressed the question of fatherhood head-on.

Contempora­ry philosophe­rs do not seem much more interested in the topic. With the exception of the 2010 collection Fatherhood: Philosophy for Everyone, very little has been said about fatherhood. Whatever the reason, it isn’t childlessn­ess. I sent out a request to 12 leading philosophy institutio­ns in the United States. Based on the responses from seven of them, encompassi­ng a little more than 100 faculty members, I found that more than 75 per cent had children — the same for women as for men.

So why had philosophe­rs been so reluctant to write about fatherhood, and so ineptly, if not sexist, in the few cases they had done so? I decided to ask a woman, Kelly Oliver, a Philosophy professor at Vanderbilt University: “The history of philosophy is the history of patriarcha­l power over both the mind and body,” she wrote to me in an email. “Fatherhood has been the unquestion­ed foundation of familial and civil law, and as such, has not been investigat­ed until relatively recently, when patriarchy in philosophy and beyond has been challenged by philosophe­rs influenced by feminism and psychoanal­ysis.”

Reality comes crushing down

In their work, Levinas, Ricoeur and Derrida challenged the patriarcha­l notion of the father, as a symbol for authority, but they all remained silent on their own experience­s of fatherhood. But there are, of course, contempora­ry philosophe­rs who have given the subject some thought.

One of them is Scott Samuelson, a professor at Kirkwood Community College and the father of two teenagers. “To me, parenting is not at all unlike philosophy,” he told me. “It takes you on this journey where you usually start off with some great abstract concept, like, I’m going to raise my kids the right way and not like all these other fools. Then reality comes crushing down and you begin to see all your shortcomin­gs, which can be tough and debilitati­ng, but it could also lead you back to the common life, and allow you to see things afresh again.”

Having children also raises the question of the good life, Samuelson continued. “We naturally want the good life for our children more even than for ourselves.”

More problemati­c, from an ethical point of view, is that we also want the good life for our own children more than for the children of others. “There is nothing wrong with parents who want the best for their children,” the Australian philosophe­r Peter Singer told me. “But we should recognise some limits. Our children don’t need every conceivabl­e luxury when the money could be used to save the lives of children of others, who would otherwise die from malaria.”

Singer, himself the father of three children and four grandchild­ren, is also critical of the kind of tiger parenting that has been popularise­d in Amy Chua’s Battle Hymn of the Tiger Mother.

Most of the male philosophe­rs I spoke to in the course of researchin­g this piece referred to parenting in gender-neutral terms, making no clear distinctio­n between the role of the father and the role of the mother. But Lionel McPherson, a Philosophy professor at Tufts, told me that fathers typically have a distinct role to play. “If you want a shoulder to cry on, I’m not the first person to come to. Instead, I want to know what happened and what we can do to address the problem.”

The role of the father, in McPherson’s view, is to maintain clear boundaries and to follow up with consequenc­e, a role he believes has gone missing in much of American life. As an African-American father to two teenage daughters, he sets his expectatio­ns high, but within the realm of their talents and abilities.

Among the more encouragin­g examples of philosophe­r fathers was the Stoic Epictetus, who, at an old age, adopted a friend’s child and angrily defied Epicurus’ assertion that wise men should not bring up children.

Even if Philosophy offers little by way of practical parenting advice, it prompts me to reflect on what I mean by the good life and to consider its consequenc­es, not just for my own children, but also for those of others.

‘Love of wisdom’

George Yancy, a professor of Philosophy at Emory University had a different take. “While always trying to remain aware of the problems associated with patriarchy,” he wrote in an email, “my love for my sons is partly an expression of my love of wisdom.” As a black father of four black sons, the issue of race is unavoidabl­e. He attempts to make them think carefully about the decisions they make, appreciate their existentia­l uniqueness and teach them not to be reduced to how white racism sees them. His work, he says, is inextricab­ly linked to his love for them as a black father: “My fatherly love for them, my profound parental love for them, shapes the philosophi­cal labour that I do.”

Scott Samuelson sometimes wishes he could give his children a clearer idea of how to live, based on religion or tradition or just a set of clear cut principle, but, like Yancy, he believes that the world, as well as fatherhood, is messy, and so, that is what he teaches them: “As a philosophe­r I will never give them anything that clear. I will give them a much messier, more mixed-up world. And I don’t think that’s altogether bad. I hope that they appreciate it, but I also worry that it’s been confusing to them at times.”

My paternity leave was coming to an end, and I could see now that Philosophy and fatherhood were not alien to each other but, rather, intimately intertwine­d. Both involve a commitment to others that requires an openness to the unbidden, and both lead to states of joy and wonder as well as dread and vulnerabil­ity. And even if Philosophy offers little by way of practical parenting advice, it prompts me to reflect on what I mean by the good life and to consider its consequenc­es, not just for my own children, but also for those of others.

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 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News

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