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The Ignorant Schoolmaster Five Lesson~ in Intellectu~l E mdncz@tion T~lilnsluted wzth '272 $rzta.od~~cdion, iia; Knisrin Ross Stanford Uiiiversity Press Stanford, California a
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Page 1: Ranciere the Ignorant Schoolmaster

The Ignorant Schoolmaster Five Lesson~ in Intellectu~l E mdncz@tion

T~lilnsluted wzth '272 $rzta.od~~cdion, iia; Knisrin Ross

Stanford Uiiiversity Press Stanford, California a

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4 The Society of Conternpr 7 5

The Law of Gravity, 76. Inequality's Passion, 80, Rhetorical Madness, 83. The Superior Inferiors, 86. The Phiiosopher-King and the Sovereign People, 89. How to Rave Reasonably, 9r. The Speech an the Aventine, 96.

5 The Emancipator and His Monkey L 0 1

Emancipdtory Method and Social Method, r 02. Ernan- cipation of Men an$ Instructian of the People, 106.

Men of Progress, rog. Of Sheep and Men, r r 3. The Progressives" Circle, i 17 . On the Heads of rhe Peopte, I 2 2 . The Triumph of the C9ld Master, I 27. Society Pedagogicized, x 30. The Panecastic's Stories, r 3 5 Emancipation's Tornb, I 38.

Ta:anslart6ax9s I neruduct don

In The Igtzovaat Schoalnz~is~.er Jacques Ranciere re- Counts the story of Joseyll Jacotot, a schoolteacher driven intn exile duririg the Kestoratlon who atlowcd that experience to fer- ment into a rnethod for showing illicerate parents how they themselves could teach cheir rhildren how t.o read. That f aco- rot's story might have somcthing ro do with the post-I 968 de- bates about education ir i France was not irnrnediately apparent EO most of ehe book's readers when i t appeared in t987. Ilow could the experiences of a man who had lived all the great peda- gogical adventures of the French Revolution, arhose own uto- pian teaching rnethods knew a brief-if worldwide and per- fectly serious-flurry of atcention before passing rapidly inro the oblivion Rancikre's book rescues them from-how coufd these experiences "communicate" wir11 ndrninistrators face CO

facc with the problerns of educating immigrant North African children in Paris, or with intellectuals intent on mapping the Frenchi schooi, system's conriniied reproductiun of socia! ine- qualicies? Ranciere's book explairied nothing about the failures OE the school systern;" it entered directly into none of the con-

'French jnurnalism of the :g%2'r spoke frequently shout "I'Cchec de l'ficnle"; this f8iliire was usually ccttihed by cornpnring the percenrage of Frcnch srudcnts whn atrain rhe lirrrr<t/arirPnl ( 3 0 prrcent in isY5) with thc perccncagc of high schooi gradustrs in Japln (75 percent) end rhe United Stares (87.6 p e ~ c n t ) . Given thc sdvnnccd nature cf thc French bdr-it includer something like a*o ycars n l what Arnericans viev n i rotlege-level work-thcse statistirs pcrlia~:s

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temporary polemical debates. tts poiemics, dramatically re- counted in the secund half of the book, were rather those of the era of the ignorant schoolmaster, Joseph Jacotot: the eEects of Jacotot's unusual rnethod; its fate at the hands of the reformers and pedagogical institutions it undermined; its effacernent by rhe educationaf poiicies pur into effect, under the auspices of Franqois Guizoc and Vicror Cousin, by rhejuly Monarchy dur- inp the r 830's. The names of the most listcned-ro tt~eorerical voices on post-'68 education-those of Pierre Boürdieu and Jean-Ctaude Milner-are not mnrioned by Ranciire. Yet the book's. subject was obviously educacion. Kej%A@rds fike "Bes- sons" and "intellectual," "ignorant" and "schoblm$~ter" ap- peared, if in a somewhat paradoxical arrangcrnent, i$ its title. And education was again, in the rg80is, under srrutiny in France.

Readers in Prance had difficulty situacing the book, as they have had dificulty, generaily speaking, kceping up with the maverick inteIlectual itinerary of its author. JFor although in 1965, Ranciere published Lire le capitui with hic ceacher Louis Althusser, lie was better known for his celebrated leftist csitique of his coauthor, La Eepn d'Altkxssw (1g74), an4 for the journal he founded the Same year, Rbobes irgiyaes. Trained as a phiios- upher, a professor of philosophy ar the University of Paris, but irnmersed rather unfashionably since 1974 in easly-nineteenth- century workers' archives, Rancihe wrote books that eiudect classification--bds rkiat gave voice to the wild journals of ar- tisans, to the daydreams of anonymous thinkers, to worker- poets and philosophers who devised emancipatory Systems alone, in ehe semi-unreal spaceitime of ehe scattered iate-night moments rheir work schedules allowed them. ' Were these books primarily history? Thc philosophy of history? The history of phiiosophy? Some readers took 1.e Mndtw ignorant to be a frag- ment of anecdotal history, a curiosiey piece, an archivaf oddity.

indicate tiw eelitr nature of French schooling. 11s system of professional ind vocational "rrxrk- ing." Frnm nearly a quarret to a third of aorking-claa and rural students fail the preparatory Course fcrr rhc b#r, %linst under 3 percent for thosc fr«rn prt>fesslnnal Famtlies.

Educators read it-sorne quice anxiously, given Jacotot's aflir- mation thae anynne can learn alone-in the imperative, as a contemporary prescriptive, a kind of suicidal pedagogical how- ao. A few reviewers read i t on the level ac which i t might, H think, mose jmmpdiately address an Americatt or Bririsfi read- ership oniy beginning to come to terms with the Iegacics of a decade of Keaganisrn and Thatcherism: as an essny, or perhaps a fable oa parable, that enacts an extraordinary pfiilosophical meditatisn on equality.

Bouidieu and the Nem~ S~ciology

The singular history of each national collectivity pIays a con- siderabte role in thc probiems of education. Though thti Engfish translarion appearc in very different conditions," i t may bc use- ful to begin by discussing rhe book's French context, a context still profoundly marlced by the turbulencc of the student up- risings of May '48 and by the confusions and disappoinrments, the reversals and desertions, of the decade that followcd: rhe a13 but total collapse of the Parisian intelligentsia nf the Left, the "end c>f politics" amid the triumph of sociology.

For it was perhaps as a reacaion to the unexpectedness of tile May uprisings ehae the 1970's favored the eiaboration of a num- ber of social seismologies atid above all energized sociologicaf teflecrion itseIP: ehe criticism oF institutions and superstruc- eures, of the multiform power of domjnation. In the wakc of the patitical failure of '58, che social sciences awoke to the study of power: ro the New Philosophcrs' self-prctmotional media rakeover, to Michel Foucaulr, buc most imporcantiy, perhaps, to rht sociology of Pierre Bourdieu-the enormous influcnce of whose work would, given the timet lag and ideology of trans- lation, begin in earncst in the English-speaking wodd only in the early rg8o's. No less chan the New Philosophers, Bourdieti

'In rhc Unirrd States today. fur cxarnplr, argumentr about equaliry invariably tilrn nn rhc cubject of tace-not surprisingty in ehe nrtiy majoi industrtal narion bi~itr on a Lrgacy of <Jo- rncsric slaucry.

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could be said to have profited from both the success and the faif- ure of the May movement, rhe first granting his work the energy and posture of critique, the second reinforcing in it the graui- tational pul1 06 scructure.

If Bourdieu's work kiad little serious impact on rnethodolog- ical debates arnong professional sociologists, its effect on his- corians, anthropologists, professors of French, educational re- formers, art histarians, ghetco high schooi teacheas, and pop- ular journalists was widespread. Hn the introduction CO

L'Enzpire dtl snczalogue (1984)~ a collection of essays edired by Ranciere and che Rkvolfes logiq~tes coltective, the authors attrfb- ute the extraordinary success of Bourdieu's tl-iernes oF reyro- duction and Jistinction-.the phenornenon of their being, so to speak, in everyone's head-to tbe simple fact that they aiorked, which is to say that they offered the most thorough philosophy of thc social, the one [hat best explained to the most people the theoretical and political signification of the last twenty years of their lives. Bourdieu Iiad produced, in other words, a discourse enrirely in lteeping with his time, a time that corn- bined, in the words of the editors, "the orphaned fervor of de- nouncing the system with the disenchanted certirude of its per- petuityVM2

Before May 1968, steeped in ehe theorerical and political at- nosphere of the Althusserian battle for revolutioriary science against ideology, Bourdieu andJean-liaude Passcron published Les Hirztisrs ( 1964)~ an analysis of the University thae helped fuel the denunciatiori of the insritution by showing it to be en- tirely absvrbed in the reprduction oß unequal social structiires. The posr-May dissipacion of hopes for social change, however. served onty EO amplify the influencc of ehat work,,and partic- ularly of its theoretical sequets, Ld Re,b~odttctinv (1970) and La Distincrian (1979).j Bourdieu's structuralist rigor with a Marx- ist accent permitted an exiiaustive interpretivc analysis uf class ciivision and irs inscriptinn-minutely cacalogucd i i i the tiniest details of posture or daily behavior-an analysis that could carry on an existence entirely divorced frorn the practical hy-

pothescs of Marxism or the na'fveres of hope for social transfor- mation. I t al tonred, Rkjoites iogiqlrar argued, "tlie denunciation of' borh the mechanisrns of domirtation and ihe iilusions of lib- erarion.""

Ranciere, in his own critical contribucion to the volurne, at- tacked Bourdieu and ehe new socio1ogy as the latest and most influential form of a discourse deriving its authority from the presumed nalvetk or ignorance of its objects of srudy: in tlie realm of educarion, rhe milirant instructors in Lia Repuodrrt-rioa who need the iegitirnacy nf the system's atithority to denounce ihe arbitrariness of that lcgitimacy; an$ the working-clasc stu- dents excluded frorn the bourgeois System of lavors and privi- leges. whn r40 not (and cannot) understand rheir exclusion. By tracing the Passage frorn Lei N&itiers to La Reprodzicfion, Ran- ciere uncovered a logic whereby the social critic gains by show- ing democracy iosing. Xt was, far exampte, afi too obvious, he wrote, co say thet working-class yoiith are aIrnosr entirely ex- cluded from the university System, and that their cultural in- ßeriority is a resuit. OE rheir econarnic inferiority. The sociotogisr attained the level of "science" hy prnviding a tautology whose systemic workings, veiled to the agencs rrapped within its grip, were evident ro him aione. The perfect circle, accordirlg so Ran- ciere, was made "via two proposicions":

I . XVorking-cLass youth nre cxciuded from the Lrniversity berairse they are uriaware of the true reasons 6i,r which they are excludrd iLes H ~ Y ? F / ~ ~ Y ) .

2. Their ignorance of rhe true reasons for which ehey are excludcd is a striicturai effect produced by the vcry existence of tRe system that exc ludes them (tß. Rep~od~tction). '

The "Bourdieu effect" could be surnmed up in this perfect circle: "they are excluded because they don't Icnow why they are excluded; and they don't know why they are excluded because they are excluded."Qr better:

1 . The system rcproduces iss exisrence because i t goes unrecog- nized.

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xi i Trunsluror's En/vodz~crion

2 . The system brings about, rhroitgh rhe reproductiori uf ics ex- istence, an effect «f misrecagnition,"

By rehearsing this tautology, the sociologisr ylaced himself "tn the position of eternal denounccr of a system granted the ability to hide itself forever from its agents": not only did the sociol- ogist see what teacher (an$ student) did not, tie saw it beiaase the teacker and student couid not. Wasn't the ultimate concern evinced by the logic oF the new soclology, Rancierc suggested, that of reuniting ics reaim, legitimating its sptcificity as a Xi-

ence through a naturalizing objeccification cif rhe other?

Pedagog ical Re forms

The sociologicai theories of Bourdieii and Passeron offered something for everyone. k r the enlightetied reader, tho dis- abused Marxist, they oKered the endkessly renewable p leas~~re of Iucidity, the fris~nn of demystification and the unvciiing of the clockwork rnechanics of a.functionaiisrn usually reserved for crhe structuralise interpretation of fiction. But for the progres- sive educator they offered ehe justification for a series of at- rempts to reform the social inequiries of thc schoot system- and this especially aftcr Franpis Mitterand and the socialists wcre e1ected in 198 I . At the levei of govesnmental education policy, the Mitterand adniinistration was riven by two warring idrological tendencies, ernbodied in the persons who strcces- sively occupied the position of Minister of Educarion, AIain Savary and Jean-Pierre Chevenemerit.

Savary, imbueti with sornething of the spontaneous, liber- tarian ethos of May '68 and with the heady early rnurnents of enacting the socialist agenda, saw his rnission as that of zeduc- ing, through a series of reforms, the inequalities diagnosed by Bourdieu and Passeran. I f petit-bourgeois instruceors, intenc on capitafizing On the dist.inreians conferred on them by their knowltdge were, as Bourdieu and Passeron argued, compla- cently reproducing the cultural models that acted to select "in- heritors" and Legitimste the sociai inferiority of rhe Jispos-

sessed, thcn, Savary's refnrrners argurd, a new educacional com- manity must lie escablished: one based on undoing the rigid srratificacion of scholars anci rheir knowledge-a kjnd of lev- eling at rhe top--and crearing aconvitriat, open, egalicarian at- mospltere in the schools, which would be attentivc eo citl- "whole personafity" of the child. Savary, for instanre, favored a compensatory acritude to unequal opporcuriity. He had "prior- ity zones" designated that saw supplemenrary funding, extra reaching positions, and speciaily designed curricula established in elementary schvols an$ high schools situared in poor neigh- borfinods.

t When Savary's sucressor, Chevencment (currenrly M~nistcr

s! of Defense under Mitteraricif, came ro power in 1984, he an- , nounced a halt to such atrempcs at egalicarian reforrn. Under the watchword of "repuMican elitisrn," Chevenement under- scored the imperatives of rechnoiogical modernization arid cornpetition for Frnnce in a period of worldwide economic cri- sis. Advocating a rerurn to the Encyciopedist, rationalist, En- lightenrnei~t principles of Jules Ferry and the Third Republic, Iie called for che restoration of gramrnar, rigici examinacioris, civic instruction--a kind of curricular "back t » basics," and a return to the rhetoric of selection t l ~ a t so long characterized French schoaiing. That a violent poIemic crrncerning the values of education should enipt in the journalisrn c;f thtt mid- igb'o's-a moment of profound general anxiety about the ques- t im of French "identicy" in the face of rising irnrnigration--- was not surprising. But ehe terms of tAe debace were all tocl farniliar, as were thc polarizcd positions thac resuired: che moie Rousseauist disciples of Savary arguiitg that even a "repubIican" elitisrn could lead only to the excliisioti and marginalitation of an important pcrceittageof French youtii; the "Enlightenmcnr'" fotlc~wers of Chevenemenc arpuing thar a socialist education sys- tem must be rarional and scientific,

in intellecrual circles, the sornewhat brutal transition from the warm bath oF Savary to the science of Chw2nemelit was fa- cilitated bu the piihlication in r984 nf che linguist Jean-CLaude

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Milner's controversial polemic, De I 'hb. {Milner appeared an the popular French Iiterary television show "Apostrophes" co taik about his book and was invited by ChevPnement to thc ministry to discuss his ideas on education.) Milner attributed all the ills of the French systeni to a plot launched against knowledge by a "triple alliance" of sringy administracors, hasri- iy accredired garvenu high school. teachers, and weil-intended reformers bent on advancing something they called "peda- gogyV-what for Milner amounted co nothing more than the ernpty science af teaching how ta teach, These pseudo-. progressive advocates of the vaguely religious and virtuous vo- cationof pedagogy produced, according to Milner, a purely par- asitic discourse: reform after reform whose ends lay in sarrificing true scholarly research and passion for a "convivial schootroom atrnosphere." Not the least provocarive of his assercions u7as tbat a teacher did not have to like children to be a good teacher. Hearkening back approvingly CO the rigors of the Third Re- pubIir, he argued chat schools and teachers should dispense with xnodeling the "whole person'aad view cheir task instead sirnply and unequivocably as that of transmitting knowledge, as "insrructing," not "educaring." The unequal teiation be- tween wacher and student was not to be dismantled but rather celebtated, for in its inequafity, as in thar of psychoana.lyst and patient, fay the key to success. inequaiity produced in the stu- dent the desire to know. True equality in schooling meant trans- mitcing the same knowledge ro each student.

fn his review of Milner's book,' Ranciere conciirred with the Linguist's frank characterization of the reformist programs as "obscurantist" in their assumprion that the b e ~ c way ro reduce inequalities in the realrn of formally transmitted knowledge was. to cut back on knowledge itself; "tacist" in thrir supposition tliat rhe children of the working class-and especially of im- migrants-should be provided with a less "abstract" or "cul- tural" curriculum; and "infantilizing" in their ideofogy of cchool as a vasr, vaguely maternal enterprise b s e d on "nurtur- ing." But the solution to afl this was not, RanciPte argued, a

return to some norion of pure, scientific transrnission a la Jitles Ferry, fot such a thing had never existed, Wasn't schooling un- der the Third Republic tainted by, if not obsesscd with, a hy- gienic project of moral formarion? The terms af rhe debate- Rousseau vs. Ferry--were misleading. Equalicy rnight reside in reaching the same thing to everyonc, bur it was simply not true that every child in France now-or ai any time in che past- had a right tuparticipate in ttie comrnunity of knowledge. Sirn- ilarly, Milner's notir)n of pure scholarly passion, Ranciere sug- gested, masked the interests of rhe arisrocrats uf education, the mandarins ac the top of the universiry and granc-funding hier- archies, whose concern Bay in preserving, in the Face of a rising tide of hastiIy accredited instructors, rhe traditional priviIcges of' the possessors of culture.

The Lesson of Althusser

Mibner and Ranciere shared a scudent activist p s t , a friend- ship, a ttacher-Louis Althusser-anJ a theoretical formatiori; cwenty years previously, they had bot11 belongcd tu the Union des Errldiants Chimmunistes, the Earnous "cercle d'lJlm'? the srn2-311 group of young theorists including Etienne Balibar, Pierre Machcray, jacques-Alairi Miller, and Rdgis Debray, who artcnded Althusser's early seminats on Marx a t rhe Ecole Nor- male. RanciPre and Milner were among the signatories elf thc first-mimeographed-iss~ze of the group's journal, the C u h i e ~ ~ Mdvxisiros-LettinisteJ, an issue whose title, "Thc Function of Th@- oreticai Formation," reveais its aurhors' eaxly preoccupation with questjons of education and the stacus of intellectual dis- Course.

A vast historical chasm separares Milner's De I'icole from "Tlie Function of Theoretical Formation"--a cttasm filled with the rnomrintous political defeat af Euroyean worker movemencs in France, Italy, Portugal, Greece, and Spain; the defeat of Al- thusserianism icself 011 the barricades uf Map; the Right's re- cuperation of Way an$ its anarcho-libertarian icieology for ttie

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Free Matket; and the virtual suppression of historical matesi- alism in Prance after r97-3 at the hands of the inteflectual cur- rents of the New Pkilosophy and post-struccuralism. And yet in cerrain of Mifner's pronouncements about education, about questions of autkarity and equality, for instance, an echo of che sld master's voice, that of Louis Althusser, can be heard: "TRe function of teaching ," Althusser wrote in I 964, "is to transrnit a determinate knowledge to subjects who do not possess this knowledge. The teacking situation thus rests ora tRe abscalute condition of gn ineqi~diity between d knawledge aPrcl a nonknowl- edge."8 For Milner, as fot Altliusser, ehe fundamental pedagog- ical relation is the one berween knowledge and ignorante. The same histoticai chasm separates Ranci&reis Le Iaifar"lm tgatorunt from his La I,epn d'Aitbrisrer, but Ranci&re's subject-educa- tion, or more bxoadly, thc sratus of those who possess knowl- edge versus rhe Status of those who don't--and orientation to- ward authority temain unchanged; h t h books, in fact, an- nounce thernselves as "lessons,"

By writing La Lern d'Aiirthuf~er, Rancitre performed what he called "the first clearing of the terrain" for the kind of reflecrion that has preoccupied him ever since: the consideration nf the phiiosophical and historical relations between knowledge and rhe rnasses. Althusserianism, in Lu Lepn d"Althusser, emerges firsr and foremost as a theory of education. For Kanciire, Al- thusser's only political-in the strict sense of the wotd-inter- vention occurred during the early moments of student unrect, when a controversy regarding higher education arose between the student union (UNEF) and the Communisc Party. Student discontent had begun at that pnint to fwus on the form.r nf the traosmission of kraowledge-the pedagogical relation of mag- isterial ptofessdrsand docile students-as weil as its ends: form- ing the future auxiliaries of the bourgeoisie. Already in ~ h e eariy 196o's, students had begun tu question the arbitrariness of ex- aminations and the ideology of individual 'research. In thesc ciarly, tentative efEOrts-their slogan was "La Sorbonne aux etu- diantsl'---politics apyeared in a new forrn: in the questioning of-

knowledge and its refation tu political power and in the intro- duction of a new line of division arnong ineellectuats betwecn rhe producers and the consumcrs of knowledge. Althusser's in- tervention was swift and cfear. In an article entitled "Problemes 4tudiants" (1964), he uurlined the correct priorities for Lorn- munist students. They must first devclop their knowledge of Marxism-Eeninicm and thcn conduct scienrifir analyses thae would yield objective knowledge of the University. What should matter to biarxists was less the form-the pedagogical relation in which knowledge was disseminated-tilan "the qualiry of knowledge itsclf." Their task must be that of "dis- covering new scientific knowledge capable of illuminating atid critricizing the overwhelrning illusions in which everyone is im- prisoned," and tlte privilegcd vehicle for perforrning this task. was individiial research. The real tocus of dass division in che University was not in the inequitable relations between teachers and students, but in the contenb of the reaching: "it is by the very nature of the knowtedge that it imparts to students that the bourgeoisje exerts . . . the profoundest influence over them."

?For Rancikre, the Atthusserian concepr of science--in fact, the sciencelideofogy distinction itself-had ultimately nu other function than that of justifying the pure being of knowledge, and, rnore important, of justifying che eminent dignity of the possessorc of chat Irnowlerige. For if science (theory) forms a n enclave of ffeedom in a world of ideologicai enslavement, if sci- ence beiongs to the inrellectuals-ehe macters-and the cri- tique of bourgeois content is resesvcd for those who alreadv know, then there is only one way for students ro criticize their masters' knowledge from thr point of view of ctass, and that is co k c o m e their peers. ff everyone dwells in iilusion (ideology), then the solution can oniy come from a kind of rnuscular the- otetical heroism on the part of the aone theorist. Ranciere re- counted what was for him the most graphic illustration of this: Althusser's need tet deny the antiauthoritarian May rcvalt as i t

was happerling in order to pretend lacer to "discover," through

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chance and solitary research, and to propose as a risky hypoth- esis, whar the mass student action had already revcalcd tu every- one-the function of the school as an ideological apparatus of rhe state.'

Confronced with the events of May, the logic of Althusser- ianism reacts according to the predictable ternporality of the olae

z~rho k n u t ~ ~ f . May '68 was not the proper mornent Ernpirical pol- itics an$ theory must be dissociated frorn each other, and the position that enacted rhat dissociatisn was thar of rlle educa- cor-he who k n ~ w s how to wait) liow to guard his distance. how to rake the time of iheory. The last re~oar@~of pMlosophy is to eternalize the division of lahot rhat grants-,~t its place.'"

IC

The Pracrice of Equality

If che phiiosophical traditiori is itself a product of the divi- sion between mental an$ manual labor, then w h a ~ authoriry is CO be granted rhe restimony of this tradieion? And particularly w1-ICII philosophy Sets itself rhe task, as i r delights in doing, of speaking for those whose presumed ignoranae grants it its do- main? Since Ld Lefon d;4I~husser, Ranciere's investigation of the origin, continuation, and accasional subversion of the hierar- chical division of head and hand has been lau-nched on two fronts. The first: might L7e calied the archival level, the docu- rnencing, chronicling, essencially recounting, of the experi- ences and voices of early-nineteenth-century workers who ";ransgressed the boundaries srit for them": figures both rnar- ginal and cencral to workers'communities whose emancipacion rook the form of clairning fur chernselves what the middle classes assurned ta be theirs alme, a realm of existente outside rhe one defined by the circle of material necessitp. He focused on workers who claimed the right to aesthetic conternplation, the tight to dead time-and, above all, rhe right to think, "I took the great gauchzste theme-the relations of inrellectuai and manual work-and put i t in reverse: not rhe re-educacion of intellecti~als, but the eruption of negativity, of rhinking, into a social category always defined bv the posirivity of doing,'"'

This archival, narrative work has run parallei to--and enrer-- tains a cruciat dialogue with-rhe second, mote potemical and discursive front: Ranciere's critique of the claims of bourgeois observers and intel lectuals (philosoptiers, sociai historians, New Philosoptiers, sociologists~ to know, and thus "speak for" or ex- plicate, the privileged other ofpoiiricai modernity, rhe worker. "

Rarici6re's cricique of the educational theories uf Bourdieu, Althusser, and Milner shows them ro have at least one thing in common: a Hesson in inequaliey. 'ff with inequality, proves i t , and by proving it, in the end, is

,- 1 . is Seen as the reproduction of incquality?~ourdieu) or as the po- tential insrriimcnr fur the redsicrion oE inequality (Savary), the effect is the säme: that oferecring and rnainraining ttie distance separating a future reconciliation fmm a present inequalirp, a knowledge in che oEng fiom tnday's intcllectual impoverish- ment-a distance discursively invented and reinventerl so that it may never be abolished. The poor stay in their place. The Same temporal and spatial distance separates the t>edakogur &om ttle studerrr as separates thc "explicator of rhe social- the workes. Rur-k-

) de6arriire? What would i r inem to makc equaliry ap~es~~ppo~ztrOn i rather ehan a goal, a pvactice rather tlran a reward situated firm1 D i vo rne disrant future so as to all rhe betrer explain i tr prercJ I in-

* . lity? This is rhe lesson providcd by JosephJacocor's ec-

perience--exphrience in the French Enlightenment sense of borti "experiment" and "experience"-and the 1.esson whuse plitical and philosophical tirneliness Ranciere affirms by recounting Ja- cotot's story.

All people are equally intelligent. This is Jacotor's startling (or naive?) presupposition, f i is lesson in inieflectual emancipa- tion. And from this starting point (the result of an accideritill discovery occasioned by ttie peculiar cirrumstances of cxile), Ja- cotot came to reatize that kn2wledge is not necessary CO teach- ing, nor explicatian necBarv to iearnin~. "Lxplication," heb Grites, "is the rnyth of pedanogy," Rarher tllan elirninating in- -

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capacity, explication, in fast, creates it, Ir does this in part by establishing the temporal structure of delay ("a little further along," "a little later," "a few more explanations and you'li see the light") that, wrii tage, would become the whole nineteenth-ceneury myth of Progress: "the pedagogical fiction erected into thc fiction af che whole society," and rhe general infantilization of the individuals who corniose i c . $he peda- gogicaI myth divides the worid inta two: t h e w h e ignorant, the rnature and the i~nformed, the capable and t& tdcaoable. IJv the second halt of The lnnarant SckooIpndster, cbe h s y ofdetay that links the popular classes, the child, and -- rlae poor wirhin the discourse of rhe repubiican "Mcn of Prog- ress" surrounding Jacoror is all too ciear.

The pedagogical ficcicin works by representing inequality iri rerms of velociiy: as "slownecs," "backwardness," "defay." Per- haps this humology oF delay, the whole ternporality of the "lag" that the book exposes, will provide thr rneans f»r readers who have pondererl the forms taken by rhe ideology of prcigrcss sincc Jacotor's time to trace the cnnstellarion (the term is Walter Ben- jamin's) that our own era fotrns with Jacotor's. For hasn't the pedagogical fiction of our own time been cast on a global scale? Never will the student catch iip wich the tcachet; never will the "developing" nations catch up with the enligheened ,nations, Are cven che critiques of "dependency theory" free of pedagog- ical rhetoric in their discussions of the Third World? To say this is ro clairn that a reading of The Ignorant Schoolmarter can suggest hrrw roday's much-heralded "democratization" of the globe- our own contempomry institucionaliz,aeion and representation of pro.gress---is just the new name for inequality.

In The Ignamnt SchooEmaster, Rancikre bas found ehe means ol' illustrating end defendingequaliry that exterids ro the very level of formal risks he has takcn recounting the story. Ir is ahove all the book's formal procedures that have allowed Rancitre to think the sociai itself in such a disrincely original fasliion. Foe as Benjamin was not alonc in realizing, "the concept of rhe his- torical progress of mankind cannot be sundered from the con-

cepr of i t s progression thtough a homogenous, empty time. And a critiqiie of such 3 pragrcssion musc br: thc basis of any criticism of the concept nf progress itself."" The criticjue of Progress, in ather words, rnust intervene at the levet of the pro- gression, rhe speed nr pacing , the gractice of historical writing itself. Viewcd from this perspcctive, rhe gradualist, "additive" notiori of writing history-the slow, reasonecf accun~ulation of clata wich which che hiscrjrian fills an empty, la~mogenous time-begins to bear a distinct resemblancc ro rhc gradual, stcp-by-step acquisitiun of rindersrandiiig throrigh rxplicstion that Jacotot's method so dramatically explodes."

If che hisrorian's relation to thc past-and co his or her read- ers--is not to he onc nf explication, rhen what can i r be? Early writings of rhe Rievoites iogiqt~ej collective announce its project to be that of crr'ating an "alternative historical rnernory." This, I think, suggests a motivacion akfn to that of Benjamin's to biasr, as he put i t , "a unique cxperience of the past" oitt of the "continuum of hisr»ry" foa the purpose of wresting rneaning from the past for the present. Ac the collective put i t :

An episodr Frorrt the past inrrrests us oniy inasmuch as i t becomes itri

episnde of the present wherein our rhoughts, aciioris, and straregies are decided, . . . Whar interests us is thnr idcas be evcnts, [hat his- rnry be at all rirnes a break, a rupture, ta be inrerrogared anly from the perspecrive of tkie tiere and now, and only pulicically. ' '

'Fhe rnotivarion is ctear. But what are die formal nr rhetorical crrategics, what are the wriring practices, that atlow an cpisode from the past to becnrne an episode in ahe present? Xn tiie case of The lg~rordnt S c b o o l m ~ t c ~ , tfle story of Jacotot apens atid ends

'Rancierc is in facr Lesi known in rhe IJoircd Stnres ana~ng h~storians. for his pi>lemical interve~irions cnncerning swial history as P a~reticr, and lor bis dpbarrs witl, p~rriciriar s ~ c ~ a l hisror~ans ovcr the identity dlK! c:?n~ciousnrss 11f ihr art i sa~ . SEI. ~sfn'cialty. h i ~ ~ ~ r h s n g e ~ i t h Wllliam Sewell, Ir. , and Chrisrupher Johoscn iri "The hlytli I I ~ tlic Ariisan," tnter~iafrn~rni Lahnr. rnd Ifit.hin(: C/"JI Hi~inyi , 2 4 (Fall roHz1. Scr als.3 whnr i s rht n~ijst ri>orough disctr~rlon ni

Rancicrck rclation to t l ie practirr nf history, arid of his u~urk in geocral. Donntd R c ~ d i inrro- diiction to t h ~ rranslarian 01 La Niiir d#~p~0~66orrtr iN?~hf.* n/ Ltbor, Philadelphia. igllg) In. pnr:anr essays by Ranciere or ipinal ly published III Rhvltrs tngt9ii~i are nwilablc in Yuiisr nf ~ b r Plopte, pd. Adrian Riikin anif R08r.r Thomas ILonilr>r~, 1»RR).

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withour RanciPre doing. on one level, anything ocher rhan riar- rating i t . Storytelling then, in and of itself, o r recozrnting-orie of the two basic operations of the intel!igence according to Ja- cotot-ernerges as one of the concrete acts or practices that ver- &es equality. (Equality, writes Jacotoe, "is neither givcn nor claimed, i t is practiccd, it is verified.") The vety act of story- relling, an acr thar presumes in its interlocutor an equality of intelligente rather than an inequality of knoudedge, posits eqtiality, jusi as the act nf explicacion posits inequaliry.

Bur another, inore unusuat effect is created by the narrative style of thc book: a particular kind of uncertkinty that readers may experience concerning the ideneiry of the book's narrator. 'B'he reader, in other words, is not quite Sure where the voice of Jacorot stops and Ranciere's begins, Xanciere slips irtto Jacotot's text, winding around or worming in; his cornmentary concex- tuali zes, rehearses, reiteraies, dramatizes, elaborates, catitilaurr Jacotor; the effect is orie of a compiex echoing taking place be- tween the author arid Jacocot at the level of voice, as thuugh an enormously sympathccic disciple of Jacotor's had, by soxne time-travel device familiar t o readers of science fiction, rurrjed u p in the twentieth ccntury. 8 n e existential grounding for such an echoing rnay be surmised. Jacocot's rcfatiun to posr- Revolurionary France (bis experirnents, in a sense, pro/nn& ehe revolutionary ctiergies of 1789 inco the France of the r 820's and 1830's) i s doubled by Rancikre's relation to 1968. The two are united by sorneching like a shared lived retation to cycles of hope, then to cycles of discouragernent, and on to the displace- ment of hope-a scquence that marks the experience of yeriods of revolutionary ferment and their aftirmach, Thac such periodr are also ones of productive ferrnent around the question of ed- ucation--nr frclnrn~issic~ti-goes withour saying, Bus in the end it is emancipation--not education--thac has drawn Ranciere t o Jacotot.

For the reader, rhis narrative uuiicertainty will prove produc- tive, I think, for it has the effecr of facilitating-----crcating the means for-the book's (nonexplicic, iinexplicated) intervention

into the prcsent. Without rxplanation, rhe polirical rimeliness of Jacotor's "naivere" is afirrned. For Rancikre, rhis particular boak becomes thc rneans by which his rwo previously separated activities-the arctiival, situated in the past, and the polemi- cal, situated for the most part in the present of contemporary tlieoay-.are merged, a merging ehac in turn con&)i,nn(.is any at- cernpt to ctassify thc book generically. Are rhe nineieenth- cenrury republican Men of Progress, thc founders of public ed- iicatii~n, the sociologists of today? Aiid, i f so, is rl~c hock a sat- ire? Does a sntirist's rage a t the fallen reality of postmodernisn, otir own societp of experts, drive the teci tation of Jncotor's urn- piari experience? I t is certainIy clear, frlr example, that Ran- eitre's (and Jacrrtot's) distincri.de "unrimefiness" stands in agon- istic relacion to the perfect tirneliliess and seamlessr-iess af the "Bourdieu effect," the whoie conternporary sociology of "sys- tems of reprisentation." Can Jacotor anci his series of concrere practices verilying equality he rnarshaled tu do battfe with thc dominant discourse of otir own time, thc discourse 0f a hidden truth and its dernyscificacion bp thr tnaster explicator, the dis- Course that asserts tt-iat "cherc is no science but of che hidcien"?'"

7 % ~ Ignnruni Schoa/itzujter forces us to confrnrir what any num- ber of nihilistic, neo-liberal phiiosaphirs would havc us avoiti: th? iounding term of our political mociernity, eq f~ l i t y . And in the face of systematic aetacks on rhe very idea, powerfu1 ideol- ogies that ~vniild relegate it ro thedustbin of history or to some dimlv radianr futttre, Ranciere places equality-z~zrtf~n/fy-in the preserir, Against the seamlcss science of rhe hidden, Jaco- tot's story remiiids its that equa1ity turns on anciclier, very dif- ferent lagic: in division rather than Consensus, in a multipiicity of concrete acts and actual rnoments and situations, sit~iarions that crupt inro the fiction of inegalitarian socicty without thern- selves hccorniug institutions. And in this. rny rendering of thc title of the book as The ignormc Schoo/nrnster is perhaps rnislead- ing, Fc~r Jucotot had no school. Equalicy does not, as thry say in FrencR, "faire ecule."

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The Igs?ordnt Schou/ma~ter

Five Eessons in Inteilecrual Ernancipation

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i n 1818, Josep1.i Jacotot, s lecturer in Frencfi l i t- erature at thc Bfnivetsity of Louvain. had an inteflectual adven- TUEK.

A long and eventful career should have made h i n irnmune to surgrises: hc had celebrared his nineteenth birthday in 1789. H e was at that time reaching rheroric at Dijon and preparing for a career rn law. In 1792, he served as an artilleryrnan in thc Repi~blican armies. Then, under the Convention, he worked successively as instructor for the Bureau of Gunpowder, secre- tary to the Minister of War, and substitiire for the director of che Ecofe Polytechnique. When he returned t o Dijon, he tsught anatysts, ideology, ancient languages, pure mathematics, tran- scendent mathematics, an$ law. In March I 8 I 5 , the esreetn of his cuuntrymen made hin1 a deputy in spite of himself. a'he re- turn of the Bourbons fbrced him into exile, and by ehe gener-

' osity of the Kiilg of the Netherlands he ohtained a position as ra profssor at half-pay. Joseph Jacotnt was acquainted with the laws vf hospiraiiey and counced on spending some calm days in Louvain.

Chance dccided di&tentIy, Thc unassurning lecturer's les- sons wcre, in Fact, highly appreciated hy his scudents. Among those who wanted to avail thernselves of him wcre a good num- ber of students who did not speak Prcncl~; but Jnseph Jacacarnt knew no FlernEsh. There was thus nu language in which he could teach them whae ehey sought from hirn Yet hc waneed to re-

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spond to their wzshes. 'Ii, do so, the minimal link of a thing 117

cott2tlmon had tobe established beeween himself and ckem. At char time, a bilingual ecircion of Tiiin~aqric was being published in Brtrsseis.' The thing in cornrnon had heen found, and TeFelema- chus made his way into the iife of Joseph Jacotot. I-Ie had the book delivered ro ehe studencs and asked rhern, through an in- tergrcter, to Iearn rhe French iext with che help of rhe trans- lation. When they had madc i t through the first half of rhe book, he had chem repeac what they had learned over and wer, and rhen todd them to read through rhe rest of the book until they could recite it This was a forrur~ate solution, but i c was also, on a small scale, a phrlosophtcal experirnent in tlie style uf the ones performed during the Age of Enltghtenmenr. AndJo- seph Jacotot, in r8t8, remained a man of ttie preccding cen- tury.

But the experiment excecded his expectations. He asked the srudents who had prepared aq instrucced to write in Prench whar chey thouglit about whar rhey had read:

He expected horrendous barbarisms, or maybe a complrce inabiairy ro perform. Wow could these young peupic, deprrved of expianation, understand and resolve the difficiif ties of a Janguage entireiy ncw to them? Mo matter! He had ro lind oiir where the route opened by ihance bad caken rhem, whar had been the resuirs of that desperate ernpiricism, hnd how surprised hc was tu dtscover that che students, Ieft to themselves, managed rh~s difficulc step as well as many Frrrich couid have done! Was wanting alt that was necessary for doing? Were atl rnen virtually capable of understanding what othcrs had done an4 understood"

Such was tlie revolution rhar this chance experiment un- leashcd in bis rnind* Until chen, he had believed what all con-

@Penelün's <lidacr(c and urnpian 24-volumc novet. 7'8tet11nqve (1699). recourtcs rhe peregri- nntiona of Tclemachu~, accompaoied by his spiritual guidc, Mentor. as hc atrcnprs to find his bther, Odysseus. In i t , FPnclon proposes an "Art of Rcigning" and inwnrs ao ideal city, Sx- Icnte, whose peacr-loviny citizens show exemplary civic virrur. 'l'he book was ewtremely dis- pleasing ro Louis XIV, whosaw himself in zhe portrait of ldomeneus. Bur it was rnurh admired by Enlightenmenr philosopherr, whn ptoclaimed FEnelon onr of theic most impor~ant prc- Cursors. In tcro~s o i jacotor's adventurr, ~ h e book could have been Ti/r;moune or any oiliir.

--TRANS.

scientious profecsoxs heiieve: rhat chc important busincss of tiie master is to transmit his knowledge to his students so as to bring them, by degrees, CO his own level of expertise. Like all con- scientious professors, he knew chat teaching was not in the slightesr about cramming studencs with knowledge and havirig them repeat i c tike parrots, but he knew equally well that stu- dents had to avoid the chance decours where minds still inca- pable of distinguishing the essential frorn the accessory. the principle from the conseqtience, gct lost. In short, thc essential act of che master was to e,:xp.izctrte: to disengage the simple ele-. ments d learniag, and to reconcile their simplicity in principle with rhe factual sirnplicity that characterizes young and igrio- rant minds. 7i, teach was to transmir Iearning and form minds simuitaneously, by leading rhose minds, accordirig to an or- dered progression, from the most sirnpte to che mosc complex. Dy the reasoned appropriation of knowtedge and the forrnation o l judgment and taste, a student was thus elevated co as high a level as his social destination clemandcd, and he was in this way prepared to make the use of the knowIedge appropriate to that desrinacion: to teach, tu litigate, ot to govern for rhr lettered elire; to invent, design, or make instrurnents and machines for rhe new avant-gardc now hrzpefully to be drawn from tlte elite of the common peopie; and, in ttie scientific careers, for the minds gifted with this partic~ilnr genius, to make new discov- eries. Undoubresily the prvcedures of these men of sciencc would diverge noticeahly from che reasoraed order of the peda- gagues. But this was no grounds foi an argumenr agairist thar order. On the contrary, one must first acquire a solid and me- thodicai foundation before tRe singularicies of genius could takc flig ht . Post hot , e q r t prnpfer bot-.

This is how al! conscientious prufessors xeason. This was how Joseph Jacotot, in his rhirty years at rlhe job, had reasoned and acted. But now, by chance, a grain od sand had golfen inco tlle rnachine. He had given no exptanation ct j his "scudents" on chc tirst elcrnencs of the language. He had not expIained spelling or corsjugations to chem. They had luoked for the French words thae corcesponded to words they icnew and che reasons for their

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grammaticak endings by themselves. Thcy had learned to put them together to make, in turn, French sentences by rhem- selves: sentences whose speiling and grammar became more and nlore exact as they progressed through the book; but, above all, sentences of writers and not oh schsoichildren. Were the school- lnaster's explications therefore superfiuous? Or, if they weren't, to whom and for what were they iiseful?

T h e Explicative Order

Thus, in ehe mind of JosephJacotot, a sudden iillumination brutally highiighted what is blindly taken for granted in any system of teaching; the necessity of explication. And yet why shouldn't i t be taken for granted? No onc truly knows anything oeher than what he has understood. And for cornprehension to take place, one has ro he given an explicarion, the words of thc rnasrer rnust shatter the silence of the taught tnaterial.

And yet that logic is not wifhoui ccrtain obscurities. Con- sider, for example, a book in the hands of a student. The book is made u p of a series crf reasonings designed to make a scudent understand sorne material. But now the schoolmaster Opens his rnouttl to explain the book. H e makes a series of reasonings in order to explain the series of reasonings that constitute the book. But why shauld rhe book need such help? Inscead of pay- ing for an explicator, couldn't a father siAply give the book in his son and the child understarid directfy che reasonings of the book? And if he doesn't understand them, why would he bc any mare iikety to understand che reasonings that would explain to hirn what Iie hasn't undersrood? Are rhose reasonings of a dif- ferent nature? And if so, wouidn't it be r~ecessa~y to explain the way in which to understand them?

So the logic of explication catls for the princi y le of a regres- sion ad infinitum: there is nu reason for the redoubling of rea- sonings ever ro stop, What brings an end to the regression and gives the system i t s foundation i s sirnply that the explicator is the sole judge of the point when the explication is itself expli- cated, Eie is the sote judge of that, in itself, dizzying qucstioil:

has che student understood the reasonings thar teach hirn to un- derstand thc rcasonings? This Is what tlle master has ovcr che facher: how could the father be certain that tbe child has under- stood the bonk's reasonings? Wtiac is missing for the father, whar will always be missing in the trio he forms with the child and the book, is the singuiar art of the expiicator: thc arc of 4istu~zre. Tke mastcr's sectet 1s to know how to recoanize the distancebetween the taught material and the person being iq-

m u , the dzstancc also hetween learning and understandipg. m i i c a t o r sets up and abolishes this discance-deploys i t

and reabsorbs i t in the fullness of his speech. This privileged scatus of speech does not suppress the regres-

sion ad infinitum without instituting a paradoxical hierarchy.

._............_I_*

Mow can wc understand this paradoxical privilege of speech over writing, of hearing over sight? Wliat relationship thuc exists between the power of speech and thc power of the rnaster?

This paradox irnrnediately gives rase to another: the u!ovdc the child learns best, chose whose rneaning he best fathoms, those he best makes his own through his own usage, are those he learns without a master expticator, well before any tnaster ex- plicaeur. According to ehe unequal returns of various intellec- tual apprenticeships, what all human chiidren tearn best is whar no rnaster can exptain: rhe mother tongue. \Te speak to ihem and we speak around them, They hear and retain, irnicate and repeat, make mistakes and correct thernselves, succeed by chance and begin again methodically, and, at eon young an age for explicators to begin instrucring them, they are almost all- regardless of gender, social condition, arad skin cotor-abie tn urderstand and speak the language of rheir parenrs.

And only now does this child who learned to speak through his own intelligente and through instructors who did not ex-

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all, he will say, the studenr must understand, and for that wr must explain even hetter. Such is the conccrn of rhe enlightened pedagogue. does the iittle ane understand? He doesn'c under- stand. I will find new ways to explain it to him, ways more rig- orous in principle, more attractive in form-and I will vetify rhat he has understood.

A noble concern. Unfortunately, it is just this Iittie word, this slogan of the enlightened--understand-that causes all the trouble. Br is this word [hat brings a halt tu the novemcnt of reason, that desttoys its confidence in irself, tfiac diseracts rt by breaking the worid of intelligence into two, by installing, the division between the groping animal and tke learned lirtle man, between common sense and science. From the marnent this slo- gan of duality is pronounced, all the perfecting uf the w q s of mnkie nvdeirtuod, that grcat preoccupation of men of methods and progressives, is progress roward stulti fication. The child who recites undct the threat OE the rod obeys the rod and that's all: he will apply his intelligence to samething else. But the child who is explrlined to will devote his inteiligence to the work of grieving: tu understanding, that is to say, to understanding that he doesn'e understand unle5s he is explained to. H e is ne, longer suhmitting to the rod, but rarher to a hierarchical world of intelligence. Fnr rhc rest, like theother chiid, he doesn't have to worry: if the solution tu the probiem is too dificulc to pursue, he will have cnough intelligence eo npen his eyes wide. The master is vigilant and patient. H e wilf sce that che child isn't following him; he will gut llim back on track by explaining things again. And thus rhe child acquires a new intelligence, that of che master's explicgtions. Eater he can be an exylicatur in turn. He possesses ehe eyuipment. But he will perfect it: he will be a man of progress.

Chance an$ Will

So goes the world of rhe explicnted expticators. So would i r have gone fot Professor J a c ~ t o r if chance hadn't put him iri the

prescnce of a fnct. And Joseph Jacotot believed that all reason- ing should he based on faccs and cede place to them. We shouldn't conclude frorn this thar he was a materialist, O n tlic conttary, like Descartes, who proved movement by walking, but also like his very royalisr and very religious contemporary Maine de Biran, he corisidered the fact of R mind at work, acring and conscious of its activity, to he more certain than any ma- terial thing. And thjs was what it was a!l about: the futt zum that his studeslts hudbed~ned ro speak and to write in Prench without the aid of explicatiori. He hpd conmunicated nothing ro them about his science, noexplications of the roots and flexions oF the French Ianguage. He hadn't even proceeded in the fashic.tri of those reformer pedagogtles who, like the preceptor in Rous- seau's Emzle, misled their students the bettet to guide them, arid who cunriingfy erect an obstaclc course for the studencs 1-0

Icarn tu negotiate themselves. He had iefc them alone wirh rhe text by Fkneion, a translation--.not even interlinear like a schoolbook-and their will to Jearn French. He had only given them the order to pass throtagh a forest whose openings änd clcarings he himself had not discovered. Neccssity had con- strained him to leave his inteiligence entirely out of tlie pic- pure-that mediating intelligerice of the rnaster that relays the prinred i ncel tigence of written words to che apprentice's. And , in one felI svroop, he had suppressed the irnaginary dist-arice that U the ptinciple of pedagogical stultificarion. Everyrhing had peeforce been piayed out bctween the inteliigence of Fenelon who had wanted ca make a particulat use of the French lan- guage, rhe intelligence of ehe translacor who had wanted so give a FIernish equivalent, and the inteiligence of the apprentices who wanred ro learn French. And it had appeared thaa no oeher inteffigence was necessary. Wirhour thinking about it, he bad made them discover this thing chat he discovered with them:

e thcm, are oof the same nature.

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page, no faise bottom &hat necessitates thc work of an otber in- tclligence, that of the explicator; na language of the master, no language of the language whose words and sentences are abie to speak the reason of the words and sentences of a text. The PLem- ish sriidents had furnished the proofi to speak about Tklirncdqrde thcy had at their disposition oniy the words of Tllkwaque. Fe- nelon's sentences alone are nccessary to understand F6neton's sentences and to express what one has understod about rhem. Learnjng and understanding are two ways of expressing the Same act of translation, There is nothing beyond texrs except thc will to erpress, that is, to tramlate. If they had understood the language by learning Fenelon, it wasn't simply through the gymnastics of comparing the page On the left with rhe page on the right. Ic isn't the aptitude for changing colurnns that Counts, but rather the capacity to say what one tkinks in the words of others. If they had learned chis frorn Fenelon, that was because the acr of Hikneton the writer was irself one of transla- tion: in order to translate a political lesson i'nto a legendary nar- rative, Fenelon eransforrned into che French of Iiis century Ho- mer's Greek, Vergil's Latin, and the language, wise or naive, of a hundred other texts, frum children's stories io erudite history. He had applied CO this double translarion rhe same intelligence they empioyed in their turn to recount with the sentences of bis book what they thaught about his book.

But the intelligence that had allowed them to learn the French in Tdidtidape was the Same rhey had used to Iearn their mother tongue: by observing and retaining, repeating and ver- ifying, by retacing what they were trying to know to what they already knew, by doing and reflecting about what chey had done. They moved along in a manner one shouldn't move alonp-the way children mom, blindly, fipuring out riddles. And the quescion then became: wasn't it necessary CO overturn the adrnissible order of intellectual valcies? W'asn't thae shame- 6u1 rnethod of the tiddle the true movement of human intelli- gence taking pos3ession of its own power? DtJn't tits proscrip-

tiori indicate above all thfi will to divide the world u t inteIIi- gence into two? The advocatec of rnethod oppose rhe nonmethod af chance ro that of proceeding by reason. Bur what tliey Want to provc is given i n advance. They suppose s little nnima! who, burnping into things, explores a world that he isn't yet ablr tu see and will only discern when they teach him ro do so. Hiue the human child is first of ail a speaking being. The child who repeats die words he hears and the Plernish student "lost" in his TPIimqrir are not proceeding hit ot miss. All their effurt, all their explorarion, is strained toward this: someone has addressed words to them that they Want to recognize and re.- spond to, not as students or as learned men, but as peuple; in the way you respond to someone speaking to you and not to scrmeone examining you: under the sign of equality.

The fact was there: they had learned by themselves, wirhout a mascer explicator. What has happeriecl once is thenccfurch al- ways possible. This discovery could, after all: overturn the prin- cipfes of theprofes~or Jacotot. Butjacotot rhc inan was in a bet- tet position to recognize what great variety can be expected from a human being. His father had been a burcher before keeping the accounts of his grandfather, the cnrpenter who had sent his grandsori to college. He hintself had been a professor of' rhetoric wheri he had answered the call to arnls in X792 I-Bis compan- ions' vore had made him an artiiiery captain, and he had showed himseif tn he a remarkable artillerytiian. In r 793, at the Bureau oF Powders, this Latinist became a chemistry instructor work- , ing coward the accelerated forming of workers being sent cvery- where in the territory to apply Fourcroy's discoverics. At Four- croy's own establishrnent, he had bccome acquainted with Vau- quetin, the peasant's son who had trained liimself to be a chemist without the knowledge of bis boss. He had seen yoilng people arrive at the Ecole Polytechnique who haci heen selected by improvised commissions on the dual basis of their liveiliness of rnind and their patrintisrn. And he had seen them become very good mathematicians, less through tlle cafcuIations Monge

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and Lagrange explained to them than through those thar they performed in front of them." He himself had apparently prof- ited from his administrative functions by gaining competence as a mathernatician-a competence he kad exercised later at the University of Dijon. Similarly, he bad added Mebrew ro the an- cient languages ke taughc, and composed an Euay an Hebvezo Gra~naar. He believed, God knaws why, [hat that language had a future, And hnally, he had gained for himself, reluctantly but with the greatest firmness, a competence at being a reprcsen- tative of the people. In shott, he knew what the will of indi- viduafs and the peril of the counery could engender in rhe way of unknown capacities, in circumstances where urgency de- rnanded destroy ing the stagcs of expl icative progression. He thought that this exceptionai state, drctated by the nacion's need, was no different in principle from the urgency that dic- tates the exploraeion of the wortd by the child or from that other urgency thae constrains clte singular path OE Learned men and inventors. Tkcough the experiment of che child, the learned man, and rhe revolutionary, thc rnethod of chanca so successfully practiced by the Flemish students reveaied its second secret. The merhod of equality was above all a method of tkie will. One could iearn by oneself and without a master explicator whea one wanted to, propelled by one's own desire or by che tonstraint of the situation.

T h e Emanciparory Master

In this case, thac constraint had raken the form of the com- mand Jacotot had given. And it resuited in an important con- sequence, no langer fot rhe students buc for rhe master. The students liad Iearned without a master explicator, but not, for all that, withdut a master. They didntt know how before, and

'Antoine Fran~ois Fourcrcy l17))-180')), chemist and polirician. participatcd in the es- rablishment of a rarional nomenclarure in chernisrry. Thc principal work of the mathematician Joseph Louis dc tagrange (17 36- I 8 r 3) was che Mdraniq~ia aanalyfiqte ( r 788). Thc mathema- ticinn Gaspard Monge (~7~6-1818) h+ed creatc the E.colc Normaie and foundcd the Ecole Po1yrcchnique.--~RANS.

now they knew how. Therefore, Jacotot had taught them sorne- thing. And yet he had cornmunicared nothing to them of bis scierice. So it wasn't the master's science [hat the scudent learned. His mastery lay in the cornmand h a t had enclosed the students in a closed circle from which thcy aione could break out. By leaving his intelligence out of the picture, he had al- lowed their intelligence tograpple wich that of the book. Thus, the two functions chac link rhe practice of the master explicator, that of the savant and that of the master had been dissociated. The ewo faculties in play during the act of tearning, nainely intetligence and will, had ttiereforc also been separated, IiLer- ated from each other. A pure relationsllip of will to will had been established between master and student: a relationship wherein the master's domination resuifred in an entirely liber- ated reirationship between the intelligence of the studenr and that of the book-rhe intelligence of the book that was also the thing in common, the egalitarian inteifectual link between rnascer and student. This device allowed the iurnkzlPdcatEFQs' ies of the pedagogical air to be sorted oiit, . . ' C I - kc&on to be precisely defined. There i s S&-r one incelligence is subordinated to another. A person-and a cFGId i n partrcuiar----may need a rnaster when his own wilt is not strong enough ta set hirn on track and keep him therc. But that subjection is gurely one of wi-1. Ir becomes stul- tification when it links an intelliaencc to another intellieence. -. ril

In rhe act of teaching arad Iearning there are two wills and two btgclligences. We wild. cali their coincidcnce stt i l t tf i~tion. In the experimental situation lacoror created, the stutlent k a s linked to a will, Jacotoc's, and to an intelligence, the book's-the two entireiy distinct. We will cail the known and maintained dif-

of ali pedagogies. The pedagogues' pracrice is based on the op- ps i t ion between science and ignorance. The merhods chosen to render the ignorant person learned may differ: srricc or gentle

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methods, traditional or modern, active or passive; the efficienc): of these methods can be cornpared. Frorn rhis point of viciw, we could, ai hrst giance, compare the speed of facotnt's srudents with the slowness of traditional methocis. But in reality there was nothing to cornpare. The confrontation of mechods presup- poses a minimal agreement on the goals of the pedagogical act: ehe transmission of the master's knowledge to the students. Buc jacotot had rransmitted nothing. He had nor used any rnethod. The method was purely the student's. And whether one learns French more quickly or less quickiy is in itself a matter of iittle consequence. The comparison was no longerb+~weeo rnethodr but rarher between two uses of intelligence and two conceptions of che inreltectual order. The rapid route was not tha@ a better pedagogy. I t was anorher route, that of liberty-that route thar Jacotor had experitnented with in the arrnics of Year 11, the fab- rication of powders or the founding of the Ecole Polvrechnique, tlie route of liberty respnding to ttiie urgency of tlie peril, but jusi as much to a confidence in the intellectual capacity uf any human being . Benearh t he pedagogical relation of ignoranre to science, the more fitndamentajl phiiosophic-al relation of stul- rificaeion to ernancipation rnust be rccognized. There were thus not two bur four terms in play. The act of learning could be produced according to four variously combi ned deterrninations: by an einancipatory master or by a stuttifying oae, by a learned master or by an ignorant one. . The Last propositian was the most difficult to accept. It goes without saying that a scientist mighr do science without expli- cating it. Bur how can we adrnit thnt an ignoranr person rnighr induce science in another? Even Jacotoc's experiment was am- biguous because of his position as a professor of French. But since it had at least shown thar it wasn't the master's knowledge that insctucted the student, thcn noching psevented the masier ftoni teaching something other tlian his science, something he didn'r know. Joseph Jacotor appiied kimself to varying the ex- periment, to regeating on purpose what chance had once pro- duced. He began to teach two subjects at which he was notabfy

incompetent: painting and the piano. Law students would iiave liked hirn to be given a vacant chair in their faculry But thc University of Louvain was aiready worried about rkis exrrava- gant lectitrer, for whom srudents were deserting rhe magisrerial courses, in favor of coming. euenings, to crowd into a much ron srnall room. iir by only two candles, in order to hear: "I must reach you that f have norhing ro teach you."' Tlie authority rhey consulted thus responded that he saw no point in calling this teaching. Jacotot was experimentiny, precisely. with rhe gap between accrediration and act. Ratliei than teaching a l aa course in Frenrh, hc taughi rhe students ro litig~ce in PIemi~h. Thev litigated very weil, but he still d~dn'c know Fiernish.

#@\I The Circle of Power

The experitnenr seerned to hirn suficienr to shed light: one can teach what one doesn'c know if ~ h e student is emancipated, that is to say, if he is obliged to use his own incelligence. The master is he who enctoses a n intelligence in the arbicrary circle from which i t can o d y break out. by becoming necessary ro ir- self, 2% emancipate an ignorant person, cme must be, anti one need only Le, ernancipatcd oneself, thar is to say, cor~sci«us of che true power of the human mind. The ignorant person wilI Bearn by himself whai the master doesn'r know if thr master believes he can and obliges him to realize his capacity: a circle ofpozwi homoIogous to the circle of pnwerlessness that ties the student ro rhe explicator of thc old method (to be cülled from now on, sirnply, thc 4914 Masrer). But the relation of forces is very parricular. Thc cirde of poweriessness is always already ehere: i t j s rhe very workings of the social world, hidden in the vident diKerence berwern ignorante and science. 'rhe circte o€ ower, on the other hand, can only take effect hy being made hlic. But i t can only appear as a rautoiogy or an absurdity.

nnr can ehe tcarned rnaster ever understand thar he can teach e d~esn ' t know as succecsf~cully as what he does know? He 3

but take rhat inctease in intellccr~tal power as a deval- :{

:j :j ;t

I --- ------

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true liberty was conditioned on it . After a11, they recagnized rhat they shouid give instmceion to rhe peogle, even at thc risk of dispucing among themselves wkich instruction they would give. Jacotot did not sec what kind of liberty fot the peopie could result fxom the ducifulness of rheir instructors. On the contrary, he sensed in all this a new form of stultificarion. Whoever teaches witkottt emancipaairlg stultihes. And whoever ernancipates doesn't have to worry about whar the ernancipated person Learns. He wili learn hc wants, nothing rnaybe. He will know he can learn because ehe Same intelligcnce is at work in all the productions of the human mind, and a inan can always understand another man's words, jacntot's printer had a re- rarded son. They had despaired of makiiig sumerhing of hirn. jacotor taught hirn Hebrew. Later ehe child became an excetllent iithographer. I t goes without saying that he never used the Hc- brew for anyrhing-except eo know what more gifted and iearned minds never knew: it t w n ' r Hebmw.

The matter was thus clear. This was not a method for in- structing the people; it was a benefit to be announced to ehe poor: rhey could do everything any man could. Ir sufficed only to anrrottnce i t . Jacotot decided to devote hirnself CO this. He pro- claimed that one coufd teach what one didn't know, an$ that a poor and ignorant father could, if he was ernancipated, conduct the education of his children, without the aid af aany mastcr explicatoc. And he indicated rhe way of that "universal teach- ing"-to leuvn something gnd to relute teo it nll rhe rest by thir prin- ciple: a l l men I?tave qzcctl intelligente.

People wcre affected in Louvain, in Brussets, and in La Haye; they took the rnail carriage from Paris an4 Lyon; they came from England and Prussiü eo hear rhe news; it was procfaimed in Saint Petersburg and New Orleans. The word reachrd as far as Rio de Janeiro. For several years polemic raged, and the Repubtic of knowledgc was shaken at its very foundations.

AI1 this because a learned man, a renowned man of sciencc an$ a virtuous fainily man, had gone crazy fur not knowing Fkmish.

The Ignorant One's Lesson

kec's go ashore, then, wirh Telernächus onto Calyp- so's island Let's rnizkc our way with one of the visitors into the madmari's lair: into Miss Marcellis's instt~ution in Louvatn; into the home of Ma. Dcschuyfrrieere, a tanner transfnrrned hy Ja- coeot inco a Latinist; into the Ecoie Normale Militaite i r i LULI- vain, where ehe philosopher-prince Fredcrick of Orange had put the Founder uf universal teachlng in charge of educating hture mzlitary instructors:

"lrnagine recruits sicting on benches, murmuring in un~son: 'Ca- lypso,' 'Calypso could,' 'Calypso could not,' crc., etc.; two mor~ths later they knvw how to read, writc, and count. . . . During this pri- mary education, rhe one was taught Engiish, the otlier Ger~nari+ rhis one fortification, that nne chemisrry, etc., etc."

"Did the Fsundcr knau. all these rhings?'" "Not ar. aitl, but we explained then-t to hirn, anti I can assure you

he profited greatly from che Ecole Normabe," "But I'm confused. DiJ you all, then, know chemistry?" "No, but we learned i t , and we gave hirn lcssons i n i t . That's uni-

versal teaching. It's the disciple that makes the mastet."'

There is an ode r in inadness, as in everything. Let's begin, then, at the beginning: Tiiimaque. "Everyrhing is in every- thing," says the madrnan. And his critics add: "And everything is in Te'/Fmque." Recause Tiie'maqrce was apparently the bonk

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that could do anything. Docs the student Want to learn how tu read? Does he Want to learn English or Gerrnan, the art of ljr- igatron a r of cornbät? The madman, impereurbably, w11l puc a copy of TPltmnqrde in his hands and the student will begiri to repeat, "Calypso," "Calypso could," "Calypso couid not," and so on, untit he knows the prescribed number of votumes of Tile- mtrgtce and can recount them. He must ht able to ralk about ,

everything he learns-the form of che letters, the placement or endings of words, ehe images, the reasoning, ehe characters' feelings, the rnoral lessons-ro say wb@t be jees, qhut hp rhinkr ~ h o t r t it, what he itnnkes nf zt There was onIy one icile: he must be able to show, in the book, the materiaiity of everything he says. He will be asked ro write compnsitlons and perform im- provisations under the same conditions: he rnust use the words and turns of phrase in the boak to coaistrucr his sentences; he must show, in the book, the hcts on which 111s reasoning is based. In short, ehe tilaster must be able to verify in the book the macertaliry of everyrhing the srudent says.

The lsland of che Book

1 % ~ bbaok. Te/emaqfd@ or another one. Chance piaced T&l&mq8ke at Jacutot's disposal; convenience rold him to keep it . TeIkmaque has been transiatcd into many languages and 1s easily available in hook9rores. It isn't thc greatesc masterpiece of che French language; but the style is pure, che vocabulary vasned, and the rnoraf severe. In it one learns mythoiogy and geography. Ancf behind rhe Frcnch "translaii~n," one can hear the echo of Ver- gil's karin and Horner's Greek. In short, ic's a classic, one of those books zn wliich a Language gresents the essential oF its forms an$ its powers. A book that is a totalzty: a Center to urhich ane can attach everyrhing new one iearns; a c~rcle in which one can zinderslnnrd each of thesr new things, find rhe ways ro say what one Sees in i t , what onc thrnks about it , what one makes of i r . This is rhe first principIe of universal caching: one must Iearn somcthing and relace everything else to i t . Aild f i rx jome-

ust be learned. Would La Palice say as rnucf-i?" La Palicc , but the ilid Master would say: such and suclt a rhing

be learned, and chen rhis other thing and after chat, this other. Selection, progression, incomplerion: these ase hia prin- ciptes. We learn tules and eternents, then apply them to some chosen reading passages, and then do some exercises based on rhe acquired rudiments. 'Flien we graduate to a highcr level: nther rudiments, another book, other exercises, another profes- sor. At each stage the abyss of igriorance is dug again; rhe pro- fessor fills it in before digging another. Fragments add up, dc- tached pieres of an explicator's knowledge thai pur the student an a trait, following a master with whorn he will never catch up. The book is never whole, tlie lesson is never finished. The mastcr always keeps a piece of learning-tiiat is to say, a piece of the stude~it's ignorante-up his sleeve. I understood that, says che satisihed student, You think so, corrects the master. In fact, rhere's a diFficulty here thac li've been sparing you unril now. We will exptain i t when we gct ro the corresponding lesson. What dms this mean? asks the curious student. I cuuld cell you, re- sponds tlae master, but it woufd bc prematurc: yoii wouldn'r unrierstand at all. It will be cxplained to you next year. The mas- rer is afways a iength ahead of the studrrtr, who always feels that in order to go farther he must have another inaster, suppiemen- tary explicatioms. Thais does the triumphant Achilles d r a ~ Hec- tor's corpse, attached to his chariot, around the city of 'IToy. Reasoned progression uf knowiedge is an indefinitely rcpro- duced mutiiation. "AG rnanwhu is taught is only half a man."'

Don't ask if the little educated child suffers from this mu- citation. The system's geriius is to transform ioss into profit, The child ~dvdnces. He kas been taught, therefote he has learned, therefore he can fnrget. Behind him ttme abyss of ignorante is beina dug again. But here's the amazing parr: from now on the

*Ja<que, dr Chabanncr, La Palite (8470-5 5 25) was cclebrnrcd in l i is own ( imc os a n>ilirary ieadcr, but whar made him immorral was a naive $uns clrrnlmscd by ltis rold~ers, which rnded ~ 9 1 t h the line: "Fiftcen rnineices before lris ~LarhiNe was rtrli #live.' ' In French. "clir words of La Paiice" rcferr ro ang setf-evidc&ir fvrmuiat1on.--TRANS

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ignorante is sorneane else's, What he has forgotcen, he has sur- passed. He no longer has to spell out loud or stumhle his way through a lesson like chose vutgar iritelligences and the children in beginiling classes* People aren't parrots in his school. We don't load rhe memory, we form the intelligente. I understood, says rhe child, I am not a parrot, Tlie mure he forgets, the more evident i r is to him that he understands. The more intelligent he becomes, the more he can peer down frorn on high at those he has surpassed, those who remain in the antechamber of learn- ing, in front of the mute baok, rhose who repeat, because they are not intelligent enough tn tmderstilnd. This is the genius of the explicarors: they attach the creature they have rendered in- ferior with the serongese chains in the land of stultificacion- the child's consciousness uf his own superioaity.

This consciousness, moreover, daesn't kill off good feelings. The little educated child will periiaps be rnoved by the igno- rance oF rhe cornmon people and will Want tu work at instrucr- ing them. He will know it is di&cult eo deat wich inincls hard- ened by routine OF befuddled by unrnethodicalness. But if he ic devoted, tte will know that there is a kind of explicacion a$apted to each category in the hierarchy of intelligel-ice: he will corne down t a theiv Ieve/, -.,, .- L.., - - ' , . . , . . , . . ,

B u t now here is anöther story. The madrnan-the Founder, his foilowers called him-comes on srage with hPs Telemaque,

ad it, he says to the poor person. I don't knaw how to read, answers the poor person. F-Eow

wouid f understand what is written in the book? As you have underscood all things up until now: by compar-

ing two facts. Hcre is a fact rhar 8 will tell you, ehe first sentence of ehe book: "Calypso could not De consolcd after the'deparcure of Ulysses." Repeat: "Calypso," "Calypso~could" . . . Now, here is a second Fact: the words are written zhere. Don't you

: recognize anything? The first word I said to you was Calypso; wouldn't rhae also be the first word on the page? Look ac it closely, until youare Sure of aiways recognizing it in the middle

of a crowd of other words. In order to rfo this you must tell nic everything you see there. Therc are signs that a hand triiced on paper, signs wkose rype was assembled by a hand at the print- er's. Teli rne "the story of the adventures, that is, the comings and goings, the detours-in a word, the trajectory of thc pen that wrote rhis word on paper or of the engraving tool thar eo- graved it onto the copper."' Would you know how ro recognize rhe letrer 4;) that one of my srudents-a Iocksmith by profes- sion-calis "the round," the lerrer E chat he calls "rhe square"? Te11 me the form of each letrer as you would dcscribe the form of an objecr or of an unknown place. Don't say ehat you can't. You know how to See, how to speak, you know how to show, you can remernber. What rnore is needed? An absolute attention for seeing and seeing again, saying and repeating. Don't try to fool me or fool yourseif. Is that reafly what you saw? Whdt dn jou rt~il lk itbnrtt it? Aren't you a thinking bcing? Or do yoil rhink you are all body ? "The founder Sganarelle changed all rhat. . . . You have a soul like mie."* There will be time afterward CO talk about what the book talks abour: what do you think of Calypso, of sadness, of a goddess, of an eternal springXhhow tile what makes you say what you say.

The book prevenrs escape. The route the student will take is unknown. But we know what he canncx escape; the exercise uf his l iber t~. We know too that ttie rnaster won't have the right tu stand anywhere else-anly at the door. The student must see everything for hirnseif, compare and compare, and always re- spond to a three-part question: what do you see? whar do you thinkabout it? what do you rnake of i t? And so ori, to infinity.

Bur that irifinity is no longcr the master's secret; i c is the stu- dent's jaurney. The book is finished, It is a totality that the sru- dent holds in his hand , that he can span entirety with a glance. There is nothing the nlasrer can hide from Iiim, and nothing he can hide from ehe master's gaze. The circie forbids cheating, and above all, that great cheat: incapacity. I tan'b, I don't t/ndersrund. There is nothing CO understand. Everything is in the book. One has only to recounr ie-the form of each sign, the advenrures

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-- 24 The Ignurcant One's tessun

of each sentence, the lesson d e a c h volume. One must begin to speak. Don't say ehat you can't, You know how to say "I can't." Say in its place "Calypso could not," and you're off. You'rc off on a route that you atready kncw, and that you should follow always vithout giving up. Don't say: "I can'c." Or then, learn to say it in the manner of Calypso, in the manner of Telema- chus, of Pdarhal, of Idornenreus. The other circle has begun, the circle of power. You will never run out of ways to say "I can't," and soon you witf able eo say everything.

A voyage in a circle. Ir's understood that the adventiires o i Uiysses's son form rhe manual, and Calypso the first word. Ca: lypso, the htdden one. But precisely what miiat be discovered is thae there is nothing hidden, no words undernearh words, no language that tells rke truth of language. Signs and Stil1 more signs are learned, sentences and still more sentences. Ready- made seritences are repeated. Entire books are learned by heart. And the Old Master becornes indignant: so this is what learning something means for you. First, your children repeat like par- rors. They cultivate vnIy one faculty, rnemory, while we exercise itlreliigence, taste, and irnagination. Your children .learn by I-eart. That's your first misrake. And rhis is .youc sccond: yout children a!o?zlt leitrtz by heart. You say that they do, but that's impossible. Human brains in generat, and those of children in particular, are incapabfe of such an effott of memory.

A circular argument. The discoucsc of one circle t o another. The proposirions must be overrutned. The Old Master says thar a clnild's memory is incapable af such eRoorcs because powerless- ness, in general, is its Slogan. It says that memory is something other than inrelkigence or imagination and, in so doing, i t uses an ordinary weapari against those that Want t o prevail over pow- erlessness: divigion. I t beiieves memory CO be weak because it doesn't beiieve in the power nf human intelligence. I t believes it inferior because it believes irr inferiors and superiors. in the end its double argument amounts to this: there are inferiors and superiors; inkriors can'r do what superiors can.

The 01d Master knows only this. Et depends on inequaiity,

but not the inequality that acknowfedges tlie Pritlcc's decrec, the inequaiity that goes without saying, that is in all hcads and in alt sentences. For that, it has its genrle weapon, difference: this is not t h t , thir isfarfrom tbut, olle cannot compar~ . . . Memory is not intelligence; to repeat is not tn know; comparison isn't reason; there is the ground and the background, Any fiour can be ground up in ehe mill of distinction, A t ~ d the argument can thus be mdernized and extended to ehe scientific as weil as to the humanitarian: tilere are stages in the developmenc of intel- ligence; a chitd's intelfigence is not an adult's; a child's intel- ligence should not Le overburdened--one runs the risk of in- juring his health, his hculties. The 01ri Master demands only thar hc be granted his negacions and his differentes: this is not that, this is something dieerent, this is mare, this is less. And this is enough to exalt all the thrones of the hierarchy of intel- ligence.

Calypso and rhe kocksmith

Let ttte CPid Master h~ve 11is say. Let's look at the facts. There is a will rhat commands and an intelligence that obeys. Let's call the act that makes an intelligence proceed under the abso- lute constraint of a will artention. It makcs no difference whethcr the act is directed ac che form of a letrer to be recognized, a sentence to be mernorized, a relation to be found between two mathematicai entities, or the ctements of a speech to Le com- posed. There is not one faculty that records, another that un- derstands, another that judges. The locksmith whocalls the let- ter 0 "the round,"and L "the square" is already thinking about relations. And inventing is not oP another order than ietnern.- bering. Let the expiicators "form" che children's "tasre" and ,, imaginarion"; ler them expound on the "genius" of creators.

We will be content to do as creators do: like Racine, who mem- orized, teanslated, repeated, and irnitated Euripides; Bossuet, who did the same with Tercullian; Rousseau with Amyot ; Boi- kau with Horace and Juvenal; like Demosrhenes, who copicd

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26 Tbr ignorant One's Lesson --

Thucydides eight times; I-,lioofr, wtio read Tacirus fifty-two times; Seneca, who recommended [hat the same book be read and teread; Waydn, who recreated six of Bach's sonatas over and over; Michelangelo, who spent his time redoing rhe Same torso again and again. Power cannor be dividcd up. There is only one power, that of saying and speaking , OE paying attetltion CO what one sees and says. One Iearns sentences and more sentences; one discovers hc ts , that is, relations berweet~ chings, and still orher relarions that are all of the Same nature; one learns to combine letters, words, sentences, ideas. It witt not be said that one has acquired science, that one knows truch or has became a geriius. But it will be known rhat, ,in the intellectual order, one can d o what any man can do.

Fhis is what evtrything is in everytbing means: rlie tautology of power. All the power of language is in the totality of a book. All knowledge of oneself as an intelligence is in the mastery of a bciok, a chapter, a scntence, a word. Everything is in evcry- thing and everything is in Ti/inz(~qtce, scoff the crirics, and, to carch the disciples off guard, they ask, 1s everyrhnng also in rhe Frrst volurne of Td~kwyae? And in its Birst word? J S mathematicc in TeIe'maque? And in the first ward of Te'lmuqae? And the dis- ciple kels the grniind slip out From under him and calls on rhe master for help: what should he answer?

You should have answered that ynu believe ali human works to be in the word Calypso since this ward is a work of human intelligence. He who calculared fractions is the same intellect~ial being as he who made the worci Calypso. The artist knew Greek; he chose a word that rneant "crafty," "hidden." The artisr resembles che one who imagined the ways o l writing the word we're talking about.He resembles rhe one who made ehe paper on which we write, the one who uses pens to the same purpose, the one who sharpens the pens witk ii penknife, ehe one who madc the penkriife out of iron, the one who procured the iron, rhe one who made the ink, the oiie whn prinred rhe ward La- lypso, the one who rnade che printing machine, the one who gener- alized the explications, rhe one who made the princing ink, etc., etc. , etc. All sciences, all art, anatomy, dynarnics, and so On, are the fruits of the saine intelligence who made ttle word Calypso. A philosopher

arriving in an unknown land would know it was inhabiced when he saw a geometrical Ftgure in the sand. "These are human foocprints," he says. I-fis cornpanions believe him mad because thc lines he shoals rhem don'r Iook likt: a Footprint. 'I'he schotars of the perfecced nine- teenth century open their startled eyes wide when someone points a Finger ar the word Calypso and tells them, " A human hand is there." I bet rhat the man sent frorn rhe Ecole Nor~nale in France, looking at the word Calypso, would say: "That doesn't I-tave the shape of a hand." "Evevything: is in eo~wything.""

Here is everything that is it? Calypso: the power of inteili- gence thar is in any human manifestation. The Same intelli- gence makes nouns and mathematicnl signs. What's more, it also makes stgns atld reasonings. These aren't two sorts of rninds. TRere is inequality in ttie nmnijfe~r~rinni of intelligence, according ro the greater or lesser encrgy communicated to rhe inrelligence hy the will for discovering and comhining new re- iations; but there is no hierarchy of ipttel'lectrlaal rapncity. Eman- cipation IS becorning consciolis of tiiis equality of nature, This is what Opens the way to all adventure in the land of knowledge. Ir is a matter of daring to be advenruruus, and not whecl-ter one learns more or Jess well or morc or less quickly. The "Jacotot method" is nar betrer: it is different. That's why the procedures used matter very Iittle in themselves. Xt could be T'di&mnqtle, or it could be something else. O n e begins with thr text and not with gramrnar, wich entire words and not wich syltables, Ir is not that i t is absolutely necessary to learn this way co Icarri bet- ter, and that the jacotot method is rhe forefarher of the globl method. In face, it's much faster to start with "Calypsn" and not with rhe A,B,Cs. Bur the speed won 1s only an effecc of power gained, a consequence of the emancipatory principle. "The Old Master begins with letters because he directs srudentc raccording to the principte of intellectual inequatity, and espe- cially rhe intellectual inferioriry oF children. He believes that letters are easier t o dicringuish than words; this is wcong, but this is what he thinks. He believes t l ~ a t a child's intelligence is only able t o learn C, A , C , and thar an adult, that is to say a

superior, intelligence is necessary to learn Catypso."' In short,

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B, A, B, like Calypso, is a flag; in~abilitp versus abiliiy. Spelling is an ace of contrition before being a way OE learning. That's why one could change the order of the procedures without changing anything in the principles.

The Old Master rnight one day rake ir into his head to train CO read by words and only then, maybe, would we have our studenrs learn how to spei1 chem. And what wouId result from this apparent change of posrure? Nothing, Our students urouid bc no less emancipated and the chlldren of the 01d Master no iess stultified. . . . The Old Master doesn't stuitify hhis students by rnaking chern spell; he stultifres by telling rhcrn rhat they can'c spell by cbernselves. Making them read by words won't emancipate thern; i t will deaden them because he will be very careful to tell rhem that their young intefiigence ,can'r do without the explications he pulls otrt of his aged brain. ift is thus not the procedure, thc cnurse, the rnanner, rhat emancipates or stultifics; it's the principle, The principle of inequality, thc old prrnciple, stul- tifies no matter what one does; the pririciple of equality, theJacutot principle, e~nancipates no matter whac pracedure, book, or fai r it is applied to.' - --

The problern is to reveveal an intelligence ro itself, Anyihing can be used. Tef6m~lque. O r a prayer or a Song that tbe child or the ignorant one knows by heatt. There i s always something tfie ignorant one knows that can be used as a point of comparison, something eo which a new thing to be learned can be related. The locksmith who opens his eyes wide when told he can read bears witness to this. He doesn't even know the alphabet. Let hirn take the time to glance at the calendar, Doesn't he know the o d e r of the months and can't he thus figure out January, February, March. He knows how to Count a little. An4 what's to prevent hjm from counting sofrly while following the lines iri order to recognize in written form what he already knows? He knows he is calted William and thac his birthday isJanuary I 6th. He will soon know how to find the word. He knows that February has only twenty-eight days. H e sees char one colurnn is shorter than the others and he will recognize "28." And so on. There is always ssrnething that the master can ask him to

find, something abouc which he can quesaion him and thus ver- ify the work of his inteiligence.

The Master and Socrates I These are in facr the master's two fundamental acrs. He in-

tewogdtes, he cfemands speech, that is to say, the manifestation of an inteiligence rhat wasn't mare of itself or ihai had given up. And he uerifef rhar the work of the inteiligence is done with attention, that the words don't say jusc anyrhing in order ta escape from the constraint. 1s a highly skilled, very learned mas- ter necessary to perform this? On ehe contrarp, ahe learned mas- W'S science makes it very difficult for him not to spoif the method . He knows ehe response, and kis questions lead rhe stu- dent to it naturally. This is the secret of good masters: rhrough tbeir questions, chey discreetly guidc che student's intelli- gence--discreerIy enough to make i c work, but not to the point af Leavitig it ro iiself. Therc is a Socrates sleeping in every ex- plicator. And it musr be very cfear how the Jacotot rnerhud- that is co say, the student's merhod-diEers radically frnm the method of theSocratic mastec.. Through his incerrogations, Soc- rates Ieads Meno's siave to rccognize the mathemarical rruths rhat lie within himself, This may be the path to Icarning, but i t is in no way a path to emancipation. O n the contrary, Socrates musr ~ a k e the slave by his hand so that the latter can find what is inside himself. The demonstration of his knowledge is just as much the demonctration oF his powerlessnesc: he will netfer walk by himseif, unlesc it is to illusrrate the master's lesson. In this case, Socrates interrogates a slave who is descined to remain one.

The Socratic rnetfiod is thus a yerfecred form of stuitificatiun. Like all learned rnasters, Socraees interrogates in order ro in- struct. But whoever wishes to cmancipate someone must inter- rogare hirn in the nanrler of men and nnt in the rnanner of scholaxs, in order co he instructcd, not to instruct. And rhac can only he performed by someone who effectiveiy knüws no rnore

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rhan rhe student, who has never made the voyage before him: the ignorant master. There's no rrsk of thls master sparing the child the time necessary to account for the word Calypso. But what does he have ro do with Calypso and how would he even undersrand anything abour i t ? Let's forget Calypso for a mo- m e n t . v h o is the chi1d who hasn't heard rhe ~ord's Prayer, who

1 hasn't Iearned the words by lieart? In this way the thnng is found, and the yoor and ignorant father who wants CO teach his son to read will not be embarrassed He will certainly find some obliging person In the neighbothood, someone litenate enough to copy the prayer for him. With this, the faehec ot the mothcr can begin the child's instruction by asking him wbere the word Our 1s. "lf the ckild ~s attentive, he w ~ i l say that the hrsr word on the paper must be Our, since it is thc Arst wurd in the sen- tence. Father will necessarily be the second word; rhe child will be able to compare. distinguish, know these two words and rec- ognize them e~erywhere,"~ Who rs the farher ar mother wha would not know how to ask the child, struggling wirh the texr o i the prayer, wtiat he Sees, what he makes of it or what he can

i say about i t , and what he thinks about what hc's saying or doing? Ir's the Same way he woutd ask a neighbor about the tool he holds in his hand and how i t is uscd. T0 teach what one doesn't know is simply to ask questions abotit what one doesn't. knotv. Science icn't needed to ask such questions. The ignorant one can ask anything, and for the Voyager in the land of signs, his questions alone will be true questions cornpelling rhe au- tonomous exercise of h ~ s intefligence.

'

Granted, reglies the cr~tic. Bur that which makes the inter- rogator forceful also makes him incompetcnr as a verificr. How will lie know if the chiid is lasing his way? The father or morhet can always ask the child: show me "Fathcr" or "'Hraven." But how can they verify if ehe ckild has pointed to rhe right word? The dif-cdty can only get worse as the chtid advances-if he advances-in ltis training. Won't the ignorant rnaster and thc: ignorant student be playing out the fable of the blind man lead- ing the blind?

The lgnnratzt Onek Eer.rcln 3 T

The Power of the Ignorant

Let's begin by reassuting ehe crirics: we will not make of the ignorant one thc fount of an innate sciei-ice, and especialiy not of a science of the people as opposed to that of the scholar. One must be iearned to judge the results of the work, to verify tbe srudcnr's science. The ignorant one himself will do les.r and tnove at t f~e Same time. He will not verify what the student has found; he will verify that the student has searched. He wilj jitdge whether or not he has paid artention. For onc need only be Iiu- man to judge the facc of work. Just iike t l ~ e philosopher who "recognizes" human footprints in tfic Iines in the sand, die mother knows how co sce "iri Iiis epes, in the chifd's fearures, when he is doing work, when he is pointing to the words in a sentence, if he is atrentive co what he i s doing,""' Th '

e ignorant rnaster inust demand frorn his ctudene that he prove to hirn that he has studied attentively. Is this insignificant? ?'hink abour ewrything che detnand implies for thc student in rhe way of an endless task. Think about the intelligente it can afsu grant to the ignorant examiner: "Whar prevents the igris~iani bur man- ~ipctted mother frorn noticing ail the times that she asks the child where 'Father' 15, whcrher or not he always poines ro thc Same word; what prevents her hiding thc word and asking, what is the wurd under n y finger? Etc. , etc,""

A pious image, a housewife's recipe . . . This is huw che of- ficia1 spokesman of the explicative rribe judged it: "Oizernn teilch U J ~ R ~ one doesn'r knozu is still a housewife's r n o r t ~ . " ' ~ We will ar- gue that "maternal int~iition" does not exert any domestic priv- ilege here. The finger that hides die word Father is the same that is in Calypso, the hidden or rhe crafty: ehe mark of human inteiligence, the most rlementary ruse of i ts teasun-the trur reason, thr orie proper to each and comnion to alt, this reason that is manifested in an exempiary fashion whenever the igno- rant one's knowledge and rhe rnasrer's ignorante, hy becorning equal, demonstrate the power5 of intellectual ecluality. "Man is

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an animal wha can tell very well when a speaker doesn'r know what he's talking about"; "that ability is what unites us as hu- m a n ~ . " ' ~ The practice of the ignorant maseer is not rhe simple expedient oF allowing clte poor who have neither time, nor rnoney, nor knowledge, co educate their children, It is the cru- ciai experiment that liberates the pure powers of reason wher- ever science does not lend a hanci. What one ignorant person can perform once, all ignorant people can always perform-be- cause there is no hierarchy in ignorante. What ignorant people and learncd people can both do can be called the power of thC. intelligent being as such.

This power ooE equaliry is at once one of dualiry and one of cornrnuniey. Theee is no inreliigence where there is aggrega- eion, the ßindisg of one mind to another. There is intelligente where each person acts, tells wtiat he is dolng, anrl gives the means of verifying the reality of his action. 'E'he thing in com- mon, placed between two minds, is the gauge of that equalicy, and this in twu ways. A material rhing is first of all "the oniy bridge of communication between two minds."l4 The bridge is a Passage, but i t is also distance maintained. The rnateriality o f the book keeps two minds ar an equal distance, whereas expli- cation is the annihilarion of-one mind by anocher. Bur the thing is also an always available source of material verificatioa: che ignorant examiner's art is ro "bring che exarninee back to tke material objects, to a thing that he can veriS with his senses,"" The exarninee is always beholden to a verifiration in the open book, in the rnateriality of each word, thc c u m of each sign. The tliing, the book, psevenrs cheating by both the ignorant and the learned. This is why the igi~orant rnaster can from time to time exeend his competence ro the point.ofverifying, not che child's knowledge, but the attention he gives to what he is doing and saying.

In this way you can even bc of service to one of your neighbors who finds himself, because of circumstances beyond his conrral, fotced to send his son ro school. Hf the neighbnr asks you to verify rhe young student's knowldge, you need not hesirate ro perform this inquiry,

evcn thou~h you have had no sclioolitig. "What are you learning, iny little friend?" you wiII ack rhe cfiild. "Creek." "What?" "Aesop," "What?" "The Fabtes." "Which ories do you know?" "The first one." "Where i s the first word?" "There i t is." "Give me your book. rne the fourth word. Write it . What ynti have written doesn't Iook like rhe fourth word in rhe book. Neighbnr, rhe child doesn't kiiow what he says he knows. This is proof that he wasn't paying attcntivn whih studying or while displaying what he says he knows. Advise him to study; I will return and tell you if he is learning the Creek ehac I n~yself don't know, rhar B don't even know how to read."'"

TRis is the way rhat the ignorant master can instruct the learned one as well as rhe ignorant one: by verifying thac he 1s always searching. Whoevcr looks always finds. He doesn't nec- essariiy find wtlat he was looklng for, and even less what hc was supposcd to find. Bur he finds somcthing new to relate to che thin8 that he already knows. What is essential i s the continuous vigllance, che attention rkat never subsides wittiout irrational- ity secting in-something that the learned one, like the igno- rant one, excefs at. T\le rnaster is he who keeps the researcher on his own route, the one thar he alone is following and keeps following.

Ta h c h His Own

Still, to vcrify this kind of research, one must know what seeking or researching means. And this is the heart of the method. "10 emancipate someone ehe, one must be emancipated oneself. One must know oneseif ro be a Voyager o f ahe mind, similar to all otlier voyagew: an intellecrual subject parricipat- ing in ehe power comrnon to incellectual beings.

How does one accede to this self-knowledge? 'X peasant, an artisan (fathcr of a farnil y!, will be intetlectuatly emancipared if Irr rhinks ahout what he is and what kie does in the social order."" This assertion will seem simple, and even sirnplistjc, eo whoever ignores the weight of philosophy's old commanli- rnent, from rhe mourh of Platr?, on the artisan's dectiny; Don't

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do anything other than yovr oecm a@r, which is not in any way bhinkin~, but simply nlnkivlg that thing rhat exhausts the deh- nition oC your being; if you are a shoernaker, make shoes-and make chifdren wllo will do the same. The Delphic oracie was not speaking to you when it said, K.now yourself. And even if the playful divinity had fiin mixing a Iirtie gold into your child's soul , it is the golden race, the guardians of the city, who will take on the task of raising him to be one of theirs.

The age of progress utidoubtediy wanted to shake the rigidity from the old commandmcnt, Afong with ehe Encyclopedisrs, this age undetstands that nothing is done by routine anymwe, not even attisans' work. And it knows thac chere is no social actor, no matter how insignificant, who is not at the Same time a thinking being. Citizen Destutr-Tracncy recalled rhis ar the dawning of the new century: "Every speaking man has ideas uf ideolog~, grammar, logic, and etoquence. Every man whn acts has principles of private morafs and social moralc. Every being who merely vegetaces has his notions of physics and arithmetic; and simply because he lives with those Bike himself, he has his little cullection of hisroeica1 facts and his vay of evali~aring them."'"

I t 1s L ~ L I S impossible for shoemakers just to rnake shoes, tltat they not also be, in their rnanner, gramrnarians, rnoralists, or physicists. And this is rhe fjrst problern: as long as peasants and artisans form rnoml, mathematical, or physical nlptions based on their environniental routine ur their chance encounters, che reasoned march of progress will be doubly at risk: slowed down by men of routine and superstition, or disrt~pted by the haste of violent tnen. Therefore, a minimum of instruction, drawn frum the principles of reason, science, and the general incerest, is necessary co put sane norions into heads [hat would otherwise form fauity ones.*And it gocs without saying that the entetprise wifl be all the more profitable if it rernoves the son of a peasant OP artisan from the natural miiieii that praduces tliose false i d m , But this evidcncc imrnediately runs u p againsr a Contra- diction; the child who muse be removed from his rautine arid

-- The Ignorant O I E ~ ~ Lesson 35

from superstitiuri musc nevertheless bc returned to his activity and his condition. And since its dawning, the age of progress has been alert to rhe mortal danger of separating the child of the pcople from the condition to which he is destined aild from the ideas that hold fast in that condition. Thus the age tutns back an4 forth wirhin this contradicrion: rhac alI che sciences are now known to be founded on simple principles availabfe co all ehe minds who Want to make use of thcm, provided they folfaw rhe rigt~t merhnd. Bur rhe Same nature that opens up a careet in science to alf rninds wants a social order where thc classes are separated and where individuals conform to thc social state rhat is their dcstiny.

Thc solution to thiscontradiction is found in the ordered bal- ance of instructiori and rnoral education, the dividing up of rhc roies that fall to ehe schoolmaster aiid to ehe father of the family.. Using the light of instruction, the First chases away the false ideas thc cliild receives f ron his parental rnilieu; thc cecond, by moral education, chases away the extravagant aspirations the scho«lchild would like to exrract fiom his young science and take back to his life condition. The father, incapable of drawing on his own experience to furcher his child's intejfectual instruc- rinn, is, an the other hand, all-puwetful in teaching him, by word and exarnple, the vircuc of remaining in liis condition. The famify is at once the nucleus af inrellectual incapacity and the principle of ethical objectivity, This double character trans- lates into a double limitation on the artisaäi's self-corisciousness: the consciousness of whar he does is dmwn from a science chat is not his own; the consciousriess of what he js leads him back to doing nothing orher than his own task.

Let us say ir more simply: rhe harmonious balance of instruc- tion and moral edttcation is that of a double stultification. Emancipation is precisely thc opposire of this; it is each man becoming conscious of his nature as an ineellectuaf subject; it 1s ttle Cartesian forrnula of equality read backwards. "Descartes said, '1 think, eherefore I am'; and ttiis nobie thought of the grear phiiosopher is une of che principles of universal tcaching.

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36 The Ignorant One'r Lessotz

We turn his thought around and say: 'I am a man, therefore 1 think.' "I9 TThe reversal equates "man" wirh cogtto. Thought is not an attribute of the thinking substance; it is an attribute of hzmzanzty. %O transform "Kn0.w yourself" inro the principle of ernancipation of any human being, i t is necessary to activate, against the Platonic interdicrion, one of the fantasric etymol- ogies of the CrarjIa~: man, the anthropos, is the being who ex- amines whut /3e sees, who knows himself in so eeflecttng on his act. 20 Tiie whole praceice of universal teaching is summed up in tbe question: what do you think about it? iits whole power lies in thc consciousness of emancipation that it realiaes in the mas- ter and gives birth to in the stiident. The father'kould eman- cipate his son if he begins by knowing himcelf, that ip'to say, by examining the intellectual acts of which he is the subject, by noticing the manner in which he uses, in these acts, his power as a thinking being.

The consciousness of emancipation is above a!! the inventory of the ignotant one's intellectual capabilities. He knows his lan- guage. H e also knows how to use it to Protest against his state or to interrogate those who know, or who believe they know, more ehan he knows. He knows his trade, his toois, and their uses; he would be able to pesfect them if need be. He must begin to reflect on bis abilities and on the manner in whicb he acquired them.

Let's cake ehe exact measure of chat reflection, It is not about opgosing manual knowledge, ehe knowledge of the people, the inceiligence of the tool and of the worker, co ehe science of ,

schools or the rhetoric of ehe elite, It is not about asking who built seven-gaced Thebes as a way to vindicate the place of con- structors and makers in the social order. On ehe contrary. it is about recognizing thar there are not two levels of ineelligence, [hat any human work of art is the pracrice of the same intellec- tual potential. In all cases, i c is a question of observing, com- paring, and combining, of making and notieing how one has done ic. Whac is possible is reflection: that return ta oneself [hat

is not pure contennplacion but rathet an unconditiorial attention to one's intellectual acts, tu the route they fol1o.r~ and to the possibility of always moving forward by bringing to bear tht Same intelligence on the conquest of new territories, He who makes a distinction between the manual work of the worker or the common man and clouds of rhetoric temains stultified. The fabrication of clouds is a human work of arr that demands as rnuch-neither more nor less-Iabor and intellectual attention as the fabrication of shoes or locks. The acadernician Lerrninier expounded on the intellecrual incapacity of the people. Ler- minier was a stuitified person. But a srultiiied person is neither lazy nor a foo3.. And we oursefves would be stuItified if wedidn't recognize in his theses the same art, the Same intelligence, the same Iahor as those acts thar transforrn wood, stone, or leather. It is only by recogniting Eerminier's Iizbnr that we can recognize the inteldige~ce manifesred in the most humble of works.

The poor vitlage people who live outside of Grenobie work ac making gioves; they are paid thirty cents a dozen. Since they became eman- cipated, rhey work hard at looking at, studying, and undersranding a weil-made glnw. They will understand the meaning of all the sen- tenceJ, all the tuoudj of the glove. They will end up speaking as wcll as the city womeri who earn seven francs a dozen. 8rie has otily CO lcarn a language spoken wirh scissors, needle, and thread. I t is merely a quvstion ( in human societies) of understanding and speaking a lan- g ~ a g e . ~ '

The material ideality of language refutes any opposition be- tween the golden race and the iron race, any hienarchy---even an invertcd one-between rnen devoted to manual work and men destined to the exercise of thought. Any work of language is understood and executed the Same way, Ir is for this reason that the ignotant one can, as soon as he knows himself, verify his son's research in the book he doesn't know how to read: he doesn't know the maeerials he is working with, but if his son teils I-iim how he goes co work at it, he will recognize if his son i s doing reseatch, because he knows what seeking, researching,

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is. He has only one thing to ask his son: to move words and sentences back and forth, as he hirnself moves his tools back an$ forth when he is seeking.

The book-TkI6m11qtie or any other-placed becween ewo minds Sums up the ideal cornmunity inscribed in the materi- aiity of things. The Look ir the equality of intelligence. This is why the same philosophical commandment prescribed that the artisan do nothing bur his own affait and condernned the democracy of the book. The PIatonic phitosopher-king favored the living ward to the dead letter of the book-that thought- become-material at the disposition of men of substance, chat discourse at once siient an$ too laquacious, wandering at ran- dom among thosc whose only business is thinking. The expli- cative privilege is onfy the small change of that interdiction. And the privilege that the Jacotoe method gave to the book, to the manipiitiation of signs, to mnenotechnics, was the exact. rc- vercai of the hietarchy of minds that was designated in Plato by the critique of ~ r i t i n g . ~ ~ The book seals the new relation be- tween rwo ignoranr yeople who recognize eacl-i other from thae: point on as inrelligent beings. And this new relation undoes the stultiQing relation of intellectual inscruction an$ rnoral edu- cation. lntervening in lieu of the disciplinary demands of ed- ucation is the decision ro ernancipate that renders the father or rnother capabie of taking the ignorant schuolmaster's place- thae piace where the unconditional exigency of the will is in- carnated. Unconditional exigency: the ernancipatoxy father is not a simple good-narured pedagogue; he is an inrractable mas- ter. The emancipatory commandment knows no compromises. It absolutely cornrnands of a subject what: i t supposes it is ca- pable of comrnanding of itseff. The son will verify in the book the equality of intelligence in the same way that the fariist or rnother will verify the radical nature of his research. Lhe famity unit is then no longer the place of a return that brings the ar- ttsan back to ehe cnnsciousness of his incapaciey. I t is one of a new consciousness, of an overtaking of the seiF that extends each

person's 'own ilRdir" to the pnint wliere i t ir Part and parcel af the common reason enjoyed by all.

The Blitid Man and His Dog

For it is indeed this tliat is verified: rhe principie of the equal- ity of all speaking beings. By cornpellirig his son's will, the fa- ther in a poor family verifies that his son has the same inrelli- gence as he, that he seeks in the Same way; and what tfle son, in turn, looks h r in tlie bouk is the intelligence of tlie book's author, in ordcr to verify that it ptoceeds in the Same way as his own. Thar teciprocity i s rhe hearc of the emancipatoty method, rhe principle of a nea philosophy tliat the Founder. by joining together two Greek words, baptized "panecastic,"" because it lovks for the total+ of human intelligence in euch iritelfeccuai rnanifestation. No doubt the Iandowner who sent his gardener to be trained at Louvain for the Lenefit of bis own sons' instruc- rion didn't understand this wry weII There are no particular pedagogical petiormances to expect from an emincipared gar- dener or from the ignorant master in general Essentially, what an ernancipated Person can do is be an emancipator: to give, not the key to knowiedge, but the consciousriess of what an intel- ligence can do when it considers itself equal to any other and considers any other equal to icself,

Ernancipation is the consciousness of that equality, of that reciprociry rhar alone perrnits intelligence to be realired by ver- ification. What stultifies the common people is not the lack of instruction, but the belief in rhe inferioriry of their intelli- gence. And what rtultifies rhe "inferiors" stultifies rhe "supe- riors" at the same time. For rhe oniy verihed intelligence is the one that speaks to a Fellow-man capable of vetifying rhe equalitp oF their tnrellipence. The supetior mind condemris irself to never beirig understood by inferiors. He can only assute himself of his intelligence by disqualifying those who could show h i n

'From rhe G r e e k ~ n , rvexyrhing, and brhastor, cach: cverythinp: in C O ~ ~ , - T R & N S .

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40 The Ignorant One's Lefson

their recognition of it. Consider the scholar who knuws that feminine minds are inferior to mascutine minds; he spends the essential part of his life conversing with someone who cannot understand him: "What inrimary! What sweetness in the con- versations of love! In the coupfe! Xn the famity! He who is speaking is never Sure of being understood. He has a mind and a heart, a great rnind, a sensitive heart! But the corpse to which the social chain has attached him, ala~!''~' Will the acimiration of his students and of the exterior world console him for this domestic disgrace? Whae worrh is an inferior rnind's judgment of a superior mind? "Teil a paet: I was very happy,yqh your latest book. He will respond, ptncking h ~ s lips: you give nie ~nnch honor; that is to say, niy dear Fellow, I. cannot be fattered by the commendation of so srnali an intelligence as y o ~ r s . " ~ "

But ehe belief in intellectual inequality and in the superiority of one's own intelligence does not belong to scholars and dis- einguished poets alone. Xts force comes frorn the fact that i c em- braces the entire popularion undet the guise of humility. I can't, rhe ignoranr one you are encouraging to teach himself declares; i am oniy a worker. J.isten carefully co everything there is in that syllogisrn. First of all, "I can't" rneans " X don't Want to; why would I make the efforr?" Which also rneans: 1 un- doubtedly couiid, for I am intelligent. But X arn a worker: people like me can't; rny neighbor can't. And what use would it be for me, since I have to deal with imbeciles?

So goes ehe belief in inequality. There is no superior mind that doesn'e Find an even more superior one to bc lower to; no inferior rnind rhat doesn't find a rnore inferior one to hold in concempt. The professorial gown of Louvain Counts Iitcle in Paris. And tlie Parisian artisan Rno~i~s how inferior provincial ar- tisans are to hirn; these, in turn, know how backward peasants are. The day when those peasants think thae they know things themselves, and rhat the Parisian professorial gown drapes a lamebrain, the loop wiil bc closed. The universal superiotity of inferiors will unite with the universal inferiority of superiors to create a world where no inteiligence could recognize another as

its equal. For reason is iost whcre one Person speaks to another who is unable to reply to hirn. "There is no more beautifuiil spec- tacle, none more instructive, than rhe spectacle of a man speak- ing. Bua: the listener must reserve the righc to think about what he has just heard, and the speaker musc engage with him in this. . . , The fistener must thus verify if the speaker is actualiy within the bounds of reason, if he departs from it, if he returns to i c . Without that authorized verification, necessitated by the very eyuality of intelligente, I sec nothing in a conversation but a discourse between a blind man and his dog.""

The apology of ehe blind man speaking to his dog is the world of unequal intclligence's response to rhe fable of the blind lead- ing the blind. We can see ihat it is a question of philosophy anrJ hurnanity, not of reciyes for chitdren's pedagogy. Universal teaching is above afl the universal verification of the similatity of what all the emancipated can do, afl those who have decided to think of thernselves as people jusc Iike everyone else.

Everything Bs in Everything

Everything is in everything. The power of the rautology is that of equality, the power that searches for the finger of inteI- tigence in every human work. This is the meaning of rhe ex- ercise that astounded Baptiste Proussard, a progressive man and director of aschooI in Grenoble, who accompanied the two sons of the dcputy Casimir E t ie r co Louvain. A member of the So- ciety of fiaching Merhods, Baptiste Froussard had already heard of universal teaching, and in Miss Narcellis's class, he res- ognized tke exercises that che society's president, Jean de Las- teyrie, had dcscribed. He there saw young giris write compo- sitions in fiteen minutes, some on the topic of "'ffhe Last Mari," others on "The Exite's Return," creating, as the Founder assured him, pieces of titerature "that did not spoil the B&tdty of thc most beautiful pages of our besr authors." It was an assertion that learned visitors had greeted with the deepest reservatians. Bur Jacotot had found a way to convince them: since they evidentiy

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42 The ignorant One? La.ron 6 .-

considered themselves to be among the best writers of their time, they had only to subrnit themselves to the same resc and give the students the possibiiity of comparing. De tasteyrie; who had lived through 1793, had lent himself willingly to the exercise. This had not been the case with Guigniaut, an envoy frorn the Ecole Normale in Paris who, though he was unable tu See any significance in Calypso, had managed to see the unfor- givable lack of a circumfiex on cior̂ tve in one of the compositions. Invited to the test, he arrived an h«ur late and was told to come back the next day. But that afternoon he caught the maii car- riage for Paris, carrying in his baggage as darnning cvidence thc shameful i deprived of a circurnfl ex.

After reading the compositions, Baptiste Froussard sat in on classes of improvisation, This was an essential exercise in uni- versal teaching: to learn to speak on any subject, off the cuff, with a beginning, a deveioprnent, and an ending. Learnirig to improvise was first of all fearning ta wercoma on~seIf, to ovetcome rhe pride that disguises itself as humility as an excuse for one's incapacity to speak in front of others-that is to say, one's re- fusal to submit oneseif to their judgment. And after that i t was tearning CO begin and to end, to rnake a totulity, to close up lan- guage in a circle. Thus two students improvised with assurance on the topic of "The Atheist's Death," after which, to dissipate such sad thoughts, Jacotot asked another student to improvise on "The Plight of a Fly." Hiiarity erupted in the classroom, but Jacorot was ciear: tliis was not about laughing, it was about speuking. And the young student spoke for eight and a half min- utes on rhis airy subject, saying charming things and rnaking graceful, freshly imaginative connections.

Baptiste Froussard had also participated in a music lesson. Jacotot had asked him for fragrnents of Freflch poetry, on which the students improvised rnelodies wir11 ac~om~anirnents that they interpreted in a deiightful manner. Baptiste Froussard came back tu Miss Marceilis's sever~ti more times, assigning cornpositions himself on morals and metaphysics; all were per- forrned with aii admirable facility and talent. But the following

T h fgnnvcdnr One? Lesson 4.3 'i_,'

exercise surptised hirn the rnosr. One day, Jacotot addtessed the students: "Young iadies, you know that in every human work there js att; in a steam engine as in e dress; in a work of literatlire as in a shoe. Well, you will now write me a cornposition an art in general, connecting your words, your expressions, your thoughts, to such and such passages from the assigned authors in a way rhat lets you justify or verify everything."'"

Various books were brought to Baptiste Froussard, and he himself indicated ro one student a passage from Atklie, CO an- other a grarnmar chapter, to others a passage frorn Bossuet, chapters on geography, on division in Lacroix's arithmetic, and so ori. He did not have to wait iong for the rcsults of this Strange cxercise on such bateiy comparable things. After a half hour, a new astonishment came over him when he heard the quality of the cnrnposicions just writren beneath his nose, and the impro- vised comrnentaries that justified thern. He particularfy ad- rnired an explication of art done on rhe Passage from Athiilze, along with a justification ot verificacion, which was comparabie, in his opinion, to rhe most brilliant lirerary lesson he had evcr heard.

That day, more than ever, Baptiste Froussard understood in what sense one can say that eterytbi?zg is in evetything. He already knew that Jacotot was an astunishing pedagogue and he could guess ar the quality of rhe scudents forrned under his direction. But he returned home having understood one more thing: Miss Marceliis's students in Louvain had the same intelligente as the giovemakers in Grenoble, arid even--this was more difficult to admit-as the giovemakers on the outskirts of Grenoble.

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We inusr look further into che reason for these ef- fects: "We direcr students based on an apinion about ttle equaliey of intelligence."

Whac is an opinion? An opinion, the explicators respond, is a fetling we form about facts we have superficially observecl. Bpinions grow especially in weak and common minds, and they are the opposice of science, which knows the true reasons for phenomena. If you like, we will teach you science.

Slow down. We grant you [hat an opinion is not a truth. Bur this is precisely whac interests us: whoever does not know the trutti is looking for i t , and there aee many encounters to make atong the way. The only mistake would be to take our opinionc for the truth. Admittcdly, this Aäppens all the time. But this is precisely the one way t h a ~ are Want to distinguish ourselves (we others, the followers of the rnadman): we think thar our opinions are opinions and nothing more. We have seen certain facts. We believe thac this coutd be the reason for it, We (and you may do the same) will perform some other experimencs to verify ehe solidiry of rke opinion. Besides, i r seems to us that chis procedute is not campletely new. Didn't physicists and chrmists often proceed in this way? And we speak rhen about hypothesis, about the scientific method, in a respccaful tone.

After all, respect means litcie co us, Let's limit ourselves to the facts: we have seen tihildren and adulrs learn by themselves,

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46 Reason Between Epuls -

without a master explicaeor, how to read, wrice, play music, and speak foreign languages. We believe these farts can bc cxplained by the equality of intelligence. This is an opinion whose veri- fication we pursue. It's true there is a difficutty in atl this. Phy- sicists and chernises isolate physical phenomena and relate them to other physical phenomena. They set themselve(; to reproduc- ing the known egecrs by producing their supposcd causes. Such a procedure is forbidden us. We can never say: take two equal minds and place them in such and such a condition. We know intelligence by its effects. But we cannor isoiate i t , measure it. We are reduced to rnult ipl~ing the experiments inspired by that opinion. But we can never say: alt intelligence is equai.

Br's true. But our probfern isn't proving that all intelligence is equai. It's seeing what can be done undet that supposition. And for this, ie's enough for us that the opinion be possible- that is, ehat no opposing rruth be proved.

Of Brains and Leaves

Preciseiy, say the superior minds. The opposite fact is ob- vious, That intelligence is unequal is evident to everyone. First of all, in nature, no two beings are idcntical. Look at the leaves falling from the tree. They seem exactly the Same ro you. Look more closely and disabuse yourself, Among ehe thousands of leaves, there are no two alike. individualiry is the law of the worid. And how could this law thar applies tri vegetation not apply afo~tiori to this being so infinitely moie elevaced in the vital hierarchy that is human intelligence? TherQuve, each in- telligence is different. Second, there have always been, there al- ways wiji be, rhere are everywhere, beings unequally gifted for inteliectual things: scholars and ignorant ones, intelIigent people and fools, Open minds and closed minds. V e know what is said on the subject: the difference in circumstances, social rni- lieu, education . . . Well, let's do an experiment: let's take two children who come from the same rniiiieu, raised in the Same way. Let's rake rwo brothers, put them in che Same sehoof, make

them do the Same exercises. And what wilI we sec? One will du berter than the other. There is cherefore an intrinsic difference, And the difVerence results from this: one of the two is more in- telligent, rnore gifted; he Iias More resources than thc other. ?%~refme, you can clearfy see rhat intelligence is unequal.

How to respond to this widence? Let's begin at the beginning: with the leaves that superior minds are so fond of. We fully rec- ognize that they are as different as people so minded couild dc- sire. W only ask: how does one move from rhe diKerence be- tween leaves to the inequality of intelligence? Xnequalicy is only a kind of difference, and it is not ttie one spoken about in the case of leaves. A feaf is a material tbing while a mind is irn- material. Mow can one infer, without paralogism, the proper- ties of che mind frorn the properties of matter?

It is truc that this terrain is now trccupied by sotne fierce ad- uersaries: physiolugiscs. The ptopercies of the mind, according to the most radical of them, are in fact tht: properries of the hutnan brain. Differente and inequality hold sway there just as in the confrguration and funccioning of all rhe other orgnns in rhe human body. The brain weighs this inuch, so intelligcnce is worth that much. Phrenologists arid cranioscopists are busy with all tliis: this man, rhey teil u s , has rhe skull of a genius; this other doesn't have a head for inarhematics. Let's leave these 1ßrott~ber~nt.r co the examination of their protuberances and get down to the serious business. One can imagine a canscquent materialism that would be concerned only with brains, and that could apply to them everything that is applied to material beings. And so, effectively, the propositions of inteilectual emancipation wouid baio nothing but the dreams of bizarre brains, stricken with a particular form of thar oid mental mal- ady called melanchoiia. In rhis case, superior minds-that is tu say, superior brains-would in fact have authority over inferior minds in the same way man has authority over animals. I6 tfiis were simply the case, nobody would discuss the inequality of intelligence, Superior brains tr~ould not go to che unnecessary trouble of proving theie superiority over inferior minds-in-

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capable, by definition, of understanding rhem. They would be content to dominate rhern. And they wouldn't run inro any ob- sracles: their rnreliectual superioriry would be demonstrated by the fact of that domination, just like physical superiority. There would be no more need for laws, assemblies, and governments in the golirical order than thete would be for teaching, expli- cations, and academies in the intellectual order.

Such is not the case. We have govetnments and laws. We havc superior minds that try to teach and convince inferior minds. What is even stranger, the apostles of the inequaijty of intel- ligence, in their immense rnajority, dnn't hl ieve the physiol- ogists and niake fun of the phrenologists. The superiortty they boasr of can't be rneasured, they believe, by Instruments. Ma- teriaiism would be an easy explanarion for their superioriry, but they make a different case. Their superiority is spiritual. They are spirituaiists, above all, because af their own pood opinion of themselves. They believe in the immaterial and imrnortal soul, But how can something irnmaterial be susceptible ro more or less? This is the superior minds' contradiction. They wanr an irnmortait soul, a mind distinct ftam matter, and they want dii- ferent degrees of intelligence. But ir's rnatcer that makes dif- ferenses. If one insists On inequality, one must accept the theory of cerebrai toci; if one insists on the spiritual principke, one must say that it is thesame intelligence that applies, in different circumstances, to different material objects. But rhe superior minds Want neitlier a superiority that would be only material nor a spirituality thac would make them the equals of rkieir In- ferior~. They lay claim to the digerences of rnaterialists in the rnidst of the elevaeion that beIongs to irnmareriality. They paine rhe cranioscopist's skuils with the innzlte gifts of intelligence.

And yet they know very well that the shoe pinches, aiid rhcy also know they have to concede something to the inferiors, even if only provisionally. Here, tken, is how they arrange things: ehere is in every man, they say, an irnmaterial soul. This soul permirs even the mosa humble to know the great rruths of g d and evil, of conscience and duty, of God and judgment. In rhis

we are all equai, and we will even cancede that the humble often teach us in these rnatters. Let them be satisfied with this and not prcrend to intellectual capacities that are the privilege- ofren dearly paid for-of rhose whose rask is to wacch over tlie general interests of sociery. And don't come back and teil us that these differentes are pureiy social. Look instead at these swo children, who come from ehe Same milieu, taught hy the Same masrers. One succeeds, the other doesn't, Therefote . . .

So be it! Let's look rhen at your children and your t b ~ ~ r e . One succeeds better than the other, this is a fktct. 1f he succeeds better, you say, this is beiwirse he is more intelligent. Hcre the explanation becomes obscure. Have you shown another frnct that would be rhe cause of rhe first? Jf a physioiogist found one of tlie brarns ta be narruwer or iighter than the other, rhis wouid be a facr. He coutd therefnre-ize deservediy. But yoii haven't shown us anorhet fact. By saying "He is more intelligent," you have simply summed up the ideas that tell the story of the fact. You have given ir a nnrne. But the name of a fact is not its cause, oniy, at best, irs metaphor The 6rsr time you rold the story of the fact by saying, "IIe succeeds better." In your reteiling of ~t

you used another name. "He is more intelfigent." But chere is no more in the second Statement than in the first. "This man does better than the other becausc he is smarter. That means precisely: he does better because he does better. . . . This young man has more r w o ~ ~ c e s , they say. 'What is more re- sources?' I ask, arid they start to teQl rne the story of the two children again; so mort resortrces, I[ say to myself, means in French thc set of faccs X just heard; but ehat expression doesn't explajn them at aB1.""

It's impossible, ~herefore, to break out of rhe circle. One must show the cause of the ineqliality, at the risk of borrowing it from the protuberants, or be reduced ro mereiy scating a tau- tology. The inequality of intelligence explains rhe inequality of intelleccuaf manifestations in the way the iiiutus domnitzgu ex- plains the effects of opium.

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- 50 Reason Betzuee~a Eiqr4nl.i

An Attentive Anima1

We know that a juscification of the equality of intelligence would be equally tautologicsil. We wiil therefore try a different patli: we will talk onty about what we See; we will name facts without pretending to assign them causes. The first fact: "I See that man does things [hat other animals don'r. I call this fact mind, intelligence, as I like; B explain nothing, 1 give a name to what I s ~ e . " ~ I can also say that man is a teasonable animal. By that I am registering the Fact that man has an articulated lan- guage that he uses eo make words, figures, and comparis8?s for " the purposes of communicating his thoughcs to his fellow-men. Second, when H coinpate two individuals, "I See rhat in thefirsg. moments of life, they have absotutely the sanie intelligence; that is eo say, they da exacely the same things, with rhe same goal, with the same intention. I say that these two humans have equal intelligence, and this phrase, equd inrekIigence, is short- hand fo'or all the facts that L have obsecved watchirig two very young infants."

kater, I[ will See different facts. f will confirrn rhat che two minds are no longer doing the sarne things, are not obtaining the Same results. I could say, if X wanted to, thar one's inteili- gence is more developed than che other's, so long as I know that, here again, B am only vecounring a new fact . Norhing pseverits me from making a supposition abour all this. I wiil not say that the one's faculties are inferior to the other's. I will onily suppose that ehe two faculties haven't been equally exercised. Nothing proves rhis eo me with certainty. But nothing proves the op- posite, It is enoiigh Bor rne to know that this lack of exercise is possibfe, and that many experimenrs attest to it. I wilf thus dis- place the tautology very siightly. I will not say that he has done less well because he is less inreiligenc. I will say that he has per- haps produced a poorer work betause he has worked more pwriy, that he has not seen well because he hasn't llooked well. I will say thar he has brought less attention CO his work.

By this I may not have advanced very far, but far enough,

nevertheless, to Lseak out of the circle. Attention is neither rhc skull surrounding the brain nor an occult quality. It is an im- material L~ct in its principle, material in its eEects: we have a thousand ways of verifying irs presence, i ts absence, or its greater or lesser intcnsity. All the excrcises of universal teaching tend toward this. In the end. the inequaiity OB artention is a phenomenon whose possible causes are reasonably suggested to us through experiment. We know why yoting children direcc so similar an inrelligence to exploring their world and learning rheir language. Insrinct and need drive them equally. Yhey all have just ahour the samr needs to satisfy, and they all Want equallg to enter human sociecy enjoying all the advantages and rigbts of speaking heings. And for this, intelligence must not come to a standstifl.

The child is surrounded by objects that speak to hin^, all a t once, i n

different ianguages; he must srudy them separately and together, rhcy have no relationship and often contradict each other. He can make nothing of all the idtoms In which nature speaks to him-through his eyes, tits touch, through all his senses-simultaneously. He must repeat ciften to remember so many absolurefy arbitrary signs. . What great attention is necessary for all [hat!'

This giant step taken, the need becomes less irnperious, rhe artention less coostant, and the child gets used to learning theough the eyes of others. Circumstances becorne diverse, and he develops the intelleceuaf capacities as those circumstance~ de- mand. The Same holds for tlle common peopie. It is useless eo discuss whether their "lesser" intelligehice is an elect of nature or an effeci of society: they develop the tntellrgcnce that the needs and circumstances of their existente demand of them, "shere where neetl ceases, intelligence slumbers, unfess some stronger will rriakes irself' understood and says: concinue; ioitk at what you are doing and what you ccbn do if you apply the same inielligence you have already made use of, by bringing to eack thing the Same arcention, by not letting youtself stray from your path.

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6y nn intelligente. P e i h n ~ saying that wiils are unequalily de- manding sufficcs to explain che differentes in attention that would perhaps sufhce to explain the inequality of rntelfectual performances.

Man is U wil l served by uala intelligence. This forrnula is heir to a long history. Summing up the thought of the great eighteenth-century minds, che poet-philosopher Jean Prancois de Saint-karnbert atifirmed: "Man is a living organization served by an intelligence.'' The formula srnacked of rnaterialism, and during the Restoration, the apostle of coiinterrevoiution . the Viscount de Bonald, strictiy reversed i t . "Man," he proclaimed, "is an intelligence served by organs."But this reversai caused a v e ~ y ainbiguous restoration of the intelligence. What the vis- coune disliked about ttie philosopher's formula was not that it gave too srnall a part ro human intelligence; he hirnself didn't grant it much. What he disliked was the republican model of a king at che Service of a collective organization. What he wanted to restore was che good hierarchical order: a king who commands and subjects who obey. The soveretgn intelligence, for him, was certainlly not that of the child or worker, tending to the appropriation of a world of signs; it was the divine in- teliigence already inscribed in the codes gtven to man by the divinity, in the very language thar owed its origin neither ro nature nor t o h u m m art, but to the pure gife of God. Huinan will's fot was to subrnit itself to rhar intelligence already man- ifested, inscrikd in codes, in language as in social institutians.

Taking ehis stand broughn: wieh i c a certain paradox. To en- siire the triumph of social objectivity and the objectivity of Lan- guage over ehe "individualisr" phitosophy of the Enlighten- ment, de Bonald had to take up in his turn the most "mareri- aiist" formulations of that Same philosophy, In order to deny any anteriotity of thought ovet language, in order to forbid in- tefligence any right to search for a truth of its own, he had to join up wirh those who had reduced mental operations to thr pure mechanism of material sensations and Linguistic signs: to rhe point of rnaking fun of those monks on Mounc Athos who,

contemplating their navelr, helieved themselves visited by di- vine inspiration. Tbus that CO-naturaliry between linguistic signs and the idcas of tinderstanding that tbe eighteenth cen- tury snught, and rhac the Ideo1oguc.s worked at finding, fuund itself recuperated, reversed to favor the prirnacy of the estab- lished, in rhe frarnework of a theocratic and snciocratic vision of tlie intelligence, ''Man ," wrure thc viscounr, "thinks his speech before speaking his rhoughtl'-a materiaiist theory of language rhat does not allow us ro ignore rhe pious thought thar animares ie: "The faithful and perpetual guardian of the sacred depository of the fundamental trutlis of the social order, society, considered in general, grants knowledge of all rhis to its chil- dren as they enter into the big family.""

In rhe face of these strong thoughts, an angry hand scratched on his copy these lines: "Compate all this scandalous vcrbiage with the oracle's response on the iearned ignorante of Socrates." It isn't JosephJacotot's hand. I t is rhe hand of de Bonald's col- ieague in the Chamber, the knight Maine de .Biran, who, a little farther on, reverses rhe viscount's cntire edifice in two lines: the anteriority of linguistic signs changes norhing for the preerni- nence of the intellecrual act that, for every human infant, giver them meariing; "Man only iearns to speak hy linking ideas tri

rhe words he learns frorn his nurse."' At first glance this is an astonishing coincidence. At hrst i t is dißicult to see what the ersrwhile Bieutenant of Louis XVl's guard and thc erstwhile army caprain from ~ e i r I , the administrative squire and the pro- fessor from the central school, the deputy of the monarch's Chamber and the exiled revolutionary, could possibly have in common. At. ehe most, we might think, the Fact that borh were twenty years oid at che onset of ehe Revolution, that botti lefc the rumult of Paris at twenty-five, and chat both had rneditared rather lengthily arid at a distance on haw much sense and virtue rhe old Socratir axiom rnight have had, or might have now, in the middle of so many upheavafs. facotot understood the matter more in the rnanner uf the moralists, Maine de Biran rnore rnetaphysicatly. Nevertheless, 'ehere remains a cornrnon vision

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that uphoids the Same affirmarion of the prirnacy of thought over iinguistic signs: the Same balance shret of ehe analytic and ideological tradition in which both had formed their thinking. Self-knowiedge and the power of reason aae 110 tonger to be sought in the rcciprocal transprency of linguistic signs and the ideas of understanding. The arbitrariness of the will-revoIri- cionary and imperial-has now enrirely taken over the promised land of well-made languages that yesterday's reason promised. Thus the certitude of thouglit withdraws beyond che transpar- encies of language-.whether they be republican ot theocratic. it bears on its own act , on that mental tensian that precedes and orients any combination of signs, The divinity of the revolu- tionary arld imperial era-the will-finds irs rationaliry at the heart of ehat efforr each puts into himself, that autodetermi- nation of the mind as activity. Incelligence is attention and re- search hefore being a crpmbination of ideas. W111 is thc power to be moved, ro act by its own movement, before being an in- stance of choice.

A Will Served by an Inteiligence

I t is this fundamental turnarouiid that ctle new reversal of the definition of man records: man is a will served dy a n intelfigence. WiIl is the rational power that must be delivered from thc quat- rels between the ideai-ist$ and the tbing-isu. Ir is also in this sense that the Cartesian equality of the c&to must be specified. In place of the tliinking subject who onty knows himself by with- drawing fronl alt the senses and froin ali bodies, we Iiave a new thinking subject who is aware of hirnself through tbe action he exerts on himself as on orher bodies.

Here is how jacotot , according to the principles of universal reaching, made his own iranrlntion of Dercartes's famous analy- sis of thc piece of wax:

I Want ro look and I see. 1 Want to listen and I hear. I Want to touch and my arm reaches out, wanders along rhe surfaces of objects or pen- etrares into their interior; my hanci opens, develops, exterids, closes

hip; my fingers spread out or move togerher by obeying my will. In ttiat acr of rouching, I know only my will cci tuuch. Thac will is nei- tber rny hand, rtor rny brain, nor my rouching. That will is me, my soul, it is rny power, it is my faculty. I feel that will , i r i s present in me, i t is myself; as for rhc tnanner in which I arn obeyed, that f don'r feel, that I only know by its acts. . . . 1 consider ideatioti like rnuch- ing. I have sensatioos when I likc; 1 order my senscs ro bring them tu me. I harre ideas when I like; 1. order r n y inrelligence ro look for them, to feel. The hand and the intelligence are slaves, eacli wirb i t s own attributes. Man is a wiI1 cerved by an intelligence.'

I baiue ideds when I l ike. Descartes knew weit the power of will over understanding. But he knew ir precisely as the power of the false, as the cause of error: the haste to afirt,r when che idea isn't clear and distinct. The opposite must be said: i t is tfie lack of will that causes intelligence to make mistakes. The rnind's original sin is not haste, but distrartion, absence. "Ta act with- out will or reflection does not produce an intellectual act. Tlie effecc that resul ts from this cannor be ciassed among the prod- ucrs of' intelligence, nor can ic be cornpared to them. O n e can see neithet more nor less action in inactivity; there is norhing, Idiocy is not a facuity; ir is the absence or the sIumber or the relaxation of [intelligence] ."R

I[ntelligeaice's act is to seeand to compare whac has been seen. Ir sees at first by chance. Iit muct seek to repeat: to rreate the conditions to re-sec whar i t has seen, in order to see similar facts, in order co see facts rbat could be the cause of what it has seen. Tt rnust also form words, sentences, and figures, in order to teil othcrs what i t has seen. In shcirt, the rnost frequent mode cpf

exercising intelligence, much to the dissatisfaction of geniuses, is repetition. And repetition jc boring. The first vice is laziness. It is easier to absent oneself, to half-see, co say what one hasn't seen, to say whar one believes one sees. "Absent" sentences are formed in rhis way, the "rherefores" that trarislate no mental adventure. "I can'r" is one of these absent sentences. ''I can't" is not the name of any fact. Nothing happens in the mind that corresponds to that assertton. Properly speaking, it doesn't

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zrtclnt to say anything. Speech is rhus filled or emptied of mean- ing depending on whether the will cornpels or relaxes the work- ings oC the inrelligence. Meaning is the work of the will. This is the secret of universai teaching. It i c also the seeret of those we call geniuses: the relentless work to bend the body to nec- essary habits, CO compel the inrelligence to new ideas, ro new ways of expressing them; to redo on purpose what chance once produced, and ro reverse unhappy circumstances intn occasions for success:

This is rnie for Orators as for children, The Former are forrned in as- semblies as we are Formed in life. . . . He who, by cliance, made people laugh at his cxpense a t rlie last session could learn to get a laugh whenever he wants to were he to study all the relarions thar led to tticguttaws that so disconcerted him arid rnade him close his mouth foreuer. Such was Demosthenes' debut. By making people laugh without meaning to, he learned how he could excite peals of laughter against Aeschines. Ruc Bemosrhenes wasn'r lazy. He couidn't be."

Once more universal teaching proclaims: dn individr*.al cdtz iio anything he wanü. But we must not mistakc what wanting means. Universal teaching is not the key to success gtantecf to the entetprising who exptore the prodigious powers of the wiil. Nothingcould be mure opposed co the thought of emancipatkon rhan that advertising slogan. And rhe Fouiider becarne irrirated when disciptes opened their school under the slogan, "Whoevet wants ro is able to." The only slogan that had value was "The equality of inrelligence." Universal teaching is not an expedienc method. Ic is undoubtedly true that the arnbirious and the con- querors gave ruthless illustracion of it , Theib: passion was an inexhaustible source of ideas, and they quickly understood how to direct generais, scholars, or financiers faultlessly in sciences thcy rhemselves did not know, But what interests us is not this theatrical effect, Whar the arribitious gain in ehe way of intel- lectual power by not judging themselves inferior to anyone, they tose by judging themsefves superior ro everyone else. What ineerests us is the exploration of tfie powers of any man when he judges himself equal to everyctne else and judges evetyune

else equal ro him. i3y the will we mean that self--refiection by the reasonable being who knows himself in rhe act. Ir is this threshold of rationality, this consciousness of and esreem for the seff as a reasonable being aceing, that nourishes the movemene of the inrelligence. Tlie reasonabie being is first of all a being who knows his power, who doesn't lie to himself about ir.

The Principle of Veracity

There are rwo fundamental lies: the one that proclaims, "I am tclling the truth," and the one that states, "I cantiut say." The reasonable being who retlects on himself knows the emp- tiness of these two propositions. Thc hrst fact is the impossi- bility of not knowing aneself. The individual cannor lie to him- self; he tan only forget hirnseif. "1 can't" is rhus a sentence of self-forgetfuiness, a sentence ftom which the reasonable ind i- viduaI has withdrawn. No evif genie can iriterpose hirriself be- tween conscio~isness and its act. We must therefore reverse Soc- rates's adage. "No one is voiunrarily bad," he said. We will say the opposite: "All blunders come from vice.'"" No one makes an error except hy waywardness, that is to say, by laziness, by rhe desire to no longer listen to what a reasonable hcing w e s hiinself. The principle of evil lies not in a mistaken knowledge of the good chat is the purpose of action. I t lies in ~infairhfulness to oneself, "Know yourself" no longer means, in rhe Platoriic manner, know wheire your good Lies. It means come back eo yourself, to what you know to be unmistakably in you. hour humility is norhing btit the proud fear of stumbling in ftonc of others. Stumbling is nothing; che wrong is in diverging from, leaving one's yath, no longer paying attention to whac one says, forgecting what une is. So foliow yogr path,

Thls principle of veracity is at the hearr nf the emancipation experience. I t is nor the key to any science, but the privileged ~elation of each Person to the ttuth, the orie that piits him on his path, on his orbit as a seeker. I[t is the rnoral foundation of the power to know. This ethical foundation of rhc very abilicy

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to know is still a thought of its time, a fruic of the meditation on rcvolutionary and imperial experience. But the majarity of the thinkerc of the time undersrood i e in ttie opposite way ro Jacotot. For them, the truth that commands intellectual agree- rnent was to be identified with che iink that keeps men united. Truth is what brings together; error is rupture and solitude. So- ciety, its institutions, the goal ie pursues-these are what define the desire with which the individual must ideneify in order to reach a correct pereeption. Tlius reasoned de Bonald the theo- I

crat, and, after him, Philippc Buchez rhe socbalist and Auguste Cornte the positivist. The eclectics, with their common sense and their grand trurhs written in the heart of each Person, be he philosopher ur shoemaker, were less severe. But: all were men of aggregation. And Jacotot departed from them On rhis point. 8 n e can say, if one likes, that rrttth brings rogerher. But whnr. brings people together, what unites chem, is nonaggregation. Let's rid ourselves of the representation of rhe social remeet thar hardened the thinking minds of tl-ie postretrolutionary age. People are united because they are people, that is ro say, distck~t beings. Language doesn'r unite them. On the contrary, i r is the arbitrariness of language that makes them try to comniunicate by forcing them to transiate--hut also puts them in a com- munity of intelligence. Man is a being thar knows very well when someone speaking daesn'c ltnow whae he is talking abour.

Truth doesn't bring people together at all. It is not given tu us. I t exists independentiy from us and does not submic to our piecemeal sentences. 'Truth exists by itself; i c is that which is an$ not that which is said. Saying depends on man, but the truch does not.'"' But for ali thar, eruth is not foreißn CO us, and we are not exiled from its country. The experience of veraciry attaches ris to its absent cencer; ir rnakes us circle around its foyer. First of all, we can see and indicate truths. Thus, " B taught wfiat I didn't know" is a truth. Ir's the name of a fact that existed, that can be repioduced. As for the reason for this fact, that is for the moment an opinion, and it may always rc- main so. Bur with that oginion, we are circfing around the

truth, from fact to facr, relarion ro retation, sentence to sen- cence. What i s essential is toavoid lying, not rnsay thar we havc seen sornerhing wfien we've kept our eyes closed, not to helievc ehat sornething has been explaincd tu us when it has only been named .

Thus, each one of us describes our parahola around the truth, No two orbits are alike. An$ this is why rtie expf icators endan- ger our revolucion.

These orbits of humanitarian conceptions rasely inrersect and have only a few points in cornmon. The lurnbled ltnes tliat they describe nevcr coincide withoiir a Jisturbance thac suspends Iiberty and, con- sequently, the use of the intelligence thar fotlows from i t . The student fcels that , on his own, he wouldn't have foliowed the roure he has jus t been led down; and he forgers rhat there are a thousand partis i n in- cellectuai space Open ta his v~ill. l2

This coincidence of orbits is whar we have called stultificatiari. And we understand why stultificaticjn is ali the more profound, rhr rnore subtle, the less perceptible, rhe coincidence. This is why the Sacratic method, apparentiy so close to universal reach- ing, represenrs the rnost formidable form of stultification. The Socratic method oF interrogation rhat prcrends to lead ehe stu- dent to his w n knowledge is in fact the merfiod of a riding- school master:

He ordets turns, marches, and countermarches. As for hin, dusing ttie training sessioit hc is relaxed and has the dignicy of arithority over , the mind he direcrs. From derour to detour, the srudenr's mind arrives at a fitiish that couldri't even be glirnpsed a t rhe starting line. He is surprised to rouch i t , he turns around, he sees his guide, the surprise turns into adrniration, and that admiration stultifies tiim. The stu- dent feels chat, a h n e and abandaned to himseif, he wo~i ld not have followed ttiat route.

No orie has a relationship to the rruth if he is not on his own orbit. But Iet no one, for ali that: gloat about bis singulariry and go out, in his turn, to proclaim: Anlict6.r Platt, sed ~nagis amzm t i ~ v i t ~ r s ! That is a Iine fi-om rhc rheater. Aristotle, who said i t , was doing nothing different f ro~n Plato. Like him, he was

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L .- Go Renson Between Eqwis

stating his opinions, he was telling the Story of his inrellectua1 adventures; on the way, he gathered a few truths. As for the truth, it doesn't rely on phifosophcrs who say they are its friend:

1 i t is only friends wirk itself. I

i 1:

1, Reason and Eanguage Truth is not told. IIt is a whole, and language fragments it;

it is necessary, and languages are arbitrary. I t was this thesis on the arbitrariness OE languages-even more than the proclama- tion of universal teaching-that made Jacotot's teaching scan- dalous. In x 81 8, in his very first course at Ilauvain, he took .nc his rheme this question, inherited frorn the eighteenth century of Diderot and the Abbe Batteux: is "direct" construcrion, the one that places the noun before the verb and the attribute, the natural conscruction? And did French writers have the right to consider that construction a mark of their language's inteilec- tual superiority? He decided negatively, With Dideroc, he judged the "inverred" order to be as natural as the so-called nat- ural order, if not mote so; and he beiieved the language of Sen- timent preceded that of analysis. But he attacked above alt the very idea of a natural order and the hierarchies it might entail. All languages were equally arbitrary. There was no language of intelligente, no language more universal chan others.

The response didn't take Iong. I n the next issue of L'Qbser- vdteur befge, a literary journaf out of Brussels, a young philos- opher by the name of Yan Meenen denounced the thesis as a theoretical warning to the oligarchy. Five years later, after the publication of Langue mczternelie, a young Iawyer ciose to Van Meenen who had takenJacotor's Courses and even published his notes, got angry ip turn. In his Essai sz~r fe k2~f-e de Monsreur]d- cotot, Jean Cylvain Van de Weyer scolded this French professor who, after Bacon, Hobbes, Locke, Harris, B;ondillas, Dumar- sais, Rousseau, Destutt de Eacy, and de Bonaid, still dared co maincain that thought preceded language.

The position of thcse young and passionate contradictors rs

easy to understand. They represented rhe young Belgium, pa- triotic, liberal, and Frencfi-speaking, in a state of intellectual insurrection against Flernish dornination. To destroy the hier- archy of languages and the universality of the French language was, for them, to give the prize to the language OE the Flemish oligarchy, the backward language of che Iess-civilized part of the population, but also the secrer language of power. Follow- ing them, the Co~<rrieu de /U Meztse attacked the Jacotot method for coming in the nick of time to impose at little cost che lan- guage and the civilization-in scare quotes-of the Flernish.

But rhere was more to it than this. These young defenders of the Belgian identity and the French intelltctual iandscape had read t he Viscount de Bonald's Rechevche~ phi losoph ic~~~es . They re- tained frorn i r n fundamental idea: the analogy between the laws of language, the laws of society, and the laws of thought and their unity, in principle, in divine law. Undoubtedly they were departing from the viscount's philosophicaf and political mes- sage. They wanted a nationai and constitutional monarchy, and they wanred the mind to discover freely the gceat metaphysical, morai, and social truths inscribed by divinity 011 each petson's heart. Their philosophical guiding light was a young phitoso- pher in Paris named Victor Cousin. In the rhesis of the arbi- trariness of ianguages, they saw irrationality being introduced into the hearr of cornmunication, obstructing the discovery of ehe true course where the phiiosopher's meditation must com- mune wich the common man's cornmon sense. They saw in the lecturer BTom Louvain's paradox the perpetuation of che vice of those phiiosophers who "have frequently confused in their at- tacks, in the name of prejudices, borh the deadly esrors whose breeding grourid they discovered not far froin them and the fun- damental eruths that they attributed to the Same origin. This is because the truth remained hidden from them in depths inac- cessibIe to atgumentacion's scalpel and ro the microscope of a verbose mtrtaphysics, depths t-o which they had long ago given up dcscending, depths where one is guided by the clarity of good sense and a simple tleart a l ~ n r . " ' ~

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T h e fact is rhat Jacotot d id not want ro relearn that kind of descent. He d id not bear foolish sentences with good sense and a simple heart. H e would have none of that Fearful l i b r t y guar- anteed by the agreement of the laws oE rhought with the laws of language and those of sociery. Liberty is not guaranteed by any preestablirhed harmony I t is raken, it is won, it is lost. solely by each persoo's effort. And reason is not assured by being already written in ianguage's constructions and che laws of rhe city. Language's laws have nothing ro do with reason, and the laws of the city haveeverything to d o wirh irrarionaiity. If there is a divine law, thoughr irsetf, in its sustained truthfulness, alone bears witness t o it . Man does not think hecatise hc speaks-- this would precisely submit thoiight CO rhe existing material order. Mari thinks because he exists.

Et remains ehat thoiight must be spoken, rnanifesred in works, communicnted t o other thinking beings, This musc be done by way of lnnguages with arbitrary significations. One mustn't See in this an obstacie ro cornmunica~ion. Only the lazy are afraid of the idea of arbitrariness and see in it reason's romb. O n rhe contrary. Ilt is because thew is no code given by divinity, no language of languages, that hurnan intelligence employs all irs arr to rnaking irself understoori and t o ' u n d e r ~ t a n d i n ~ what tbe n e i g h b r i n g intelligence is signifying. Thoughr is not rold i n twth; it is expressed i n verdcity. I t is dividcd, it is told, it is translated for someone else, wlao will make of it another tale, anorher tianslation, on one condition: rhe will to corntnunicate, the will to figure ou t what the other is thinking, and this undrr no guatantee beyond his narration, no universal dictionary ro dictate what rnUSt be undetstood. Will 6gures out will. I t is in this common effort thar the definition of man as a will served hy an intelligenq cakes on irs ~neaning:

I think and I wanr ro commuaicare my thought; immediaref~ my incelligence artfully employs any signs wharsoever; i t combiner them, composes them, andyzes them; and an exprecsion, an image, a ma- teriui fact, emerges that will henceforth be h r me the portrait of a rhought, that is tosay, of an immaterial fact. It will recall my thought

for rne, and 1 will rhink of i t each time I sre its portnit I can rhus converse with myself when I like. And then, one day, t find myself face ro face with anorher man; L rcpeat. in his presence, rny gertiires and my words and, i f he likes, he will figure rne out. . . .

Bur one carinot reach an agreemenr through words about rhe mean- ing of words. One nian wrnts to speak, rhe ather wants to figure i r our, and thac's that. From rhis agreernent of wilis rhere results a thougbt visible to rwo rnen at rhe samt rime. At hrst i r exists im- materially for onc of them; then he says it to himself, lie gives fr,rm to it with his eyes oi his ears, and tinalIy fie wants that form, <hat material being. to rcpmduce foi anothcr man the Same primitive thought. These crcations or, if you wili, these rnetamorphoses are tlic eRict of rwo viiils iielping each other out. Thoughr thirs becomes speecli, and thcn ihar speerii or that word becomes thought again; an idea becomes matter, and that matter bccomes an idea-.snd aI1 this is the effecr of the will. Thoughts fly fram one rnind co anather on the wings o f words. Each word is senr OE wirli the intention of car- rying jusr one thoughr, but. unknown to the one speaking and almosr in spite of hirn, rhat speech, thai word, ~ h a r larva, is made fruirful by the listener's will; and che represencative of a rnonad becomes rhe ccnter of a sphere of ideas radiating out in all directions, such thar the speaker has actually said an irifinicy of things beyond what he wanted ro say; he has formed tlir body of an idea with ink, and rhc marter destined to rnysteriousiy envelop a solirary immarerial beinR acruaily conrains a a.holp worid d those h ings t those choughtr.

Peihaps we can now better understand the reason for univer- sal teachingi marveis: rhe strengtlis i t puts into play are simply those of any sicuation of com~riunication becween rwo reason- able beings. The relarion between two ignorant people con- fronting the book they don't know how to read is simply a rad- ical form of the efforr one brings every rninute ro translating and counter-translating thoughts into words and words inro thoughts. T h e will :hat presides over the operation is not a ma- gician's secret spell. It i s the desire ro understand and to be uoderstood wirhout which ncr man n~ould ever give meaning t o rhe materialities of language. Understanding m ~ r t be under- ~ t o n d in its true sense: not the derisive power to unveil things,

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Perhaps he will only say a few things at first-for exarnple, "The head is prerty." Bue we will repear. the exercise; we will show him rhe same head and ask him to fook again and speak again, at the risk of repeating what he already said. Thus he will be- come more attentive, more aware of his abflity and capable of imitacing, We know the reason for this eRect, something com- pletely diEerent from visuat memorization and manual train- ing. What the child has ver$ed by this exercise is that painting is a language, rhat the drawing he has been asked to imitate qeah ro him. Later on, we will pur him in front of a paintibg and ask him to improvise on the zfnidy offeeliig present, for ex- ampke, in that painting by Poussin of the buriaI of Phocion. The conrioisscmr will undoubtedly be s'nocked by this, won't he! How could you precend ro know that this is whas Poussin wanted to pur in his painring? And what does this hypothetical discourse have to do with Poussin's pictorial arx and with the one the srudent is supposed to acquire?

We witl answer that we don't precend to know what Poussin wanted to do, W are simply trying to imagine what he rnight have wanted to do, We thus verify that all wantgng tn do is a wariting to say and that this wanting to say is addtessed co any reasonabic being. In short, we verif$ thac the utpoesispic~ura che artists of the Renaissance had cIaimed by reversing Horace's ad- age is not knowledge reserved solely lor artisrs: painting, like sculpture, engraving, or any other art, is a language that can be understood and spokei~ by whoever knows the language. As far as art goes, "1 can't" translaces easilg, we know, into 3 h a r says nothing ro me." The verification of the "unity of feeling," that is to say, of the meaning of the painting, will thus be the means of ernancipation for rhe person who "doesn't know how" ta painr, the exact equivalent to the verificacion-by-book of the equality of intelligence.

Undoubtedly, there's a great distance from this to rnaking masterpieces. The visitors who appreciated the Iicerary corn- positions of Jacotot's seudents often made a wry face ar their paintings and drawings. But it's not a matter of rnaking great

painters; it's a matter of rnaking the emancipated: people ca- pable of saying, "me too, I'm a painter," a Statement that con- tains norhing in the way of pride, only the reasanable feeling of power that belongs to any reasonable being. "Thzre is no pride in saying out loud: Me too, I h a painter! Pride consists in saying sofcly to others: 'i(Qii neirher, you aren't a painter."z' 'We too, I'm a painter" means: me too, I have a souI, I have feelings to communicate to my fellow-men. Universal teach- ing's method is identical to its morals:

VVe say in universal ienching rhat every man who has a soul was born with a soul. In universal teaching we belicve that man feels pieasure and pain, and thar i t is only up CO him to know when, how, and by wbat Set of circurnstances he felt this pleasure or pain. , . . What is more, man knows that there are orher Leings who sesembie him and ro whom he could comrnunicace his feelings. provided [hat he places theni in the circurnstances ro which he owes his pains and his pfea- sures. Ac soon as he knows what moved him, he can pracrice moving others il he srudies the choice and use of che means of cornrnunica- tion. Ir's a language he has co learn.21

TAe Poets' Lesson

Onc rnust fenrv. All rnen hold in comnion the abiliry to feei pleasure and pain. Dut this resemblance is for each only a prob- ability to be verified. And it can be verified only hy the long path of the dissimilar. I must verify ttic reason for my thought, ehe humanicy of rny feelings, but I cttn do i t only by making rhem venture forrh into the forest of signs that by chemsetves don't Want co say anything, don't correspond with that thought or that feeling. Since Boileau, it has been said that if something is well conceived, ~t will be clearly articulated. This sentence is rneaningless. Eike afl sentences that surreptitiously slip from thought to matter, it expresses no intellectual adventure. Con- ceiving well is a resource of any reasonable person . hrticutating well is an artisan's work that supposes the exercise of the tools of language. It i s true that reasonable man can do anytliirig. Bur

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he must stitl learn the proper ianguage for each of the ehings he wants to do: to make shoes, machines, or poems. Consider, for example, the akktionate mother who sees her son come back from a long war. The shock she feels robs her of speech. But "the long embraces, tlhe hugs of ii love anxious at the very rno- rnent of happiness, a love that seems to fear a new separation; the eyes in which joy shines in the middle of tears; the mouth that srniies in order co serve as the interpreter of ehe equivocal language of tears; che kisses, the fooks, thc attirude, the sighs, even the ~ilence,"~'-alil that imprvvis~rioa in short-is thts not che mose eloquent of poems? You feel the emotiori of it. But try to communicate it, The inscantaneousness of these ideas and feelings that contradict each other and are infinitely nuanced- rhis must be trarismitted, made to voyage in the wi'tds of words and sentetlces. And the way to do that hasn't been invented. Por then we would have to suppose a third levet in berween the in- dividuality of that thought and common language. Would this be still another language, and how would its inventor be under- stood? We are left with learning, witA hnding the tools of that expression in books. Not in gramrnarians' books: they know nothing of this voyage. Not in orators' books: these don'r seek to be jignred out; they wane to be liste~zed to. lhey don'c want co say anything; they want to command-to join minds, subrn:r wills, force action. 99ne must learn near those who have worked in the gap beeween feeling and expression, between the silent hnguage of emotion and the arbitrariness of the spoken tongue, near tkose who have tried co give voice to the silent diahogue tke soul has with itself, ~ v h o have gambied all rheir cre$ibility on ehe kt of the simiiarity of minds.

Let's learn, ihen, near those poets who have been adorned with the title genius. I t is they who will betr- to us the secret of that imposing word. The secret of genius is that of universal teaching: learning, repeating, imitating, translating, taking apart, putting back together. in the nineteenth century, ir is rrue certain geniuses began to boast of superhuman insptracion. But the classics, those geniuses, didn't drink out of the Same

cup. Racine wasn't ashamed 0f h i n g what he was: a worker. He tearned Euripides and Vergil by heart, likeapavrot. He tried translating thern, broke down their expressions, recomposed them in another way. He knew that being a poer meant trans- laeing rwo rimes over: cransiating into French Verse a mother's sadness. a queen's wrath, or a lover's rage was also rranslating how Euripides or Vergil translared them. From Euripides' H@- palytrts, one had to transfate not only Phhdre---thar's undet- stood-but ako Athalie and josabeth. For Racine had no illu- sions abour what he was doing. He didn't th i i~k he Iiad a bettet undetstanding of human sentiments than his listeners. "If Xa- cine kncw a rnothcr's heart hetrer rhan I. he would be wasting his time telling me a h a t he read in it; 1 would not reiogniie his observations in my memories, and I wouId not be moveci, Shis great poet presurnes the opposite; all his work, all his care, all his revisions, are perforrned in the hope that werything will be undersrod by his eeaders exactly as he underseands it him- elf.“^' Like alf creators, Racine instinctively applied the method, that is to say, the rnorai, of universal teaching. He knew that there are no men of greor ihughts , only men of great expressiotrs. He knew chat alt tke power of the poem is concen- trared in two acts: cransfation and counter-translation. He knew ehe limits of translation an$ the powets of counter-translation. He knew that the poem, in a sense, is aiways rhe absence of another poem: that si1ent poem that a mother's tenderncss or a lover's rage improvises. In a few rare eEects. the first approaches the second to ehe pcint of imitating it, as in Corneille, in on& or thrce syllabIes: "Me," or beeter, "That he die!" For the rest, the poet is suspended in thecounrer-rranslation the listener will do of ir. It is che counter-translation that will produce the poem's emorion; it is the "sphere of jdeas radiatinp forth" that will reanimate the words. At1 af thc poer's egort, all his work, is to create that aura around each word, each expression. I r is for this reason that he analyzes, dissects, translates others' expressions, that he tirelessfy erases and corrects his own. He strives to say ewrythiing, knowing that every thing cannot be

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said, but that it is rbe unconditional tension oF the translator that opens the possibility of ehe other tension, the other wili: language does not allow everything to be said, and "I rnusc have recoutse to my own genius, to all men's genius, to figure out what Racine meane, what he would say as a man, what he says when he is not speaking, what he cannot say since he is only a p ~ e t . " ~ '

This is the true modescy of the "genius," that is to say, of the emaiicipated artist: he employs all his art, all his power, to show us his poern as the absence of another that he credits us with' knowing as weil as he. "We believe ourselves to be Kacine, and we are r ight. 'This belref has nothing to do with any chariatan's pretenslon. It in no way implies thae out Verse is as good as Ra- cine's, or that it soon wili be. IF means first that we understand what Racine has to tell us, that his thoughts ace not different frorn ours, and that his expressions are orily achieved by our counter-translation. We know first thuough hiln that we are people like him. And we also know through hirn thc power of a Ianguage that rnakes us know this via the arbitrariness of signs. W e know out "equality" with Racinc: thanks to tlte fruit of Racine's work. His genius lies in having worked by the prin- ciple of the equaliry of intelligence, in having not believed him- self superior tu those he was speaking eo, in having even worked for those whu predicted that he would fade like a season, I t is lefr to us to verify thar: equality, eo conquer that power through our own work. This does not mean making tragedies equal to Racine's; i r rneans, rather, employing as much attention, as much artistic research as he, ro recounting Biow we feel and to making others feel i c , despite the arbitrariness of language or the resistance of ail matter to the work of our hands. The artist's emancipatory iesson, opposed on every count to the professor's stuitifying lesson, is this. each one of us is an artist to the extent that he carries out a double process; he is not content to be a mere journeyman buc wants ro make ali work a rneans of expres- sion, and he is noe content to feel something but irres to impart it to others. Tbc artisi needs equality as the explicatot needs

inequality. And he rherefore designs the model of a reasonable society where the very thing rhar is outside of reason-matter, linguistic signs-is traversed by reasonable will: rhat of relling the story and making orhers feel che ways in which we are sim-

We can thus dream of a s ~ i e t y of the emancipatcd thar would be a sociery of artists Such a society would ripudiate the division between those who know and those who don't, bctween those who possess or don't possess the property of inteliigence. It would only know rninds in action: people who do, whti speak about what rhey arc doing, and who thus transform all their works into ways of demonstrating the humanity thar is in tliem as in everyone. Such people would know that no one is born wit h more intelligence than his neighbor, thar t he superiotity tliat someone might manifest is only tlie fruit of as tenacious an ap- plication to working with words as anotlier mighc show to working with toolr; thar the inferiorirp uf someone else is the cansequence of circumstances ihar didn't cornpel him to scek harder. tri short, they would know clrat rhe perfection someone directs toward his own art is no more than the particular appli- cation of the power cornrnon to all reasonable heings, the Une that each person feels when he withdraws into rhar privacy of consciousness where lying makes no sense. They wouid know that man's dignity is independent OE his position, chat "man is not born to a particular position, but is meant ru be happy in irnself, independently of what fare btings,'42" and rhar tlie re- ectiun of feeling that shines in ihe eyes of a wife, a son, or a ear friend presents ro rhe gaze of a sensitive enough soul ade- uate satisfaction.

Such people wouid not be occupied crcaring phalansteries vocations woirld correspond 'to pacsions, communities of

ic organirarions harmoniously distributing te humankind, tiiere is no heiter

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7 2 Reason Between Eqzi~ds -

link than this identical intelligence in everyone It is this that is the just measure of similarity, igniting that gentie penchant of the heart that leads us to help each other an$ iove each otber. It is this that gives someone the means of measuring the extent of tlie services rhat he can hope for from his fellow-man and of devising ways to show him his appreciation. Rut let's not taik like utilitarians. The principal service that man can expect from man depends on that faculty of intercommunicating their ptea- Sure and yain, hopes and fears, in order to be moved recipro- cally: "If men didn'c have rhe faculty, an equal faculty, they woukd soon become strangers to each other; they wouid scatrer at random throughout the globe and societtes woulb be dis, solved. . . . The exetcise of that power is at once the sweetcst of our pleasures and the most demanding of our needs.""

We scarcely have to ask what these wise peopie woiild have in t!ie way of laws, magistrates, assemblies, and triblinais. Feople who obey the dictates of reason have no need of laws and magistrates. The Stoics knew that aiready: virtue that knows itsetit; the virtue of knowing oneself, is the guiding power of alil other virtues, But we ourselves know that reason is not the privrlege of the wise. There are no madmen except those who insist on inequality and domination, those who Want ro be right. Reason begins when discourscs organtzed with the goal of being right cease, begins where equality is recognized: not an equality decreed by law or forre, not a passively received equality, but an equality in act, verified, at each step by those marchers who, in eheir canstant attention to themselves and in their endless rwolving around ehe truth, find the right Sen- tences to make themselves understood by ochers.

We must therefore reverse the critics' questions. How, they ask, is a thing like ehe equaiity of inteliigence thinkable? And how could this optnion be established without disrupting the social order? We must ask the opposite question: how is intei- Iigence possible witiiout equality? Intelligence u not a power of understanding based on comparing knowledge with its ob- ject. It is the power to make oneseff understood through an-

other's verification. And only an equal understands an equal. EqucfIiry and inrelliyena are synonymous rcrms, exactl y like rea- snv and will. This synonymy on wliich each man's inrellectual capaci ty is based is also what makes society, in gcneral, possible. The equality of inrelligence is rhe common bond of human- kind, the necessary and sufficienr condition for a society of rnen to exist . "If rnen considered themselves equal, the consriturion would soon be completed." '~t is rrue that we don't know that men are equal. We are saying chat they migbr be. Th ' i s is our opinion, and we are trying, along wich rhose who think as we do, to verify it . But we know rhat this mighi is rhe very thing tkat makes a society of kumans possible.

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41) The Society of Contempt

But there is no such thing as apofszbie sociery. Thr rc is only the society thar exists. We were gercing lost i n our dreams, bu t here comec someone knncking at the door. It's the envoy from rhe Minister of Public Insrcuction, who has come

out rhecondiciuns ior estabtishing a schooi in the kingdorn. It's the officer from ehe Military School of Delft assigned ro bring order to tlte strange Ecote Normale Mititaire in Louvain. Lt's the rnessenger bringing the Last issue of Annules Acddmrriue i,ovaniett- sfs, containing che mafio of our cofieague Franciscus Josephus Dumbeck, who sounds t he charge against universal teaching, rbe new corrupter of youth:

Since education embraces the cotality of the penpie and its Grsr virtue resides in unitary harmony, a perverse rnethod caa descroy thatr uniry and split the city into opposing Camps. . . . Let us rid tlie countty of this rnadriess. Guided by the Iove of beaiity an$ of literature, s tu- dious young peoplc rnusc not only attempt ro flee laziness as the most serious of evils; they must also cling ro that Decency, that Modesty, ceiebrated by all anriquity wich divine honors, Only then witl chey be citizens oF ehe elire. drferiders of law, masrers of virtue, iriter- pceters of the divine commandnients, upholders of the couäitry, «I the honor of an enrire race. . . . And you ron, Royal Majesty, rnusr Bisten! For ir is ro you that the care of your subjectc has been conficied, especially at rkat cender age. It is a sacred dutg ta annihilate teachers of this kind, ro siippress schools of darkness!'

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82 'fhr Society of Contenzpt

Thus the social world is not simpf y the world of non-reason; i t is that of irrationality, which is to say, o l an activity of the perverted will, possessed bv inequality's passion. In litzking one Person or grouP to another by co~pdrison, individuals contin- ually reproduce this irrarionality, this stultification thac insti- tutions codify and explicators solidify in their brains. This pro- duction of irrationality is a work at which individuals ernploy as much art, as much intelligence, as they would for the tea- sonable comrnunication of their minds' w r k s , Except that this work is a work of grief. War is che law of the socjal order. Bur: by the terrn '"war,'' lec us not think heie of anyi'fi&i cfash OE materialforces, any unleashing of hordes dorninated by'bestinl instincts. War, like ali human vvorks, is first an act of words. But these words rejecr che halo of iJeas radiating from a counter-translator representing another intelligence and an- other discourse. The wilf no longer attempts to figurc out and to be figured out. i t makes its gnal the other's silence, the ab- sence of reply, the plurnmering of minds into the material ag- gregaeion of consent.

The perverted will doesn't stop using inrelli&nce, but its use is btpsed on a fundamentaf dist~dctinn. I r habituates intelligence into only seeing what contributes ro preponderance, what serves to cancel out the other's intelligence. The universe of social ir- rationality is rnade up of wills served by inteiligences. But each of these wills charges itself with destroying another will by pre- venting another inteltigence from seeing. And we know thst this result isn't difficult to obtain. One need only play the rad- ical exteriosity of the linguistic otder against the exceriority of reason. The reasonable will, guided by its distant link with the truth and by its desire co speak with those like i t , controls tkar exteriority, regains it chrough the force of attenrion. The dis- tracted wtH, detoured h n l the toad of equality, use; it in the opposite way, in the rhetorical mode, to hasten the aggregarion of rninds, their plurnmet into thc universe of material artrae- rion.

Rherclrical Madncss

This is the power of rhetoric: the art of vensalai?zg that trics to annihilate reason under the guise of reason. Once the Engiish and Ftench revolutians put the power of deliberative assemblies back at the center of politicat Iife, curious rninds revived Plaro's and Aristotle's grand inquiry into the power of the false that imitates the power of the truth. That is why. in 1816, the Gc- nevan Etienne Dumont translated his friend Jeremy Beneham's Trentzse on Parii~mentarj~ Sophirtriei into Prench. Jacorot dnesn't mention this work. But we can feef irs influence in tlie parts of the Lnngae taaternelle devoted to rhetoric. Like Bentham, Jacocot piits the irrationality of deliberative assemblles a t the center of his analysis. Thr vocabulary he uses to talk about them is ctose to Dumonc's. And his analysis of falsc modesty recalls Ben- tham's chapter nri the argument ud z~everrrtrn'idra,~~ Bur if both exposed- the machinery of the sarne comedy, they dift-erd rad- ically i r i riieir outlook and in tlie rnoral they drew from it . Ben- tham's polemic was against the English conservativr assemblies. He demonstrated rhe ravages of the well-cfoaked authuritarian arguments thar tlie beneticiaries of the exisring order empioyed to oppose any progressive reform, He denounced the allegoties that hypostasize the existing order, the words thar throw a veil, pieasant or sinister as needed, clver things, the sophistries thar serve co associate any propnsition for reform with the specter uf anarchy. For him these saphistries are mplaincd by the play of interesr, their success by the intellectual weakness of the voting public and the srace of servitude under which ir is kept by au- thority. This is to say that disinterested and free-thinking, ra- tional rnen can cornbat them successfully, And Dumonc, less imperuous than his friend, insisted on the rehsonable hope chat assimiiates the Progress of moral instirutions to that of the physical sciences. "Aren" there in morais as in physics, errors that philosophy has caused ro disappear? . . . It is possible to discredit false arguments to the point that they no longer dare

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slave: so Socrares had taught Afcibiades, as he tiad Callicks be- fore him. Alcibiades might be amused by the foolish face of a shoernaker glimpsed in his workshop and expound on che stu- pidity of tbo~epeople; the philosopher woufd be content to reply to him: ''SVhy aren't you more at ease when you have to speak in front of those people?"'"

Thc Superior lnferiors

"That was rhe case iong ago," the superior rnind, habituiited to the setious speech of voters' assemblies, will say. This was true of rhe demagogic assemblies drawn from the scum of the peopie who curned Co and fro like a weathervane from Demos- thenes to Aeschines, and from Aeschines back to Demosthenes. Let's look at this more ciosely. fhestu~rdity that made the Athe- nian people turn somccimes to Aeschines, sornetimes tu Be- rnosthenes, had a very precise content. What made rhem sur- render alternatively to ehe one or the other was not tkeir igno- rance or their versatility. 1i was that this speaket or that one, at a particular rnoment, knew best how to incarnate the specitic ctupidity of the Athenian peoplc: ciae feeling of its obvious su- periority over the imbecile people of Thebes. Iri short, what moved the masses was the same thing that animates superior minds, the Same thing that 111akes society turn on itself from one age to the next: the sentiment of the inequality of intelli- gence, the sentirnent that distinguishes superior minds only at the price of confusing thcrn with universal belief. Even today. what is it tkat allows ehe thinker to scotn ehe worker's intelli- gence if not the wotker's rontempt foc the peasant-like the peasant's foc his wife, the wife's for hds ncrghbar's wife, and so on unto infinity. Social irrationaiity finds its formula in what could be called ehe pradox of the "superior infcriors": each per- son is subservient to the one he represents to himself as inferior, subservrent ta the law of rhe masses by his very pretension EO

distinguish hirnself from them. Don't cry to find an alternative to these demagogic assemblies

in rhe reasonable serenity of assemblies made up of grave and respectabie notabjes. Wherever people join together on the ba- sis of their superiority ovec others, they give thernselves orer to the law of material rnasses, An oligarchical assembly, a congress of "honest people" or of "capable ones," will thusobey the brutc law of marter rnuch more certainiy chan a democratic assemtily. "A Senate has a derermined pace and direction that i t cannot itself change, and the Orator that propels it down its own road and follows in its steps, alwayc wins out over the oti~ers."'~ Ap- pius Claudius, absoiutety upposed to taking any insrructions from the plebeians, was the senatorial Orator par excellence, be- cause he understood better than any ocher thc inflexibiliry of the rnovcment chat pushe$ the leaders of the Roman elire in "their" direction. His rherorical machine, the machine of su- perior men, seized a unique day: the day wheri che piebeians gachered on the Aventine. It wouid have taken a rnadman ithat is ro say, a reasonable man) to save things on rhat day, sorneone capabie of an extravagance impossible and incomprehensible for an Appius Claudius: going to iisten to tlie plebeians, prcsuming that their mouths emitted a ianguage and not just nnises; spcak- ing to ttiem, supposing they had the intefligence to understand the words of superior minds; in short, consideririg them equally reasonable beings.

The parabie of the Aventine recaits the paradox of the in- egaiitarian frction: social inequality is unthinkabie, impossible, except on the basis of the primary equality of irttelligence. In- equality cannot think itself. Even Socrates advised Callicles in vain rhat to break out of the rnaster-shve circle he must learn that trtde equality is proportion, thus joining the citcte of those who think of justice in retms of geometry. Wherever there is laste, the "supcriot" gives up his reasori to rhe inferior's law. An assembly of philosophers is an inert body that rnoves on the axis of its own irrationality, the irrarionality of everyone. fnegali- tarian society tries in vain to underscand itself, co give itself a narural foundacion, Ir's preciseiy because ehere is no natural rea- son for dornination that cunvencion commands and commands

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absolutely. Those who explain domination by superiority faii ineo the old aporia: the superior ceases being that when he ceases dorninatixsg. The Duke of Lkvis, academician an$ Peer of France, worried abour the social consequcnces cif the Jacotot System: if one proclairned the equality of intelligence, why would wives still obey their husbands, and the administrated their adminjsrrators? IIf r he duke hadn't been slfrstiacied, like al l superior minds, he would have naticed that it was his System, that of ttie inequality of intelfigence, that was subversive of the social order. Hf authoriry depends on intellectual superiority, what witl happen on the day when an administrated Person, hirnself also convinced of the inequaliey of intetligence, thinks his prefect is an imbecile? Won't it be necessary to test minisrers and prefects, burgenneisters and office heads, to verify their su- periority? And how will we be Sure that some imbecile, whose shortcornings when recognized would lead to citizens' disobe- dienre. might not slip in among rlicm2

Only che partisans of the equality of intelligence can undrr- stand this: if the qadi makes his slaves obey hirn, the white man his biacks, i t is becatise he is neither superior nor inferior to them in incelligence. IC circurnstances and cnnventions separate and malce hierarchies among men, if rhey create aurhotity and force obedience, it is because they alone are capabte of doing that. "ht's precisely because we are all equal by nature that we musc all be unequal by circumstances."'6 Equality remains the only reason for inequaliry. "Sociery exists oniy through disrinc- tions, and nature presents only equalities. f t is in k c t impos- sible for equality to last for a long time; but even when i e is destroyed, it remains rke only reasonable explanation for con- ventional distinctions.""

The equality of inteliigence does even rnore for inequality: ir proves that the overturning of the existing order woiild be just as irrational as the order itself. "If someone asks me, What do you think of the organization oF human socieries? 1 would re- spond: This spectacle seems against nature. Nothing is in its place, since rhere are different piaces for beings that aren'r dif-

ferent. And if human reason is called on to change rhe order, i t would havc to recognize its incapacity to do so. Order for ordrr, places far places, differences for differences, there are no reason- able motives for change."'"

T h e Philosopher-King and the Sovereign People

Thus equality alone remains capable of expiaining an in- equafiey that the inegalitarians will always be pmwerless to imagine. Reasonable man knows the reason h r his irrationaliry as a cirizen. But he knows it a t ttie Same time ro be insur- mountable H e is alone in knowing the tircle of inequality. Bur as a cirizen, he hintself is enclosed in it. "There is only one rea- son; yec i t haso'r organized the social order. So, happiness could not lie therein. '"~hilosophers are undoubtediy right to de- nounce the functionaries who try to rationalize the existing or- der. That order has no reason. Bur they deceive themselves Liy purs~iing the idcaof a social order that would finaily be rational. The cwc, extreme and symn~etrical poles of that prerension are known: the old Platonic drearn of rhe philosopher-king and the modern dream of rhe people's sovereignty. Undoubredly a king can be a philosopher just like any orhet man. As rhe head, a king has at bis disposat his ministers' reason, who have their bureau heads' reason, who in turn have cverybody's reason. It's true that he is nor dependent on liis superiors-only on his in- ferior~. Bur the philosopher-kiiig ur rhe kingiy philusopher takes part in society; and siiriery irnposes its laws, its superi- orities, and its explanatory corporations on hirn, as i t does on everyone.

'I'his is also wliy the orher pole of the philosophicai drearn, the people'r sovereignty, is no sounder. For that sovereignry, preserited as an ideal to be rcalized or a principle to be imposed, has always existed. And history resounds wieh the names of those kings who lost their throne for having ignored ir : nor one of them reigns except by the weight given hirn by the rnasses. The ptiilosophers ate ~ndignanc. The people, they say, cannot

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part with ies sovereignty. We will answer that perhaps it catz't, bur that i t has always clone so since the beginning of the wor1d. "Kings don't make peoples; they would try in vain rodo so. But peopies can make leaders, and rhey have always wanted to do So."2" The people is atienated from i t s leader exactly like the leader from his people. This reciprocal subjugation 1s the very principle of the ppoliticat fiction whose oaigin lies in rhe aiien- ation of reason by the passion of inequality. The philosophers' paralogism is to assume a people of nies. But this is a Contra- dictory expression, an impossible being. There are only peoples of citizens, people who have given.up their reason to rhe in- egalirarian hctiori. . ?"*?-3;. .$

' C

Lec's not confuse this alienacion with another. N7e aren't. say- ing that the citizen is the ideal man, the inhabiranr of ar$.egal- itarian pofitical heaven that masks the reality of the inequality between concrete individuals. We are saying the opposite: that there is no equalicy except between men. that is to say, berween individuats who regard each orher only as reasonabke beings. The citizen, on the contrary, the inhabitant of the political fic- tion, is man fallen into the land of: inequality.'

Reasonable man knows, rherefore, that rkere is no political science, no polirics of truth. Trurh sertles no conflicr in the pub- lic place. It speaks co man only in the solitude of his conscience. It withdraws the rnornent thar conflicr eruyts between two con- sciences. Whoever hoges to rneet up with it must know, in any case, that it cravels alone, without any retinue. Political opin- ions; on the other hand, never fail to give themseives the most imposing retinue: "Brotherhood or Death," rhey say; or, when rheir turns came, "Legitimacy or Death," "Oligarchy or Death," etc. "The first term varies but rhe second is aiways ex- pressed or understood on the Rags, the banners of all opinions. On the right, we rcad The Soverezgnt~ of A or Dedh. O n t he left it's Ths Srrtlereignty of B or Ilecath. Death is never rnissing; B even know phiiosophers who say, Su@#i.essia~~ QJ the Deadh Peltalty 07

Death."zl As Eor truth, it isn't given any sanction; it doesn't as- sociate wich death. Following Pascal, let's say: we have alway~

already found the means of giving justicc to force, bur weuren't close to finding the way togive force to justice. a'lrie very project doesn't make sense. A force js a force. It can be reasonable to make use of i t . Biit it is irrational to Want ca render it reason- able.

How t~ Rave Reasonalily

So it remains to che reasonable man to subinit to che madness of being a citizen, while trying to safeguard his reason. Phi- losoghers believe rhey have found the way: nopassr'ue obedience, they say, no di~ties without rights! Btit this is speaking from 6stractin~. There is nothing, there will never be anything, in the idea of duty that irnplies rights. Whoever is alienated is absolutely alienated. To suppose anything eise is a poor ruse of vanity that has no other effcct rhan to racionaiize alienation and to trick the one who pretends orherwise. Reasonable man will not be taken in by these tricks. He will know thar the social order Lias nothing better to oEer him than the s~iperioricy af otder over disorder. "'Any sort of order, so long as it cansiot Re troubled: that has characterized sociai organizations since the beginning OE the ~ o r l d . " ~ ~ Keeping a rnonopoly on iegitimate violence is still che proven best way to limic violence and atlow teason some asy lum where it can brr freely practiced. Reasonable man thus does not consider himself above rhe law. W r e he to attribute this superiority to himself, he would plurnmet into rhcdestiny of those inferior superiors who constitute the human species arid maintain its irrationalicy. He will consider ehe social order a rnystery situated beyond rsason's power, the work of a superior reason that requires the partial sacrifice of his own. He will submit himself as citizen to that which che irracionaiicy of governments requires, refilsing only ro adopc the reasons given by it. He wifB not, forall that, abdicare bis reason. He will bring it back to its firsc principle. Reasonable wiii, we have seen, is first of all the arr of conquering oneseif. Reason will preserve itself faithftilly by controlling its own sacrifice. Reasonable man

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will be uirttlozrs. H e will partially give away his reason a t the command of irrationality, in order to maintain the threshold of rationaliry thar is the capacitp tu conquer oneself Thus reason will always maintain an impenetrabte stronghold in the middle of irrationality.

Social irrationaiity is war in its two aspecrs; the battlefield and the tribunal. The bstrlefield is the true portrait of society, the consequence ~ r o d u c e d exactly and in tegra l l~ by che opiniort on which i c is founded,

When two men rneet each other, they are polite as though they be- Iieved each ocher equal in inteIligence; buc if one of rhem i s found deep in the middle OF the othet's counrry, there is no langer as mucti ceremony: he abuses his force like his reason: evetyfhing about rhe inrruder denotec a barbarian origin; he is treaced wirhout ceremony like an idiot. His pronunciation causes peals of laughter; the awk- wardness of his gestuces, everything about him, announces rhe bas- tard species ro which he belongs: they are a heavy peopfe, we are light and frivo1ous; they are coarse, we are proud and high-minded. In gen- eral, one people believes itself in good faith to be superior to another people; and when a little passion is thrown in, war erupts: as mang people as possible are killed, on both sides, iikc insects being crushed. The moxe kilied, the more glory. One is paid so much per head; a crosc is demanded for a burned village, 3 grear ribbon if it's a big cicy; and this traffic in blood is called love of country. . . . Ht i~ in rhe name of country that you atrack neighboring peopies like savage beasts; and if you were asked wiiät yoiir country is, yoii woulci all cut each other's throats before agreeing on tlie nlarter."

And yet, says a chorus oF philosophers and the common ron- science, we must make distinctions. There are un just wars, wars of conquest rhat the madness of domination dcmands; and there are just wars, those where we defend clic ground of r>ur councry under attack. The former artilleryman f oseph Jacotot m&st have known this, he who had defended his endangered country in 1782 and who, in 181 5 , opposed with all his parliamentariaa, strength the King's return i i i tbe harids «f the invaders. Bur i e was precisely his expericnce rhat aflowed him to notice that rhe

morality oP the thing was compietely different from what i t had seerned at first. The defender of the country under attack does as a citizen what he would not do as a man, He doesn't have to sacrifice his reasori to virtue. For reason requires the reasonable animai to 90 what he can to preserve himself as a living being. Reason, in this case, is reconciied wirh war, and egoism with virtiie. There is thus no particular merit in all this. O n theother hand, he who obeys tkie orders of the conquering country, i f he is reasonable, meritoriousiy sacrifices his reason to society's mysrery. He needs far more virtile to preserve his interior for- tress and to know, when duty is done, how to rerurn to nature, to reconvere into the virtue of free thaught the self-mastery he invested in being obedient as a citizen.

But for all this, war between armies is scill reason's teasc dif- ficult tesc. Reason is content to controf its own suspension, I t suffices for i e to dominate itself as it obeys the voice of an au- thurity that has enough power to make itseff unequivocatly heard by everyone. Much more perifous is action in those placcs where authority is yet to be established in the midsr of concra- dictory passions: in assem blies deliberating law, in tribunals judging how it is ro be appiied. These places presenr reason with the Same sort of rnystery to which one can only bow down. In rhe middfe of passion's brouhaha and irrationaiiry's sophisrties, the balance cips; iaw makes its voice heard, a voice that must be obeyed like that of a general. But this mystery requires the rea- sunable man's participation. It invites reason not onto the ter- rain of sacrifice but onto terrain that i t assures i t is its own, that of redroning. And yer the reasonable man knows i t is only a mar- rer of combat; only the iaws of war prevail. Success dcpends on ehe fighter's address and Force, not his reason. This is why pas- sion reigns here through its weapon, rhetoric. Rhetosic, we know, has nothing to do witfi reason. But is the opposice true? Doesn't reason have anything ro do with rhetoric? Isn't i t , in general, the speaking being's control OE himself that permits him co make, in any domain, an drtirtic work? Reason would not be itsetf if it didn'r granr rhe power to speak in the asscmbly

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as in any other glace. Reason is the power to learn ail languages. Ht will thus learn tke langiiage of the assembly and the tribunal. I t will iearn to rave.

So we must firsr side wlth Aristotie and againsr Pllato: it is shameful. far the reasonable man to get beacen in a tribunal, shameful for Socrates to have lost the battle and his life to Me- letus and Anytus. The language of Anytus and Meletus, tfie orator's language, must be learned. And it is learned like other languages, more easily, even, rhan the otiiers, for its vocabulary and Syntax are enclosed in a tight circle. The "everything is in everything" Slogan applies better here than in any orher study. Thus jo?nethilag must be learned--a speech by Mirabeau, For ex- ample-and the resr will follow. This rhetoric that required so much work foc the students of the 81d Master is a garne for us: "We know everything in advance; everytlaing is in our books: only the narnes rnust be changed.'""

Rut we also know thar the bombast of sentences and stylistic Ornament are not the quintessence of oratorical art. Their func- tion is not to persuade ininds but to distrctct them. What carries the decree-just as against a forrification-is assauit, words, the decisive gesture. An assembly's fate is often decided by the audacious person who, eo stiffe discussion, is the firsr to cry out "voice votel" So let us also learn, we EOO, the art of crying out "voice vote!" at rhe right moment. Lea. us not say this isn't wor- thy of us and of reason. Reason doesn't need us; it's we who need it . Qur so-called dignity is onty laziness and cowardice, similar to tliat of the proard child who dc~esn't Want to improvise in front of his Peers. I n a little while, perhaps, wr will also'cry out "voice vate!" But we will shoiit it out along wich thc band of cowards who are echoing the winning orator-he who wiil have dared whac we were too lazy to do.

1s i t , then, a matter of making universal teaching inro a sctiooi of political cynicism, reviving the sophistries Bentham denounced? Whoever wants ro understand this lesson of the reu- 3onalEbEe n2un ruvtng must rathec conipare it with tlaat of the zg- normt schoolm~ster. It is a questiori of verifying, in ali cases, rea-

son's power, of always seeing what can be done with i c , what i t ran do ro remain arrive in rhevery heart of extreme irrationality. The reasonaMe man rauiug, encdosed in the circle of sociai mad- ness, shows that the individual's reason never ceases to exercise its power. In die closed field of tlie passions-exercises of the distracred will-it must be shown that artentive will can always do as mlich-and more than-what the passioias can do. The queen af rhe passions can do better than they u ~ h o are her siaves.

?' "The most seductive sophistry, the one with the most verisi- 4 rnilitude, will always be the work of the person who knows besc 1

i' i whar a sophistry is. He who knows the righr way departs from :/I ;/I it when necessary, as much as is necessary, and never too rnuch. i;

No matter what superiority passion grants us, it can itself be li 8 dazzled, sioce i r is a passion Reason Sees everything as it is: it Er shows, it hicies, as much as it deems suitabie, never more not i'? $1,

iess."" This is a lesson not in ruse bur in constancy He who :I ,'.' ., , ;b knows liow co remain true co himseif in the middle of irratio- 9% nality will triumph over rhe passions of others exactly as he *ir iii triurnphs over his w n . "Everything is done by the passions, H jiit

know; but everything, even follies, would be miich better done :& by reason. TAis is the unique principle af Universal Teach-

Are we ihen that far from Socrates? He too tauglit, in tlie Phnrdrm as in 7he Reppuhblrc. that the philosopher will tell the

. .. good lie, the one that is exactly necessary and sufficient, because ,i;r ''$ he alone knows what lying 1s. The whole differente for ~ i s is pre-

cisely in this: r e suppose rhat everyonc knuws what lying is. It #

5 is even by rliis thar we defined the reasonable being, by his in- Ij $1 capacity tu Lie to BimseljF We are thus not speaking at ail about

rhe wise man's privilege, but about the power of reasonable people. And this power depends on an opznzon; thar of the equal- ity of intelligente. This is the opinion that was inissing in %C-

a t e s , and that Aristotle couldn'r corrert. The very superiority that ailows the philosopher to locate the tiny diflsrence that fmls every time dissuades him from speaking to rhe "cornpan- ions of slaverp.""' Socrates did not wanr to rnake a spcrech to

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g G The Soriety of Conrernpt -

please the people, to seduce the "ungainly animal.'We djdn't Want to study ehe art of the sycophants Anytus and Meletus. H e thought, and practically everyone praised him for it, that this would decay his oacn phifosophy. But the basis for bis opin- ion is this: Anytus and hieletus are imbecitic sycophants; thus, there is no art in their speeches, only recipes; there is nothing to be Iearned from thern. Yet the speeches of Atiytus and Me- letus were a rnanifestation of ehe human intelligence like those of Socrates, We won't say they were as good, We will say that they derived from rhe Same intelligence . Socrates, the "ignorant one," thought hirnself superior ro e-he rribunai'orators; he was too lazy to Iearn cheir are; he consented to the world's ixratio- nality. Why did he act like this? For the Same reason that de- fiated Laius, Oedipus, and all the tragic heroes: he believed in the Delpl~ic oracIe; he thoughc thar he was ehe elect of the di- vinity, that stie kad sent him a personal rnessage. He shared the madness of superiot beings: the belief in genius. A divinely in- spired h i n g doesn't learn Anytus's speeches, doesn't repeat them, doesn't try, when he needs EO, to appropriace their art, It is thus thar the Anytuses become masters in the social ordet.

But, one may srili. ask, wouldn't they be anyway? What good is triumphing in the fotunl if one already knows that nothing can change the social otder? What good is ic fur reasonable in- dividuals-or the emancipated, if you will-to save their lives an$ safeguard their reason, if they can du nothing to change cociety and are redueed to tke sad advantage of raving better than tke madmen?

The Speech on the Aventine

Let's reply firse of ail that the worsc is never certain, since, in a given social order, it's possible for ail individuals to be rea- sonable. Saciety as such will nevet be reasonable, but it could experience the miracle oF reasonable mornents arising not in the coinridence elf intelligentes-thar wouild be stultificacion- bur in the reciprocal recognition of reasonabte wilis. When the

Senate raved, we joined Appitis Claudius's chorus. That was the way to get i t over with most quickiy, to get to the Scene on tbe Aventine sooner. It's Meneriius Agrippa who is spcaking now. And the details of what he is telling the plebeians matter little. The essential is that he is speaking to ehern, and they are lis- tening to him; that they are speaking to him and he hcars them. He speaks to them about legs and arms and stomachs, and that's perhaps not very flatcering, But whar he imparts to thern is their equaliry as speaking bcings, their capacity to understand as soon as chey recognize themseives as equaily marked by the sign of intelligence. He tells them they are the stomachs-this derives from uhe art learned by studving and repeatitrg, by breakirig a p r c and putting back together others' speeches; let's say, anachronisticaliy, that it dcrives from inteliectual emancipa- tion. But he speaks co them as men, and, in so doing, makes them into men: this derives from intellectual emancipation. At the murnent when society threatens to be shattered by t ts own madness, reason gerforms a saving social action by exerting the totality of its own power, that of the recognized equality of in- tellectual beings.

Fot this rnornent of civil war undone, this rnornent uf the reconquered, victorsous power of reason, it was worth Raving saved his reason for so long, and apparenrly so futilcly, by ieasn- ing from Appius Ciaudius rhe art of raving berter than he. There is a life to reason that can remain faithful to itself within social ~rrationaiity, and it can have an effect. This is what we must work toward. Whoever knows how, for the good of rhe cause, ro compose, with equal attenrion, the diatribes of an Ap- pius Claudius or the fables of a Mencniiis Agrippa is a student of universai teaching, Whoevet recognizes, along wich Menc- aius Agrippa, that every man is born to understand what any other man has to say to hirn knows inteliectual ernanciparion.

These happy encountets amount CO littje, say the impatient or the self-sarisfied. And thr Aventine is oid history. Brit pre- cisely a t the sanle rirne, other voiees. very different voices, n ~ ~ k e themselves heard, to afirrn that the Aventine is rhe beginning

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98 The Soriety ofconrempt

of our kistory: that of the self-knowiedge that makes yesterday's plebeians and today's proletarians capable of doing anything a Inan can do. In Paris, another eccentric dreamer, Pieare-Sinon Ballanche, teils the Story of the Aventine in his own way, and reads in it the Same jaw proclaimed: that of the equality of speaking beings, of rhe power acquired by those who recognize themselves marked with the sign of inteliiigence and thus be- come capable of marking a name in heaven. And he announces this Strange prophecy: "Roman history, as it has appeared tn us up till now, after having in parr ordered ourdestiny, after having entered. in one form, into the composition of oür sociaf life, our customs, our opinions, our laws, comes now, in a different form, to order our new thoughts, those that must enter into the com- position of our future social life.''28 In the workshops of Paris ot Lyon, a few clreaming minds hear this stury and recoune i t in rheir turn anb in their manner.

Undoubtedly this prophecy of a new era is a daydream. Bus this is not a daydream: one can alwoys, ae the vesy heart of in- egalicarian madness, verafy the equaliry of intelligence, and thae verificacjon has an eRect, Thr victory on the Aventine is very real. And undoubeedly it isn't wliere we think it is. The tri- bunes the plebeians won would rave just like the others. But that everg pliebeian felt hirnself a man, believed hirnseif capa- ble, believed his son and any other person capable, of exercising tbe prerogatives of intelligente-this is not nothing. There can- not be a dass of the emancipated, an assernbly or a society of tbe emancipated, Bue any individual can always, ar any mo- ment, be emancipated and emancipate sorneone else, announce to others thepractice arid add ro ehe number of people who know themselves as such and who no longer play the comedy of the inferior supriors. A society, a people, a state, will always be irrational. Bur onecan multipiy wishin thesebodies the number of people who, as individuals, will make use of reason, and who, as cititens, will know how eo seek die art of ravnving as rea- sonably as possible.

It can thus be said, and it must be said: "Hf each family did

what I arn saying, the nation would soon be emancipated, not wirh the emancipation given by scholars, by their explications dt the 6 z ~ e l of the people's inrelligence, bue with the emancipa- tion seized, even against the scholars, when one ceaches one- ~elf*''~f'

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3 The Emancipator and His Monkey

The duty of Joseph Jacotoc's disriples is thus sim- ple. They mustr announce to everyone, tn all places and all ctr- cumstances, the news, the practlce: one can reath what one doesn't know. A poor and ignorant father can thiis begin edu- cating his childrcn: sonterhing nzwt be Etwinedand nll the ver/ i.ela.ted fo It, on thzs pvincrple: everjoppe 2s of equal intellzgeirce.

They must announce rhis principle and devote thernselves to its verificacion: speak to the desritute Person, make him talk about what he is and whar he knows; show him how ro instruct Iiis child; copy rhe prayer that the child knows by hearr; give him the first volurne of Tedemaq~~cand have him learn i e by heart; respond to the demand of those who Want to Iearn from the mas- ter of universal teaching u~hat hedaesn'! knnw; finally, use all pos- sible means of convtncing the ignorant one of his power. A Jis- ciple in Grenoble couldn't persuade a poor and eIderly woman to learn to read and write. He paid her to get her consent, She learned in five months, and tiow she is emancipting her grand- chitdren. '

This is what r-nust be done, all the while aware that a I.;nowl- edge of TeIe'm~p4~ or of any orher rhing is, in itseif, irrelevant. The groblem is noe to create schofars. Bt t s to raisc up those who believe themselves inferior in intelligente, tn make thern leave ~ h e swamp where they are stagnacing-not rhe swamp of ig- norance, bur the cwamp of self-conternpt, of conrernpc tn nnd

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I 0 2 The Ernancrpdtos. find His Morskey The Emancipdtor and Nis Monbrry r 03

of irre(/ for rhc reasonable creature. It ir to rnake emancipated and ernancipating men.

Emancipaiory Method and Soiial Method

Universal teaching shouidn't be placed on the prograni of re- forrnist parties, nor should intellectual ernanciparion br in- sctibed on the banners of sedition. Only a man can emancipte a man. Only an individual can be reasonable, and ~ n l y with his own reason. There are a hundred ways to instrucc, and ieaining also takes place ar the s rul tder i school; a prokssor is a thing, less easily handled than a book, undouhtedly, bur he can be ledrrsed: he can be observed, imitared, dissccted, pur back to- gether; his person, avaiiable forobservation, can be tested. One always learns when Iistcn~ng to someonr s~eaking. A professor is neither more nor iess intelligent than another man, and he generally presenrs a great quanrity of facts for the researcher's observation, Bur there is only one way to emancipate. And no party or government, no army, schwl, ot insriturion, will cver emancipate a single person.

This is not at all a meraphysicai proposition. The experimene was performed in Louvain, under rhe patronage of His Majesty, the King of the Netherlands. We know rhat the King was en- lightened. His son, Prince Frederick, was taken with philoso- phy. Responsible for the army, he wanred it modern and edu- cated, like the Prussian arrny. He was interested inJacotor, ruf- fered because of rhe disgrace the acadernic authorities nf Louvain held him in, and wanted to do something for bim, and for the Dutch arrny as well. Ar rhat time the army was a priv- ilegrd rcrrain for rrying out reformisr ideas and new pedagogies. The Prince so conceived it, and persuaded his father to create a military school in Louvain and to confide ihe pedagogical mis- sion ro Jacotot,

This was a good intention but a poisoned gift: Jacotot was a mastrr, not the head oh an insiitution. His merhod was designed ro form emancipated men, not rnilitary insiructotr, or indeed

servants of any kind of social speciality. Let's understand this well: an emancipated man can just as well be a rnilitary insrruc- tor as a locksmich or a lawyer. Bur universal teaching cannot, withour being spoiLed, specialize in the production of a set kind of social actor-especially ih these sociai acrors are insttuctnrs of a body of rnen, rniiitaty or orheru~ise. Universal teaching he- lorags ro famifies, and the best thar a n enlightened ruler can do for its propagation is to use his aurtiority to protect the free cir-. culation of the service. An enlightened king can certainly er- ra1iIish universd ceaching when and where he pleases, buc such an establishmeni would not endure, foc the human unimdl be- iongs to the old merhod. The experimenr could undoubredly be atrempted, for the glory of the ruler. I t a?oiiId obviously fail, bue there are instructive failtnres. 0 n l y one guarantee was re- quired: che absolute concentration of power, the social scenc swept clean of all its incermediaries tci give free rein tu just one couple, ehe King and the philosopher. This, rlien, was neces- sary: firsc, to get rid of all the advisers nf the old method in the conventionai manner of civilized councries, that is co say, by giving them all a promotion; cecond, tu supptess alf interme- diaries &her than those chosen by rhe philosopher; and rhird. to give all power to the philosopher:

They would do whar:I said, everything I s ~ i d , nothing bur what I said, and ttle responsibility would weigh entirely vn me. 1 uvould ask for nothing; on the contrary, the intrrmediaries would ask rne what was to be done, and how i t was ta 1,e doiie, everyrhing to be proposed to ehe King. I woitld he regardeci not as an employed functionary, but a a philosopher whose consulrations were needed. Finatly, ttie estab- lishmenr 06' ~iniversal tcaching would be considered, for tlie time beitig, the first and foremost of all the affairs in the Kingdorn.=

These are conditions thar no civilized monarchy could ac- rnmodate, especially for ii Sure failute. Rievertheless, thc King sisred on the experimenr, and Jacotor, as grateful puesc, at-

epred a basrard trial of cohabitation with a commission of mil- ary instrucijon, under the auchority d the sommander in arge at Louvain. The school was created on this basis in March

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-.

r 04 The E??znracipatnr and Hbs Motzkey

1827, and ehe students, a t first bewildered t o hear rhrough an interpreter that their prokssor had nothing to teach thern, must have found some benefit in i t , since at the end of their reguiar term, they petitioned ro have their stay a t sctiool prolonged so they migh t learn languages, history, geography, mathematics, physics, chemistry, topographical drawing, and hrtificarion by the universal method. Bur ehe masrer wasn't satisfied wich rhic .rpoiled universal. teaching, or with the daily conflicts wich rhe civilian academic authorities aind the military hierarchy. Through his outburscs, he hastened rhe demise of the school, Me had obeyed the King i n forming milirary itistructors by an accelerated method. But he had better things to d o ehan to fab- ricate second lieurenants, a type that will never be'lacking in any society. W h a t is more, he solemnly warned his students that they should never try to militate for the establishrnent of uni- versal teaching in che arrny. But neither should they forget that they had witnessed an ddventtlre of the mind a licrle greater than thc fabrication of subaltern oficers:

You fornled s~ibalterns i n a few months, i t ' s true. Bur ro persist in obtaining resutts as paltry as thoseof the European

schools, civil as much as rnilitary, is to spoil universal reaching. Let society profit from y&r experiences and he content with thern,

that will make me happy: you will be useful to the State. .

But never forget rhat you have Seen resulrs ofa much superior order CO those you have obtained and to which you wiil be reduced.

Make use, then, of inrellectuat emancipation for the benefit of yoursetves and your children. Help the poor.

Bilt for your councry, confine yourseives to making subafrerns and acadernic citizeris.

You no longer need me to move forward in thar rut.]

This speech by rhe Sjounder 6 0 his rnilicary disciples-he had some fairhful ones.-appears on the frontispiece of the Mathe- matirs vol~irne of Slniuersat Zaching, a work in which, in keeping wich the rnaster's frustrating habit in every matter, there isn't a singie word about mathematics. No onk is a disciple of universal teaching if he hasn't tead that work as tbe history oF the Ecole

The Emn~ncipntor and Hi f Monkey I og

Normale in Eouvain; if he isn't convinced of this opinion: uni- versal teaching isn'c and cannot be asocial method. Ir cannor he gropagated in and by social institlr tions. The emnczpated are Lin- doubtedly respectful of the social ordet, They know chat ic is, in any casc, less bad than disorder, But that's all that they grant it, and no institution can be satisfied with this minirntim. Xt's not enough for inequality rs be respec td ; it wants t o be be- tieved and loved. I t wants co be e,uplicated. Every instjtution is a n ex>licdtio~t in social act, a drarnacization of inequality. Its principlc is and always will be antithetical to that of a method based on equality and the refusal of explications. Universal reaching can only be directed to individuals, never ro societies.

P-lumari sucieries, united in nations, Brom the Laplanders ro tlie Pat- agonians, need form for their crability, some kind of order. Those who arc responsible for maintaining rhe neccssary order must explain and have it explained that this order is the besc of all orders, and they must prevent. any conrradictory explanation. This is the goal of constitu- tions antl iaws. Every sociaI order, telying on an explication, thus ex- ciudes ali other explications and especially rejects thc mechod of in- teliectual ernaricipation, based as i r is on the futility and wen the dan- ger of explication in reaching, The hunder even wenr s o far as ro recognize that the citizen of a state musr respect the sacial order he's a part of, as well as the explication of that order; bur he also estab- iiished that the law only asked of a cirizen that he conform his actions and words to this order, and could not impose tlioughcs, opinions, or beliefs on hirn; that the inhabiranr ofa country, before being a cirizcn, '

was a man; char che family was a sanctuary where the father was rhe siipreme arbirer, ~ n d that consequently, i c was there and there alnne that inte1Eectual emanciparion could be fruicfully sown."

Let's a f i t m , then, that universai texfi ing will not tnbe, it will not be established in society. But it u4ll nntpcrirh, because i t is the natural method of the human rnind: tl-iat of all people who look for tfleir path themseives. Wha t the disciples can d o is ro announce t o a f f individuals, t o atl rnothers and fathets, the way to wach whar one doesn't know on rhe grinciple of the equality of intelligence.

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r 015 The Emancipgtuv and His Monkey "-

Emancipation of Men and %nscruction of the People

It musr be announced to everyane. First, undoubtedly, to the poor: they have no other way to educate thernselves if they can'r pay the salaried explicatocs or spend long years on school benches. And above ail, it is on them that the prejudice of the inequality of intelligente weighs mosr heavily. It is they who rnust be raised up from their hitmitiared position. Universal teaching is the poor's method.

But it isn't a method of tbe poor. Xt's a method of rnen, rhat is to say, of inventors. Whoever employs iti'xg mader what his science or his rank, will mulripiy his intcllectual- powers. must therefore be announced to princes, rninisgrs, and rhe powerful: they cannot i n s t i t ~ t e universal reaching, buc they can apply i r to teach tlieir children. And they can make use of their social prestige ro announce the service far and wide. Thus the eniighrened King of the Nethetlands would have done better to teach his children what he didn't know, and to speak out for the dif ision of emanciparory ideas to families chrougkout the kingdom. Thus Joseph Jacotnt's former colleague, General La- fayette, could announce it to the Resident of the United Stares, a riew councry not weighed down by centuries of scholastic stul- tification. In the days following the July Revolution vf r 830, the Founder ieft Louvain fvr Paris to indicate to the victorious iiberals an$ progressives the means of realizing rheir good

. thoughts regarding the people: General Lafayette had only to spread universal teaching throughout che national guard. Casi- mir PCrier, former enthusiast of the docrrine and future Prime Minister, was now in a position to spread the service far and wide, Barthe, Laffitte's Minister of Public Instrurtion, camc. hirnself to consult with Joseph Jacotot: whar rnusr he do to or- ganize the education that the government owes the people and ehat he intends to give them according to the best merhods? Nothing, answercd rhe Pounder ; government doesn'r owe rhe people an educarion, for the silnpte reason rhat one doesn't owe

people whar they can take for tliemselves. And education is like liherty: it isn't given; it's taken. So what musr he done? asked thc minister. You need onIy announce, he replied, that I am in Paris at thc Corneille Motel, where every day I receive fathers of poor farnilies to show them the means of emancipating rheir children.

It must be told to all those who worr): about science or the people, or both. The learned should also learii it: chey have che means of increasing their intellectual power tenfold. They think they are onIy capable of teaching what they know. We are aware of rhat social ic)gic of false rnodesty where whar one tenouncec establishes rhe sntidity of whar one annnunces. Rut scholars- rhosc who research, certaiiily, not rhose wlio explicate the knowledge of others-perhaps Want something a Iittle newer and a %itrle less conventional. Ler them begin teaching what they don't know, and maybe rhey will discover uns~ispected in- teliectuai powers ttlar will pur rhem on the road to new discov- eries.

I t musr be told to republicnns who Want a free and equal people and who imagine rhat this is a tnarter of laws and con- stitutions. I t rnusr be told tu all men of Progress, who, with generous hearts and fiery brains-inventors, phiianthropists, and lovers of rnathemarics, poiytechnicians and philotechni- cians, Fourierists arid Saint-Sirnonians-scm the counrries of Europe and the fiejds of knowfecige in search of technical in- ventions, agronomical arnetiorarions, economic forrnulas, pecfa- gagical methods, moral institutions, architectural revolutions, typogrqhical procedures, ericyclopedic publications, etc. , for the ph~sical , intellectual, and moral improvement of the paar- est and most ntimerous class. Thev can do rnuch rnore for the poor rhan they chink, and at less expense. They spend time and money experirnenting with and grornoting grainlofts and rnid- dens, fertilizer and conservarion methods, in an attempt to irn- prove cultivation and enrich the peasants, to ctean the rot out of farm strearns artd the prcjudices out of rustic minds. It is

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"."

r 08 Tbe EmanciJatov and His MonLey

much simpler than that: with a used copy of TdLhnaqtte, or even a pen and some paper to wrtte down a prayer, they can eman- cipate the inhabitants of the countryside, make thern conscious of their iniellectual power; and the peasants thenlselves will set about improving ciil tivation and grain conservation. Stdtif;cn- tion is not an inveterate superstition; it is fear in the face of lib- erty. Routine is noc ignorante; it is the cowardice and pride of people who renounce their own power for the unique pleasure of afirming their neighbor's incapacity. It is enough to e?jza?z-

ctpdte. Don't ruin yourselves by inilndarirag fawyers, noeaties, and phatmacists of subprefectures with enc~clopedic volurnes inaended to teach rhe inhabitants of the countryside the health- iest ways to preserve eggs, brand slieep, hasten rnelon ripening, salr butter, disinfect water, fabricate beet Sugar, and make beer out of pea pods. Show them rather how to make their son repeat "Calypso," "Calypso could," "Calypso coiild not," and yoti wi%B see what they can do,

Such is the unique chance, the uriique chance of inteliectuai emancipation:: each cirizen is also a man who makes a wo&, wirh the pen, with the drill, or with any other rool. Each superior inferior is also an equal who recounts and is in turn tofd by an- other, the Story of what he has sern. I r is always possibte to play wich this relation oF self to seif, to bring it back to its primary veracity and waken the reasonable man in social man. Whoever doesn't seek to introduce the method of universai teaching into rhe workings of the social rnachine may awaken thar entirely new energy that fascinated iovers of liberty, that power wi thout gravity or agglomeration that is propagated in a ßash by the contact between two poles. Whoever forsakes the workings of the social machine has the opportunity to make the electricat energy of emancipation circuiate.

Only che srultified followers of the Qld Master and those powerful in the oid mode will be Cast aside. They were aiready anxious about the evils of instruction for the sons of the people, imprudentty cut oK from their condirion. What is speaking about emancipation and rhe equality of inteliigencc worth, if

i t is only to say that husband and wife have rhe samc intelli- gence! A visitor bad atready asked jacoroc if wurneri i n these circumstances arouId stiII be pretty! Let's deprive the stultified of a. response, then, and let them turn about within their academico-noble circle, We know that it is this that defines the stuitifying vision of the world: ro believe in the reality of in- equalicy, CO imagine that the superiors in society are truiy su- perior, and that society would be in danger i f the idea should spread, especially arnong the Ioafer classes, that this superiority is onlp a conventional hrtion. In fact, only an einancipated per- son is untroubled by the idea thar the sociat order is entirely conventionaI: only he can scrupuiously obey superiors thar he knows are Iiis equals. He knt~ws what he can expecr of the social order and will not make a big ra-do about it. The stultified have nothing to fear, bur they wi l l nevet knnw it.

Men of Progress

Let's leave therri, then, to rhe sweet ancf anxiotis consciotts- ness of their genius. B u t standing right beside them is no lack of rnen of Progress who shoiildn't fear tlie overturning of the ofd inteIlecttia1 hicrarchies. Wk understand men of ,brolj~.e.u in the Iiteral sense of ttie term: rnen who moijefonunvd, who are not concerned with the social rank of sorneone who 11as a&rmed such 2nd such a thing, but g o See for themselves if rhe rhing is true; Voyagers wt-io traverse Europe in search of all the proce- dures, methods. or insticutions worthy of being irnitated; whn, when atiey have heard tell of soinc new experirncnr hetc or therc, g o to see thc facts, r r y to reproduce the experirnent; wha don't see why six years should be spent learning sornetlting, df it's been proved that i t can be done in two; who think, abovc all, thar knowledge is nothing in itseif and that d o j q is every- thing, that the sciences are pursued not to be explicated but tti produce new discoveries and usef~tl invenrions; who therefore, when they hear about profitable invenrions, are not content to praise them orcririque thern, but inctead nffer, if possible, their

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I r o Tbe Ernanciputi~r und Nzs ildonkey

factory or thcir land, their capital or their devotion, to give them a !ry.

There is no lack of Voyagers and irinnvaiors of rhis lcind who are interested in, even enthusiastic, about possible applicacions of theJacotoe rnethad. They might be teachrrs in conflict with the Old Master iike Professor Durietz, norirished since fiis youth on Locke and Condiflac, Helvetius and Condorc,et, who had early on mounted an assault on "the dusty ediftce of our Gothic institutions.'" A professor at the central school in Lille, he had founded in rhae city an establishment inspired by the principles of h i s mascers. A victirn of thE Emperor's , "consumirig -C*--%' hatred" for rhe ideologuer, for "any institution <hat didd1t go aoog with his goak of universal servitude," but still devored to4haking oE hcRtt,urd methods, he wenr to rhe Nerheriands to iidaertake the education of the son of the Prussian ambassador, ehe Prince of Hatzfeldt. I t is there that he heard about the Jacotot: method, visited the estabiishment that a former polycechnician, de Sepr+s, had founded on those principles, recognized aheir con- formity with his own, and decided ro propagare the method wherever he could. This is whac he did for five years in Saint Petersburg ar Grand Marshal Paschov's, ar Prince Sherbtetov's, and at the homes of several other dignitaries who were friends of Progress, before returning to Faance-not without propa- gating emancipation en raute, at Riga and Qdessa, in Germany and Bcaly. He now wanted to "chop down rhe tree of abstrac- tions" and, if he coufd, pul! i r out "by the fibers of its deepest roots

He spuke about his projects to Ternaur, rhe famous textile manufacrurer and a deputy of the extreme liberal Left , No more eniightened industrialist could be found: Ferdinand Ternaux was not content to reorganize his father's tottering factory,and inake it prosper during the troubling times of the Revolukion and the Empire, He wanted ro be useful r o the national industry in gencral, by favoring the produccion of cashrnere. To this end, he recruited an orientalist from the Bibliothkque Nationale and sent him to Tibet to find a herd of fifteen hundred goats to be

- Ths Emnncipdtctr an</ His Monkey r I r

acclirnatized to the Pyrenees. An ardent friend of liberry and tlie Enlighrenment, he wanced co see fnr himself the results of rhe Jacotot mechod. Lonvinced, he promised his Support, and wich his help, Durietz felr srrengthened in his quest to anni- hilate the "dealers iri supiries and gerunds" and other "satraps of the university monopoly," . .

Fcrdinand ~irnaurr was not rhc only industrialist tu move ahead in this way. In Mulhouse, the Industrial Society, an in- stitucion pioneered by thc philanrhropicai dynarnism of the Dollfus brothers, confidcd a Course in universal teaching for workers to the care of its young animator, h c t o r Penot. In Paris, a rnore modest industrialist, the dyer Beauvisage, heard cell of che mechod. A worker who had made it on his own, he wanted to extend his affairs hy founditig a new factory in tfie Somme. Buc in so doing, Ite didn't Want to be separated from the workers, the brothers of his origins. A tepublican and free- rnason, he dreamed of rnaking his workers his associates. Un- forrunately, this drearn ran up against an unpleasant reafity. In his factory, as in aIi rhe orhers, rhe workers were erivious of. each other and only got along when in opposition to the master, Eile wanred co give rhem rhe education thar would destroy the old man in thern and would perrnit rhe reatizarion of his ideal. For this, he addressed himseif to the Racier brothers, fervent dis- ciples of the method, one of whom preached emancipation every Sunday in the Halle aux Draps.

In addition ro the industrialists, rhere nlere progressive mil- itary men, ingenious officers prineipally of the artillery, guard- ians of rhe revoIucionary and polyteehnic tradition. Thus Eieu- eenant Schölcher, rhe son of a rich porcelain maker and an officer of geniils at Vülenciennes, wenr regularly to visit Joseph Jaco- tot, who had temporarily retired there. 8 n e day he brought with him his brother Vicror, who wrate in various newspapers, who had visited the Unitcd States and rerurned indignant that tliere could still exist in the nineteenth century thac denial of kumanity called slavery.

But the archetype of all chese progressives was surely the

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r I 2 The Emanriparor nnd Mir Mo~fkej~ h

Count of kasreyrie, a sepcuagenarian and president, founder, or mainspring of the Society for the Encouragemenr of National fndustry, rhe Society for Elementary Education, the Society for hautual Teaching, the Central Sociery for Agronomy, the Phi- lanthropic Society, the Society of Teaching Methods, the Vac- cine Society, the Asian Society, the jourr~at d'idacdtion er n'itr- strjiction, and ahe Journal des cnnnni~sances mtreiies. Please don't snicker, imagining some pot-bellied academician, peacefiilly snoozing away in presidential armchairs, On the contrary, de Lasteyrie was known for not staying in one place. In his youth, he had visited England, Icaiy, and Switzertand to perfect his knowledge of economics and improve the rnanagemenr of his dornains. At tirse a parcisan of the Revolution like his brotlier- in-law, the Marquis de kafayette, he neverthelttcs, roward Year 111, was obliged tn go hide his title in Spain. There he Learned the language wen enough to translate various anticlerical works, seudied rnerino sheep well enough to publish two books on the subject, and appreciated their merirs weil enough to bring a herd back to France. He eraveled through Holland, Denmark, Sweden (whence he brought back rutabaga), Nor- way, and Cermany. He looked into the fattening of livestock, into the appropriate kinds of pits for grain scorage, into the cul- tivation of cotcon, and of indigo plants and vegetables thac pro- duce the color blue. In 181 2 he learned of Alois Senefelder's invention of iithograpiiy. He irnmediately lefc for Munich, Iearned rhe process, and created the first lithographic press jn France, The pedagogicai power of this new industry oriented him toward questions of education. He was chen militating for ttie introduction of mutual teaching using rhe bncasrrian rnethod. But he wasn't ar all exclusive. Among otber societies, he founded the Society of Teaching Methods Pot the study of alf pedagogicai innovations. Alerred by public rumor of the mir- acles being produced in Belgium, he decidcd tu go See them for himself.

Still alert at seventy years otd-he would live twenty rnoie, wriring books and founding societies and journals to cleave ob-

scurantism asunder and promote science and philosophy----he rook tke maif carriage, saw the Founder, visired Miss Marcelfis's insritution, gave improvisatinns and cnrnpositions ro ehe stu- dents to do, and verified thac they wroce ac well as he did. The opinion of ehe equality of intelligence didn'r frighten hirn. He saw in i e a great encouragernent to the acquisition of science iind virtue, a blow far more deadly than any material power to be struck against the intellectual aristocracy. Hc hoped that its ex- actitude could be shown. So, he thought, "the pretensions of rhose proud geniuses wouirf disappear, those who, believifig then~selves privileged by nature, believe themselves equatly in the right to dominate their fellow-men and to reducr thein i o the levei of beasts, so as to enjoy exclusively the material gifts that blind fortune distributes and that are known ro be acquired by profiting from human ign~rance . "~ H e came back to an- nounce it to the Society of Teclching Methods: an irnrnense step had just Lxen taken for civitizacion and the happiness of the hu- man species. Ie was a new method that the sociery rnusr exarnine and recommerid to the first rank of thrise best suited to fiasten the progress of rhe people's education.

Caf Sheep and Men

Jacotot appreciated the count's zeal. Buc he was immediacely obliged ro denounce his di~tt.actzon, I t was Strange, in Fact, for sorneone who appiaudc-d rhet mdea of intellecc~ial emancipation to then submit it to che approbation of a Society of Methods. What exaccly is a Societj~ of Methud~? An Areopagus of superior minds who Wane mass education and try to select rhe best meth- ods of arriving at it. This evidently stipposes that pcior families are incapable of seletting on their own. For that they would have to be alrcady educated. In such a case, they wouldn't need in- strucrion. In stich a case, rhere would be no need for the soci- ety-which ic contradi~tory with the hypothcsis.

Ir's a very oid ruse, rite learned sociery one, by which the world has aiways been duped and probnbly always wil l be. The public is fote-

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r r 4 Tbe E mant+zlov iarid Hir Monkq

scatied from taking the pains ro examine things. The Jairrtral is in charge of seeing, rhe Sociecy takes care of judgirig; and to give tliein- seives an air of imporrance rhar inrimidates rhe Iazy, they don't praise, tiever blame, neither too much nor cao lirrlc. Only a small niind ad-' rnires unreservedl y; bur by praising or blaming in a measured fashion, besides gaining a reputation for impareialicy, onc is thus ptritied above rliose one judges, one is worch more than they, one has wisely sorted out the good fror11 the rnediocre and the bad. The report i c an excrlicnr stultifying explication rhar cannot help being successful. Several Little axiotns are invoked i n addirion, and used to interlard one's speech: "Norhing is perfect," "One musr rnistrust exaggerarion," "Time will celi." . . . One o l these characters takes ehe Aoor and sayc: My dcar friends, we agree among ourselves that all goad methods will be pur to our test, and rliat the Iirench nation will have confidence in the results rhat derive from our analysis. The people our in thc deparr- nieiirs canrrot have societies like ours to direct their judgmenrs. Hrre and there, in snrne af rhe big towns, there are corne iirrle resting placcs; but the best test, rhe rest parexcellence, is only found in Paris. Ai1 the good rnethods compete for the honor of being retined, verified by our rest, Uniy one purporrc to revolt; bur, we insist, it will fade like the others. The mernbers' intelligencr is the vast laboracory wherein the legitimace analysis of alt rnethods i s performed. I n vain does Universal Teaching argue againsc our rulec; chey gire us the right: ro judge it, and we will judge i t .R

Yet don'r h i n k (hat the Society of Methods judged the Ja- cotot method with iil-will, Br shared its prestdent's progressive ideas and knew how co recognizeafl ihdt w~sgood in the method. Undoubtedly a few snickering voices were raised in the Areo- pagus of professors ro denoiirice ehis rnarvelous sirnplificarion brought to the jot, of teaching. Undoubtediy some rninds re- rnained skeptical when confrotlted with the "curious details" thae their "indefarigable president" brought back from his voy- age. Geher voices besides made themselves heard deslouncing the ct~arlatan's dramatizacion, the carefully prepared visits, the "improvisatiorts" learned by heart, the "original" compositions copied from the master's books, books that opencd all by rliem- selves to the samc spot. Tlley also laughed about tlie rnaster who

didn't know how to play guitar whose student played a different rnelody frorn the one he had under his eyes." But the mernbers of rhe Society of Methods weren't men to believe one teport, Froussard, a ckepric, went to verify de Lasceyrie's report and came back convinced. Boutmy verified Froitssard's rnthusiasm , then Baudoin Doutrny's. Ai1 recurned convinced. But they alt returned eqaially convinced precisely of the erninentprogl-e~s that this new teaching method fepresenred. They weren't at all con- cerned with annvuncing ir ro the poor, with using it to instruct rheir childten, or with using i t to tcach what they didn't know, They asked ehat the society adopt it for the "orthoaatic" school it was organizing, something that would dernonstrate the ex- cellence of the new methods. The rnajority of the society and de kasteyrie himself opposed this: the society could not adopa one merhod "to the cxclusion of ali those that presenr them- selves or that will present thernselves later on." Thnt woiild "prescribe Ii~ntts ro perfectibilicy" and destroy tiie cenrral tenec of the society's philosopkical faich and its practical resison fot being: the progressive perfectirig of dil good rnethuds-past, present, aad future. " T h e society tefused rhe exaggerarion, but, imperturbably serene and objective fn the face of rhe jcers about universal teaching, it aliocated a roorn in the orrhornatic school to the jacotot rnettiod of teaching.

Such was de Lasteyrie's inconsiscency: in earlier days he hadn't thought ro convoke a cornrnission on the value of rnerino sheep or lithographv, to make a reporr on the necessiry oF jm- porting one or the other. He imported them hirnself so he could tty them out on hisown. But he iudged different'ly when it came ro importing emancipation: this was for him a public aEair rhat must be treated by saciety. This unfortunate differente was it-

self based On an unforrunate identificarion; he confuseci pcopie to be educated with a flock of sfteep. Flocks of shcep don't drive rhemsefves, arid he thought ic was the s a n e for men: cercainly they had co be emancipated, but it was üp toenlightened minds ro do it, and for thae, all ideas should be put in common in ordet ro find the best methods, the best insrrumentc of emancipation.

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Emancipation for him meant putting light in obscurityls place, and he rhought that the Jacotot method was one method of in- sttuction like the others, a system for enlightening minds com- parabie to the others: an invention tliat was certainly exceltent but oE the Same nature as all rkose that proposed, weck after week, a new pergecting of the perfecting of the people's edu- cacion: Bricait le's panlexigraphy, Dupont's citolegy, Monte- mont's stiquiotechnics, Ortin's stereometrics, Painpare and Lu- pin's typography, CouIon-'Thevenot's tachygraphy, Payet's ste- nography, Carsrairs's calligraphy, Jazwinski's Pofish method, rhe Galiic method, the Levi method, the methods of Senocq, Coupe, Lacombe, Mesnager, Schlott, Alexis de Noailles, and a hundred others whose books and memoirs piled up on the so- ciety's desk. From then an, everything was Set: sociecy, com- rnission, examination, report, journal, theve's good and Rdd in it , tfnzti will teil, necgrobdtir nec imgrohcbtii, and so on unril the end of time.

\Vhen it was a question of agricultural and industria! irn- provements, de Lasteyrie liad acted in rhe rnanner of universal teaching: he had seen, compared, reflected, imitated, tried, corrected by himself. But when it was a matter of annotsncing intellectual emancipärion to rhe fathers of pour and ignorant farnities, he was distracted, he forgot everything. He ttanslated equaiity as PROGRESS and the emancipation of the fachers of poor families as EDUCAT~NG THE PEOPLE. And in order to be concerned with these abstractioris, these oratologies, other ab- stractions-corporations-were necessaty. A man can drive a herd of sheep. But for the herd PEC)PLE, a herd called I. .EARNED

SOCIETY, UN1VERSITY, COMMISSION, REVIEW, etc., Was nec- essary-in shorc, stultification, rhe old rule of the socdal fiction. lntelleccual emanciparion pretended to replace it. Yet i t found stultification there on its own route, erected as a tribunai. charged with trying out universal teaching's principtes and ex- ercises for their suitabi licy or unsuitability to families, and with judging it in the name of progress, and indeed in the name of the emancipation of the people.

The Emancipntov and His nlLo82key r r 7

T h e Progressives' Circle

The inconsistency did not owe simply to de kasteyric's weary brain, It was the contradictioti thar inteifectuaf emancipation meers head on when it addresses itself to rhosr-the men of progress-who wanc: just as it daes, the happiness of the poor. The o~acle of stuliification had warned the Founder well: "To- day mure than ever, you cannot hope for success, Tbey believe themselves to be progressing, and their opinians are soIidIy hinged ori this. 1 laugh ar your efforts; rhey will not budge,"

The contradiction is easy ro expose. Wfe said: a man of prog- ress is a man who moves forward, who gocs to see, experiments, changes his practice, verifies his knowledge, and so on wi rhout. end. This is the literai definition of rhe word progress. But now a Inan of progress is somerhing else as well: a man ~ lhose think- in& takes the opiniola of progress as ics poinr af departure, who erects that opinion tu the level of rhe dominant explicarion of the social order. ,

We know, in fact, thar explication is not only the stultifying weapon of pedagogues but the very bond of the social order. Whoever says order says distriburion irito ranks. Putting into ranks presupposes explication, the distributory, justificatory fiction of an inequality that has no other reason for being. The day-to-day wotk of explication is only the small change of the dominant explication that characterizes a society. Wars and rev- olutions change the nature oT clorninanr explications by chang- ing che form and jlirnits of empires. But this change is narrowl~ circurnscribed. We knaw, in fatt, that explication is the work of laziness. I t need only introduce inequality, and that is done at little expense. The most elementary hieratchy is that of good and euz/. The simplest fogical relationchip that can serve to ex- plain chis hierarchy is that of before and @&er. With these four terms, good and evil, before and afier, we have rlle matrix of all explicatioiis. Things were better before, say some: the Ilegislator or ttie divinit-y arranged things; people were frugal and happy,

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I r 8 'The Emancipdtor atzd His Mo~zkey --

leaders paternal and obeyed, the ancestors' faith respected, func- tions well distributed, and hearts einited. Now, words axe cor- rupted, distinctions crumble, ranks are condused, and solici rude for the young has been Lost, along wich respect for the aged. Let's try then to preserve or revive that which, in our distinc- tions, still holds us to the principle of the good. Happdness will come tomorrow, respond the others: the human species was like a child Left to the caprices and terrors OB his imagination, rockcd to sleep with ignorant nursernaids' fairytales, subjected to the brutal force of despots and priestiy superstition. Now, minds are enlightened, customs are civiiized, and indusrry spreads. its benefits; people know their rights, and education will reveal to them their duties witti science. Capdcify must from now on de- cide social ranks. And ir is education that wiH reveal and de- velop it.

We are at the momenr when a dominant explication is in the process of succumbing to another's conqiiering force: an age of transition. And rhis is what explains the inconsistency of men of progtess llike the Count. Before, when the university bIun- dered rhrough Barbara, Cehrent, and Barali~ton, there were, ozri~ide of i t , gentlernen or doctors, bourgeois or Church peoplc, who ailowcd it ta go on spcaking and w e e busy doing some- thing ehe: they had lenses cuc and polished, or polished them themselves for opticai experiments; rhey had thetr butchers save them animals' eyes so they could study akatorny; they informed each other of their discoveries and debaied eacti other's hy- porheses. Thus, in rhe pores of the old society, progress-that is, realizations of the human capacity to understand and todo- was accomplished. The counr still resembles these experimentai gentlemen a little. Bur as time passed, he had been snatched up by the rising force of the new explication, the new inequality: Progress. I t 5s no longrr the curious and the fault-findess who perfect one or another branch of rhe sciences, such and such a technical method. It's society that pcrfects itself, that takes per- fectibility as ehe watchword of irs order.' lt's society that pro- gresses, and a society can oniy progress socially; that is ro say,

ali together and in good ordet. Progress is the new way of saying inequality.

Bur that way of saying it has a much more formidable force than the old way. The lastet was coneinually obliged to go against the grain of its principle. Things were better before, it said; the more we advance, the closer we get to decadence. But rhis dominant opinion t ~ a d the shortcoming of not being ap- plicable to the dominant explicatory practice-that of peda- gogues. These people were certainiy obliged co suppose that the child approached his perfection by being distanced from his or- igin, by growing up and progressing under their direction from his ignorante to their science. b c r y pedagogical practice ex- plains the inequality of knowfedge as an evii, and a reducible evil in an indefinite progression toward tbe good. AI1 pedagogy is spontaneously progressive. Thus rhere was a discordance be- tween the grand explication and the Iittleexplicarors. Boch were stuitifying, but in a disorderty fashion. And this disorder within stuftification left some space Open for emancipation.

Those times were ending. Theteaftcr, the dominant ftction and the daily stultification went in the Same direction. There is a simple reason for this. Progress is the pedagogica1 ficrion built into the fiction nf the society as a whole. At rhe heart «f the pedagogicai fiction is the representation of inequality as a reravd in one's development: inferiority, in irs innocence, lets irself be taken in; neither a lie n i r violence, inferiarity is only a laceness, a delay, that is posited so one can piit oneself in the position of curing it. Of Course, this will never happen: nature itself makes sure of it; there will always be delay, always inequality, But one can rhus continually exercise the privilege of reducing it, and there are double benefits to be gained from this.

The progressives' presuppositions are the social absolutizing of what is presupposed by pedagogy: before, steps n7ere taken gropi ngly, blindly ; words were gathered more ot less badly from the mouths of unenlighrened mothers or nursemaids; things were guessed at, false ideas drawn from the first contacc with the material universe. Mow, a new age is beginning, the one

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where the man-child takes tkierighr road to maturity. The guide points to the veil covering all things and begins to raise it- suitably, in otder, step by step, progre~sive(y. "A cettain delay must be worked into the pr~gress ." '~ Methods are necessary. Without a method, without a good rnethod, the child-man or the pople-child is prey ro childish fictions, to routine and prej-- udices. Wirh a rnerhod, he sets his feet in the footsteps of those who advance rationally, progressively. He grows up in their wake in an indefinite process of coming closer. Nevet will the Student catch up with ehe master, nor the people with its en- lightened elite; but ttie ho& of gettinf: rhqe mäkes them ad-

:' D vance along the good road, the one of perfected explications. The century of Progress is that of che triumpha~:'exp1icamrs, of humanity pedagogicized. T l ~ e formidable force of this new stultiticatton is that it still imitates the approach of the men of progress of a former day; it attacks the old srultificsttion in terrns rhat wilt put minds just akerted to emancipation on the wrong scent, will make rhem srumble at the slightest distraction.

This is also to say thac the ongoing victory of the progressives over the OId Master is just as much the OId Master's victory by virtue of their very opposition: the absolute triumph of insti- eutionalized inequality, the exemplary rarionalizaeion of that iiistitutiori, And rhis is the solid foundation on which the pe- rennial power of ehe 81d Masrer is based, The Fourider tried tu show this to the progressives of good faith: "The explicators of industry and everyone have already repeated: look at civiliza- tion's progress! The people need arts, and we soid them only Latin they can't use. They will draw, design machines, eec. Phi: losophers, you are light, and I admire your zeal under the reign of a Great Master who doesn't help you at alt, lounging laziiy on his throne of dead languages. 1 admire your devotion; your philanthropical goal is undoubtedly, more useful than that of the Old Master. But aren't your ways the Same as his? Isn't ynur method the sarntt? Aren't you afraid of being accused of sus- taining, as he does, the supremacy of the master e ~ p l i c a t o r s ? " ~ ~

Goodwill thus risks becoming an aggravating circurnstance. The Old Master knows what he wants-stultification-and he works to that end. The progressives, on the other hand, Want to tiberate minds and promote the abilities of the masses. But- what they propose is to perfect stultification by perfecting ex- plications.

This is the progressives' circie. They warit to tear rninds away from the old routine, from the controf of priests and obscur- anrisrs of any kind, And for ttiat, rnore rational explications and methods are necessary. They must be tested an4 compared by way of commissions and reports. A qualified and Iicensed per- sonnel, learned in the new methods and monitored on their ex- ecution of them, must be employed to educate thc people. Above all, the irnprovisations of inccirnpeeents rnust be avoided; nne must not permit minds formed by chance or routine, ig- norant of the perfecred explications and progressive metl3nds, to have the possibiiity of opening a schooii and reaching a,ny- thing in any which way. Pamilies-thosc places of che routine reprodiicing of inveterate supersticion, of empirical knowledge an$ obscure sentiment-must be prevented from taking on their children's instruction. For this, a weil-ordered system of public instruction is necessarp. A University and a Grear: Masrer are necessary. It will be poinred out in vain that the Greeks and Romans had neither a University nor a Great Master, and that things didn't go badly for them. In the era of progress, the most ignorant of backward peoples need no more than a brief stay in Paris to be convinced that "'Anytus and Melerus demonstrateci from that point an the necessiey of an organization that derer- mines ( I ) that one must explicate; (2) what one will explicate; ( 3 ) how one wi 11 explicate it," Without these precautions, they see clearly that "(I) our shoemakers might put iiizivevsd tedding around the boor on their signs, as was dune in Wome or Athens, for want of a careful organization, Candf ( 2 ) the tailor will Want to explain developabie surfaces, without any previous exarni- nation, as occurred in Rorne," with the result that what must

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strength. This is aiso why Jacorot's name is not btoadcasted and dishonored. Inssead they speak of rhe nntzrr~i r~zethud, a method recognized by the besr niinds of the pasr: Socrares and Mon- raigiie, Locke and Condillac. Hadn't the maiter himself sard that there was no Jacorot method, oniy ihe studenr's method, the natural rnethod of the human mind? So what good would it do to brandish his name like a fan? As earfy as 1828, Duriecz had warned rhe Founder thar he wanted to chop down "the tree of abstractions," hur he wouldn'r do it iike a woodcutcer. He wanted to creep slowly and engineer "sewral ostensible suc- cesses" in ordet to prepare the metkiod's triumph. He wanted to move toward intel~lectuai emancipation throrigli universal teaching, '' -

But the victorious revolutiori of r 830 offered a more gran- diose theater for that effbrr. The occasion arose in 183 i . pro- vided by the most modern of the progressives, the young jour- nalist Emile de Cirardin. He was twenty-six years old, He was rhe grandson of the Marquis de Girnrdin wko had prctrected Emir'e's author. it's ttue he was a bastatd, but this was the Start of a new era when no one had to biush about one's birth. i i e was one with che new era and the new forces: work and industry; professional insrruction and dornestic economy; public opinion and the press. He laughed at Latinisrs and pedants. He laughed at the young foois the good provinciaf families sent to Paris co study law and flirt wirtt working-girls. He wanted accive elites, lands fettiiized by the larest chemical discoveries. a people ed- ucated in everything that could lead to its material happiness, and enlightened on the balance of rights, duties, and interests that creates ehe equilibrium of modern sbcieries. He wanred all this to come about very fast, for youth ro be p-pared by rapid methods ro become useful to the community a t an early age, for the discoveries of scbolats and inventors to become Part of rhe life of workshops an$ households immediately, even in the most distanr countryside, so new thoughrs rnighr bbe engendered. He wanted an organ to disserninate chrse benefits without delay. Of course, there was de Lastey rie's Joztrt~nl des connrtissance~ urz(elies. Bur tiiiz kind of publication was expensive and tlius inevitably

-- The Emanci#dtui. dnd His Monkeg. r 23

reserved for a public who had no need of it. What good was ir to vulgarize science fot academics and domestic sckence for women of high society? So he iaunched theJotrinal des corznais- snnces d e s in an edrtion of a hundred chousand copies thrrtugh a gigantic subscriptron and advertising campaign. To sustain the journal and prolong its action, he fourtded a new sociery and called it simply che National Society for lntelfectuai Emanci- pation.

The ptinciple of that ernancipatian was simple. T o r consti- turions as for edihces, a firm and level soil is necessary. Instruc- tion gives inteIiig6nce a level, a soil for ideas, . . . lnstruction for the masses puts absolutist governments in danger. Their ig- norance, on the other Iiand, is perilous to republican govern- rnents, for though the masses can learn of their rights through partiamentarg debates, they cannot be expecced to exercise them with discetnment. As soon as a people knnws its rights, there is only one way ro govern it, and that is tu instruct ir . l'hus, what is necessary ro every republican government is a vasr sys- tem of graduated reach~ng, national and professional, rhat sheds light onto the dark souls of the masses, rhat replaces all arbitrary demarcations, that assigns each class to its rank, each man to bis place." "

This new otder was, of course, that of the recognized digniry of the laboring population, of ies preponderanc place in rhe so- cial order. Intellectual emancipation was the ovetturning of the oid hierarchy actached to instruction's privilege. Until that time, instruction had been rhe monopoly of the rnanaging cfasses juscifying their hegemony, with tlie weil-known conse- quence that an educated child of the people no longer wanted his parents' life. The s ~ c i a l logic of rhe sycrem had to be over- turned. Frorn now on instruction would no longer be a privi- Bege; rather, the Iack of lnstruction would be an inenpanty. To oblige ihe people to ger educated, any man of twenty who could not read in 1840 should be declared an incapable civilian. One of che first nurnbers from the drawrng that condemned unlucky young people to miiitary service must be oficially reserved for him. This obiigation contracted with the people was just as

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much an obligation contracted against it. Eipeditious methods to teach afl Prench youth how to read before 1840 had to be found. This would be the Narionai Society for Intellectual Emancipation's motto: "Pour instruction onto the heads oP the people; you owe it this baptism."

Cbver the baptismai font stood the secretary of the society, the rake from che Society of Methods, universal teaching's enthu- siastic admirer, IEugPne Boutmy. i n rhe journat's first issue, he prornised to indicate expedi tious methods for educating ehe masses. J-ie kept his word in an article entitIed "Teaching by Onesekf." The master should read aloud "Calypso" arid the stu- dent repear "Calypso"; then, separating the words well, "Ca- lypso could," "Calypso could not," erc. The method was called nattdrdluniv~r~dl teaching, in honor of nature itself, which taught it to chil.dren. An honorable depucy, Victot de Tracy, had in- structed forty peasanrs f ion~ his cornmune in this way with enough success that they were able to write a letter in which rliey poured out to him their deep gratitude for his having thus ushered them into intellectual life. Let each teader of the jour- ?zal do the same, and soon the leprosy of ignorante would dis- appear entirely from the social body. '"

The society, which wished to encotirage exemplary insritt!- cions, was also interested in de Sepres's establishment. It sent commissaries to exarnine rhat method of "u~todiduxy" that taughe yoüng boys to reflect, to speak and to reason from facts, by following the natural meehod that had always been ehe ve- hicle of great discoveries. The establishmenr's tocation ori the rue de Moneeau, in the Parisian quarter rnost known for its air, the wholesomeness of its food, its hygiene, and its gymnastics, as well as its moeal and religious senriments, left little to be desired. And, in rhree years of secondary teaching, at a maxi- mum price of eighr hundred francs a ycar, ehe institution un- dertook to bring its seudents to the point where they couid pass any exarnination. Thus, a father couId foresee exactly how rnuch his son'c education would cost and calculate whethet it was worthwhile. The society conferred on de Gpres's insriturion thc

title National Lycee. On the other hand. it urged the parents who sent rheir children ehere to read rhe programs carefully so as to deterrnine what career their sons should follow. That career determined, the sociery's commissaries watched to make Sure that the Course of study the parents wanted was scrupulously folioweci, so thar the Student urould learn everything needed for a distinguished profession, and, above all, that he didn't learn myththrng s t lpe t f l~~or i~ . " Unfortunately, the comrnissaries hardlr had time CO pursue their coltaboration with rhe National Lycbe's work. A Breton agricultural institution, desigtleci to spread agronontcat knowledge at the sarne time that it rcgenerated part of the unemployed city youth, was the financial abyss into which the Nationaf Sociery for Intellectual hanc ipa t ion col- iapsed. At Least it had sown seeds for rhe future: "It was a good journal, tliat usefut knowledge one. We took your word abour inteflectual emancipation, and we are emancipating our sub- scribers by dint of explicationc. Tliat kind of emancipation is not at afl dangerous. When a harse is bridled and rnounted by a good borseman, wc know where we're going. He doesn'r know anything, but we can becalm; he will not ctray in rhe mountains and ~alleys.""~

T h e Triumph of the gbld Master

And so universat reaching and even the words inteli,estual emancipation could be put in the Service of progressives who in fact wotked ro the Old Master's greatest profit. The division of labrpr worked this way: for the progressives, the rnethods and licenses, tlie reviews and journals rnaintaining rhe love of ex- piications by the indefinite perfecrittg of their perfecting; for the CPl$ Master, the institutions and the examinations, thc administraelon of the solid foundations of tlie explicative insti- rution, and the power of social sanciion.

Frorn rhere all those Iicensed invenrions [hat coltide with each orher in ihe void of cheexplicatory System: explications of reading, writing metamorphosed, languages rnade simple, synoptical rables, perfertcd

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r a 8 The Emaricipacor und His Monkey

merhods, etc., and so many other hea~ttifui rhings, copied ineo new boaks containing a new explicacion of the old ones; everything rec- ommended by the perfected expticators of our era, who all tightly make.fun nf each other as forerunners. Mever have certified oficers been more to be pitied than in our time. There are so many of them that they can hardly find a schootchild who doesn'c have his Iittle Fr- fecced explication; to the point that they will soon be reduced ro ex- plicating ta each other rheir recpective explications. . . . The Oid Master laughs at these disputes, excites them, names commiscions CO

judge them; and, since tlie crtrnmissions approve all the perfectings, he doesn't part with his old scepter for ,anyo~e. Dizlzde gnd conquw. The Old Master rerains for himself rhe colleges, univenities, and con- servatories; he gives the ochers only what's left and tells chem that's already a lot, and they believe ;C.

Like tiine, the explicatory system i s nourished by its ownchildcen whom it devours as ir ptduces theiai; a new explication, a new per- fecting i s born and imrnediately dies to make roorn for a tbousa~id othcrs. . . .

And thus the explicatory system is renewed, rhus tiie Lacin colleges and the Greek universities are maintained. People will cry out, but the colleges will endure. People will make fun of rhem, but the rnosa iearned and the inost enlightened will continrie to greet each othcr, humorlessly, in their old ceremonial suits; the young indirsrriäl method will insult its grandmother's scienrific agectations, and yee the indusrrialiscs will srill use rheir rufers and their perfected com- pasces to build a chmne where the old drivelet can sit arid rule over all ehe workshops. In a word, che industrialists will make explicatory pxofessotial chairs for as long as there is wood on rhe earrh.z3

Thus olle victory in progress of rhe Izmzinotl~ over the ob~~r~ran- ti~ts worked to rejuvenate the oldcst cause defended by the ob- scurantists: thc inequality of intelligente. There wasn't, in fact, any inconsistency in rhis division of toles, W h a t the progres- sives' distrarinw was based on is the passion that underfies all disrraction, rhe opinion of inequality. A progressive explicaror is first of all an explicator, that is t o say, a defender oF inequality. f tS very true that tke sorial ordcr doesn'r tequire anyone CO be- lieve in inequality, nar does i t prevent anyone from announcing emanciparion t o individuals and hmil ies . Bur that simple an-

nouncement-which there are never enough police tu pre- verit-is also rhe onc that rneets the most impenetrable resis- tancc: that cf the inrelIectual hierarchy that has no other power except the rationafizarion of inequality. Progressivism is the modern form nf that power, purified of any mixture wich she material forrns of traditional authorit y: progressives have no pu~uet' ofher than that ignorante, thar incapacity of the people on which their priesthood is based. How, without opening up an abyss under their own feet, can they say to workixig peopie that they don't need thern in order to be free men, in ordcr to be educated in everything suitable to eheir dignity as men? "Each one of thcse so-called emaricipacors has his herd of emancipated people whorn tie saddles, beidles, and spurs onward,"" Thus, they all Eound themselves united in rejecting t he only bdd merliod, the dirastrozkf merhod, that is to say, the method of Rad emancipation, Jacocot's method-or rather, his anti-method.

Those who erased this proper riame knew whac they were d o i n , ~ . For i t was the proper name thar made all the differencc, thar said e g s r a l i ~ o[ zinteflipence and would have opened up the abyss underneath the feet of alf thc givers of instruction and of happiness to the peuple. The name nced only be silenced for the nnnotlncemetzt not tn rake place.

Y013 rry mit i n vain in writing; tbuse who don't know l-iow to read can only learn from us whac you have ptinted, and we would be very fool- ish tu announce to them that they don'r nced out explicarions. If we give reading lessons co some, a c wilf concinue to use aiI thc go»d methods, never those that could give the idca of intelicctual emacl- cipation. Let's make siire not io begin with having tl-iern read prayers; the chil$ who knows them might think that he could have figurecf them out by hin-iself. Mc must sbove atl rlever know that he who knows how to read prayers can leatn to read everything else by him- self. . . . Let's make Sure never to p;onounce those emancipatory words: learning irnd re1ating.l'

W h a t had t o be prevented ahave ail was letting the poot know rhar rhey could educare themselves by their own abilities, that they had nhi/itie.r-those abitisies that in rhe social and politjcal

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order now succeeded the old titles of nobiiity. And the best way to do this was to educate thern, that is ro say, to give thein the measute of their inability. Schools were opened everywhete, and nowhere did anyone Want to announce ehe possibility of learn- ing witbotit a mastet explisator. Intellecrual emancipation had founded its "po1itics"on a principie: not to seek to penetrate social instirutions, to work inscead wich individuals and fami- lies. But this was a moment when that separation, which was emancigation's only chance, was breaking down. Sociall insti-

L . tutions, inteiiectual corporations, and political parties now came krtocking on farnilies'cioors, addressing themselves to all individuals for the purpose of educating them. Heretofore, rhe University and its baccalaureate had only controlled access to a few professions: a few rhousand lawyers, doctors, and acadein- ics. All ehe other soc-ial careers were open to those who forined rhemselves in their own way. Bt wasn't, for example, necessary to have a baccalaureate r o be a polytechnician. But with the sys- tem of perfected explications came the installation of the system uf peificted exarninations. From this goint On, the Qtd Master, wtth the help of che petfecters, would increasirigly use his ex- aminations to curb che liberty ro lehn by any means other than his explications and the noble ascension of his degrees. The per- fected exarnination, the exemplary representation o l the mas- ter's omniscience and of the student's inability to ever equal hirn, was from that poinr on erectcd as the unbendable power of the ineqiiality of intelligetice over the path of whoever might wish to move through society at his own pace. Intellectuai emancipation thus saw its retrenchments, the pockets of the oid order, inexorahly invested by thc advances of the expficatory machine.

Saciety Rdagogicized

Everyone conspired in this, and especially those most pas- sionately bent on the repuhlic arid the happiness of rtie people. Repilblicans take the sovereignty oP the peopie as a principte,

-. The Emancipdtor and H ~ J M ankey I I

but they k n m zJeq well that the sovereign people cannot be iden- tified with the ignorant swarm devoted solely to the detense of its own material interests. They also knutli uery zbvll that che re- public signi6es the equality of rights and duties. but that it cannot decree the equality of intelligence. J t is clear, in fact, that a backward peasant does not have rhe intelligence of a re- publican leader. Some think that this inevitabie incquality de- rives from social diversity, tike ehe infinite variety of ieaves de- rives from the inexhaustible richness of nature. Qne need only make Sure that the inferior intelligence not be prevented from understanding his rights and, especially, his duties. Qrhers think that time, littie by Iittle, progressively, will attenuatc- chc dehcirncy caused by centuries of oppression and obscilricy. In the two cases, equatity's cause-good equality, nondisastrous eqiiality-has the same requisite, che instruction of the people: the instruction of the ignorant by the ilearned, of rnen buried in egotistical material concerns by men of devotion, of individ- uals enclosed in their particularities by the universality oE reason and public power. This is called public instruction, that is 00

say, the instruction of the emgirical people, programmed by the representatives of the sovereign concept of the people.

Public Instruction is the secular arm of progress, the way to ecluafize ineqtiality prngressively, that is to say, to unequalize equatity indefinitely. Evcrything is still played out according 1.0

a sole ptinciple, ehe inequality of intelligence, If this principle is granted, tlien one consequence alone can logically be deduced from it: the intelligent caste'c rnanagernent of rhe stupid mul- ritude. Republicans and all sincere men of progress feel heavy- hearted at rhis consequence. All their efforcs are directed at agreeing wich the principle without accepting the consequence. This is what the eloquent autiior of the Book oflhe People, F4liciek Robert de Lamennais, makes ciear: "Without a doubt," he rec- ognizes horrestly, "men du not possess equal facultie~."~' Bur must the man of the people, for all that, be condemned to pas- sive obedience, he brought down to the level of an anirnal? It cannot be this way: "The sublime artribute of intelligence, self-

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r 32 The E~rtdnctpntor a d His iMotzhY

sovereignty, distinguislies the man from ehe b r ~ t e . " ~ ~ Undoubr- edly the unequal distribution of this sublime attribure imperiis tfie "City nf God" rhat the preacher urged the people to build. Bur it remains possible if the people know how to "use wisely" ics regained rights. The ways that the man of thc people might nor be br^~z~ghddow~z, the wlays rhat he might M E ruisely his rights, the ways to make equaliry out of'inequality-this is the edu- cation of the people, that is to say, the inrerminable making up for its belatedness.

Such is the logic that puts things in their place, that of the "teduction" of inequatities. Whoever has consenced to the fic- tion of rhe inequality of intelligente, wh0ever has refused thc unique equaiity that ehe social order can allow, can do nothing hut run from ficcion CO fictian, and f r im ontolagy to corpora- tion, to reconcile the sovereigri people with the rerstrdrd people, ehe inequality of intelligerice with rhe reciprocicy of rights and duties, Piiblic Instruction, che institured social fiction of in- equality as lateness, is the magician chat will reconcile ali ehese rcasonable beings. Ir will do i t by inhnitely extending tfie fieid of its explications and the examinations that control them. By this account, the Otd Master will always win, supported by a newi industriaf ptilpir and the luminous fairh of the progres- sives.

Against this tkere is nothing else ro do but to teil those sup- posedly sinccre rnen again and again to pay more attention: "Change the form, unrie tRe tether, brcak, break every pacc with thti Old Maseer. Realite rhat he is not any stupider than you. Reflect on this and yoi~ will teil rnc what yug think ahut &."26 But how could they ever understand the consequence?

How could they understand thar the rnission of rhe luminous is not to ~nlighten those who dweit. in obscurity? What man of science and devotion would accept in this way to Ieave his light undcr a Lasket and the salt of rhe earth without savor? And how arould the fragile young plants, the childlikc mit-rds of the people, how would they grow without rhe beneficial dew o i ex- piications? Who could understand that the way fctr them ta rise

Th@ 'h~.~~nanczptor u n d His iklonkey r 33

up in the intellectual order is not to learn what rhey don't know from scholars btit rather to teach i t to other ignorant ones? A man might, with a great deai of difficulty, understand rhic rea- soning, but no ledrned Person will cver understand it . Even Jo- seph gacotot hirnself would never have ctnderstood it without the chance event that had ttirned him into tlte ignurant school- master. Only chance is strong enough to overturn the instituted and incarnared belief in inequality.

And yec a n o t h i q wotild be atl that's necessary. Ir would suf- fice for the friends of the penple, for one short instant, tu fix their atcention an this poinr of departiire, on this first principle curnmed up in a very simple and very old metaphysical axiom: the nattire of the totality cannot be tlie sarne as that of irs parrs. Whatever rationality is given to society is taken grrorn the in- dividual~ that make it up. And what is refused to ehe individ- uals, society can easily take for itself, bclt i t can never give it back to them. This goes for rcason as i t goes for equality, which is reason's synonym. One must choose to attribute reason to real individuals ot to their frcrive uniry. O n e rnusr chuose between making an unequal society out of equaf men and making an equal society out of unequal rnen. Whnever has sorne taste for equality shouldn't hesitate: individuals are real beings, and sn- ciery a ficrion. It's for real beings thar equality has value, not for a fiction.

One neeci only learn how to be equal men i n an unequal so- ciecy. This is what Ireilzg emanctpdted rneans. But this very simple tliing is the fiardest to understand, especially since the new ex- plication-progress-h~s inextricably cunfused equality wirb its opposite. The task to which tht repubiican hearts and minds are devoted ic to rnake an equal society our of unequal rnen, to t'edzice inequality indefinitely. But whoever takes this pnsition has only one way of carrying it through to the end, and that i s the inregral pedagogicization of society-the general infantil- ization of the individuals chat make it up. Eater oii chis will be ralled continuing educacion, rl-rat is co sag, thc coextension of tlie explicatory instisution with society. The society of the su-

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I 34 'rhe Enau~cipatov und His Motzkey .-

perior inferior~ will be equal, it will .have reduced its inequal- ities once it has been entirely transformed into a society of ex- plicated explicacors.

Joseph Jacotot's singularity, his nzt~dtzess, was to have sensed this: his was ehe moment when the young cause of emancipa- tion, that of ehe equalicy of men, was being transforrned into the cause of social Progress. And social progress was first of all progress in the sociai order's ability to be recognized as a rational order. This belief could only develop to the decriment of the emancipatory efforts of reasonabie individuals, at the price of stifling the human potenc.i.al ernbraced in the idea of equality. An enormous machine was rewing up"ti equaliry chrough instruction. This was equality represenred, socialited, made unpqual, good for being peTjfected-thar is ,&I say, deferred from commission eo commission, from report to report, from reform to reforrn, until ehe end of time. Jacotot was alone in recognizing the effacement of equali ry under progress, of ernan- cipation iinder instruction. Lee's understand this well. Outspo- ken anti-progressives were a dime a dozcn in thar century, and rhe atmosphere today, one of a fatigued progress, leads us to praise their lucidity. This is perhaps to give them too much honor: they merely hated equalicy. They hated gxogress because, like ehe progressives, ehey confused i t with eqi~aiiry. jacotot was the only egdzbvian to perceive the representaeion and institu- tionalization of progress as a renouncing of the moaal and in-- tetlectual adventure of equality, public instruction as the grief- - work d ernancipation. A knowledge of this sort makes for a frightening solitude. jacotot assumed thae solicude. He refused al1 progressive and pedagogical tcanslation of emancipatory equality. On eliis point he agreed with the disciples who hid his name under the labe! "natural method": no orte in Europe was scrong enough to bear that name, the nameof the madman. The name Jacotot was the proper name of that a t once desperate and laughable knowiedge of the equaliey of reasonable beings bur- ied under the fiction of progress.

- l i S e Emnncipator and His Monkey q 5

Ttie Panecast ic's Stories

There was nothing else to do but to triaintain chegapattached to ehe proper name. Jacotot thus broughr things into fociis. Fot the progressives that came t o See him, he had aszeve to yut them rhrough. When they became impassianed for rhe cause of equality in his presence, he softIy said: "one can teach what one doesn't know." Wnfortunately, the sieve worked too weil. Xt was iike trying CO pur a finger in tkie dike. The saying, ehey said unanimously, was poorly chosen. A littte army of disciples tried ro hold the flag against rhe professors of "nattirat" universal reaching. With thern he proceeded in his way, tranquilly; he Jivided thern intn twu groiips: teachw or exfiticator disciples of thejacotot method who sought to leacl che students of universal teaching to inteliectuai e&iancipation; emncipatory disciples who iaughc only with ernancipation as a prelirninaty, or who even taught nothing at ali and were contenr CO emancipate fa- thers by showing them how to teach their childrcn what thcy didn't know. I t goes withouc saying that he didn't hold rhe two in equaf esteem: lie preferred "an ignorant emancipated Person, one aloric, co a hundred million schotars taught by universal teaching and not ernancipared."" Bur thc very wotd ernanci- pation had become equivocaf. After rhe fall o€ the Girardin en- terprise, de Sipr&s had retitled his journai Emdncipatiot2, gen- erously pliimped up with the best essays by ehe National l[.yc&e students, A Society for the Propagation of Universal Teaching became associated with it-a society whose vicc-presiderit pleaded eloy uentl y for the necessity of qualified masters and thc impossibili t y of fathers of poor filmilies concerning themselves with their children's educarion. The difference had to be undet- lined: Jacotot's journal, che one rhac his rwo sons edited under his dictation-illness prevented him from wtiting; he was obliged to hold up a head that no lunger wanted to Iiold itself straight-this journal thus took the title ofjourml dephifoso~hie ficrnkcds~iq~e. In its irnage, the Faithful created a Society fos Pane-

Page 78: Ranciere the Ignorant Schoolmaster

I 36 The EmancI;oator atzd His Monkey -

castic Philosophy. NO one would try to take that name away from him,

We know what it meant: in each intellectual rnanifestacion, there is a totality of human intelligence. The panecastician is a lover of discourse, like rhe mischjevous Sscrates and the nar'vc Bhaedrus. But unlike Plato's proragonists, he doesn'r recognize an y hierarchy arnong orators or discourses. Wbat interests hin1 is, on the contrary, looking for their equaliay. He doesn't expect truth from any discourse. Trurh is k l t and not spoken. I t fur- nishes a rule governing the speaker's conduce, but it will never be manifested in his sentences. Nor does the panecastian judge the morality of a discourse. The morality thar counts for him is the one that presides over the act of speaking and wiiting, that of rhe intention to communicate, of recognizing the other as an intellectuat subject capable of understanding whae another in- tellectual subject wants to say to him. The panecastician is in- terested in all discoutses, in every intellectuai manifestacion, 60

a unique end: to verify that they put the same iinrelligence ro work, to verify, by ttanstating the one into the other, the equal- ity oF intelligence.

This presupposed an original relaiion to the debates oF the time. The inrellectual batrle on the subject of the people and its capacity was raging: de kamennais had published his Book aJ' ibe Peopie. Jean Louis Lerrninier, a repencant Saint-Simonian and oracle of the Rewe da d e m mondes, had denounced the book's inconsistency, George Sand, in her turn, had raised rhe ffag of ehe people and its sovereignty. Tbe Jot~vndl de phiiosophze &uni- castiqtle analyzed eack of these intelleccual manifestations. Each pretended t i artest to the truth of a political camp. That was someching thac concerned the citizcn, but rhe panecastician got riothing out of ir. What interested hirn in that cascade of ref- -

utarions was the art tbar some used eo express what they meanr. H e wouid show how, by eranslating themselves to each other, they were translating a thousand other poems, a thousand other adventures of the human mind, of classical works frnm the story of Bluebeard to the recorts of prnletar~ans on the Place Maubert.

-. The Erndntljkztov and Hif Monkey r 7

The search for art was not a learned person's pleasure. It was a philosophy, the only one the people could praccice. The old phl- losophies slzid the truth and taughr morals. They supposed, for that, a h ~ g h degtee of learning. The panecastician, on ttie other hand, didn't say the truth and preached no morals, And it was simple and easy, fike the sttlry each person tells of his intelfec- tiial adventures. "It's the story of each one of us. . . . No mat- ter what your specialty is, sheptierd or king, you can discuss thc human rnind. Intelligente 1s at work in ail trades; it is Seen at all ttie Levels of the social ladder. . . . The faiher and rhe son, both ignorant, can talk to each nther about paneca~t ics ."~~

The prnblem of the proletarians, excluded from the official society and from political representation, was no different from the ptobfem of the learned and the powerful: like them, they co~ildn't becorne men in the full sense of the word except by recognizing equality. Equaiity is not given, nur is it clairned; it is practiced, it is z~erzfied. And proletarians couldn't verify it ex- cept by recognizing the equality of intelligence of theit charn- pions and their adversaries. They were undoubtedly interested, for example, in ffeedom of the press, under attack frorn the Sep- tember 1835 iaws. But they had co recognize that the reasoning of the defenders of that principle had neither rnore not less force in trying to establish ir than its adversaries had crying to refute it. In short, said sorne, I want people to have the liberty tu say everything they shouid have tke liberty to say. In short, re- sponded the others, I don't wanr people to have the liberty to say everyching they shouidn\ have the Iiberty CO say. What was important--the rnanifesration of liberty-lay elsewhere: in the equal ar t rhat, in order to Support these antagonistic positions, the one translated from rhe other; in the esteeni for that power of the intelligence that doesn't cease being exeircised at the very heart of rhetorical irracionality; in rhe vecognilion of what speak- ing can rnean for whoever renounces the pretension of h i n g right an$ saying the rruch at the price of the orher's dcath. To appropriate for oneself that art, ro conquer that reason-this was what counted for ehe protetarians. One must firsr be a man

Page 79: Ranciere the Ignorant Schoolmaster
Page 80: Ranciere the Ignorant Schoolmaster

The place of publicarion on Bjrench-tangiiage nlorks is Paris unless ocherwise noted.

I . Jacques Ranciere (wich Alain Faure), Lu Pcsrole ortvri2rt (1976); Rancikre, La Nrtit desprofitaire.r ( I 98 r ) , translared by Cionald Keid as The Nights of Labov (Philadelphia, 1989); Rancierti, Le Phifnsophepii- biien, ed. Louis Gabriei Ciauny ( 1983).

2. RPYalta logiqtief collecrive, L'Empit-e ci7t snriolugtte ( 19#4), p. 7 , 3. At1 three works have been translared iriro English by Richard

Nice: The It~hevitorj (Chicago, 1979); b2ept.odrrrtion (London, 1977); Distinction (Cambridge, Mass., 1985).

4. LIEmpirt. d~ sociolog~~e, p. 7 . 3. Jacques Aanciere, "L'Ethiqur de ia saciologie," in ibid., p. 28. G. lbid. , pp. 28, 29. 7 . Jacques Ransiere, review of ].-C. Milner, D o f'icoie, Lu Qzrin-

zuine l i t~ i ra i ve , 4 2 2 (Aug, 1984). 8. Louis Afrhusser, "Prohl+rnes etudiants ," La Notivello Crit iqt ie.

152 (Jan. 1964). 9. Louis Althusser's "ldeology and Ideological State Apparatuses"

appeared originally in La Penslo in 1970. f r was translated the follow- ing year in k n i n and Phiiosophy. tr. Ben Hrcwster (New York, 197 r ) , pp. 127-86.

10. La Leqon A'Atthwt~ ( 1 9 7 4 ) ~ P. 35 . 1 r . jacques Ranciere interview with Francois Ewald, "Qu'est-ce

que la classe ouvri&re?," Magazine litttcrdire, I 75 (July-Aug. 198 11,

Page 81: Ranciere the Ignorant Schoolmaster

I 2. See, in particular, Jacques RanriPre, Le Phifo~opbe ek sespa~vres (1983).

I 3. See Jacques Ranciere, Azix dord dzi politique ( r 990). 14. Wafcer Benjamin, "Theses on the Philosophy of History." in

Ilfnmrnarionf, ed. Hannah Arendt (New York, 1969). 1 5 . Rit~oltes fogiques collective, "Deux ou trois choses que I'his-

rorien ne veut pas savoir," Lc Mardvernetlt sorial, roo (July-Sept, 1977).

I 6. Hourdieu, Repvod~ction, p. iv.

I . Pelix and Victor Ratier, "Enseignemenr universel: Emancipa- cion inteliectuelle," Journal rZe pbiloso~hiepanicartiq~~e, 5 ( I 838): r 5 5 .

2. J . S. Van de Weyer, Sornnaair-e des fepttspubliques de M . Jaccitot szsr Ies principes de l'enseignement rtniz;tvsel (Brussefs, 11822), p. I I .

3. J jacotor , E nseigne?ncnc uniziet+sel: Lnngue mairemelle, 6th ed. ( I 836), p. 448; jaurnrtl i i e t'~rnancip~rian int~llectaelle, 3 f I 83 5-36}: I2 I .

4. J . Jacotot, Enseignement universei: Langae kran@re, 2d ed. t182g), p. 219.

I . J . Jacotot, Enseignemelzt rrniz'erjef: &idthimtique~, 2d ed. i~ 8291, PP. 30-5 r .

2 . L.ettre du FonaCztefir rle lenseignement trnt'slersel att g & i d Ldfnyette (Louvain, 1829), P. 6.

3. f outnul L t'kmanczpation intcllectuefle, 3 ( r 8 35-36): r 5. 4. Jbid., p. 380. 5. B. Gonod, Nouuelle exposiiion de .% mdhode de, Joseph Jacotot

( I 830j, pp. I 2-r 3. 6. J. jacocor , Ensetg~rernelat .vniversd: tangtfe mutemefle, 6rh ed.

( 18361, pp. 464-6s. 7, Jotdrnal de I'imncipation irrtellectir'efle, 3 ( r 8 3 5-36); 9 . 8, Ibid., p. 1 1 . 9 , Xbid., 6 (1841-42): 72. 10. Ibid., p. 73. 1 1 . Ibid' I 2 . C. Lorain, Rt@tation de fa m~thodeJncotot f xgjo), p. 9 0 13. Jacotot, Lungiie nadernelle, p. 2 7 r ;jot/rnal de l'kmanciputiost ia-

tefle~tuelfe, 3 ( I 835-36): 32 3. x 4. Jatrrnal de I'imncipation inft/lecturrlle, 3 l r 835-36): 25 3.

1 5 . Ibid., p. 259 . 16. Ibid., 4 (1836-37): 280, I 1. Jacotot , Langae maternelfe, p. 422. r 8. A. Destutt de Tracy, Observations suv le sysrtme actzrel d'instyrdc-

tion prrbfiqtte (Year IX). I c). J. S. Van de Weyer, Somrnuire de~ Eeqvns #a.lltliqt/cj dt M . J ~ ~ o r o t

srrr /es princ+es de L'enseignenlent universei f Brussels , i 82 21, p. 2 3. 20. Plaro, C~atyl?ls, jygc: "Palone among the anirnafs, man was

called anrhropos precisely because he exarnines what he Sees (clnadhron /311 o ~ o ~ P ) . ' ~

2 1 . J . Jacotot, Etzseigncrnentnt ~rniversef: Mtdsiyfte, 3rd ed. (r83of, p. 349-

22. See Plato, Phuedrtts, 274ciz77a; and jacques Kancikre, Le Philojophe et ses putwes ( x983), especially p. 66.

z 3. journa f de l'imancip~tion intcllectrrelli!, 5 ( r 838): 168. 24. J. Jacotot, M&funge~postht,7ne~ dephilosophzepznk~;?~~iqr~e ( I 84 I ),

p. 176. 2 g . Joztrtzaf de I't+natzcipution intellectuelle, 3 ( I 8 3 5-36): 3 34. 26, B, Froussard, f x t~re a res umis dzl stljet de ia ?nbbode de M . Jacoiot

fr829). p. 6 .

Clwpter Tbree I . J. Jacotot, Enseignement miversei': hnglte brang?re, 2d ed.

( I ~ z F ) ) , pp, 228-29. 2. Ibid., p. 229. 3, J , Jacotor, Enseigwement ttnivevsel: tangrre maternefle, 6th ed.

(I&), p. 199. 4. L. de Bonald, RecherL-hes philosopbiqites jur /es puenzierr objets des

co~enaissaptces rnoralej f x 8 I 8), voi . r , p . G7 . 5 . L, de Plonald, Legislution primitive con.rtdet'ke &ns lesprentiers tefnps

par les seules IidtnieP.es de la raison, in Oezrures comp!Ptes ( (x 8591, vol. K , p. r I 6 r ; de Bonald, Rechercbes phi/orophrqrrer, vol. I , p. 1 0 5 .

6. M. Maine de Biran, "Ees Recherches phiiosophiqiics de M. de Bonald," in Oeuvres cotnpiPtes ( 1 9 3 ~ ) ) ~ vol. 1 2 , p. 252.

7 . J";drnaI de I'imancipation intellect?ieife, 4 ( I 836-37): 430-3 I .

8. J . Jacotot , Enscignement uni#ersel: Droit et phiktsofthie pan6castiqtte f 1838), p, 278.

g , Jacotoc, I ~ n g u e mcsternefle, p. 330. xo. Bbid., p. 33.

Page 82: Ranciere the Ignorant Schoolmaster

I L . Jorrtnal de IYetnancIp~tiort zt~teliectue/le, 4 ( I 836-37): I 87. I 2. Jacotot, Droit et philuuphie panicastiqrie, p. qz . 13. Ibid., p. 41. 14. L'Obsewa!etlrbelge, 16, 426 (1818): 142-43. r 5 . Jacotoi, Dt'oit et phiiorophie panic&iyz(e, pp. i 1-1 3. 16. Hbid,, p. 231. I 7. J , Jacotot, Ensejgnenlent xniiarsel: iW~(siq~ie, 3d ed, ( t 8 3 0 ) ~ p.

I 63. 18. Ibid., p. 314. i9 . Jacotot, Droif ei phiiosnphie panicajtiqzle, p. 91. 20. Jacotor, M~tsiqae, y. 347. 2 E. jacotor, Lung~ce tnaternelle, p. 149. 22. Jacotot, Mrssiqate, p. 322. 2 3 . Jacotot , Langrre materneile, p. 28 r . 24. Ibid., p. 284. 25. Ibid,, p. 282. 26. Ibid., p. 243. 27. Jacotot, IMmiqne, p. 3 3 8 2 8 . Journal de philorophie pdnkrastiqtte, 5 ( r 838): 265.

I . F. J . Dunibeck, Annsrlrs Acddetniae La~uniensis, 9 6 I 825-26): 216, 22a, 222.

2 . Jonvnaf de i'itnancipation ittteilectrrelie, 3 ( I 8 35-36): 22 5 3. J . Jacorot , iMLlunge.r posthmes de philosophie pattPc@.~tiq~~e ( r 84 r ),

p. 118. 4. J . jacarot , Enseignemeqt ~oziversel: Langur itrnngsre, 2d ed.

(18291, P. 75. 5. Jacorot , Mkjanges posthzunes, p. i 1 6. 6. J . Jacotor, Enseignement ztnivwsel: Mrisique, gd ed. ( I 810), p. 5 2 ,

7. J Jacotot, Enseignetnent trniverxl: Langue rnatekriefle, 6th ed. (18361, p. 278.

8. Ibid., p, ga. 9. Ibid., pp. :$Ga--63. ro. "'If one points our a vice in our insriturions and proposris a

remedy Tor it, immediately a great functionary stands up and, wirh- out discussing the prnposirian, cries out in a serious manner: 'B'm nor prepared to examine the question, I admit my incapaciry, etc.' But here is the hidden meaning of his words: 'If a man Like me, higbly situared and gifted wirh gcnius proporiionate to his dignity, admits his inability, isn't i c presumptuoiis, isn't i t madness on che part: of

those who pretend to have a ready-made opinion?'This is an indirect metliud of intirnidation; ic's arrogante beiienth a very thiri veil of modesty." Jeremy Bentham, Tkziti des ~ophismes pcrrlementaives, tr.

Etienne Dumont (Paris, n840), p. 84. r : . E. Dumont, preface to Jeremy Bentham, Tacfiquedaf dssernblies

parletnenfaires (Geneva, r 8 x G), p. xv. 1 2 . Jeremy Bentham, "Essay an Politicai Tactics," in vol. z of The

\Vor.k.r -J Jeremy Benthafri, ed. John Bowring {New York, xgzG), p. 306.

r 3. Jacotot, bngtie mrztevnelle, pp. 328-29. 14. Jm~.'~'l(ri de l'itnnncipntion i~tteilecttrelle, 4 ( r 836-57): 357. ir 5. Jacotot, Langue materneile, p. 3 39. 16. Xbid., p, 109, 17. Jacorot, Itlrrsiqzde, pp. 194-95. 18. Ibid., p. 193. ag. Jacotot, k n p e marernelle, p. 365. 20. J. Jacotot, "1-c Gontrat sucial," inforrrnai Je philosoprtiic palltni-

custtqdse, 5 (1838): 62. 2 r . Ibid., p. 2x1. z a . jacotot, LangIre ktrangire, p. I 23.

2 3. Jacorot, I,angtre muternelle, pp. 289-90. 24. Ibid., p. 355) 25. ibid., p. 356. 2 6 . Ibid., p. 342. 27. Plato, Phaen't-IIJ. 273e . 28. P.&. Ballanche, "Essais de paling6nesie sociale: Formule g6-

nerale de I'histoire de tous Les peuples appliquke a I'histoirc du peuple rnmain," Revxe de P~rlvij, April 1829: ~ 5 5 .

29. J . Jacotot, Marrrret de l'imatacij~rrion inteliectirellc ( r 84 I ), p, I 5 .

Chaptrv Five

r . P. Reter de Brigton, lZlanlrei po!rrtlnire de Ir? mithode _ltacitur (18301, p. 3.

2 . J. Jacotot, Enseignement rlnir:errel: Malhi?ttatique.r, i d ed. (T 829), P. 9 1 ,

3. Ibid., pp. 1-2.

4. Jnflrnrll de pltt'fofopbie paniajtiqrtc, 5 ( r 838): i--- I 2. 5 Ihid., p. 277. 6 . Ibid., p. 279 . q . J . de Easreyrie, Risxnd Re ld tnethode clE- I'enseignement rtnzt~ersd

d'ap& M . Jacotot (r8zg), pp. xxvii-xxuiii,

Page 83: Ranciere the Ignorant Schoolmaster

8. J . Jacotot , Btl~eignenrent uniuer.wl; Langue matevnelLe, 6t h ed . (1836), pp. 446, 443.

9. See Retnurques SZIP fu 1IiIithoiIe ~ f e M, jacotot (Brussel~, 1827); and L'Universit6prot;gie pur f'znerie des discipfes deJvsephJurvtot ( I 830).

15, jor/rnal deduration et d'instvucddo~, 4: 81-33, 264-66. I I . jor/rnal de ti4wrtctparion inteE6ectftef/e, 4 ( X 836-37): 32 8 I 2 . Jacotot, Mnthi»tatique.r, pp. 2 1-22.

13. Ibid., p . 143. 14. Jbid., p. 22. 15 . Bbid,, p. 2 1 .

1 G. Journal de philosolrhie pai~[r;a~tique, 5 ( I 838): 279. r 7. Jorrrncal des cvnnajSjr?vces zdtiies, j ( P 8 3 3): . g 18. Ibid., 2 , 2 (Feb, 1832): 19-21. rg. Ibid., 3: 208-10. ,L

20. Jrtrcvnul dc I'imuncip~tion in!t/lerttreIIe, q ( r g36 5: 328. 2 I . Jacotot, Mathitnatiqgees, pp. I g I-gz. 2 2 . J . Jacotot , Enseigrzemevt rrniuersel: Droit et phifoso~ie pankus-

tique (18381, p. 342. 23. Ibid., pp. 330-31. 24. E de Lamennais, Le Livre du peupfe (x838), p. 6 5 , cited in

Jotivnczl de Irt philv~opbie pu~tfcastiqae, 5 ( I 838): r 44, 2 5 . A paraphrase of de Lamennais, Liz~redz,pezrpte, p. 73 , in ibid.,

P 145. 2 6. Jacotot , Msth4rnutiq/~es, p. 2 2 .

27. jotlrnaf de ll4r11~ncipidtio~ intefle~taefle, 3 ( I 835-36): 276. 28. Jacotot, &oi? et phifosophie @nicd~tiq~ie, p. 2 i 4. 29. Ibid., p. 293. 30. J . Jacotot, Mikrqe~poesthi~m~~ dephilosopbiepande~~tique ( a 84 I ),

PP. 349-51.


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