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Mirror, Mirror: The Uses and Abuses of Self-Love, by Simon Blackburn

Shahidha聽Bari delights in a lucid and graceful philosophical probing of self-consciousness

Published on
March 13, 2014
Last updated
June 10, 2015

Simon Blackburn鈥檚 Mirror, Mirror is a very fine and brilliant book, full of the sort of聽measured analysis and keen insight you might expect from that excellent University of聽Cambridge philosopher. But you鈥檒l forgive me if I confess that the observation that stopped me dead in my tracks was the following, quoted from David Hume: 鈥淎 man will be mortified, if you tell him he has a stinking breath; though it is evidently no聽annoyance to himself.鈥

The idea that that magnificent Scottish mind might have lent itself to meditations on miasmic body odours is in itself remarkable (and mischievous), but what鈥檚 most arresting is the plain truth of the observation itself. It is true that we might not care one whit for our own odours were it not for our imaginative ability to experience them via others. The way that Hume鈥檚 unobtrusive little note brings us up short and makes us cock our heads differently at the idea of self-consciousness is in聽some regard indicative of the quiet ways that this book works.

This is a book that concerns itself with 鈥渢he emotions and attitudes that include some estimate of the self, such as pride, self-esteem, vanity, arrogance, shame, humility, embarrassment, resentment, and indignation鈥 and that also extends to 鈥渢he qualities that bear upon it 鈥 integrity, sincerity, authenticity鈥. And Blackburn is not just a sure and supremely knowledgeable narrator in whom we can have utmost confidence, but one with a quirky ear, alert to the curious side note and irrefutable detail that can make his sometimes dusty discipline gleam with a new sheen and edge.

He is irritated by the vacuous diktat 鈥楤ecause you鈥檙e worth it鈥. There鈥檚 something tickling about his being foxed by the voluminously coiffured Eva Longoria

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He is a discerning reader, selective and economical with the material he distils, steering us through the thickets of serious and substantial (rather than 鈥減opular鈥) philosophy with an unerring touch for the precise aspect of Aristotle or quotation from Immanuel Kant that could refocus a tired argument and lend new light to a problem. The sources are illuminating, but it is Blackburn鈥檚 secure grasp and sound understanding that inspire our confidence to walk with him through the morasses of聽monstrous solipsism, patiently puzzling out our divided loyalties to a self that we might equally seek to 鈥渇ind鈥 and strive to 鈥渇orget鈥.

The seriousness and substance of the material that Blackburn encourages us to navigate is no small part of his argument itself. To think through complex reasoning is to recognise selfhood itself as a phenomenon capable of such complexity. Blackburn is a helpfully deft and precise expositor. If聽at moments a regal professorial presence rears its head 鈥撀爀laborate deductions involving 鈥渕ythical teapots鈥, like examples involving divided apples or decisions made on sinking boats, are sweetly redolent of first-year philosophy 鈥 Mirror, Mirror is also full of lovelier, more gently reflective passages: 鈥淭here is a melancholy pleasure in contemplating the wandering infirmities to which we are all prone.鈥 There is a wry candour to the truth that self-inspection pleases. Blackburn鈥檚 particular grace here is not to censure this satisfaction, nor to permit us to laze in the language of fatuous self-help, but to insist on an intellectual athleticism. Every position is scrutinised from a different, sometimes more, sometimes less, redemptive angle. We must be agile thinkers and, more to the point, we wish to be so too, because Blackburn never underestimates our appetite, and inspires our ability for difficulty.

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If this is a version of 鈥減opular鈥 philosophy or a philosophy of personal life, then it is one that is exceptionally dignified, often kind, always unsentimental and uncloying. You might think, by way of contrast, of those other usual and tiresomely numerous suspects who trade indifferently in platitudes, banalities and generalities, or, worse still, who wear their learning heavily and whose writing lacks the very life for which they claim usefulness. Utility is barely a notion that Blackburn attends to. Rather, he writes with the unspoken understanding that the philosophy that could be of 鈥渦se鈥 to us will make itself apparent, doing so with neither fanfare nor declaration. And our ability to seek out that use, or聽not, is ours, not his, to dictate.

Indeed, it is Kant, who lopes in and out of this book with the perambulatory regularity for which he was famed, who leads us to this, in defining 鈥減ragmatic knowledge鈥 as the 鈥渋nvestigation of what he as a free-acting being makes of himself, or can and should make of himself鈥. This notion of us as free-acting agents capable of self-making is the crux of the book. If we are vainglorious idiots sky-high in our self-absorption, we have every possibility of thinking our way out of it. Blackburn provides us with resources. He is, though, a聽decided rather than impartial guide, unseduced, for instance, by聽the easy reductions of contract-based philosophy and its claims to right selfishness. Such contracts, he points out sensibly, must be predicated on self-cultivation, as generations of philosophers (Cyrenaics, Cynics, Epicureans, Stoics, sceptics, Aristotelians, Peripatetics) all knew: 鈥淟iving is a process, not a product.鈥

And it is the commercial production of selfhood for which Blackburn reserves a white-hot fury. L鈥橭r茅al鈥檚 exasperatingly ubiquitous slogan 鈥淏ecause you鈥檙e worth it鈥 emerges as a provocation for the book, with Blackburn confessing, somewhat sheepishly, to being irritated and niggled by the vacuous diktat. Truth be told, there is something tickling, lightly absurd, about the eminent philosopher scratching his head at/being foxed by the voluminously coiffured Eva聽Longoria. But Blackburn鈥檚 response is a powerful and compelling condemnation of the iniquities of the beauty industry, at the heart of which is that catastrophic inversion, 鈥渂ecause I聽am worth nothing鈥, that leaves selfhood destitute.

In the latter half of the book, George W. Bush, Tony Blair and bankers all make for fair game, Blackburn neatly manoeuvring into the right angles for a series of elegant potshots during a discussion of the grey shades of charisma, confidence and hubris. Perhaps this makes the book timely. Yet much more interesting is the closing discussion of Christianity, whose traditions of abstention and asceticism might be understood as forms of self-abasement. God, Blackburn reasons intelligently, might easily be cast as a narcissist who neglects, or a busybody who endangers, but there is also a聽gentle defence of religious thinking here, and an unusually balanced argument. In fact, his subtlety leaves Richard Dawkins a聽mere brutish braggadocio, grunting and lumbering in his graceful wake.

This is not to mistake Blackburn as a religious thinker 鈥 rather he is a resolutely sociable thinker, one in whose company we find balance, kindness and clear sight. Dignity and decorum are ideas that have purchase for him, but we are enervated beings if we are without desire, he notes too. At the heart of the book is an idea of the care of the soul. Here, one might think of Michel Foucault or Sigmund Freud, and if聽the book lacks anything, it is this continental tradition that so frequently concerns itself with that very thing. It matters little though. There is something modest and true in Blackburn鈥檚 account of conscience and cooperative care, something he calls 鈥渃ompany鈥 in terms that are secular, sociable, readily understood. As he writes thoughtfully, 鈥淲e do not need to believe in souls in order to find some people soulful.鈥

The author

Of that photographic fad of the moment, the selfie, Simon Blackburn observes: 鈥淚f聽someone thinks the most important thing about the Mona Lisa, the Parthenon or Nelson Mandela鈥檚 memorial service is 鈥楲ook, here I聽am!鈥, then I聽do feel a bit sorry for them. Why not try really looking at the Mona Lisa, Parthenon, etc for a change? It聽might do you good.鈥

Blackburn was born near Bristol and raised near Sunderland. 鈥淚 like to think Northerners are more down-to-earth than other people; I then like to think that I am as well. Sunderland people are intransigent, stoical, sociable and humorous, all of which sound good to me,鈥 he says. He and his wife live in Cambridge, 鈥渁lthough we often visit North Carolina, where our children live鈥.

As a child, he says, 鈥淚 don鈥檛 think I was particularly studious, but I found most schoolwork fairly enjoyable, unless it bored me. My mother was anxious for my academic success, and perhaps that rubbed off on me. I was also lucky enough to have a few inspiring teachers.鈥

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The first philosophical work he recalls disagreeing with was G.鈥塃. Moore鈥檚 Principia Ethica, which he encountered while he was still at school. 鈥淢oore tries to show that beauty cannot be 鈥榠n the eye of the beholder鈥 by asking us to imagine a聽lovely scene (or ugly scene) with nobody looking at it 鈥 and then you have to admit that it is still lovely (or ugly). I聽thought that wouldn鈥檛 prove what he wanted at all, and I聽still do.鈥

Blackburn鈥檚 own earliest philosophical writings, he adds, were 鈥減robably adolescent musings, which I聽hope left no trace鈥.

Until 2011, Blackburn was professor of philosophy at the University of Cambridge. He remains a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, where he read philosophy as an undergraduate before taking his doctorate at Churchill College, Cambridge. From 1969 to 1990, however, he found himself in 鈥渢he other place鈥, as a fellow at Pembroke College, Oxford. Asked if Oxford鈥檚 charms match those of Cambridge, Blackburn will say only: 鈥淚f I were to have a Twitter account, which I do not, I might try to call it @diplomacy.鈥

He is (half-time) distinguished research professor of philosophy at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill. He recalls: 鈥淎fter I had decided I was being stifled at Oxford, it was a question of where to go. UNC had opportunities, colleagues and climate. I loved it. And while in Oxbridge being a graduate student was a license to coast, in the US the graduate students worked, until at the PhD level they were as good as any.鈥

In addition, Blackburn is visiting professor at the New College of the Humanities in London. On the matter of the college鈥檚 annual tuition fees being, at 拢18,000, approximately equal to the annual salary of someone earning the London Living Wage, he says: 鈥淚聽would prefer it that those who can afford it spend their money on education, and therefore on the people providing it, rather than on the rubbishy things for which they tend to use it, including rubbishy ideas that they wish to promote.鈥

He has not, he says, been tempted to retire entirely. 鈥淚聽hope that while I draw breath I聽will continue to think about hard things, and even try a few falls with colleagues. It鈥檚 what I聽do.鈥

In his spare time, he enjoys music. However, he confesses, 鈥淚 do not have a good voice, good ear, or good memory for music and I sorrow over that. I enjoy music, and respond to it enough to lament over what more it could have given me.鈥

In 2010 Blackburn lent his name to a letter decrying Pope Benedict鈥檚 having been given the honour of a state visit to the UK. Asked if he feels any more kindly disposed to Benedict鈥檚 successor, Pope Francis, he replies: 鈥淚 suppose a good man in a bad position is better (for the world, if not for the man) than a bad man in a bad position.鈥

Asked who is wisest on the matter of vanity, of all the writers he considered for Mirror Mirror, Blackburn observes: 鈥淎dam Smith, possibly the most subtle of the great moral psychologists, is the hero of my book, alongside the lost authors of many myths. Iris Murdoch gets a much, much lower mark, because she advanced simple solutions to complex things. But you have to read it to see why, or whether I am being fair.鈥

Karen Shook

Mirror, Mirror: The Uses and Abuses of Self-Love

By Simon Blackburn
Princeton University Press, 248pp, 拢16.95
ISBN 9780691161426 and 9781400849956聽(e-book)
Published 24 March 2014

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