<DIV>Another great one gone -- both as an activist and a philosopher. <BR><BR><B><I>John Mage <jmage@panix.com></I></B> wrote:
<BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid"><HTTP: 04morgenbesser.html?pagewanted="all" obituaries 04 08 2004 www.nytimes.com><BR>since these don't stay up long, i'm pasting it in below...<BR><BR>in '68, when i was on the staff of the NYCLU (my first job), i<BR>represented Sidney on a discon in a demo arrest. a couple of years later<BR>- on his doing - i entered the doctoral program in his department (but<BR>quickly regressed to lawyering under the pressure of the times).<BR><BR>i was in his causation seminar (Sidney on theories for discovering<BR>unconscious motivation of action - "the lapsus linguae theory of Dr.<BR>Fraud"), and for over thirty years we have been in a university seminar<BR>together ("Political Economy of War and Peace").<BR><BR>the NYTimes obit omits his (soft) left politics. he described himself<BR>as a "Menshivik". he was a close friend of Ed Saïd, and though he always<BR>tred carefully on the zionist
question never disguised his hatred of the<BR>likudniks, Sharon et. al.<BR><BR>another Sidney line: on whether ontology encompassed epistemology<BR>- "no matter, never mind"<BR><BR>adieu, Sidney<BR><BR>"yeah, yeah"<BR><BR>john mage<BR>----<BR>Sidney Morgenbesser, 82, Kibitzing Philosopher, Dies<BR>By DOUGLAS MARTIN<BR><BR>Published: August 4, 2004<BR><BR>Sidney Morgenbesser, whose servings of logic, wit and insight as a<BR>Columbia University philosopher for a half-century prompted comparisons<BR>to Socrates - minus the Yiddish accent - died on Sunday at St.<BR>Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center in Manhattan. He was 82.<BR><BR>The cause was complications of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, said<BR>Leonie Haimson, the daughter of his companion, Joann Haimson.<BR><BR>Near the end, Dr. Morgenbesser entertained a stream of bedside visitors<BR>with pronouncements about politics, God and baseball.<BR><BR>Kibitzing, a gift he developed on the Lower East Side, where his father<BR>was a garment
worker, was the medium through which Dr. Morgenbesser<BR>reached the highest of intellectual planes. Colleagues and former<BR>students described a teacher whose power and influence were felt not so<BR>much in a legacy of articles and books (there were relatively few for a<BR>tenured professor of his standing) as through the deceptively whimsical<BR>give-and-take that allowed him to distill the essence of things, taking<BR>kibitzing to the edge of such frontiers as metaphysics and epistemology.<BR>With freewheeling intellectual banter that many likened to Socratic<BR>dialogues, he influenced generations of students, including the<BR>philosopher Robert Nozick, who once wrote that he "majored in Sidney<BR>Morgenbesser."<BR><BR>Dr. Morgenbesser first studied at the Jewish Theological Seminary and<BR>was ordained as a rabbi, before becoming something of a Columbia legend<BR>at the time of the student uprising in 1968 for being beaten when he<BR>joined a human chain against the
police.<BR><BR>"You ought to very carefully observe what transpires," he said to fellow<BR>professors during a riot. "Watch carefully."<BR><BR>Few watched more things more carefully than Dr. Morgenbesser, the John<BR>Dewey professor of philosophy, particularly when it came to essential<BR>meanings. He was once asked if it was unfair that the police hit him on<BR>the head during the riot.<BR><BR>"It was unfair but not unjust," he pronounced.<BR><BR>Why?<BR><BR>"It's unfair to be hit over the head, but it was not unjust since they<BR>hit everybody else over the head."<BR><BR>Dr. Morgenbesser's reputation for questioning other scholars, often in<BR>midsentence with barbed humor, struck fear in the hearts of would-be sages.<BR><BR>It went like this, according to Arthur Danto, a Columbia philosopher:<BR>"Let me see if I understand you," Dr. Morgenbesser would begin.<BR><BR>"He would restate the thesis, and that would be that," Dr. Danto said.<BR>"It was one of the ordeals you had to go
through."<BR><BR>In an interview yesterday, Noam Chomsky, the linguist at the<BR>Massachusetts Institute of Technology who agreed with Dr. Morgenbesser<BR>about some things and not others, called him "one of the most<BR>knowledgeable and in many ways profound thinkers of the modern period."<BR><BR>Dr. Chomsky called him "a philosopher in the old sense - not so much<BR>what's on the printed page, but in debate and inspiring discussion."<BR><BR>Harry Frankfurt, professor emeritus of philosophy at Princeton,<BR>struggled to define Dr. Morgenbesser's contribution, finally resorting<BR>to metaphor.<BR><BR>"You don't ask what the wind does," he said. "It's just power and<BR>self-sustaining energy."<BR><BR>But it was often energy with a humorous punch line, as Dr. Morgenbesser<BR>earned fame for witticisms. He insisted the jokes were openings to more<BR>substantive philosophic discussions.<BR><BR>An example: in the 1950's, the British philosopher J. L. Austin came to<BR>Columbia to present
a paper about the close analysis of language. He<BR>pointed out that although two negatives make a positive, nowhere is it<BR>the case that two positives make a negative. "Yeah, yeah," Dr.<BR>Morgenbesser said.<BR><BR>Another: in the 1970's, a student of Maoist inclination asked him if he<BR>disagreed with Chairman Mao's saying that a proposition can be true or<BR>false at the same time. Dr. Morgenbesser replied, "I do and I don't."<BR><BR>Sidney Morgenbesser was born in Manhattan on Sept. 22, 1921. In addition<BR>to his seminary degree, he earned another bachelor's degree from the<BR>City College of New York. He completed his doctorate at the University<BR>of Pennsylvania and, after teaching at Swarthmore College and the New<BR>School of Social Research, joined Columbia's faculty in 1954. In 1968,<BR>he was a member of a faculty panel that drafted proposals to reform the<BR>university after the student unrest.<BR><BR>He was a member of the editorial board of The Journal of
Philosophy for<BR>most of his career. He wrote more than 50 articles, many with<BR>colleagues, and edited six anthologies.<BR><BR>Dr. Morgenbesser, whose only immediate survivor is Ms. Haimson, never<BR>lost his Talmud-inspired gifts for reasoning. A few weeks before his<BR>death, he asked another Columbia philosopher, David Albert, about God.<BR><BR>"Why is God making me suffer so much?" he asked. "Just because I don't<BR>believe in him?"<BR><BR>___________________________________<BR>http://mailman.lbo-talk.org/mailman/listinfo/lbo-talk<BR></BLOCKQUOTE></DIV><p>
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