259
See also: Georg Hegel 178–85 ■ Karl Marx 196–203 ■ Martin Heidegger
252–55 ■ Slavoj Žižek 326
A
t first glance, nothing
seems to be more irrational
than Marcuse’s claim that
“that which is” cannot be true,
which appears in his 1941 book,
Reason and Revolution. If that
which is cannot be true, the reader
is tempted to ask, then what is? But
Marcuse’s idea is partly an attempt
to overturn the claim made by the
German philosopher Hegel that
what is rational is actual, and also
that what is actual is rational.
Marcuse believes this is a
dangerous idea because it leads us
to think that what is actually the
case—such as our existing political
system—is necessarily rational.
He reminds us that those things
we take as reasonable may be far
more unreasonable than we like to
admit. He also wants to shake us
up into realizing the irrational
nature of many of the things that
we -take for granted.
Subversive reason
In particular, Marcuse is deeply
uneasy with capitalist societies and
with what he calls their “terrifying
harmony of freedom and oppression,
productivity and destruction,
growth and regression.” We assume
that the societies we live in are
based upon reason and justice,
but when we look more closely, we
may find that they are neither as
just nor as reasonable as we believe.
Marcuse is not discounting
reason, but trying to point out that
reason is subversive, and that we
can use it to call into question the
society in which we live. The aim
of philosophy, for Marcuse, is a
“rationalist theory of society.” ■
THE MODERN WORLD
THAT WHICH IS
CANNOT BE TRUE
HERBERT MARCUSE (1898–1979)
Fast cars are the kind of consumables
that Marcuse accuses us of using to
recognize ourselves; he says we find
“our soul” in these items, becoming
mere extensions of the things we create.
IN CONTEXT
BRANCH
Political philosophy
APPROACH
Frankfurt School
BEFORE
1820 Georg Hegel writes in
his Philosophy of Right that
what is actual is rational and
what is rational is actual.
1867 Karl Marx publishes
the first volume of Das Kapital,
setting out his view of the
“laws of motion” within
capitalist societies, and
asserting that capitalism is
guilty of exploiting humans.
1940s Martin Heidegger
begins to explore the problems
of technology.
AFTER
2000 Slavoj Žižek explores
the relationship between
technology, capitalist society,
and totalitarianism.