© 2024 Nick
Substack is the home for great culture
Tuesday 19 November 2024 is the 191st anniversary of the birth of Wilhelm Dilthey (19 November 1833 \u2013 01 October 1911), who was born in Wiesbaden-Biebrich on this date in 1833.
Dilthey has been pervasively influential, but it\u2019s difficult to put my finger on exactly what that influence consists. How do we know that Dilthey has been pervasively influential? He has been widely cited, selections from his writings are included on anthologies on philosophy of history, and his books remain in print and have been mostly translated. Through his correspondence with Paul Yorck von Wartenburg, Dilthey became an influence on Heidegger, who has dominated continental thought since the middle of the twentieth century. Near the end of Being and Time, sections 72 to 77, Heidegger discusses history, but I haven\u2019t attempted to produce an episode on Heidegger as he\u2019s not simpatico for me. But in this discussion of history Heidegger references the correspondence of Dilthey and Count Yorck, quoting Yorck in extenso. This was recently brought to my attention by Eliyahu Rotenberg on Substack, so thanks for that. I wouldn\u2019t have known about it otherwise. Dilthey\u2019s influence should mean that he is widely read, but that doesn\u2019t seem to be the case. This isn\u2019t hard to figure out. He\u2019s a difficult philosopher to read. Of course, I\u2019m reading English translations of Dilthey, and a former friend of mine, a translator, once told me that he had never read anything that was clearer in translation than in the original, so it\u2019s entirely possible that Dilthey has suffered in translation. Dilthey\u2019s Introduction to the Human Sciences is a ploddingly slow read, but important for understanding Dilthey\u2019s relation to philosophy of history. He specifically devoted four chapters of Introduction to the Human Sciences to a critique of philosophy of history: Chapter 14, Neither Philosophy of History nor Sociology Is Really a Science, Chapter 15, The Philosophy of History and Sociology Cannot Fulfill Their Tasks, Chapter 16, The Methods of the Philosophy of History and of Sociology Are Wrong, and Chapter 17, Philosophy of History and Sociology Do Not Recognize the Relationship of History as a Science to the Particular Social Sciences. This isn\u2019t a critique of the mere possibility of philosophy of history, but of how philosophy of history had gotten it wrong so far. Dilthey characterized philosophy of history as follows: \u201CBy philosophy of history I understand a theory which undertakes to discern the system of historical reality through a corresponding system of unified principles. This feature of unity of thought is inseparable from theory, which has its distinctive task precisely in recognizing the system of the whole. And so philosophy of history locates this unity now in a blueprint of historical process, now in a basic concept (an idea), now in a formula or a set of formulas which express the law of development. Sociology (I speak here only of the French school) escalates this clam to knowledge even further inasmuch as it aspires to introduce scientific direction of society by the knowledge it has of this system.\u201D This is more sophisticated than most critiques of philosophy of history in this vein. There are many philosophers who have criticized any attempt to see history whole, but Dilthey doesn\u2019t merely mirror this problematic holism, he specifically cites the theoretical comprehension of history through a unified system of principles, and since it\u2019s difficult to imagine any study of anything undertaking without a system of unified principles, his critique would apply to any principled study of history. But Dilthey also acknowledges that the theoretical unity of history can take many forms: a blueprint, a basic concept, a formula or set of formulas, so he\u2019s not assuming that a system of unified principles must be monolithic. As I said earlier, Dilthey\u2019s distancing of himself from philosophy of history is more sophisticated than many of the efforts that I have called non-philosophy of history, as, for example, Descartes, Jacob Burckhardt, Simone Weil, and Karl L\u00F6with. Dilthey, to his credit, also has concrete and constructive suggestions on how philosophy of history ought to be carried out. Here is Dilthey\u2019s own take on the proper way to do philosophy of history:
Share this post
Dilthey and Our Lived Experience of the Past
Share this post
Part of a Series on the Philosophy of History