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We too often forget that the name “intellectual” itself is a French invention. There is a tendency, because the French exported the concept very successfully in the past, to try to interpret any thinking phenomenon as an “intellectual” one, and to believe that where there are no proper intellectuals, there is no thinking. However, as Stefan Collini brilliantly demonstrated in Absent Minds, it is France that is the exception rather than the other way around. The way it has promoted the figure of the intellectual is unprecedented in history, and it would be pointless to try to find the same patterns in other countries which have other traditions. British thinkers, in that perspective, have been sceptical of the term “intellectual” for two reasons: they felt superior to what they saw as French immaturity or grandiloquence, but at the same time inferior to them, because they watched the exceptional treatment given to intellectuals in France with great envy.

Just because a country remains reluctant to recognise its intellectual character doesn’t mean it doesn’t have one. Conversely, just because a country constantly boasts about its tradition of thought doesn’t mean that the tradition is still alive. Progressive thinkers such as Sartre have always preferred — isn’t it much easier? — to paint large abstract pictures, and then, when reality contradicted them, to turn a blind eye and blame someone else — the bourgeoisie, usually.

British thinkers, from Adam Smith and David Hume to Friedrich Hayek (Britain being his adopted country), from Thomas Hobbes, John Locke and John Stuart Mill to John Gray, from Edmund Burke to Michael Oakeshott and Roger Scruton, have always started from the facts and the patterns of life and tried to make sense of them, without being obsessed by the fact that they were or were not thinkers. British people think because they don’t think they think. I wish the French would do the same.
 

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Ivan A.
June 3rd, 2015
4:06 PM
It's very hard to take seriously an article about thought when it mindlessly repeats the lie about Sartre's theoretical work being unintelligeble. This is just lazy chauvinism, and if there is a national character today in anglophone thought that it would be a sort of monolinguism: a refusal to read anything that hasn't got its roots in the English language. I mean how would it be otherwise possible that whole armies of commentators and intellectuals declare unintelligeble what every other highschool student in France manages to make perfect sense of. It must be that you are in bad faith.

Al de Baran
June 3rd, 2015
3:06 PM
"The French are rationalists, and like abstraction"... Ah, you mean like Andre Breton and the Surrealists? Surrealism was one of the most important and engaged intellectual (not merely artistic) movements of the 20th Century, but Ill wager that Breton et cie get scant, if any, attention in this book.

David Ehrenstein
June 3rd, 2015
3:06 PM
No it wasn't. Structuralism was (and is) intellectually invigorating. That France has fallen into an apparent slump is unfortunate, but not irreparable.

Philip Amos
June 3rd, 2015
12:06 PM
A very interesting review. I just hope that listing Oakeshott with Burke and Scruton is not a perpetuation of the notion that he was a conservative or Conservative. He shooed away the blandishment of the Conservative Party from the time Rationalism in Politics was published (the start of many gross misinterpretations) until he refused a knighthood offered by Thatcher. A close reading, preferably by those who don't think writing an essay about being conservative means you're a Conservative, shows clearly enough that Oakeshott was a classic liberal thinker. There is a country mile between the reactionary desire to turn the clock back or at least keep things just as they are and deep scepticism about the ability of social engineers to create their own notion of the perfect society. Re the consequences of the latter, the most appalling have o f late been evident in the Harper Government (by decree, its official name) in Canada and Thatcher through Cameron in Britain, Conservatives all. Oakeshott would be appalled by all of them.

John Borstlap
June 3rd, 2015
10:06 AM
Of course the article is plain right. Leftist deconstruction was a purely negative trend. Finkelkraut is not 'conservative' but a realist: his 'The Defeat of the Mind' (1987!) about the multicultural society is a brilliant analysis and warning, which has meanwhile proven to be spot on.

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