Anthony Weston
Anthony Weston is an American writer, teacher, and philosopher, author of widely used primers in critical thinking and ethical practice and of a variety of unconventional books and essays on philosophical topics.
Life
Weston was born in 1954 and grew up in the Sauk County region of southwestern Wisconsin, country identified with the conservationist Aldo Leopold and the architect and visionary Frank Lloyd Wright, a strong influence on his father's family. He is a 1976 Honors graduate of Macalester College, and received his PhD in Philosophy in 1982 from the University of Michigan, where he wrote his PhD dissertation with Frithjof Bergmann on "The Subjectivity of Values". He taught at the State University of New York at Stony Brook for ten years, and subsequently at Elon University, where he has won the University's premiere awards for both teaching and scholarship, as well as abroad in Costa Rica, Western Australia, and British Columbia.Weston has worked in philosophy for his entire professional life but teaches and writes on interdisciplinary themes and beyond as well. He has co-taught with biologists and ecologists and in both Philosophy and Environmental Studies at Elon, working as well with astronomers, Zen masters and in environmental education programs as well as on design and social change projects such as Hart's Mill Eco-Village.
Philosophical work
Weston's philosophical project as a whole advances an expansive "toolbox" for critical, creative, and constructive thinking, especially for purposes of social and environmental re-imagination and pragmatic ethical practice. The social, ethical, even ontological problems that we so often take as "given" are more often, he argues, products of underlying conditions, practices, and choices. This view may be identified with deconstruction, but too often, Weston argues,This reconstructive project calls on a set of skills and concepts less often recognized and valued in philosophy. Inspired in particular by the pragmatic social philosophy of John Dewey, Weston envisions open-ended, generative, imaginative and experimental thinking, modeled on crafts such as building or performance and empirical science, gradually displacing more category-bound and formal thinking that tends to be more reactive and critical. In a variety of essays and books he lays out key concepts such as "the hidden possibilities of things" – the sense that the world has much more depth and possibility than it may seem – and correlatively the need to thematize and resist self-validating reduction, the process by which some being or some part of the world are reduced to less than they might be, and then that very reduction is taken as an excuse and validation for itself, the obliterated possibilities now thoroughly out of view. Correspondingly, the task of knowing and valuing is not to "read off" the nature and possibility of things off the world as it is "given", but to actively engage the world, to "venture the trust" to create new kinds of openings in interaction with the world within which deeper possibilities might emerge.
Settled modes of value issue in the familiar ethics, of persons for example, but the "originary" areas of ethics, as Weston calls them, are only now taking shape, and are not a matter of extension or application of pre-given principles but rather the co-creation or co-constitution of new values. In environmental ethics in particular, Weston argues that we stand at the very beginning of our exploration. At the same time, he also argues for a "multicentric" approach to reconstituting the human relation to the more-than-human world, as opposed to the "mono-centrism" that could either be human-centered or larger-than-human but still "centered" in the sense that one dimension and model for values determines who or what morally counts and why.
Another key theme is the centrality of the built and lived world to the shaping of thought, as well as vice versa. Philosophers tend to assume a one-way connection—that thought determines world—while philosophy's critics, such as doctrinaire Marxists, see it just the other way around. In Weston's view the connection goes both ways, and is genuinely dialectical. A world or a set of concrete practices represent the enactment of certain ideas, but they also shape our ideas in turn. The cultural enactment and perpetuation of anthropocentrism is one good example. But this is, in his view, a good thing, and a necessary one: it gives thought an anchor, allows us to work out ideas concretely, and gives us a lever for philosophical change as well: by actually changing the world. Once again, the world as it is, is not somehow the limit of possibility.
Finally, just as ethical practice becomes intelligent, creative, critical engagement with problematic situations and possibilities rather than "puzzle-solving", so even the widely taught and conventional field of critical thinking becomes something more than a matter of testing someone else's arguments for "fallacies", but rather a constructive and open-ended process of framing one's own arguments and energetically recasting and exploring others' lines of thought.
Weston has called his overall project "Pragmatopian", adapting Charlotte Perkins Gilman's term for the project of her visionary novels: radical but experimental utopias. Philosophy as he tries to practice it, Weston has said, is a kind of "pragmatopian dare".
Writings
Books
Critical and constructive thinking
- A Rulebook for Arguments now in its 5th edition and translated into ten languages: this critical-thinking handbook is Weston's best known textbook.
- A Workbook for Arguments, co-authored with David Morrow. Textbook expansion of Rulebook. Third edition, 2019.
- Creativity for Critical Thinkers
- Thinking Through Questions, co-authored with Stephen Bloch-Schulman. Short textbook exploring critical, creative, and philosophical questioning, along with "questionable questions" and the uses of questioning in college classes.
Pedagogy
- Teaching as the Art of Staging: A Scenario-Based College Pedagogy in Action argues for and illustrates a radically more co-active and "designing" role for teachers than either the information-providing lecturer or the usual facilitator/coach model. "Impresarios with Scenarios" are "teachers who serve as class mobilizers, improvisers, and energizers, staging dramatic, often unexpected and self-unfolding learning challenges and adventures with students".
Ethics
- Toward Better Problems, a systematic attempt at Deweyan reconstruction in contemporary ethics.
- A Practical Companion To Ethics. A short guide to "the basic attitudes and skills that make ethics work".
- A 21st Century Ethical Toolbox. A full-scale textbook for ethics in a pragmatic key.
- Creative Problem-Solving in Ethics
Environmentalism
- Back to Earth: Tomorrow's Environmentalism. An attempt to recover the experience of life among other-than-human beings and within nature that grounds our ethical engagement with them.
- An Invitation to Environmental Philosophy, with essays by David Abram, Val Plumwood, Holmes Rolston III, and Jim Cheney, with Preface and "Going On" sections as well a companion essay by Weston.
- The Incompleat Eco-Philosopher: Essays on the Edges of Environmental Ethics. A collection of some of Weston's key essays in the field from the professional literature.
- Mobilizing the Green Imagination: An Exuberant Manifesto. This is a book of practical but sweeping environmental visions, Weston's "pragmatopian imagination" fully applied, or as the book's cover puts it, "elegant and audacious possibilities that push the boundaries of contemporary environmentalism".
Social philosophy
- Jobs for Philosophers appears to be a collection of reviews of adventurous philosophy books and projects, but is in fact a portrait of what philosophy might become. This is a self-published book.
- How to Re-Imagine the World: A Pocket Handbook for Practical Visionaries
Selected essays
- "Beyond Intrinsic Value: Pragmatism in Environmental Ethics", Environmental Ethics 7:4 : 321-339.
- "Forms of Gaian Ethics", Environmental Ethics 9:3 : 121-134.
- "Radio Astronomy as Epistemology: Some Philosophical Reflections on the Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence", Monist 71:1 : 88-100. This is a less surprising theme in Weston's work than it may seem, given his interest in other-than-human "contact" right here on Earth; it also emerges in his recent teaching and in the last chapters of both The Incompleat Ecophilosopher and Mobilizing the Green Imagination.
- "Uncovering the 'Hidden Curriculum': A Laboratory Course in Philosophy of Education", APA Newsletter on Teaching Philosophy 90:2 : 36-40.
- "Non-anthropocentrism in a Thoroughly Anthropocentrized World", The Trumpeter 8:3 : 108-112.
- "Before Environmental Ethics", Environmental Ethics 14 : 323-340.
- "Self-Validating Reduction: Toward a Theory of the Devaluation of Nature", Environmental Ethics 18 : 115-132.
- "Instead of Environmental Education", in Bob Jickling, ed., Proceedings of the Yukon College Symposium on Ethics, Environment, and Education.
- "Risking Philosophy of Education", Metaphilosophy 29 : 145-158.
- "Environmental Ethics as Environmental Etiquette: Toward an Ethics-Based Epistemology in Environmental Philosophy", Environmental Ethics 21 : 115-134.
- "Multi-Centrism: A Manifesto", Environmental Ethics 26 : 25-40.
- "For a Meta-Ethics as Good as Our Practice", in Elizabeth Burge, editor, "Negotiating Dilemmas of Practice: Applied Ethics in Adult Education", special issue of New Directions in Adult and Continuing Education.
- "From Guide on the Side to Impresario with a Scenario", College Teaching 63:3 Proposes a new model of the college teacher in contrast to the traditional lecturer or facilitator/coach.
Criticism
Weston's ethics textbooks in particular take substantive positions in ethical philosophy. Weston's rationale is that any practical textbook necessarily does so, and that this is just less noticeable or objectionable to traditionalists in the usual textbooks because the substance tends to be the taken-for-granted norms. Weston's method is to try to reconstruct certain fields the long way around: by rewriting their textbooks, modeling a quite different approach in practice and therefore inviting new kinds of students into the field and perhaps also reshaping their teachers' views without arguing in the usual way against the assumed norms.