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Pragmatic Cataphasis:
Plenitude and Caution in Morning Prayer
(Taking up Daniel Weiss' Challenge)
Peter Ochs
University of Virginia
Daniel
Weiss has offered us a worthy set of challenges for textual reasoning: to
consider the way God is addressed in the texts of rabbinic prayer; to consider,
through the instruments of rhetorical and semiotic analysis, the "oddly
deictic" character of this address; and to measure, at once, the ethical and
theological force of this deixis: Does it move the worshipper to action? Is
this action for the other/Other? And does this action embody all that
can be said of God, "that there is nothing to say of You beyond this action to
which You bring us"? I believe this challenge is worthy for three reasons:
(1) Prayer renders scripture a ground of action, so that Weiss' study has the
consequence of drawing textual reasoners to address the practical efficacy of
classical Jewish textuality; (2) A strong source of textual reasoning is
postmodern Jewish philosophy, and Weiss' thesis raises the central postmodern
question concerning Jewish prayer: Does Jewish prayer offer training in
compassion for the "other" (care for the human other is a primary virtue for
postmodern Jewish ethics), or does it inculcate a traditionalism that may in
fact occlude attention to the other outside the worshipping community? (3) But
"postliberalism" is another source of textual reasoning, and Weiss' thesis may
set a place for fruitful dialogue between postmodern and postliberal
practitioners of textual reasoning. Such a dialogue may introduce a
non-romantic means of valorizing the practice of Jewish prayer as, at once,
socialization in traditional rabbinic discourse and training for a life of care
for the other.
I
will take up the last question as a point of departure for this response to
Weiss' thesis, posing the following thought experiment. What consequences would
follow if we took Weiss' thesis as a contribution strictly to the postmodern
direction in recent textural reasoning? His thesis would, I believe, introduce
a radical apophasis. On the other hand, what consequences would follow if we
took his thesis as a contribution strictly to the postliberal direction in
resent textural reasoning? His thesis would, I believe, introduce a radical
cataphasis. But, finally what consequences would follow if we understood his
thesis to display the results of a dialogue between the postmodern and
postliberal tendencies in textual reasoning? His thesis would, I believe,
introduce a pragmatic account of rabbinic prayer as training in the practical
(which includes social, relational, and ethical) efficacy of classical Jewish
belief. I will limit this response to the terms of this thought experiment,
sticking for the most part to a philosophic and semiotic vocabulary. Having had
the opportunity of reading Adam Zachary Newton's contribution to this volume,
I believe his detailed study of various levels of rabbinic
liturgical practice provides sufficient illustrations of what I take to be the
most satisfying reading of Weiss' thesis - the pragmatic one.
1.
A Postmodern Reading of Weiss' Thesis: "You" as Apophatic Address
Is
Weiss' "odd deixis" a contribution, specifically, to the postmodern turn in
Jewish philosophy? Is his reading, in other words, consistent with the Levinasian
ethics that has been at the center of Jewish thought - and textual reasoning -
the past decade or two? If so, we might gloss his thesis in the following way:
Rabbinic
prayers address God not merely through the second-person You, but also through
a You employed as radically deictic, which, to use a few synonyms, means
radically indexical or demonstrative. A bit of history of these terms may be in
order. Working at Johns Hopkins in 1883, the young logician O. Mitchell
suggested that certain elements of speech may refer to their objects without
any predication: referring, in other words, strictly to the thatness or raw
existence of something out-there, without delivering any other information
about the whatness or characteristics of the something. Charles Peirce
founder of the American brand of semiotic theory, of pragmatism and of its
attendant logics took up Mitchell's insight with great energy. He called these
speech elements "indices" or "deictic signs" and described "indexicality" or "deixis"
as the way that certain signs refer to their objects.[1]
Prime examples are the demonstrative pronouns "that," or "there!" These
pronouns point to something that has meaning only for those who observe some
physical behavior that accompanies the speaker's claim. While declaring
"there!" for example, the speaker may point with the index finger at a certain
tree that his or her interlocutors are looking at. This means that the index
lacks any predicative meaning apart from the living context of the speech act.
Within that context, however, the index carries a range of qualitative meanings
to those who share in the context: listener A may understand the
pointing to refer to "that tree there with the squirrel on it;" for listener B,
it may point to "that bush there with the berries." One feature of indexicality
is thus non-predicative reference. Another is context-specific meaning. Another
is vagueness or indefiniteness, since listeners may understand the predications
in different ways; they are not spelled out even to those present in the context.
Since Peirce, many inquirers have examined the rhetorical, semiotic and logical
force of deictic signs. As noted in Adam Zachary Newton's essay, "Thou, so to
speak: Dei-xis," these
include the linguists Roman Jakobson, Emile Benveniste, and Otto Jesperson; the
philosophers Jacques Derrida, Emanuel Levinas, and Roland Barthes; and, I would
add, the semiotic logicians Paul Grice and Stephen Levinson (both of whom
influence Weiss' thesis[2]).
Grice is most well-known for his notion of "conversational implicature": that
certain speech acts are not meant to bear their surface or plain sense meaning,
but to signal another dimension of meaning to those who share the speaker's interpretive
context.
In
these terms, let us assume that, in a postmodern mode, Weiss is claiming the
following: (a) A semiotic observation: that second person address in rabbinic
prayer illustrates deixis (indexicality); (b) A semantic inference: that this
address delivers no information about the addressee other than its being there as
addressee; (c) A set of theological and epistemological inferences: that
the non-predicability of this addressee is precisely what merits its being the
object of prayer; that it is the uniquely non-predicable since it bears no knowable
attribute other than this; and that any effort to say more about this addressee
is to do it a disservice by misrepresenting it; (d) An ethical inference: that
it is good to address the object of one's prayers in this way. It is good
because it corrects one's "totalizing" tendencies (to capture others within the
finite and thus restrictive terms of ones own conceptual frameworks). And it is
good because it thereby teaches one to address other humans, as well, as You:
as those whose freedom and capacity to surprise can never be limited by one's
own prejudgment.
If
these were Weiss's postmodern claims, they would imply: (a) that rabbinic
prayer is practice and training in the fact that the one we in English call
"God" is there as the object of prayer, but also (b) that we humans have
no basis for predicating anything other than that to this addressee, so that
there is no warrant for our naming this one "God," Hashem, the Creator,
and so on, for such names bear predicative meaning; (c) that rabbinic prayer
validates the Levinasian direction in recent textual reasoning. This direction
includes:
A)
A hermeneutics of suspicion, comprised of: (1) A nominalist or skeptical
critique of any universal or necessary claims (I believe Levinas' critique of
totalizing uses of speech and language fall within these rubrics); (2) A
tendency to extend this critique to any positive (or "synthetic"[3])
claims about entities or relations other than individuals within this world of
experience or observable relations among such individuals (on the assumption
that such claims are equivalent to totalizing claims).[4]
Such claims are assumed to be both unwarranted (and thus either simply errant
or deceptive) and dangerous (since they may be adopted as conditions for
actions that are errant or deceptive); (3) A tendency to assume that all
positive theological claims fall within the category of claims subject to this
second critique and, thus, to argue that all positive theological claims are
unwarranted and potentially dangerous.
B)
A hermeneutics of retrieval, which qualifies these skeptical tendencies
by way of what we might call a pragmatic or regulative realism. According to
this sort of realism, theological claims (and perhaps others that belong to
category A-2) are warranted if and when they can be shown to bear positive
fruit when adopted strictly as regulative ideals. These are second-order claims
that do not, despite appearances, offer any empirical information about the
world of direct experience (in Kant's terms, that which is known through the
understanding). Instead, they function as pragmatic recommendations for acting
in certain ways in certain contexts of social action. Within the terms of
Weiss' thesis, for example, the daily practice of addressing "God" as You may
nurture a range of good habits among rabbinic worshippers, for example: (a)
Removing the worshipper's devotion to any idol in the sense of any finite
entity, concept, or construction (lacking predicable content, the "You" cannot
be the object of idolatry); (b) Freeing the worshipper, therefore, to encounter
everything and event in the world with less presumption about what it may be or
mean; (c) Opening the worshipper, therefore, to new or fresh observations and
relations; (d) Opening the worshipper, therefore, to encountering other human
beings (or others more generally) as comparably free from pre-definition - and,
in this sense, as images or places of the unpredictable You.
2. A
Romantically Postliberal reading of Weiss' thesis: "You" as an Opening to Cataphasis
What
if, however, Weiss' thesis is postliberal rather than postmodern? If it is a
postliberal thesis, then I think it might imply a set of claims like these:
1. A critique of circular reasoning in postmodern humanism.
Consider the claim offered in A-3 above: that predicable claims about God
are necessarily totalizing. Perhaps Weiss' thesis about the divine You would
imply that this claim is circular. The humanistic postmodernist presumes that
any locution about God (or about whatever is infinite or not limited to the
terms of human experience) is a human construct. If so, according to rule A-3,
the construct would be totalizing, since it exceeds the limits of empirical
observation. But this inference begs the question: on what ground can the
postmodernist assume that all locutions are human constructs? Such an
inference is based either on a totalizing premise (that all locutions that are
meaningful to humans must be constructed by humans) or it is simply circular
(that our vocabulary excludes the possibility of nonhuman agency);
2. The possibility of nonhuman agency. This critique
of humanistic postmodernism does not itself warrant any specific claim about
the potentially extra-human source of a given locution. It favors theology no
more than it favors, say, accounts of the utter contingency of human knowledge,
or claims that our locutions are utterly determined by evolutionary or other
forces. According to this second postliberal claim, Weiss might read the "odd
deixis of God" as training in a more radical skepticism than the humanist
allows: an openness to sources of knowledge that we may not have dreamt of. In
this case, Weiss' thesis would retain an apophasis that might still please many
postmodernists, including Levinas: that "God language" is there to undo our idolatries,
not to reintroduce any of our epistemic pretensions under the guise of "what we
know of the Infinite." Of postliberal approaches, this one would come closest
to the postmodern reading of Weiss, except in its more thoroughgoing
skepticism. We will return to that in a moment;
3. A romantic postliberalism. Postmodern critics,
however, are wont to associate "postliberalism" with a far less skeptical and
more romantic alternative. It is clear that Weiss does not pursue such a postliberalism.
Nevertheless, I want to take time to imagine what it would look like, in order
to get a clearer picture of what Weiss may be rejecting. Suppose, for the sake
of this exercise, that the "odd deixis of You" served a cataphatic function:
that the divine discourses of scripture and prayer introduce a vocabulary that
by definition exceeds the limits of human comprehension. In Charles Peirce's
logical terms, each name of God is irremediably vague. This means that each
name is a deictic sign that points directly and forcefully to the reality and
presence of God (just like Weiss' You) but also discloses something of this
God, introducing this something into our lives and understanding so that the
naming changes what we know as well as reinforcing the limited character of all
that we know.
In
the scriptural account of Exodus, for example, God discloses such names as ehyeh
imach, "I will be with you," or ehyeh asher ehyeh, "I will be what I
will be," or yhvh (the unspeakable name). In the prayer book, many other
names appear, drawn from both scriptural and latter rabbinic sources: for
example, hakadosh baruch hu, "the Holy One, blessed by He," or hamakom,
"the Place." For the romantic or cataphatic postliberal, these names all imply
the deictic You, but they are not reducible to it alone. They add bits of
information about the God and God's relation to creation and to us. Indeed, as
both postmodern and postliberal thinkers would argue, we cannot fully capture
any of this information in discrete sentences of our natural language. In Peirce's
terms again, the information is introduced vaguely. This does not mean,
however, that sentences of natural language are not useful means of delivering
this vague information to us, or clarifying or extending it; it is simply a
warning against self-satisfied or idolatrous employment of any single set of
natural language sentences or descriptions.
It
is worthwhile to learn, for example, that "God may be with me," provided I bear
in mind that the learning is never exhausted by any single take I may have on
what that phrase means. This caution is no ground for radical skepticism,
however, for it should apply as well to ways we come to know other human beings
or perhaps all other things. Say, for example, that I know you as "my friend"
or "that fast runner." Yes, these attributions are much less vague than those
we make of God, but they are vague nonetheless: we may understand them
differently at different times and, to be sure, we may have reason to change
them altogether at different times. In sum, theological language carries with
it special instructions about how to use it, and it certainly cannot be used as
if it were equivalent to any given set of natural language conventions. But
this is to say no more than that theological language is a special language, as
are the languages of mathematics, physics, and poetry, or even how to play
Monopoly. It takes education to know how to use any such language, and rules of
vagueness and probability are appropriate features of any special language. No
need, then, for radical skepticism, just for appropriate wisdom.
4. The pragmatic efficacy of divine discourse. Since
he does not take this third, cataphatic option, I must assume that Weiss might
raise some objection to it, perhaps this one: that the option is ahistorical,
offered as if in ignorance of the century we live in and of what effects
un-self-critical cataphatic theology has had on social and political life. Perhaps
Weiss would say that a postliberal option that takes vagueness seriously also
understands the context-specific meaning of any vague locution. If so, it
should comprehend its own context, and we are in a context where religious
practitioners are making egregious misuse of cataphatic language: justifying
persecutions, wars, mistreatment of persons on the basis of claims about the
context-specific meanings of this or that scriptural or doctrinal
pronouncement. Weiss may argue that he has learned enough about human
character, at least in our time, to be very wary of the optimism embedded in
a romantic postliberalism.
Perhaps,
however, Weiss would entertain another kind of cataphasis: one that included
instructions and practices for when and where to use or to avoid use of divine
names and other potentially totalizing terms. If so, this "pragmatic
cataphasis" might include the following:
A Kantian-like distinction of levels of
discourse. The first rule for a pragmatic postliberalism would be to
respect a version of Kant's over-drawn distinction between the Understanding (Verstand)
and Reason (Verstehen) as two distinct domains of knowledge and locution.
Weiss may claim that statements of empirical observation belong to one category
of locution (like the Understanding) and theological statements belong to
another (like Reason). In these terms, theological statements do not compete
with empirical claims. They describe neither "another world" that certain of us
can see and describe beyond this world, nor a set of claims that compete with
what most of us take to be empirical claims. Instead, theology offers a second-order
discourse, of which there are various kinds.
- A Lindbeckian-like notion of transformational
discourse. Without buying fully into George Lindbeck's postliberal account
of scriptural hermeneutics, a pragmatic Weiss might borrow at least this much
from Lindbeck: that scriptural and doctrinal statements about God introduce
transformational grammars that instruct us on how and when to transform the way
we use ordinary language. If Weiss were adopting this distinction, then he
might restate it in the following, pragmatic terms.
- A pragmatic account of transformational discourse. A pragmatic postliberal might characterize Lindbeck's second-order
discourse this way: that "God talk" or "divine speech" appears through our use
of natural language but not according to the grammars and rules of our natural
language use. From this perspective, God is not named, per se, in
sentences that purport to name God as we would name Sam or Sally. God is named,
rather, through the way that our use of language gets changed from its
conventional uses. This change is not seen through the semantic rules of our
everyday sentences, but that does not mean that it is invisible. It is seen
through the way certain collections of sentences (such as scripture or doctrines
and so on) instruct readers to speak and act differently than they normally do,
which includes reading these very sentences differently than they normally
would.
Where, then, are these instructions to be found? That question rings like
Job's question, "Where is wisdom to be found?" In either case, we may suppose
that "she cries in the streets
" "She cries," meaning that this instruction is
not at all mute. "She cries in the streets," suggesting that the place of
instruction is right here where we conduct our everyday affairs. But, "she
cries," suggesting that this instruction rises above the sound of our
conventional action and speech in the everyday. The question, then, is not "Where
is she to be found?" but "Who can and will hear her?" From this perspective,
scripture and related discourses offer instruction in how to be one who would
hear this very instruction.
Unless the postliberal pragmatist is also guilty of circular reasoning, the
discourse that instructs us on how to be this one must include yet
not be limited to the words of our everyday readings of scripture (and
comparable texts).
The
reader who hears this instruction (wisdom's cry[5])
would have been nurtured in a way of seeing, hearing, and living, as well as reading,
that conditions the possibility of hearing her cry. Even then, the hearing
would come only by way of a presence that is ultimately unpredictable.
Does a postliberal Weiss intend something like this pragmatically second-order
discourse? If so, is the "odd deixis" a way of turning the reader's attention
away from the conventional grammars and vocabularies of scripture and prayer to
one that speaks to the wisdom that is now "to be found?" If so, then we should
no longer be satisfied with any stark dichotomy of choices regarding how to
interpret God's You: neither a skeptical postmodernism (with its apophasis) nor
a romantic postliberalism (with its cataphasis) will suffice to capture the
instructional and transformational force of the divine You. This force must
propel the reader into some additional realm of discourse, community, tradition,
language, and action in which, alone, wisdom's cry is heard. Once propelled by
this force, the terms of discussion may no longer be what they were a moment
before. Is God named or not named? Perhaps that is a question we ask only
before being propelled by this force. And after? Perhaps a wholly different
set of questions arise.
3. Conclusion: The Pragmatics of You
What
lessons shall we learn from this exercise? Weiss' sensitivity to the
indexicality and thus the pragmatic force of You suggests that he would also
expect us to respect the epistemic vagueness of his thesis as a whole: that it
should speak in somewhat different ways to somewhat different contexts of
reading. I believe we have seen that several different postmodern and postliberal
options may be consistent with his thesis. At the moment, I am most warmed to
the following reading: that the You of rabbinic prayer marks the performative
character of our relation to the One to whom we pray:
That, as Martin Buber has taught so clearly, to
utter any of the Hebrew names of God is at once to perform an action and to be
acted upon. It is to address an Other, using whatever language suits you to say
that this Other "is there," present before you. This is, moreover, not just any
other but what we might call the Other of any possible other and, yet, it is no
abstraction, but right there before you, over against you.
It is to be called to action. To utter such a name
is, despite the obvious fact of your own willing participation in the act, not
wholly an act of your own doing. This is the claim that exceeds the circularity
of any strictly humanistic postmodernism: that it is indeed possible (it is not
illogical to claim that) my speech is not wholly my own. Either this is the
case in general, and speaking the divine name is a prototype and instruction in
what is generally true; or this is what it means to utter the divine name. It
means that when I utter it I am addressing You; whether or not I intend to do
so, by uttering Your Name I in fact address You. This possibility is also the
possibility of transformational action. In ordinary language use, we assume
that we say what we mean to say, or at least we try to do so. But to say that
uttering the divine name is addressing You is also to say that it is a speech
act that transforms the human speaker into one who both speaks and is spoken
to, both wills speech and discovers that the speech enacts another's will. In
Abraham Heschel's phrase, it is to perform the fact that "I am what is not mine."
Heschel's phrase suggests the additional possibility that this speech act may
not transform the self into something other as much as return the self to the
one to whom it had always belonged - and from which, at some point and for some
reason, it had lost its place.
To address You is to mark all this speech that
addresses You (all this prayer) as bearing context-specific meaning. It is not
just any talk, but talk that takes place here in the way I am now, in this
history and space-time. But it is also about You who is not just you in
general, some this or that, some name for God in general, but this You who is
here now in this particular way and exerts this real force in relation to me.
The nakedness of the deictic signifier is thus, paradoxically, a sign of the
full or utter presence of its object. That is, after all, the meaning of
deictic signs: that they cannot be read apart from the immediate context in
which they are offered, so that, if they have meaning, the object of meaning is
right there.[6]
In these terms, the You is, in a sense, no mark of apophasis but a mark of the
utter density of Your presence.
Finally, the context-specificity of You means that
the speech act is not offered alone but in the specific context of the rules of
speech, habits, traditions, communities, memory and grammar that accompanies
this act and that enables this encounter with the utterly other and unknown to
be addressed in our language.
Notes
[1] Peirce writes, "Mr. Mitchell also
has a very interesting and instructive extension of his notation for some and
all . . . to the logic of relatives," Collected Papers of Charles Sanders
Peirce, eds. Charles Harteshorne and Paul Weiss (Cambridge, Mass., 1934,5:
3.393). Behind this quote is Mitchell's notion of indexicality as applied to
the meaning of demonstratives and of what we mean by "some."
[2] Weiss cites Stephen C. Levinson, Pragmatics
(Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1983) and draws also on H.
Paul Grice, Studies in the Way of Words (Cambridge, Mass: Harvard
University Press, 1989).
[4] Among proponents of this postmodern
argument are Edith Wyschogrod, Gilles Deleuze, Francois Lyotard, Michel
Foucault.
[5] See David Ford's theory of "the
cry," in Christian Wisdom: Desiring God and Learning in Love (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007).
[6] Thanks to Emily S. Kempson for
pointing out the force of this last point. And thanks to Ms. Kempson and to
Kate Vasiloff for editorial help in this paper as a whole.
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