Paul Ricoeur, one of
the best French living philosophers, talks with Gabriel Marcel,
who has been one of his masters, and we have here six conversations
which make up a philosophical itinerary of sorts, travelling from
the ontological side to the existential, dramatic and ethical
one, together with their common points.
The First Talk deals with the formative years, in relation
with the two parts of the Journal métaphysique (Metaphysical
Diary). The first part, very dialectical in form, was written
in 1914 ; Marcel wrestles with dialectics and stubbornness, "
but with the very means of that system ". The second one (1915-1923)
culminates in the essay Existence et objectivité, in which
Marcel analyses sensation and the " proper body ", thus laying
the foundations of what Merleau-Ponty and others would later call
the " Phenomenology of Perception ". Here Marcel honestly acknowledges
his debt to Claudel and his Art poétique.
Starting from 1933, why does the question of being replace the
question of existence ? asks Paul Ricoeur at the beginning of
the Second Talk. Gabriel Marcel explains that this came
to be first because of his own education in idealism, then, more
deeply, with a more precise examination of perception itself,
when he came to wonder " what we mean to say when we talk about
Being, what is our purpose ". The notion of " exigence
ontologique ", which is dealt with in Position et approches
du mystère ontologique (1933), is rooted in a polemic way
in the refusal of a world " in which man is merely treated
as a bundle of functions ", in the name of an aspiration "
which carries us towards a plenitude, that is, something which
goes wholly against " the functional and abstract determinations
of a world which is more and more technicalized.
The Third Talk deals with the vital link between theater
and philosophy in Gabriel Marcel's work. Among other remarks on
the dramatic nature of his philosophy, his desire to render towards
human beings a providential conciliation of points of view, the
attraction of the Christian ethics of non-judgment, and the frequent
anticipation of the dramatic work on the philosophical work (the
first one remaining wholly autonomous from the second), Marcel
draws an interesting link with the Kierkegaardian method of "
indirect communication ".
In the Fourth Talk the two philosophers first try to bring
into light the relations between Marcel's philosophy and Christianity.
Starting with Marcel's statement that he's always considered himself
" a philosopher of the threshold " - leaning against the
Christian religion but never ceasing to talk with non-believers
- Paul Ricoeur brings Jaspers into the dialogue, and Heidegger,
with whom Marcel notes a deep agreement regarding " the sacred
sense of Being " and the " conviction that Being is a sacred
reality ".
The Fifth Talk deals with the question of the philosopher's
presence in society and political commitment. Marcel sees two
sorts of commitment : a partisan commitment that goes
against
" everything human in man " and which is thus unacceptable
; a fundamental commitment in " the structural conditions of
personal existence ". The philosopher is fully concerned with
this second commitment, for he must " take up a truly militant
stand " everytime he witnesses an attack against the dignity
of Being in both human and sacred presence. Here we have an ontology
which is both the source and the foundation of political commitment.
Now the two philosophers had to consider, in a Last Talk,
" the living unity that binds all themes " in Marcel's
work, which can suitably be qualified as " socratisme chrétien
" (Christian Socratism), as did Xavier Tilliette. Christian
socratism indeed, insisting on humility, the call upon Grace,
the paramount importance of the Théologales (fidelity,
hope, and agapè) ; a genuinely socratic work, too, in which
the theme of man's " journeying " plays such an essential part.
This philosophy in which we find a recurring conflict between
" a metaphysics of light and a sociology of darkness "
(Paul Ricoeur) is not a skeptical one : " It is a search that moves about tentatively, but a search in which one doesn't shut
out the light when one sees it. " Here is the true meaning
of the Christian call upon Grace, which has nothing to do with
an undue objectivation which would make it " the engine of
a pseudo knowledge ".
It would be unfair to say that this slim volume brings us major
revelations, but starting from page one in the spirit of exploration,
it provides a welcome recapitulation of Marcel's thought. We can
be grateful for Paul Ricoeur's unobtrusive intelligence and for
the masterly way he conducts these talks.
Michel Sales
Présence de Gabriel Marcel