2018, Metapsychology Online Reviews
Nicholas Maxwell is not afraid of big ideas. As the title suggests, this book covers several sweeping topics: aside from those in the title, Maxwell discusses the methodology of social science, interdisciplinarity, quantum mechanics, and more besides. Given the 325-page word-length, this scope inevitably means that the ideas and arguments are frequently underdeveloped. However, despite this proportion of pages to topics, Maxwell's book is clear, accessible, and (most importantly) thought-provoking. It is hard to place a book with such scope into context, but Maxwell's basic philosophical project is simple. Karl Popper's methodology of falsificationism, which was an attempt to analyse the scientific method as a combination of deductive logic and convention, was once a prominent force, but it is out-of-favour today among philosophers. Maxwell presents a modified version of Popper's methodology and applies it to a tremendous range of issues about science and human knowledge. Chapter 1 is a critical exposition of Popper's overall thought, which is notable for breadth, clarity, and accessibility. I have not encountered a definitely superior brief overview of this topic. Maxwell's own methodology of science is advocated in Chapters 2 and 5. In Chapters 4, 6, and 7, he analyses theoretical simplicity, theoretical beauty, and inductive reasoning. In Chapters 3 and 8, he focuses on some specific issues in the history and philosophy of physics. Chapters 9 and 10 shine most brightly. Firstly, Maxwell offers a fiery defence of what he calls 'universalism'-the view that there are questions of universal importance for all human beings, such as 'How do we fit into the world?' and 'How can we improve the world?' He argues that answering these questions is the basic task of intellectual inquiry (though not the sole task) and criticises 'specialism', which is the view that discipline-specific questions are the only intellectual questions worth pursuing. According to Maxwell, contemporary academia is dominated by specialism, and despite recent moves towards interdisciplinarity, almost all academics demur from the big questions. Maxwell does not comment on one of this position's most refreshing features: the notion that there are questions that transcend the political and social issues of the day; questions that were as relevant in the times and places of Socrates or Confucius as they are today; and questions that are fundamentally about what is true rather than what is expedient. Unfortunately, despite his passion and clarity, Maxwell fails to tackle most of the deeper reasons for specialism's popularity among academics (and, perhaps more significantly, administrators). Pragmatists, post-modernists, Marxists, and many others have persuasive arguments why these 'universal' questions have only ephemeral and local value. The politicisation of universities encourages the minds of academics towards the next election or educating the next generation of decision-makers, rather than the (superficially!) abstract basic questions, and there are arguments for this politicisation. I do not think that the