Brook Sadler
Technique 1
Begin by making a spurious distinction. Befuddle the reader with your
analytic wizardry. The reader will enter a logical trance, from which she will be
unable to recall the initial spurious distinction and will feel strangely compelled to
accept your conclusions.
Technique 2
Think of a matter of great importance to life. Reduce it unequivocally
to three concepts. Enumerate them. Analyze each concept by
distinguishing two independent notions in each.
Continue with further analysis (preferably speculative) until you have developed
a maze of distinctions that bear no resemblance to any topic of any
importance to life at all. The use of logical notation at this point will evoke
deep feelings of insecurity and uncertainty in the reader - use this to your
advantage. Use the word reductio at least once.
Conclude by congratulating yourself on having advanced our collective human
understanding of a topic of great importance by making it completely
unrecognisable as such.
Technique 3 (Advanced)
Sit in front of a computer. Have a thesaurus nearby. Smoke up. Proceed
to pronounce on anything that happens to come to mind. Use a tone that is
urgent and highfalutin. Avoid the use of punctuation and use periods as
infrequently as possible. French and German phrases should appear with
regularity. When in doubt, make hasty references to Foucault, Heidegger, or Derrida.
Take great pains not to explain what you mean. Abandon all reason.
Technique 4
Single-handedly develop your own jargon. It should include an
exceedingly hard-to-follow extended metaphor of dubious relation to the
topic under discussion. Persist in using the metaphor to ground your
arguments. Stick to it at all costs, even if it
seems to run your argument into blatant dead-ends or outrageous
contradictions. To give the appearance of profundity, insert paragraph breaks at
random. Then number every paragraph. (The reader will simply divine the
appropriate relations between paragraphs, sub-paragraphs, and
sub-sub-paragraphs.)
Technique 5
Think of a famous example from a twentieth-century philosopher.
Think
of a pun based on that example. (e.g., What is it like to be a rat? zit? phat?)
Use the pun to develop a catchy new example of your own. Explain your
example at length. Say nothing of genuine importance. By all means, do not
advance philosophical discussion one iota. Conclude with more puns.
Technique 6
Respond to an article or book that you have not read. Be relentless.
Technique 7
Read an enormous mass of empirical data. Cite all of it and conclude
that it is right. Overlook statistical ambiguities and incongruities.
By all means, do not deign to interpret the data. Continue on like
this for as long as you can (it may require stamina). The goal is
to bore the reader into submission before the flood of facts. Try
not to problematise anything (that only makes it harder).
Technique 8
Do some serious research. Do not rest until you have found a really
obscure text. Reject this text. Continue to search until you find something
truly obscure and completely unknown. In your
first paragraph, state something of interest that you have discovered from
reading this obscure text. Go on for many, many pages detailing the seemingly trivial
and inconsequential insights of the obscure text. Repeatedly affirm what you
said was interesting in the first paragraph, taking care not to expand upon
what you said there. Conclude by reminding the reader that the point is so
terribly obscure and so minimally interesting that if you had not written about it,
no one would have.
Technique 9
Discuss a controversial and extremely interesting topic. Show great skill in
handling the complexities of the topic, treating the arguments with care
and subtle attention to important details and distinctions. Carefully trace out
the implications of the different positions. But (and this is the hard part) refuse
to be identified with any of the available philosophical positions. In fact, it is
best never to let on that you have an opinion of your own. Always seek to evade
the possibility that someone might reference your argument as
your actual view. Use the elusive phrase 'One might
argue' as often as possible to escape detection as a philosopher who is
committed to something ... to anything.
Technique 10
Spend some time - one or two seconds - concocting the most outrageous ethical
conundrum possible. It should involve Nazis in some way. For example:
What should person B do if confronted by person A, disguised as
a Nazi, but not really currently a Nazi, but who used to be a Nazi,
and who is threatening to kill B, who does not know whether A is
or ever was a Nazi, and who is known as having a penchant for torturing
small children, though only Nazi children, just for fun, but who
has a special relationship with A's child, who is not a Nazi, but
who will enlist in the Nazi party if A harms B in any way or if
B lies about his/her penchant for torturing Nazi children? Just
when you think that the conundrum is complete, add in the possibility
of saving one's wife from a dire predicament, just to throw off
the reader's intuitions.
Technique 11
Using a style that is lively and congenial, make a promissory note. Say a
bit. Make another promissory note. Say a
bit more. Make another promissory note. Say a bit less. (You should be
getting tired about now.) Say something - anything at all. Don't worry about
relevance - that's overrated. Make a point about something wholly beside
the point. Promise to return to the initial topic. Do not fulfill any of the
promissory notes. End with a promise to take up another topic in a future paper.
(An existent unpublished paper will do at a pinch.)
Technique 12
Set out not to solve any problems. Do this in spades.
Note
Naturally, these techniques are not recommended for amateur use
and should not be attempted without the supervision of a full professor.
These philosophical techniques are for use only by professional
philosophers who have had years of specialised training. The author
is not responsible for any non-sequiturs, invalid arguments, fallacies,
digressions, existential malaise, mid-life crises, or career changes
that may result from the use of these techniques. Anyone who feels
chest pain, constriction in the throat, reddening of the face, or
clenching of the fists upon reading these techniques should be treated
immediately for anautoscopsis (an inability to laugh at oneself),
a potentially lethal condition.