The Philosophy that I Liked to Teach (2)

By Erasmo Calzadilla

I understood that rebelliousness and all that Marx stuff against alienation were very similar to my way of understanding philosophy now. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

Since I first became interested in philosophy, its sense and meaning have changed several times for me; which of course is what should happen when one keeps on thinking.

That’s why it’s hard for me in my classes to repeat, and make students repeat, a pre-designed and poorly explained philosophical concept: the perfect procedure to create the zombies I don’t want to create.

What to do then? In a conversation I had some time ago with the teacher who served as the expert witness in my suit against the university that fired me, and a person who accused me of being rightwing, recognizing my unconformity, he didn’t hesitate to suggest, “If you don’t like it, leave. If you signed a contract saying that this is what you are going to teach, that’s exactly what you should do. That is what they are paying you for.”

What to do then? Withdraw from the fight and devote myself to less complicated matters? At the time, I decided to wait until the teachers were called to reanalyze the study program. I was hopeful that the struggle could be carried out from the inside. How naïve I was, such a moment never came and as I see it, never will.

As a result, I became a good contortionist trying to make my ideas fit into the tight framework provided by the program. At the beginning, it was disastrous; but then I began to learn how to do my work.

I understood that rebelliousness and all that Marx stuff against alienation were very similar to my way of understanding philosophy now. I even believed that, donned in such a helmet, I would be protected against smacks to the head, but I was wrong.

Recent Posts

Havana Weather for May 2 to 8

Highs will be between 30 and 32°C (86 and 90 F) and Lows between 21…

Dave Valentin – Song of the Day

Today’s featured artist is Dave Valentin from the US with the song “Cinnamon and Clove”…

Maykel Osorbo: “They’ll Have to Kill Me Looking Straight at Me”

"You are all to blame right now in the eyes of the world, for participating…

In order to improve navigation and features, Havana Times uses cookies.