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L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal It may come as a surprise to you to find that a serious consideration of the notion “bullshit” takes us headlong into a shockingly revealing understanding of our selves and the communication environment we inhabit. It may be your first reaction to downplay the topic of “bullshit” as not terribly important, possibly a prank, pointing to what we generally disdain and turn away from without much thought. Or, given that this is a proposal for academic study, it may even be read as a criticism of the academic world, the very act of applying for financial support to study bullshit, not the topic “bullshit” but “the usual academic stuff” as seen by those who see L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal academic stuff as bullshit. But Princeton University’s professor of philosophy, Harry G. Frankfurt’s 2005 little book titled, On Bullshit, set in motion a closer look. No doubt Frankfurt’s lofty station in life and record of serious academic work helped to get our attention on the topic. A number of thinkers have seen the topic as particularly apropos to today’s world, connecting it to reasons for war, a proliferation of fraud and deception, new technologies allowing for the manipulation of photographs and documents, scandals involving the church and the financial industry, corporate pronouncements of sincerity (“your call is important to us”), titans of the entertainment L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal world, politicians, much of what passes in the classroom as discussion, on and on. Bullshit has been found even in the halls of science, a culture respected for attempting to consciously keep out its own bullshit. Some have referred to current times as “an age of bullshit” (Reisch & Hardcastle, 2006). Many folks have given up the hope of simple, authentic talk. Some might write off the idea of paying any serious attention to bullshit, keeping with the idea that it is what we disdain, what we commonly experience and see it for what it is, bullshit. But this may turn out to be the most serious harm L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal done by bullshit, our casual acceptance of it, our thinking that it does not matter. Some scholars have taken the position that the pervasiveness of bullshit and our casual acceptance of it does matter. That in fact, this state of affairs points to the heart of bullshit, and that is that it engages our values of what does matter. Some have written that bullshit calls into question our valuing truth or not valuing truth. It may point to other values simultaneously, impression formation, profit, success, even politeness. Ever since Frankfurt’s seminal work on the topic, philosophers have been debating the question of L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal whether or not bullshitting is concerned with the truth or not. What we hope to discover is a somewhat different take on the matter by introducing communication and discourse analysis theory. We suspect that bullshit needs to be understood as a transaction, as a communication event will all that entails, intentions, expectations, multiple meanings, a history, relationships and not simply as a text. Under this theoretical perspective it is entirely likely that bullshit is about the truth at one level and falsehoods at another. L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal What we suspect is that an exploration of bullshit will benefit greatly from both a serious philosophical, conceptual analysis of what it is and also from a communication theory point of view. What is meant by this is that bullshit appears to operate as indirect speech acts. It functions at more than one level simultaneously. Bullshit, we hypothesize, functions at the level of direct content and underlying relational messages, underlying value messages. There is a tension between these levels and messages. To offer a simple example, a bullshit response to a student’s poorly facilitated discussion may be something like, “great job.” We may know this is not true but L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal it serves the underlying task of being supportive. One can see a tug of war already in values attached to this example. What we propose to do in this study is to spend a good deal of time reading and analyzing the literature on bullshit, which includes works such as Frankfurt’s book, a collection of philosophers reacting to Frankfurt’s book and numerous others who have written about the large field of related topics, face saving behavior, news, politics, corporate behavior, arguments over climate change, guns and so on. Once we are familiar with the variety of aspects discussed about bullshit, we L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal plan to explore the attitudes of our peers to see where they stand on such questions as how much bullshit they perceive around them, in what areas of life, compared to the past, and reasons for bullshit. Going back to our hypothesis, we wish to explore the contention that bullshit typically operates at more than one level simultaneously. We offer survey participants an example or two to see if they see a multiplicity of messages in the bullshit transaction. While philosophers have shown some interest in bullshit, and in fact some have pointed out that that is exactly what philosophy has focused on and L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal fought for centuries, what we propose to bring to our analysis is a theoretic framework that focuses on human communication. Bullshit afterall, is not an entity that exists in a vacuum. It is a communication exchange with all that goes into a communication event. A communication perspective promises to shine a great deal of light upon this exchange. Some of this framework comes from communication theory and some more broadly from discourse analysis (Tracy, 2002). For instance, we can draw upon Baxter and Montgomery’s Relational Dialectics (1997), which helps us see the flux in our exchanges, the moment to moment push and pull as we take up L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal stances that contradict one another in underlying dimensions of things like closeness and distance. Face work points to our concern for maintaining our own and the other’s identity. Discourse analysis has shown us that messages draw their meaning from many sources simultaneously, semantics, culture, relationship and context more generally. What this framework encourages is an analysis that considers multiple objectives in the exchange, both for the sender and the receiver. It allows us to see contradictions and how they are resolved and maybe opens the door to considering our valuing truth, politeness, success and so on. It L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal also holds out the possibility of exploring gender differences in perceptions of bullshit. Finally, we expect to interact with the literature and with our findings and to flexibly navigate through this investigation as we learn our way along. One final thought. Some of us have trouble with small talk. “How you doing?” “Nice day.” “Gee, you are up and out early.” One possible reason for this is that small talk may be a good example of the tug of war between different levels of meaning in an exchange. If one values and focused on the L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal relational meanings, then small talk is to be valued. If stated the truth and only what is necessary is foremost, then small talk may be hard to do. Just a thought. Have a nice day, however you decide on our proposal! L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal References Leslie A. Baxter and Barbara M. Montgomery, “Rethinking Communication in Personal Relationships from a Dialectical Perspective,” in A Handbook of Personal Relationships, 2nd ed., Steve Duck (ed.), John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1997, pp. 325-349. Frankfurt, H. G. (2005). On Bullshit. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. L. Shedletsky and T. Sprague April, 2015 UROP Proposal Reisch, G. A. & Hardcastle (2006). On Bullshitmania. In Geroge Reisch & Gary Hardcastle, Bullshit and Philosophy, Chicago: Open Court. Tracy, K. (2002). Everyday Talk: Building and Reflecting Identities. New York: The Guilford Press.