Introduction
âNo one has ever doubted that truth and politics are on rather bad terms with each other, and no one, as far as I know, has ever counted truthfulness among the political virtuesâ (Arendt 1967: 295).
In spite of the success of such âcommonplaceâ mentioned by Hannah Arendt at the very beginning of her reflections on Truth and Politics, in 21st century contemporary democracies truth, lies, and political opinions are very intertwined concepts. Expressions like âpost-truth politicsâ and âfake newsâ by now entered the vocabulary of politics, and they are employed more and more to describe relevant dynamics of the contemporary political discourse.
We live in times when it is not easy at all to distinguish between facts, mystification of facts âwhich contain some truths well-mingled with a high dose of distorted information â blatant lies, and political opinions. While reading the newspaper or scrolling through the social media newsfeeds of politicians directly speaking to âthe peopleâ through Facebook live videos â a habit which became particularly massive during the recent outbreak of Covid-19, when Facebook live-streaming in some countries replaced the usual institutional broadcasting on national television â we sometimes feel outraged as we spot blatant lies or traces of wisely hidden truths in political speeches (or tweets), or when we witness political leaders endorse information soon after unveiled as fake news.
Sharing Arendtâs view that philosophy can help us to understand reality and to reconcile ourselves with the world we live in (Arendt 1994: 308), this chapter will consider relevant concepts and paradigms elaborated in Arendtâs works, which have been at the centre of modern and contemporary Western political thought even beyond Arendt. This conceptual toolbox purposely would help to clarify the relation between (the different kinds of) truth, (the different kinds of) lying, and politics in contemporary democracies.
Contextualising Arendt: On truth and politics in Western philosophy
In order to examine the relationship between truth and politics, we move from Arendtâs distinction between different kinds of truth and even different degrees of lying. Identifying which truths possess a political value of some sort presupposes pondering even more basic questions that philosophers well before Arendt have tried to respond to: does truth exist as such? In case it exists, is it intelligible? And when it is not, is it dispensable? Can we talk about any knowledge at all beyond objective truths? Which kinds of truths are at odds with democracy and which are necessary for its wellbeing?
The many different answers to these questions gave rise to different approaches to science, philosophy, and political theory. The discussions concerning whether truth can be deemed to exist as such and whether, in that case, it would be accessible to human knowledge are indeed deeply intertwined with the epistemological question of whether natural or philosophical truths could â and/or should â constitute the ultimate object of philosophical or scientific research and of the appropriateness of such pursuit as the qualifying characteristic of science.
While pre-Socratic philosophers looked for the ultimate principle of natural reality, thereafter, spanning from the Cave in Platoâs myth to Schopenhauerâs Veil of Maya (Schopenhauer 1995) and through Kantâs Critiques, the idea that objective truth and the representation of reality by human beings, as a subjective perception or interpretation, may be two different things deeply affected the evolution of philosophical thought, and that of political theory.1
In the 18th century, Immanuel Kant shifted the focus of philosophical research from objective truth, as the study of an outer object, to the subject of knowledge and thus to human rationality, morality, and judgment (Kant 2007a; 2007b; 2012), to explore the way in which we, as human beings, perceive ourselves and the outer world. This brief premise shows the relevance of the subject we are treating in all the philosophical production; a philosophical production that our examination has not the ambition to analyse thoroughly but that constitutes the humus in which Arendtâs reflections on truth and politics â and contemporary further explorations â could emerge.
In order to contextualise Arendtâs definition of truth and truths and their relationship with democratic politics, we adopt the distinction drawn by Antonella Besussi (2013; 2015) in her work devoted to the concept of truth in contemporary political philosophy. Besussi usefully distinguishes between those political theories suggesting a banalisation of the relationship between truth and politics and those tending towards a dramatisation: it is in this second group that we find Arendt.
The perspective of those allegedly banalising such relation is quite clear-cut in its premises: according to these thinkers, there is no objective truth at all to be found out beyond our subjective interpretations. To bring this belief to its extreme would mean to say that there is no such thing as objective facts: subjective interpretations of reality are all we have. We can ponder whether it is convenient or not to attribute to our subjective interpretations of the world the characteristics of truth, that is to present them as undisputable. As an objective truth does not exist, to attribute the quality of truth to our subjective interpretations of the world will thus be a decision that we will take considering what truth does rather than what it is,2 in a consequentialist perspective.
On the other hand, political theorists who dramatise the relationship between truth and politics are not expressly excluding the possibility that an objective truth does exist. Facts do exist. What they point out is rather that, for different reasons, there is an incompatibility between truth and politics, supporting the idea that truth has no place in the political democratic realm, at least in ordinary circumstances. Such dramatisation, in Besussiâs taxonomy, assumed two different forms. The former is that of a ârealistic conception of truthâ.3 In this view, truth does not concern politics in as far as the objective of democratic politics is not to ascertain which human representation of reality does correspond to truth.
More specifically, politics should deliberate which principles a specific society gives priority to in a specific moment of its history, among those embodied in the programmes and policies proposed by the different competing political parties. These philosophers accept that individuals and groups can believe in comprehensive paradigms that give rise to the principles they support within the democratic competition, but once such principles enter the realm of democratic politics they become just alternative policies competing for consensus. As Norberto Bobbio would say, the discourse over the foundations of such principles is left outside the political arena which is just concerned about their possibility to be agreed on (Bobbio 1997).
Quite differently, Hannah Arendt endorses, similarly to John Rawls, a âvalue-based conception of truthâ by refusing to recognise truth as an absolute standard in the public sphere, from an anti-authoritarian stance. In Rawlsâ Political Liberalism (Rawls 2005), the principles of justice of a well-ordered society are proposed not because they are the true right principles per se, but because they are the ones that supposedly would be agreed on by individuals finding themselves in an ideal original position. The overlapping consensus is their source of legitimacy, and thus they are political principles, not moral ones. The function used by Rawls to identify them is political consensus, not truth, even if the first is conceived in an abstract way by means of a mental experiment. To accept truth within the well-ordered society would make the overlapping consensus impossible, as truth accepts no compromise.
Such incompatibility between truth and democratic compromise is strongly perceived by Arendt as well: this is the element that will bring her in going deep in elaborating the taxonomy of truth, truths, and lying which we think does constitute a particularly useful conceptual tool for contemporary reflections. We will examine Arendtâs conceptualisation thoroughly in our next section, mainly referring to her works on Truth and Politics (Arendt 1967) and Lying in Politics (Arendt 1969) but having in mind her much wider philosophical production.
Factual truths, philosophical truths, and lying in politics: Arendt's perspective
In her reflection on Truth and Politics, Arendt (1967) distinguishes between factual truths (facts, events) and rational truths (e.g. mathematical, scientific and philosophical truths) to specify the different relations they have with the political debate in a plural society and to investigate the consequences of their negation or mystification.
In Arendtâs definition, factual truths are just factual statements which describe facts and events: with reasonable approximation â an approximation justified by common sense, a crucial concept in Arendtâs discourse (Arendt 1982) â to say âIt rainsâ, when it is actually raining, is a factual truth. Rational truths (a category which also includes philosophical and religious truths) are instead expressed in the form of statements like âtwo plus two is fourâ or âGod existsâ.
What they both have in common is that they imply an element of coercion:
Statements such as âThe three angles of a triangle are equal to two angles of a square,â âThe earth moves around the sun,â âIt is better to suffer wrong than to do wrongâ, âIn August 1914 Germany invaded Belgiumâ are very different in the way they are arrived at, but, once perceived as true and pronounced to be so, they have in common that they are beyond agreement, dispute, opinion, or consent
(Arendt 1982: 302).
In Arendtâs view, any truth is coercive because it is beyond agreement, dispute, opinion, or consent, which are precisely those elements that, as we found in Rawls, make the democratic politics of the overlapping consensus possible. In this being undisputable and non-negotiable, truth is intrinsically anti-democratic. Yet, the distinction between factual truths and rational ones is crucial.
Factual truths, while being at odds with the political debate, are necessary for the exercise of democratic power in a plural society. Also, this is the category which acquires critical relevance today with reference to the problem of fake news: it is factual truths that fake news denies On the contrary, according to Arendt, rational truths are both generally at odds with the political debate and also at odds with the exercise of democratic power in a plural society: as truth is not democratic, it does not allow for the plurality of opinions which is the essential nourishment of democracy.
The content of rational truths can be admitted to the public sphere of democratic politics only in the form of a mere opinion among other opinions, which does not carry with its coercive value of truthfulness, and as long as it accepts to give up such claim for truthfulness. For instance, a political party can inform its action to religious values but it cannot do so by presenting its policies as the only true actions to take. Such religious values can enter the political arena just as opinions.
On the other hand, factual truths, while being at odds with the political debate in their being uncontroversial, are not only totally compatible with democratic politics but even necessary for it. While this can appear contradictory, it works if we accept that facts belong to another dimension, which is placed underneath that of politics itself. âFacts and events [. . .] constitute the very texture of the political realmâ (ibid.: 297), they are the ground political opinions can be built upon. If we do not agree on the facts at hand, we cannot appropriately start any discussion about how to deal with them, exchanging our opinions on the issue.
While science and philosophy are the dimension of rational truths, politics is thus the realm of opinions, which is grounded on an underlying layer of factual truths. This ground is solid as long as it is not put into question, as long as its validity is not doubted. When facts are not universally recognised and their truthfulness is put into question, when the question âIs it really true that itâs raining?â is asked, deliberate lying can make its appearance in the public discourse and the ground which the political discourse is built upon, âthe ground on which we stand and the sky that stretches above usâ (ibid.: 313) starts shaking.