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Surfing with Sartre Page 2


  Sartre himself was a Marxist-socialist whose sympathies lay with the experiments in communism of his era. But the being-as-work idea was already well rooted across capitalist societies such as America, Canada, and Germany and remains with us today. One’s identity, the product of one’s self-creative work, is defined by what others will pay for one’s time and talent from their own hard-earned money. We largely let the market decide how much we contribute to society, who can fairly claim public benefits, and how we appear in the eyes of others, and so to ourselves. Yes, the forty-hour workweek does afford a measure of free time, but as a strategy for optimizing productivity. Leisure’s job is to “recharge the batteries” for work in our primary market occupations, the true source of our meaning. Time for being in leisure and lazing and relaxing and loafing and surfing is time for recreation rather than vocation.

  The Protestant work ethic did nurture early capitalism,*5 and without the rising wealth of nations the leisure revolution would never have begun. For that the surfer owes a historical debt of gratitude. That isn’t to say the ethic is part of our very being, instead of a way of getting rich so as to free up time for activities other than work. Now that advanced countries are rich, could the old ethic be out of date? Surfers aren’t exactly known for knowing things. Yet it could be—it isn’t impossible—that they’re on the right side of history.

  That, anyway, is this book’s main thesis: what the surfer knows, in knowing how to ride a wave, bears on questions for the ages—about freedom, control, happiness, society, our relation to nature, the value of work, and the very meaning of life. The surfer’s answers to these questions suggest how we might adapt on a changing planet, given an unprecedented transformation in the human condition as our planet steadily warms. It’s a utopian thought at the moment, as were most of the humane changes in our working conditions at one time. But this is what’s great about philosophy: we can have such thoughts. We liberate ourselves from the daily machinations of politics, by looking beyond.

  I realize all this might sound like some mash-up of surf camp musings and philosophical blathering in a Paris café. Be assured, the surfer offers fresh insight. Indeed, Jean-Paul Sartre, the prolific, incisive, provocative, chain-smoking existentialist philosopher, is my main intellectual opponent throughout this book. If I could chat with him about our twenty-first-century predicament in view of questions for the ages, I’d make my case that the surfer’s knowledge undermines central tenets of his philosophy. Sartre brought deep questions about the human condition before us. He also left us in a bleak existential predicament. In searching for an exit, the surfer shows a way into the sunlight, a hopeful view of history, and intellectual permission for a more exuberant conception of being.

  * * *

  *1 Of a sorrowful man who brings himself to help others “without any inclination at all, but solely from duty,” Kant says here “for the first time his action has genuine moral worth” in comparison to a sympathetic person who just wants to help others. Here Kant surely overstated the point. But if working solely from duty is at least especially praiseworthy, the begrudging surfer would still get kudos. Groundwork for the Metaphysics of Morals (1785), sec. 1, at 398, or p. 11 in Ethical Philosophy (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1983).

  *2 In high school, surfer boys often compare the tube ride with sexual intercourse, noting any number of structural isomorphisms. They debate the relative merits as though they have to choose between them. Surfer girls aren’t as impressed with the vague similarity.

  *3 Behold this truly epic tube clip of Koa Smith at Skeleton Bay, Namibia: https://www.youtube.com/​watch?v=LG9ei558NEA.

  *4 Each chapter of the book is relatively self-contained, so the short-attention-span reader can skip around among the different topics, following his or her curiosity, going with the attentional flow, circling back to earlier or later themes as connections become apparent.

  *5 Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism, trans. Talcott Parsons (New York: Charles Scribner’s Sons, 1958).

  Part One

  Epistemology in Action

  1

  What the Surfer Knows

  A person who has a good nose for arguments or jokes may have a bad head for facts.

  —Gilbert Ryle, The Concept of Mind

  A WAVE RISES FROM the deep, and a surfer surfs it, being carried along by the wave’s natural momentum.

  When an ocean swell is mounting over shallowing sand or reef, its wave face will steepen and crest and then plunge into the wave trough. If the wave is any good for surfing, a sloping shoulder will pull up into the cresting curl, and a moving wave face will run along the beach, tracking the contours of sand or rock below. Assuming one is up and riding (no easy feat, and I’ll come back to tips for beginners momentarily), the surfer glides along the wave face, in or around the wave’s breaking curl. Then a lot of different things might happen. The wave may shift. Or shoulder. Or wall up. Or race along. Or tube.

  Whatever is happening, the surfer has to sense it and adapt. The surfer has to sense what next moment is approaching and adjust as the coming moment asks, before the wave’s curl passes one by.

  They say it’s good to “go with the flow,” in walking a city street, in a work project, in the day’s tasks, and as a general way to live, with less anxiety, less striving, and a certain graceful success. “Going with the flow” is a pleasing metaphor for something—but what? The surfer literally goes along with a flowing natural phenomenon, often on a daily basis, in a way of life devoted to just that activity. So if we wanted a better sense of what truth lies behind the metaphor, we could do worse than look to what the surfer knows.

  How to Surf

  As an ocean swell approaches, mounting over shallow reef or sand, you’ll want to catch it before the wave face peaks and pitches. With careful positioning, you paddle yourself under the vaulting peak, so as to be caught up and carried along by the wave’s natural momentum. Then quickly move to your feet, pushing yourself up, pulling your body into a sideways upright posture, all while keeping a crouch and low center of gravity.

  As you drop into the wave’s quickly steepening face, suddenly picking up speed, you can start sensing how the wave might develop, how it might shift or inflect. Then try to respond as the wave is asking, pausing if it is shouldering or becoming less steep, or instead racing ahead if the face is walling up, because the wave section is about to pitch and crash. You keep adapting in each new moment, with a keen eye for the wave’s next offer or request. With enough practice, you’ll eventually be carried through from each moment to the next, flying along the whole wave’s length, linking wave sections together, with effortless speed, fluent power, and stylish fluidity.

  The beginner will wonder about basics. “Respond” how? What maneuvering might be “asked” of you? In which “moments”?

  Unfortunately, here philosophy can’t provide a definitive answer. It is much as Aristotle said of moral virtue, which he likened to an exercise of skill in sports. What to do next depends entirely on the wave situation before you, which can only be known in practice. Even on waves of the most machinelike predictability, there are just too many possible wave moments, each with its own apt reactions, for any rules or principles to tell you ahead of time how to go on in any definite way.

  Still, one could come into a general sense of the variety. So consider a few key surfing moments.

  PUMP: Sometimes you have to hurry down the line of the wave, and so you’ll pump the surfboard up and down like a steam engine, because the wave face is walling up and might leave you caught behind a breaking section.

  FADE: Or maybe the wave section is slowing, but about to rebuild, in which case you have to downshift, like hitting a downbeat note in a jazz riff, by fading back into the curl of the wave, in order to be well positioned as the wave steepens again.

  SNAP: Unless you’re already in exactly the right position, in which case you just unload your best turn! If the wave face is steep and hanging there
for you, like an eager dance partner in waiting, you can place the surfboard right up in the wave curl’s pocket, vertically, and snap it back to six o’clock, while pushing the surfboard’s tail through the rotation.

  CUTBACK: If you’re in a mellower mood, you might just project out onto the wave’s sloping shoulder and lay down a long, carving turn, burning your speed, gradually unloading your strength, as you track through the arc of the turn, like a bar of soap slipping around in a bathtub.

  ANTICIPATION: In any case, when you’re in transition out of one of these other maneuvers, you want to be ready for the next section, sowing seed for the next harvest. While keeping an eye on what’s going on down the wave’s line, you quickly get back into a low, tight crouch, out of which you can spring into the next moment of release.

  TUBE RIDE: Most important of all, if you’re lucky, or the waves are just really good on that day in particular, the wave lip might suddenly be throwing out, while the wave trough is sucking up. You then tuck yourself under the curl in a balling crouch as the pitching curtain engulfs you in a spinning, roaring, snarling cylindrical vortex. Inside the tube, don’t get too excited. But do go fast. Watch the lip line out in front of you so as not to get clipped when you could have tightened your crouch and kept going. Keep your weight forward. Pump or ease forward if you’re getting drawn too deep in the tube, so as to sustain your momentum. Don’t get caught up on the foam ball behind you, which can lift your surfboard fins and spin you into whitewash oblivion. And otherwise just wait for a chance to exit, which might well come, if the wave gods are showing you favor.

  So, you know, like that. Depending on what is happening, you respond as the wave asks, which is to say, appropriately.

  That is still not especially helpful. Appropriately how? Appropriately when? Those are the questions you’d have to know how to answer to actually surf a wave, and you can’t answer without having a wave actually before you, which is telling you what move comes next.

  If a complete book of surfing’s rules could be written, it wouldn’t necessarily help unless you could also learn the “know-how” that comes in faithful practice. You could read and understand all of its instructions, grasp them intellectually, and still not know how to put any rule into action. As a new wave situation presents itself, you have to know how to go on in the next moment. To borrow from Ludwig Wittgenstein, the enigmatic early-mid-twentieth-century philosopher, if rules were all you had to go by, they couldn’t tell you how to “go on” from what came before, even with suggestive coaching.*1 Given only rules, with no further sense of how to apply them in a fresh particular moment, you’d have to look to further rules to tell you which rules to follow and when. But then you’d also need rules for applying those rules, and so on, without end, ad infinitum, all the way up. Which is absurd, or impossible, or just not what we do in learning to surf.

  So there must be a different way of engaging one’s situation, which isn’t simply dictated by knowing rules, but somehow the basis for following and interpreting them. Here Wittgenstein says, “If there has to be anything ‘behind the utterance of the formula’ it is particular circumstances, which justify me in saying I can go on—when the formula occurs to me.”*2 And so one must have a way of knowing what one’s situation is. There must be a different, more “intuitive” way of knowing how to sense and adapt to a new moment, which isn’t simply grasping a rule’s content intellectually.

  For Martin Heidegger, the early-mid-twentieth-century German philosopher who revived Aristotle’s appreciation for the ordinary, our basic orientation to the world is not that of knowing things to be true by thought, reason, or perception. It is that of “handiness,” of knowing how to use things: “The nearest kind of association is not mere perceptual cognition, but, rather, a handling, using, and taking care of things which has its own kind of ‘knowledge.’ ”*3

  His central example is a hammer. You “know” it not by thinking about it, or staring at it, but by using it. You know the object as “for-hammering,” with a sense of how to pick it up in your hand and pound a nail. And so it is for nearly all of human experience, which is made up of all manner of ordinary know-how, supplied by the material culture that organizes all of our choices.

  So life is less thought than action, or rather thought in action, without too much thinking. Philosophy, as the saying goes, doesn’t bake bread. So of course it can’t teach you to surf. Surfing, in a word, must be lived.

  This might explain certain dissatisfactions with modern routinized work and why it is often contrasted with living. Following Heidegger, Matthew Crawford explains, based on his own experience in motorcycle maintenance, that “craft knowledge” in our ever-refined division of labor is broken down into “minute instructions” that replace experience, “animated by the worker’s own mental image of, and intention toward, the finished product.”*4 This contrasts with the older way of the tradesman:

  The physical circumstances of the jobs performed by carpenters, plumbers, and auto mechanics vary too much for them to be executed by idiots; they require circumspection and adaptability….The trades are then a natural home for anyone who would live by his own powers, free not only of deadening abstraction but also of the insidious hopes and rising insecurities that seem to be endemic in our current economic life.*5

  The intuitive know-how of trades work goes beyond mere “knowledge that” because, much as with surfing, it’s “always tied to the experience of a particular person. It can’t be downloaded, it can only be lived.”*6 A machine such as Deep Blue, the chess-playing computer that beat the grandmaster Garry Kasparov, only simulates the tacit, intuitive knowledge of an embodied, living person. Because this living know-how is the source of work’s human meaning, to replace it with narrow rule following is to degrade a person’s work, to compromise or corrupt its value. There is still genuine and enthralling knowledge work, but it is increasingly concentrated in the hands of an ever-smaller elite. Even in white-collar work, dealing in the stale abstractions of routinized spreadsheets and cost-benefit calculation is not the same as thinking. And at low or medium wages, “creative” work is mainly an illusion cultivated by upper management, who tend to “push details down and pull credit up.”*7 (Think of “employees” versus “associates.”) Crawford thus encourages a return to trades work. In chapter 9, I’ll suggest a different upshot: we should move to a shorter, more flexible workweek that leaves more time for engaged leisure, whether in surfing or motorcycle repair.

  Surfers Do Know Something

  Surfing came into its own as a cultural phenomenon in the 1960s, when it became iconic of and to the counterculture. Surfers seemed to be onto something, something that exposed the limitations of a stagnant conformism.*8 Timothy Leary, the 1960s-era acid-dropping, hippie-boosting psychologist, tried to explain. Surfers, he said, are “truly advanced people” who are “evolutionary” for their general appreciation of waves and change. “Many, perhaps most, surfers have become almost mystics,” he claimed. For the surfing act is “almost Taoist poetry. Almost Einsteinian.”*9

  Only “almost,” but even that may be a lot to expect from profoundly vague contemplation over tacos. Very few surfers are completely oblivious, let alone disrespectful and constantly stoned.*10 And few are hippies nowadays; most work, and anyway aren’t after the sort of freedom that licenses anything whatever, while going wherever. The times, they are still a-changin’, and Leary’s “question authority,” “turn on, tune in, drop out” countercultural era has passed. Change brought the triumph of capitalism over surf culture or, rather, enterprising surfers into big business, the surf industry, with clothing and wet suit sales, branding, and professional surfing. These days, most surfers are neither neo-hippie heroes nor deadbeats but conformists, more or less. Just as many non-surfers live for their work, serious surfers live in dedicated pursuit of excellence in a particular exercise of skill, by way of faithful daily practice, before or after work.

  Surfers do know something, even if they coul
dn’t be consulted for the oracular wisdom of the Stoic sage or the Zen master. The main preoccupation of the surfer is not wisdom but waves and surfing them, and the last swell, and the swell coming in the next days, whatever this might ultimately mean. A few surfers are charming and silver-tongued, like Shaun Tomson, a former world champion. And of course there’s Kelly Slater, the undisputed best surfer ever, who despite two decades of win-if-I-feel-like-it competitive dominance, his nth world title, and steady progression into his forties, long after most pros retire, also happens to be a thoughtful, articulate, nice guy. Yet zoologically speaking, the global tribe of surfers is motley and carnivalesque. It’s a mix of kids, professionals, beach people, and working-class types, united only by the zealous love of waves, with varying interests and aptitudes in everything else.

  Still, the love of waves is a lot to have in common, and all the time in the water does engender a shared sensibility about life and existence. So it makes enough sense to speak of the surfer, at least for purposes of asking what the surfer might appreciate above and beyond the technicalities of wave riding.

  What might the surfer know? Leary, who apparently surfed himself, offers the tube ride as a metaphor for “the highly conscious life”:

  At that point moving along constantly right at the edge of the tube…think of the tube as being the past, and I’m an evolutionary agent, and what I try to do is to be at that point where you’re going into the future, but you have to keep in touch with the past…there’s where you get the power;…and sure you’re most helpless, but you also have most precise control at that moment. And using the past…the past is pushing you forward, isn’t it? The wave is crashing behind you, yeah? And you can’t be slow about it or you [get picked off].*11