Grover Cleveland
Let me take another puzzle from Roy Sorensen’s book
that I quoted in my blog last week. It’s about American presidents:
“Grover Cleveland was inaugurated as the 22nd and 24th
US president, succeeding Benjamin Harrison, who was the 23rd president. Who was
the other [US] president who succeeded his successor? ... You do not need any
historical hints” (p. 20).
Unlike last week, I’ll give the answer immediately, so
if you want to figure it out yourself, stop reading NOW.
***
According to Sorensen the answer is Harrison, for “Benjamin
Harrison succeeded his successor, because his successor was Grover Cleveland.
Harrison was elected after Cleveland’s first term. Although Harrison was
elected only one term, he succeeded his successor” (pp. 256-7).
At first sight, the answer seems correct. Let me do
some simple logic:
(1) Cleveland = Harrison’s successor {namely during
his second term as the 24th US
president}.
(2) Harrison succeeded Cleveland {namely when Harrison
became the 23th US president,
he succeeded Cleveland who had finished his first term as the 22th US president}.
he succeeded Cleveland who had finished his first term as the 22th US president}.
Now fill in (1) in (2) and we get:
(3) Harrison succeeded Harrison’s successor.
In plain English we would formulate (3) as “Harrison
succeeded his successor”, and that’s what Sorensen contends.
So far so good. Nevertheless, I wouldn’t be surprised if
you think that there is something wrong with (3), even though the formal reasoning
is correct. Anyway, I think that Harrison did not succeed his successor, although he succeeded Cleveland, who later
became his successor. Just this “later became” is the point where Sorensen goes
wrong, to my view, for what he ignores is the aspect of time. The question is:
Is Cleveland as the 24th US president identical with Cleveland as the 22th US
president? My answer is “No”, at least not in the respect we are discussing
here: Being the successor of Harrison.
A much discussed issue in analytical philosophy is the
question what makes a
person P2 at time t2 the same person as person P1
at time t1. For example, what makes a ten years old schoolboy
living in a provincial capital in the north of the Netherlands the same person
as the philosopher who writes a blog about a philosophical puzzle more than
fifty years later somewhere in the centre of the Netherlands? Now I pass over a
long and extensive discussion, but we can say that in the first place it’s the
physical continuity between the schoolboy and the philosopher that does, but –
as most philosophers stress – it’s especially the psychological continuity in
time between the schoolboy and the philosopher that makes them the same person.
When talking about psychological continuity we have to think of qualities like
character traits, memory, experiences, etc. Does the philosopher still remember
to which school he went? Is he still like the boy who wanted to be the best of
the class? Does the boy’s experience that he fell from a bridge explains the
philosopher’s fear for water? To the extent that we can answer such questions
with “yes”, we can say that the philosopher is still the same person as the schoolboy;
to the extent that we have to say “no” the philosopher has changed and got
another personality. Who doesn’t know the sayings “Oh, John has changed so much
through the years”. Or “Pete is still like the one I met fifty years ago for
the first time”?
Now I think that it’s clear that the ten years old
schoolboy is not the philosopher he is fifty years later. Maybe someone would have
predicted that the boy would become a
philosopher, but then he was not the philosopher we see fifty years
later writing blogs. Let’s now assume that you are also a blogger and you write
in your blog “Fifty years ago I was a friend of philosopher By the Way, but
when we left the primary school, we lost sight of each other and we have been
out of touch since then.” Is this statement true? No. Maybe you were a friend
of the boy who would become a
philosopher but not of the philosopher. The characteristic “philosopher”
applies only to the man many years later and not to the schoolboy, even if that
man and the schoolboy can be considered otherwise the same person. In this
respect the schoolboy has changed. And so it is also with Grover Cleveland as
the 22nd president of the USA. At the
moment that Benjamin Harrison became the 23 US president (in 1889),
Cleveland was not the successor of
Harrison, but the successor of Chester A. Arthur, the 21st US president. It was
only four years later (in 1893) that Cleveland became Harrison’s successor. It
is an anachronism and therefore wrong to ascribe in 1889 to Cleveland a
characteristic he would get only four years later, and at least in this respect
Cleveland as the 22nd US president is not identical with Cleveland as the 24th
US president. So there has been only one US president that succeeded his
successor: Grover Cleveland. When he did, Cleveland became a little bit another
person (namely by becoming the successor of his successor), even though he was physically
and psychologically continuous with the Grover Cleveland who had ended his term
as president of the USA four years before and who lacked the characteristic
just mentioned.
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