by Sophie Parekh
Yes, I know, it is a rather pretentious title but I am
channelling the spirits of long dead philosophers and such-like so I feel it
only necessary to say in a sentence what I could have said in about four words.
Regardless, the purpose of this article is to apply some well-established
philosophical ideas to a very 21st century issue.
I’ll explain what I actually mean by the title. Well, during
one particularly unproductive stint on YouTube, I came across a rather
curiously entitled video called, ‘Tampon Curls: Curl Your Hair With Tampons!’.
I obviously watched this video and then discovered that this person had done a
follow up video called, ‘Maxi Pad Curls: Curl Your Hair With Maxi Pads!’ which
showed some rather vicious comments from the previous video. You know, things
like “This is disgusting, you should be ashamed” and “I feel violated right
now”, that sort of thing really. And
obviously, doing IB HL philosophy, I naturally wondered why these people felt
so violated.
Thomas Aquinas: philosopher and saint |
We could perhaps turn to some of the more traditional
philosophers for an answer. Thomas Aquinas, for instance, the creator of the
wonderful theorem called Natural Law, contests that in order for something to
be ‘good’, it must fulfil its purpose. So, for example, a shelf stacker is only
good if they fulfil their purpose, i.e. by stacking shelves. We can extend this
idea to the content of the video. The purpose of a tampon is to absorb
menstrual blood, and so by not doing so, it is not fulfilling its purpose and
thus is a bad tampon. And perhaps these people are uncomfortable with the video
because the purpose of the tampon is not being adhered to.
Thomas Aquinas was in fact a Saint and so I think it is safe
to say that he was fairly religious. And even now the Catholic Church uses his
philosophy as the basis of their religion some 800 years later. So it seems
fair to say that his philosophy may be somewhat out-dated, considering he
believed that atheism was wrong because one of the purposes of being a human
being was to worship God and by being an atheist, you’re not really fulfilling
this purpose…
Jean-Paul Sartre sometimes believed he was being chased by a giant lobster through the streets of Paris |
But do not despair, for there is hope yet in the form of
Jean-Paul Sartre. Monsieur Sartre lived in the twentieth century and was a
fabulous existentialist, writing some of his best works on acid, believing he
was being chased by a giant lobster through the streets of Paris.
Unsurprisingly, J-P had some pretty cool ideas. He believed that everyone has
radical freedom; so we are able to do whatever we want, whenever we want,
except things that compromise other people’s freedom, so don’t go round killing
people in the name of existentialism... This freedom was so essential to J-P’s
philosophy, that he believed if we didn’t acknowledge our freedom, or lived
monotonous or became our job or role, then we were living in bad faith. Bad
faith = not good. It's basically the polar opposite of what Aquinas said.
So, with regards to the video, Sartre’s philosophy teaches
us that we have radical freedom to do whatever we want (within reason, because
we can’t fly or breathe underwater…) so why not curl your hair with tampons? It
is perfectly within your radical freedom to do so. They are cleaner than most
people’s curlers (being fresh out of the packet and all) and they are cotton so
are much comfier than rollers. But why is it that their use has been ingrained
into their existence?
The lovely David Hume |
We could look to the lovely David Hume for the answer to
this one. Hume says that nothing exists in an entity as itself, but merely the
sum of its properties, this is bundle theory. For example, a daffodil is
yellow, has long, narrow green leaves as grows in the spring. The word
‘daffodil’ is merely a culmination of all these properties, and therefore
cannot exist without them. This is quite a weird concept initially, but try to
imagine something without properties. I can’t… So going back to our delightful
example, a tampon does not exist in itself, but merely as a sum of its
properties; cotton/manmade fibre, usually white and has a bit of string
attached. So Hume would say a tampon's use is separate from its existence
because a tampon doesn’t actually exist, what exists are its various
properties. Also, by saying that you cannot use a tampon for curling your hair
because its not meant for that is redundant because you are not using a tampon
per se, you are using an white, fibrous object with a string attached, which
sounds pretty good to me.
In conclusion, I personally see no problem with this because
although it does seem kind of odd, I think that’s mainly based on social
constructs (which I really cannot be bothered to go into right now), it poses
no threat to anyone’s health and because of what I said earlier using the
philosophers and stuff.
I hope I’ve given you a bit of an insight into the wonderful
world of IB philosophy; it's really interesting and, as it turns out, practical
as well.
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