Postmodernism and Critical Theory. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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Post-modernism now seamlessly joins the bigger stream of post-democracy.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:The thing about the old deconstructionists is that they make a convincing case that the objective features of a phenomenon so little constrain the ways it is classified and theorized that these features can be disregarded in trying to understand why a particular classification system or scientific theory has been adopted. Maybe this goes for Foucault and Derrida in particular; we may call them sophists all we like, and that is a reasonable case to be made about them, but they illuminate important problems even if or when they arrive at them in a sophistical manner.
Reading this I can't tell if you are serious or taking the p*ss.

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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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Typhoon wrote:
NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:The thing about the old deconstructionists is that they make a convincing case that the objective features of a phenomenon so little constrain the ways it is classified and theorized that these features can be disregarded in trying to understand why a particular classification system or scientific theory has been adopted. Maybe this goes for Foucault and Derrida in particular; we may call them sophists all we like, and that is a reasonable case to be made about them, but they illuminate important problems even if or when they arrive at them in a sophistical manner.
Reading this I can't tell if you are serious or taking the p*ss.
As much fun as it would be to keep some mystique in tact; I gotta say I'm speaking a bit earnestly...maybe it would be better to say I'm trying to offer a defense as it's caricature doesn't do it justice. And Derrida, at least, =/= mess in his wake.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by Typhoon »

NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:
Typhoon wrote:
NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:The thing about the old deconstructionists is that they make a convincing case that the objective features of a phenomenon so little constrain the ways it is classified and theorized that these features can be disregarded in trying to understand why a particular classification system or scientific theory has been adopted. Maybe this goes for Foucault and Derrida in particular; we may call them sophists all we like, and that is a reasonable case to be made about them, but they illuminate important problems even if or when they arrive at them in a sophistical manner.
Reading this I can't tell if you are serious or taking the p*ss.
As much fun as it would be to keep some mystique in tact; I gotta say I'm speaking a bit earnestly...maybe it would be better to say I'm trying to offer a defense as it's caricature doesn't do it justice. And Derrida, at least, =/= mess in his wake.
The Einsteinian constant is not a constant, is not a center. It is the very concept of variability -- it is, finally, the concept of the game. In other words, it is not the concept of something -- of a center starting from which an observer could master the field -- but the very concept of the game.

~ Jacques Derrida
I have no idea what this is intended to mean.

~ Steven Weinberg
May the gods preserve and defend me from self-righteous altruists; I can defend myself from my enemies and my friends.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by Simple Minded »

Typhoon wrote:
The Einsteinian constant is not a constant, is not a center. It is the very concept of variability -- it is, finally, the concept of the game. In other words, it is not the concept of something -- of a center starting from which an observer could master the field -- but the very concept of the game.

~ Jacques Derrida
Simple Minded wrote:
Exactly, maybe not in the now now, but Shirley in the immanent future, or maybe a little later.
Typhoon wrote:
I have no idea what this is intended to mean.

~ Steven Weinberg
That's why intellectuals spend so much of their lives discussing shite. One invalid, impressive sounding theory, can be followed with decades of explanation.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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Typhoon wrote:
NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:
Typhoon wrote:
NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:The thing about the old deconstructionists is that they make a convincing case that the objective features of a phenomenon so little constrain the ways it is classified and theorized that these features can be disregarded in trying to understand why a particular classification system or scientific theory has been adopted. Maybe this goes for Foucault and Derrida in particular; we may call them sophists all we like, and that is a reasonable case to be made about them, but they illuminate important problems even if or when they arrive at them in a sophistical manner.
Reading this I can't tell if you are serious or taking the p*ss.
As much fun as it would be to keep some mystique in tact; I gotta say I'm speaking a bit earnestly...maybe it would be better to say I'm trying to offer a defense as it's caricature doesn't do it justice. And Derrida, at least, =/= mess in his wake.
The Einsteinian constant is not a constant, is not a center. It is the very concept of variability -- it is, finally, the concept of the game. In other words, it is not the concept of something -- of a center starting from which an observer could master the field -- but the very concept of the game.

~ Jacques Derrida
I have no idea what this is intended to mean.

~ Steven Weinberg
All Derrida explicates is that we cannot recover or account for everything in our mental reconstructions and so we we should approach our intellectual pursuits with some humility.

His point about Einstein was in this context:

We develop these ideas and concepts we turn into fixed dogmas of these great mental structures [the structuralism of the time] that we can neither justify or account for. These "centers" (the dogmas- and again, in the context of structuralism] grow so great and rigid that they transcend the very structures they are supposed to be a pinnacle or floor. So for example, "Marxism" and "Capitalism" become something beyond that of which the mind reflects and transcend any practical reason so that it becomes almost a placeholder to describe anything and everything- to a point where it is, as he put it, both a center and a not-center.
He points out the history of philosophy (Derrida was primarily discussing literary form here) is one of replacing one "fixed center" for another in a supposed rupture that doesn't really change anything-- his example would be replacing at the center the "God of the philosophers" with human reason or "rationality", didn't change a single thing about how philosophy operated or thought. It was merely replacing one word for another after the initial outburst of energy. By doing this, we fail to expound upon that going on at the margins, which is where the real action is. This is where Derrida says that mankind "plays"; we negotiate, investigate, prod, create and discover in this area all while denying that anything changes by using that "center" as a cover for these actions.

He does posit that there are real ruptures even if most fail (or eventually fail,) to eliminate the same centering process. For him, one rupture which succeeded would be Einstein's work. What he suggests he broke was thinking of space and time as these absolute set-pieces that are in some sense, not apart of actual living and movement.

Maybe another way of putting it would be to say that space and time were no longer to be thought of as remote metaphysical objects (or collections of physical objects with a metaphysical purpose) but instead of a summary of phenomenon which may or may not mean more than that, but can only investigated as a sum.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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the map is not the territory
the model is not reality
magic numbers make the baby jesus cry.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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noddy wrote:the map is not the territory
the model is not reality
magic numbers make the baby jesus cry.
No, he's saying the exact opposite.

The map is the territory for us, and that's okay.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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I wasnt trying to summarise him, just remembering the various versions of that argument ive had and heard over the years.

this is one of those spots that im not much of a philosopher.

the map is the territory for us because the working model is how our brains deal with it, yet being aware that the map isnt the territory is a requirement to knowing that the model can be improved.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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noddy wrote:I wasnt trying to summarise him, just remembering the various versions of that argument ive had and heard over the years.

this is one of those spots that im not much of a philosopher.

the map is the territory for us because the working model is how our brains deal with it, yet being aware that the map isnt the territory is a requirement to knowing that the model can be improved.
sorry, I wasn't trying to be snotty about it.

I stepped away before could finish my thought:

We shouldn't treat our words as a medium that we are saddled with or must somehow get around in order to get to the truth.

Nor is having and acknowledging different interpretations some great wound to man's thinking or an example of futile exercise.

At the same time, and I know Derrida tried making this point several times: just because there is room for multifarious interpretations doesn't mean that all are good, true or useful. Or that everything ever is text.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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and not that it needs to be said but I'm not expert either.

I do fondly remember a philosophy professor who had us read Derrida and Bergson as a counter to Descartes, Leibniz, Spinoza and Philo of Alexandria who he asserted was the foundation the rest were built on.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by noddy »

50 odd years of computer systems design and architecture - i feel that this is one of few subject areas that those of is in the computer age are so far advanced of the previous state of the art that its almost comical.

modelling reality was a hobby before, its the entire focus of civilization right now.

the fair, the foul, the limitations and the scary implications, we have it all and we are living it, not musing upon it.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by Simple Minded »

NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:
All Derrida explicates is that we cannot recover or account for everything in our mental reconstructions and so we we should approach our intellectual pursuits with some humility.

His point about Einstein was in this context:

We develop these ideas and concepts we turn into fixed dogmas of these great mental structures [the structuralism of the time] that we can neither justify or account for. These "centers" (the dogmas- and again, in the context of structuralism] grow so great and rigid that they transcend the very structures they are supposed to be a pinnacle or floor. So for example, "Marxism" and "Capitalism" become something beyond that of which the mind reflects and transcend any practical reason so that it becomes almost a placeholder to describe anything and everything- to a point where it is, as he put it, both a center and a not-center.
He points out the history of philosophy (Derrida was primarily discussing literary form here) is one of replacing one "fixed center" for another in a supposed rupture that doesn't really change anything-- his example would be replacing at the center the "God of the philosophers" with human reason or "rationality", didn't change a single thing about how philosophy operated or thought. It was merely replacing one word for another after the initial outburst of energy. By doing this, we fail to expound upon that going on at the margins, which is where the real action is. This is where Derrida says that mankind "plays"; we negotiate, investigate, prod, create and discover in this area all while denying that anything changes by using that "center" as a cover for these actions.

He does posit that there are real ruptures even if most fail (or eventually fail,) to eliminate the same centering process. For him, one rupture which succeeded would be Einstein's work. What he suggests he broke was thinking of space and time as these absolute set-pieces that are in some sense, not apart of actual living and movement.

Maybe another way of putting it would be to say that space and time were no longer to be thought of as remote metaphysical objects (or collections of physical objects with a metaphysical purpose) but instead of a summary of phenomenon which may or may not mean more than that, but can only investigated as a sum.
well said. Derrida should have left this task up to you. No surprise that "deconstructionists" have great difficultly creating coherent sentence structures.

He may also have meant rapture instead of rupture....
Last edited by Simple Minded on Sat Jun 17, 2017 10:49 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by Simple Minded »

noddy wrote:
modelling reality was a hobby before, its the entire focus of civilization right now.

the fair, the foul, the limitations and the scary implications, we have it all and we are living it, not musing upon it.
Excellent observation. When reality does not agree with the model, within the specified assumptions. Time to fudge the data so the model can remain Gospel. Once the Oracle fails...... all is lost.

"Two more years of grant funding and I can tell you exactly how whites, blacks, righties, lefties, etc will view the world.... or predict Climate Change down to a millionth of a degree per week! Shirely that's a good investment, right?"

Excellent example of the self-imposed limitations humans employ in order to comprehend and function (successfully or not) in an infinitely complex world.

If you can't sum up a lifetime of dedicated work performed by a philosopher or scientist or theologian, in 15 words or less. You are just plain wrong!

How to resolve Fred's thinking and concrete convictions at 25, with his differing thoughts at 40, or 50, or 60....... Even Fred couldn't do it. Poor Fred, when he couldn't get it right, he had no choice but to continue the rationalization process.

Screw sex, self-esteem drives everything. :P
Simple Minded

Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by Simple Minded »

noddy wrote:...

modelling reality was a hobby before, its the entire focus of civilization right now....
"If you give me six lines written by the hand of the most honest of men, I will find something in them which will hang him."

Cardinal Richelieu
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by noddy »

Simple Minded wrote:
noddy wrote:
modelling reality was a hobby before, its the entire focus of civilization right now.

the fair, the foul, the limitations and the scary implications, we have it all and we are living it, not musing upon it.
Excellent observation. When reality does not agree with the model, within the specified assumptions. Time to fudge the data so the model can remain Gospel. Once the Oracle fails...... all is lost.

"Two more years of grant funding and I can tell you exactly how whites, blacks, righties, lefties, etc will view the world.... or predict Climate Change down to a millionth of a degree per week! Shirely that's a good investment, right?"

Excellent example of the self-imposed limitations humans employ in order to comprehend and function (successfully or not) in an infinitely complex world.

If you can't sum up a lifetime of dedicated work performed by a philosopher or scientist or theologian, in 15 words or less. You are just plain wrong!

How to resolve Fred's thinking and concrete convictions at 25, with his differing thoughts at 40, or 50, or 60....... Even Fred couldn't do it. Poor Fred, when he couldn't get it right, he had no choice but to continue the rationalization process.

Screw sex, self-esteem drives everything. :P
ive modeled the model and decided it needs more modelling.
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Back on Topic.

Post by noddy »

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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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Simple Minded wrote:
NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:
All Derrida explicates is that we cannot recover or account for everything in our mental reconstructions and so we we should approach our intellectual pursuits with some humility.

His point about Einstein was in this context:

We develop these ideas and concepts we turn into fixed dogmas of these great mental structures [the structuralism of the time] that we can neither justify or account for. These "centers" (the dogmas- and again, in the context of structuralism] grow so great and rigid that they transcend the very structures they are supposed to be a pinnacle or floor. So for example, "Marxism" and "Capitalism" become something beyond that of which the mind reflects and transcend any practical reason so that it becomes almost a placeholder to describe anything and everything- to a point where it is, as he put it, both a center and a not-center.
He points out the history of philosophy (Derrida was primarily discussing literary form here) is one of replacing one "fixed center" for another in a supposed rupture that doesn't really change anything-- his example would be replacing at the center the "God of the philosophers" with human reason or "rationality", didn't change a single thing about how philosophy operated or thought. It was merely replacing one word for another after the initial outburst of energy. By doing this, we fail to expound upon that going on at the margins, which is where the real action is. This is where Derrida says that mankind "plays"; we negotiate, investigate, prod, create and discover in this area all while denying that anything changes by using that "center" as a cover for these actions.

He does posit that there are real ruptures even if most fail (or eventually fail,) to eliminate the same centering process. For him, one rupture which succeeded would be Einstein's work. What he suggests he broke was thinking of space and time as these absolute set-pieces that are in some sense, not apart of actual living and movement.

Maybe another way of putting it would be to say that space and time were no longer to be thought of as remote metaphysical objects (or collections of physical objects with a metaphysical purpose) but instead of a summary of phenomenon which may or may not mean more than that, but can only investigated as a sum.
well said. Derrida should have left this task up to you. No surprise that "deconstructionists" have great difficultly creating coherent sentence structures.

He may also have meant rapture instead of rupture....
The 'salty' thread is like 2 spaces down, dude. :D
Simple Minded

Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by Simple Minded »

NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:
The 'salty' thread is like 2 spaces down, dude. :D


:lol: I think I was ruptured into this one by some quantum physical electron spin....... perhaps inside my head, perhaps in the outside world. Who knows for sure?

Bro, you have the ability to deconstruct the opinions of Derrida, and simplify my own. :shock:

Be careful, with great power, comes great responsibility...... ;) Promise us you will only use your superpowers for good.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by Typhoon »

NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:
Typhoon wrote:
NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:
Typhoon wrote:
NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:The thing about the old deconstructionists is that they make a convincing case that the objective features of a phenomenon so little constrain the ways it is classified and theorized that these features can be disregarded in trying to understand why a particular classification system or scientific theory has been adopted. Maybe this goes for Foucault and Derrida in particular; we may call them sophists all we like, and that is a reasonable case to be made about them, but they illuminate important problems even if or when they arrive at them in a sophistical manner.
Reading this I can't tell if you are serious or taking the p*ss.
As much fun as it would be to keep some mystique in tact; I gotta say I'm speaking a bit earnestly...maybe it would be better to say I'm trying to offer a defense as it's caricature doesn't do it justice. And Derrida, at least, =/= mess in his wake.
The Einsteinian constant is not a constant, is not a center. It is the very concept of variability -- it is, finally, the concept of the game. In other words, it is not the concept of something -- of a center starting from which an observer could master the field -- but the very concept of the game.

~ Jacques Derrida
I have no idea what this is intended to mean.

~ Steven Weinberg
All Derrida explicates is that we cannot recover or account for everything in our mental reconstructions and so we we should approach our intellectual pursuits with some humility.

His point about Einstein was in this context:

We develop these ideas and concepts we turn into fixed dogmas of these great mental structures [the structuralism of the time] that we can neither justify or account for. These "centers" (the dogmas- and again, in the context of structuralism] grow so great and rigid that they transcend the very structures they are supposed to be a pinnacle or floor. So for example, "Marxism" and "Capitalism" become something beyond that of which the mind reflects and transcend any practical reason so that it becomes almost a placeholder to describe anything and everything- to a point where it is, as he put it, both a center and a not-center.
He points out the history of philosophy (Derrida was primarily discussing literary form here) is one of replacing one "fixed center" for another in a supposed rupture that doesn't really change anything-- his example would be replacing at the center the "God of the philosophers" with human reason or "rationality", didn't change a single thing about how philosophy operated or thought. It was merely replacing one word for another after the initial outburst of energy. By doing this, we fail to expound upon that going on at the margins, which is where the real action is. This is where Derrida says that mankind "plays"; we negotiate, investigate, prod, create and discover in this area all while denying that anything changes by using that "center" as a cover for these actions.

He does posit that there are real ruptures even if most fail (or eventually fail,) to eliminate the same centering process. For him, one rupture which succeeded would be Einstein's work. What he suggests he broke was thinking of space and time as these absolute set-pieces that are in some sense, not apart of actual living and movement.

Maybe another way of putting it would be to say that space and time were no longer to be thought of as remote metaphysical objects (or collections of physical objects with a metaphysical purpose) but instead of a summary of phenomenon which may or may not mean more than that, but can only investigated as a sum.
That's a lot of text to try and explain what Derrida means to a philoplebian such as I. Thank you for your effort.

Anyways, he does not add anything to my understanding [and not to S. Weinberg's who, among other notable achievements, is the author of a famous text on GR.]

Empirically, one may compare the understanding of nature achieved by use of the scientific process versus the same using postmodern text deconstruction.

I'll stick with the scientific method.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by Simple Minded »

Typhoon wrote:
That's a lot of text to try and explain what Derrida means to a philoplebian such as I. Thank you for your effort.

Anyways, he does add anything to my understanding [and not to S. Weinberg's who, among other notable achievements, is the author of a famous text on GR.]

Empirically, one may compare the understanding of nature achieved by use of the scientific process versus the same using postmodern text deconstruction.

I'll stick with the scientific method.
Have you tried post-mortem test reconstructionism?

During my brief stint as a potential philosophy major, it became obvious that no one can correctly what any of the great philosophers actually meant. Even those with doctorate degrees in philosophy could not agree. It was great fun to watch, but not a career path that fit my personality. Not to mention I was paying them to arguing, rather than them paying me to argue.

Kinda like the eternal gig of evaluating what God really meant in religious texts.

Good work if you can get it and if it fits your personality. On the plus side, like religion, it is a science that is never settle.

Before Post Modernism gets defined, we will be into Post Mortem -Post Modernism.
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by NapLajoieonSteroids »

Simple Minded wrote:
Typhoon wrote:
That's a lot of text to try and explain what Derrida means to a philoplebian such as I. Thank you for your effort.

Anyways, he does add anything to my understanding [and not to S. Weinberg's who, among other notable achievements, is the author of a famous text on GR.]

Empirically, one may compare the understanding of nature achieved by use of the scientific process versus the same using postmodern text deconstruction.

I'll stick with the scientific method.
Have you tried post-mortem test reconstructionism?

During my brief stint as a potential philosophy major, it became obvious that no one can correctly what any of the great philosophers actually meant. Even those with doctorate degrees in philosophy could not agree. It was great fun to watch, but not a career path that fit my personality. Not to mention I was paying them to arguing, rather than them paying me to argue.

Kinda like the eternal gig of evaluating what God really meant in religious texts.

Good work if you can get it and if it fits your personality. On the plus side, like religion, it is a science that is never settle.

Before Post Modernism gets defined, we will be into Post Mortem -Post Modernism.
Socrates said to Phadreus, writing preserves a solemn silence. No one bats an eye.

But for some Derrida says it, the whole melts down in condemnation.

I think it can be said the difference is that Plato was a masterful writer and Derrida was the exact opposite in translation (and I think it fair to presume in the original as well).
Simple Minded

Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

Post by Simple Minded »

NapLajoieonSteroids wrote:
Socrates said to Phadreus, writing preserves a solemn silence. No one bats an eye.

But for some Derrida says it, the whole melts down in condemnation.

I think it can be said the difference is that Plato was a masterful writer and Derrida was the exact opposite in translation (and I think it fair to presume in the original as well).
Once again my master, you have stated it brilliantly. Always a source of fascination to me, Fred reads author X and thinks X an durian. Fred reads author Y's interpretation of author X's text and finds author X to be (brillaint-Freudian typo, maybe my best ever!) brilliant.

You never know what combination of words will strike a chord, or when a well respected guru will fall from grace for a few decades or generations. Wisdom, like beauty is in the eye of the beholder.

Most of the philosophy profs I had the pleasure of knowing had the personality I imagine to be dominant among lawyers, they just love to argue with little regard for the outcome. Lot of output bandwidth, little input bandwidth. One day, my favorite said so in almost as many words, "We, philosophy professor are just full of ourselves, and we love to argue. And if we ever start to agree with each other, most of us won't be employed any longer."
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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The thing with the French Phenomenologists is (besides that habit of being silly Frenchman, ) they demand too much of others.

You are expected to have read the whole corpus from Husserl on down (with widely varying qualities of prose to boot), familiarize yourself with all the historical arguments, live the method , adopt its customs, poses and prejudices, and engage the world with a chip on your shoulder than you will be misunderstood. And unless you've done all this plus the secret handshake, you are not in the club and therefore, cannot level any comment of criticism.

There is a lot to appreciate from this view in a sense; for example, I can easily imagine that it is more authentic to direct oneself to philosophy as a communal exercise and a way of life not meant for everybody.

But, towards my understanding, the list of positives come with these well known negatives which leave me thinking: Where is the love for others if you do not provide them with some attempt at clarity?
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Re: Postmodernism. Or why the Empress has no clothes.

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Simple Minded wrote:Always a source of fascination to me, Fred reads author X and thinks X an durian. Fred reads author Y's interpretation of author X's text and finds author X to be (brillaint-Freudian typo, maybe my best ever!) brilliant.

You never know what combination of words will strike a chord, or when a well respected guru will fall from grace for a few decades or generations. Wisdom, like beauty is in the eye of the beholder.
Great point and this was Mr.Hume's point in A Treatise on Human Nature:

“Reason is, and ought only to be the slave of the passions, and can never pretend to any other office than to serve and obey them.”

“Where a passion is neither founded on false suppositions, nor chooses means insufficient for the end, the understanding can neither justify nor condemn it. It is not contrary to reason to prefer the destruction of the whole world to the scratching of my finger. It is not contrary to reason for me to choose my total ruin, to prevent the least uneasiness of an Indian or person wholly unknown to me. It is as little contrary to reason to prefer even my own acknowledged lesser good to my greater, and have a more ardent affection for the former than the latter. A trivial good may, from certain circumstances, produce a desire superior to what arises from the greatest and most valuable enjoyment...”


And this is easily the default philosophy of the English-speaking academic and literary world which naturally trickled down to form the presumptions of the culture.

The reason for that post-modern umbrella, those French guys who spread so rapidly, is because they gave a nice rationalization [maybe permission is a better word] to flip Hume the bird without tossing him in the trash. What has changed in recent times for English-speaking academia isn't a turn towards French phenomenology but that a specific idea of "good taste" informing our aesthetics&moral sentiments must be rejected as elitist. And truth be told, it was overtly snobby as previously practiced, as well as laid out by David Hume, who was a tremendous snob by all accounts.

So now everyone is presumed to have their own good taste and moral superiority.

Everyone wins!?!?!? [but it is one of those really disappointing wins which doesn't fire the endorphins. Sort of like you won the game but you lost your star pitcher along the way.] :?
Most of the philosophy profs I had the pleasure of knowing had the personality I imagine to be dominant among lawyers, they just love to argue with little regard for the outcome. Lot of output bandwidth, little input bandwidth. One day, my favorite said so in almost as many words, "We, philosophy professor are just full of ourselves, and we love to argue. And if we ever start to agree with each other, most of us won't be employed any longer."
I could spend the rest of the day arguing with you on this, but I have a feeling it would be counter-productive. :D
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