Back in the day I'd found philosophical p0m0 to be an academically effete redundancy selling the news a day late and dollar short that "metanarratives, epistemes" were suspect because they – their subject Man – had been decentered. Big whup. Modernity organically grows out of the first great (though marginalized) decentering: Copernicus' Heliocentric model of the solar system, followed by (just the highlights):
• Galileo's Mediocrity Principle, Relativity & (revived) "atomism"
• Spinoza's Natura Naturans, Conatus, Affects ... & (first of a kind) biblical criticism/deconstruction
• Newton's Gravity constant (death of telelogy)
• Hume's Bundle theory of "the self", Induction problem & Is-Ought "guillotine"
• Darwin-Wallace's speciation (descent) by Natural Selection
• Boltzmann's 2nd law of thermodynamics ("heat death of the universe")
• Schopenhauer-Nietzsche's Will ("unconscious") ... genealogical method, perspectivism, etc
• political-economic anarchism (mutualist, syndicalist, libertarian communist, etc)
• Einstein's Relativity theories
• quantum uncertainty
• Gödel's Incompleteness theorems (+ Turing, Von Neumann, Chaitin, Wolfram)
• Shannon's Information entropy
• Wittgenstein's forms of life-language games-meaning is usage
• fallibilism ... falsificationism ...
• semiotics ... structuralism ...
• Chomsky's Universal Generative Grammar
• absurdism (e.g. Zapffe, Camus)
• economic democracy (stakeholder socioeconomics contra shareholder capitalism)
• Kahneman & Tverksy's cognitive biases & prospect theory — 180 Proof
A human being is a part of the whole, called by us "Universe", a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings as something separated from the rest — a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. The striving to free oneself from this delusion is the one issue of true religion. Not to nourish the delusion but to try to overcome it is the way to reach the attainable measure of peace of mind. — Albert Einstein
Such an attitude is post-modern in that it is able to supersede the typical obsessions and tropes of the modern period, but it is a-historical, in that it is deeply informed by the worlds' perennial philosophical traditions. — Wayfarer
Or should I pose the question to the administrators? — ssu
For the record, I'd say a philosophy with the qualities you describe is assuredly _not_ postmodern. — Kenosha Kid
because I don't see anything significant or important. Whether or not that makes p0m0 "justifiable" I can't say until I have a better idea of your meaning, KK.My question for the apologists: What has p0m0 proposed in philosophy that e.g. atomists, skeptics, kynics, freethinkers, anarchists, fallibilists, critical rationalists or absurdists have not already proposed more clearly, cogently and also that is less co-optable – commodifiable – by late capitalism (i.e. Neoliberal "post-truth" populism)? — 180 Proof
What do you mean by "justifiable"? — 180 Proof
The way I'd probably break this down is as follows: does postmodernism have
- descriptive
- predictive
- prescriptive
- novel
value? (Will add more e.g. cognitive if you like.) — Kenosha Kid
Okay, somehow this got lost on first read of the OP.The question is: Does postmodern philosophy add anything _new_?
The way I'd probably break this down is as follows: does postmodernism have
- descriptive
- predictive
- prescriptive
- novel
value? (Will add more e.g. cognitive if you like.) — Kenosha Kid
In light of the 'decenterings' (i.e. shredding the (Western) palimpsest of metanarratives) included in the OP, I wonder, Wayf, how much – if any – of my take on this idea ("new horizons of being") you agree with.Humanity needs to realise its role in the cosmos ... — Wayfarer
The question is: Does postmodern philosophy add anything _new_? — Kenosha Kid
Okay, somehow this got lost on firest read of the OP. — 180 Proof
The p0m0s are great exemplars of how not to do philosophy: obsession with philosophies – and adjacent (media? lifestyle? consumer? rhetorical? sociological?) signifiers / narratives / representations / identities :yawn: – in lieu of philosophizing. That said, I think "justifies" is the wrong word (it hangs me up); intellectually beneficial, or edifying, seem clearer. Anyway, my verdict: p0m0 isn't worth a philosopher's time. In this sense I vote "no". — 180 Proof
(pomo needs a better class of postmodernist).
— Kenosha Kid
I'll drink to that! :up: — 180 Proof
I want to know just which philosophers you count as being postmodernist and why you would count them as such before answering that question. — Janus
...but Wittgenstein did not apply language games to ethics and politics; — Kenosha Kid
...and in so doing undermined his own foundations.Lyotard did... — Kenosha Kid
exploring how language and culture limits and determines our worldviews and systems of values seems a useful endeavor. — prothero
I suppose the usefulness of critiques of modernism depends on what one assumes to be the basic tenets of modernism. If they are materialism, reductionism and determinism then yes I think critiques are well placed and very useful. — prothero
I'll take exception to this on Wittgenstein's behalf!
Whereof one cannot speak... you would have him apply language games?! No, that would be absurd. Instead he acted, choosing the most dangerous activities as an Austrian solder; going to work as a mere hospital orderly during the second war. — Banno
That started out like a contradiction but didn't end that way... — Kenosha Kid
Another way of asking this is: even if you detested every postmodern philosopher to date, is there good reason to wish for some better postmodernism of the future, or is the whole field pointless by virtue of being postmodern — Kenosha Kid
The p0m0 philosophers = p0m0 philosophy. You're taking what I wrote out of context to make a distinction without a difference. — 180 Proof
So are you asking whether we should have philosophy that rejects or eshews grand narratives? Or? — Janus
Post-modern architecture is a revolt against modern architecture, which is essentially Marxist. — Kenosha Kid
It's not Soviet brutalism; nor the phalic expressions of capitalism. It sits in the heart of a avowedly communist nation, a postmodern twist. — Banno
Yes, or a philosophy of ethics, politics, aesthetics, etc. for that already being accepted as the case. Is there some need, whether it has been met fully, partially, or not at all, to move beyond modernism to something that deals with the living in postmodern condition (the perceived breakdown of grand narratives, as you say)? — Kenosha Kid
Actually I was in East Berlin recently, and the architecture is surprisingly decorative. — Kenosha Kid
Pomo got it wrong in an interesting way, and as usual it is up to analytic philosophy to set things straight... after all, that's what it does. — Banno
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.