I like Derrida's face. I like his vibe in interviews. I really like The White Mythology, too. (If metaphysics is metaphorical, then metaphor is metaphysical. That's my take-home.) But his ideas seem far less ambitious and essential than Hegel's. Really, Kojeve had me feeling like a rational mystic. It lit up my world. It was a beautiful translation and type-setting too.For my perception, Hegel and Derrida took philosophy seriously in very different ways. Hegel, for me, is the genuine article; Derrida seems to be more of a 'celebrity philosopher'. — John
There's a tradition of thinking "analogy as the core of cognition." Lakoff, Norman O. Brown, Vico, and Rorty come to mind. Derrida quotes Anatole France in the essay. Look to the etymology of abstract terms. I used to do this, very taken with metaphor as a central function. Where Mathematics Comes From was especially relevant and convincing to me. Here's this, just in case it tickles your mind:I'm not sure what it could mean to say metaphysics is metaphorical or the converse. — John
But he makes a case that metaphor usurps a "metaphysical" role as a master/explanatory/reducing concept.Derrida's White Mythology offers a penetrating critique of the common paradigm involving the nature of concepts, posing the following questions: “Is there metaphor in the text of philosophy, and if so, how?” Here, the history of philosophy is characterized as an economy, a kind of "usury" where meaning and valuation are understood as metaphorical processes involving “gain and loss.” ...
The “usury” of the sign (the coin) signifies the passage from the physical to the metaphysical. Abstractions now become “worn out” metaphors; they seem like defaced coins, their original, finite values now replaced by a vague or rough idea of the meaning-images that may have been present in the originals.
Such is the movement which simultaneously creates and masks the construction of concepts. Concepts, whose real origins have been forgotten, now only yield an empty sort of philosophical promise – that of “the absolute”, the universalized, unlimited “surplus value” achieved by the eradication of the sensory or momentarily given. Derrida reads this process along a negative Hegelian line: the metaphysicians are most attracted to “concepts in the negative, ab-solute, in-finite, non-Being” (WM 121). That is, their love of the most abstract concept, made that way “by long and universal use”, reveals a preference for the construction of a metaphysics of Being. — IEP
I think he did forge a new, French Hegel. In any case, I still think Kojeve is gold. But then I really liked Solomon's From Hegel to Existentialism, too.I read Introduction to the Reading of Hegel a few years ago, and I remember enjoying it, in particular the discussion of the master/slave dialectic....Perhaps he is largely responsible for the predominately materialist interpretations of Hegel that are almost universally orthodoxical in l'academie, and which I have long been somewhat skeptical about. — John
I think you're right. The Phen. was rushed, too, if memory serves. I've read his early theological writings. They are quite clear, quite enjoyable. He also gave stirring and clear speeches, recorded in Wiedmann, if I'm spelling that right. But maybe Phen. was raw Hegel just giving birth to ideas he hadn't organized yet under a time constraint.You can have the cynical Schopenhauer view...but I think it's more likely he felt unable to express his own depth. — The Great Whatever
His Introduction To Metaphysics is one of the best examples of this I think: the first 3 or 4 chapters are lovely to read, and then all of a sudden he starts taking about Antigone and it all goes to hell. — StreetlightX
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