This seems to have always been p0m0's raison d'etre to occult, or obfuscate (i.e. "defer"), any distinctions — 180 Proof
Then yes, in my opinion. — Kenosha Kid
Okay, so how would you make this distinction between sensical Pomo and nonsensical one? What criteria would you use? — Olivier5
I refer to distinctions between sense and nonsense, not between sense and sense – p0m0's botorious lack, or avoidance, of (in/formal) standards of intelligibility. — 180 Proof
Only that similar equivalent "Sokal hoaxes" have gone through very well, which just shows how adrift the whole field is. And it's telling that you describe Sokal to be a conservative, which he isn't. As typical, anybody criticizing postmodernism has to be from the right.The Sokal affair seemed to me pretty stupid on both sides. Sokal got his paper rejected from several journals before finding one stupid enough to publish it. I don't think it says much of anything at all other than Sokal was an arsehole with a conservative axe to grind and Social Text had trouble unpacking his paper and ill-advisedly published it anyway. — Kenosha Kid
Now that's a great metaphor for post-modernism or simply an example of a postmodern film. It Has enough cues and enough of traditional story telling that you try to find a logical string that will make sense of the story. Yet then look at Inland Empire from the same director and yeah, then it's just "postmodernism".I've been on a cinema binge since the beginning of the pandemic so might I recommend Mulholland Drive — Maw
And it's telling that you describe Sokal to be a conservative, which he isn't. As typical, anybody criticizing postmodernism has to be from the right. — ssu
How does it get stronger, if you don't believe in the goal of objectivity in science, but start from the idea that it's just a subjective power play?In reality, science only really gets stronger through criticism. — Kenosha Kid
Still Sokal was a leftist, similar to actually others that are politically on the left and worried about postmodernism.) — ssu
Ok, conservative meaning he's for those old ideas about science from the age of Enlightenment. Got it. — ssu
How does it get stronger, if you don't believe in the goal of objectivity in science, but start from the idea that it's just a subjective power play? — ssu
?His criticism, however motivated, whatever his beliefs, was valid when it was valid and invalid when it was not. Invalid criticism isn't something to fear: it can be met quite simply to the scientist's satisfaction, if not the critic's. Valid criticism needs to be taken on board, and it was, to science's betterment hopefully. — Kenosha Kid
As typical, anybody criticizing postmodernism has to be from the right. — ssu
Have you read German philosophical texts from the 19th Century? Many of them were quite conservative/right wing and still extremely difficult to understand. So being difficult to understand isn't something that post-modernists have invented.I mean, it's easy to sound "leftier" than anybody if no one understand what you're saying... — Manuel
If some of our great minds, who are sympathetic to the French writers, don't get it right, what chance for the rest of us? — Tom Storm
It is legitimate to say that Schopenhauer said this out of jealousy, there may be some truth to this, but I just think he really disliked obscurity, making a notable exception for Kant. — Manuel
I haven't found Kant obscure. For me his work is complex rather than obscure. — Janus
the fact that so much additional 'infrastructure' is needed to excavate the few scattered diamond-splinters from mountains of frenchified turds indicates that one's time will be better spent shoveling up the muck prospecting for precious gems in the other "movements" "schools" "traditions" of philosophy & critical theory. — 180 Proof
This isn't a pomo distinction, it's just the distinction between sense and nonsense. — Kenosha Kid
Yet isn't the problem when those that should use the scientific method reject it as being part of the modernist agenda? — ssu
Who do you think decides what just is valid or invalid criticism? — ssu
When religion trumps science, science doesn't get stronger, it simply loses. A great example in history is what happened to science in Islam after "the Golden Age" in medieval times. People are people, even scientists. — ssu
What specifically is there in pomo that is of use to thinking about science that stands out as opposed to say, Humean skepticism or some other variety of common sense? — Manuel
The threat of 'science being undermined' was just never credible imo — Kenosha Kid
A distinction which is now blurred in modern gender studies, queer studies, fat studies, etc. i.e. the industry of grievience studies stemming from Pomo. — Olivier5
That was precisely Sokal's position, that pomo does NOT represent a significant threat to science at all. — Olivier5
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