|
POST-MODERNISM
AND THE RECOVERY OF THE PHILOSOPHICAL
TRADITION.
© F. L. Jackson
fljackson@morgan.ucs.mun.ca
Introduction
1. As century and millennium draw to a close the paradoxical thought
preoccupying philosophers is whether or how philosophy is at an end. According
to the now common opinion - among many academic philosophers, indeed, a
certainty - the ideal of a universal knowledge through principles, philosophia,
has long since been exposed as spurious so that no person of right mind
would nowadays recognize or indulge in it as a legitimate pursuit. For
the new philosophers the fact is that "philosophy" as traditionally understood
is a thinking no longer relevant for a post-modern consciousness and world;
if it might still have a role it can only be in some radically attenuated
sense: as writing its own obituary, clearing away of the rubble of its
own ruined foundations, speculating as to what it might now mean to live
and think post-philosophically.
2. That the philosophical legacy has become moribund would
certainly appear confirmed in the universities, where the former queen
of the faculties has long been deposed and the view of philosophy as an
obsolete discipline is so broadly established that even full professors
of philosophy are rendered mute by the question as to why it should even
be taught at all, much less what its proper curriculum should be. In the
general culture too the appeal to rational grounds is viewed as un-chic,
if not indecent; a moralistic presumption prevails that equates the naive
appeal to principles with allegiance to established religions: as indicative
of an atavistic and reactionary turn of mind. In a culture that tolerates
the most capricious and absurd superstitions provided they claim no more
than a subjective validity, the achievement and the way of philosophy does
not even garner that much respect. The popular view accords more with the
judgement of Nietzsche that the philosophical outlook and spirit is not
merely misguided, it is perverse.
3. In this light the spirit of the times might, on considerable
evidence, be described as a-philosophical through and through. But it can
hardly be right to deplore this state of affairs, as traditionalists tend
to do, as a kind of Roman degeneration of modern culture into mere thoughtlessness
and caprice. For it must also be acknowledged that in consideration of
its commitment to subjective freedom and its insistence on open discourse
as sine qua non for the acceptance of any moral, intellectual or
political position - not to mention the unprecedented numbers of philosophers
populating contemporary universities - it could just as well be said that
never has there been an age so thoroughly "philosophical" as is our own.
Even those writers who would now claim to have at last overcome philosophical
culture and its "logocentrism" are far from representing this eventuality
as catastrophic; on the contrary, they herald it as the final liberation
from an intellectual despotism, the emancipation of thought from all its
past delusions.
4. Indeed it is now de rigeur among philosophers
themselves to argue that philosophy did in fact end, with Hegel or thereabouts,
and that the age when people believed in a universal, absolute knowledge,
or that the actual is the rational, is long since over. So has almost everyone
from Kierkegaard and Feuerbach to Rorty and Derrida argued (even Auden:
"Goodbye, Plato and Hegel/ The shop is closing down..."). Thus it cannot
just be a question of philosophy having somehow spontaneously withered
away over the past century or so; rather the significant fact is that there
has been a deliberate and resolute effort to overthrow it, and that this
indeed has been the principal project of philosophy itself in the ultra-modern
era. Bewailing the "decline" of philosophy is thus not quite to the
point; the real challenge is to understand this ultra-modernist legacy
of overthrow and the motives for it.
5. This is not to deny that there is something logically
fishy about arguments which claim to set absolute limits to argument or
a theory to end all theory, which is what the war over the end of philosophy
being waged in the journals is mostly about. No less scrutable are pronouncements
that we are now passing from a culture founded on intellectual principle
to one that no longer is; especially when this position is argued intellectually.
It is no doubt the paradox which prompted Lyotard to warn us that we must
not view the "post-modern condition" as the dawn of some new culture to
supplant the older modern one, for that would require us to give the "rationale"
whereby the first is distinguished from the last, which is to contradict
just what the step means to be, namely a stepping beyond all rationale-fixated
culture. So if it is to be neither the advent of a new culture nor a lunge
into the void, the link of post-modernity to modernity must somehow be
maintained in stepping beyond it. Thus his formula: post-modernity is modernity
itself in it self-negative extension.[1]
6. Attempts to think the end of philosophy share the same
difficulty: how it is thinkable to go beyond philosophical reason or set
it in abeyance without resorting to arguments that are again philosophical.
It is the Cartesian problem of how one is to think beyond thinking. One
way is to construct arguments that can claim to be "persuasive" in some
para-logical sense; it has become common practice since Heidegger, Wittgenstein,
Foucault et al. to appeal to poetic, linguistic or coercive "reasons"
and even to cite these as the real hidden force behind the arguments of
philosophy itself.[2] Another way is to abstain from argument altogether,
as does Derrida who, when asked what he really means (vouler dire)
in his books and arguments replies that he means nothing at all,[3] which
is the right answer if what one in fact "means to say" is precisely that
all meaning is undecidable.
7. The paradox is nothing new. In various forms it has
plagued the whole career of anti-philosophical thinking in its rise to
predominance over the past two centuries. If that history may be described
as the history of attempts to effect the definitive critique of the philosophical
tradition, it is also the history of this paradox and of successive attempts
to surmount it. It is the purpose hereinafter to explore this distinctively
ultra-philosophical spirit and very broadly to sketch the lines of its
development from its early nineteenth century origins to its current post-modern
denouement. It will be argued that it is precisely the contradiction entailed
in the very idea of a philosophical conquest of philosophy that has rendered
all attempts to articulate it ambiguous and deficient, and that it is the
same ambiguity that has provided the dialectical engine which has driven
each interim stage of the argument beyond itself, forcing its restatement
at a further level.
8. For it is only when philosophical movements reach their
proper denouement that it first becomes possible to begin to understand
and evaluate them within the purview of the wider history of thought. Before
that, the dogmatic enthusiasm that is associated with projects still under
way and whose aims are as yet unsullied and undoubted makes any real questioning
of them virtually impossible. So it has been with Euro-American thought
since the eclipse of the great age of modern philosophy in and after Hegel's
time and, whose logic and limits only lately have begun to come into view.
"Ultra-philosophy" would seem the apt term to designate the general
form of the thinking peculiar to that era which, in other contexts, is
often referred to as "ultra-modernity". The prefix "ultra-" has
the convenient double sense of "going-beyond" and "taking-to-the-extreme",
and ultra-philosophy stands in just such an ambiguous relation to the philosophy
of classical modernity which it would at once overthrow, but also drive
to its limit.
9. The common view of post-modern writers that their own
perspective owes its origin to very recent insights on the part of a Rorty
or Derrida is quite mistaken. The undertaking to emancipate thought from
philosophy is already two centuries old and has generated a substantial
legacy of its own. The earliest forms of ultra-philosophy are to be found
in nineteenth century materialism or evolutionary theory, in Feuerbach's
"going-beyond" of Christian theology or Schopenhauer's and Kierkegaard's
subordination of speculative reason to specifically contra-rational absolutes.
The 20th century saw a return to philosophy in a new key in the form of
methodologies whose ostensible aim was the "reform" or "critique" of philosophy,
thus again with an essentially ultra-philosophical intent. Its most recent
shape is the post-modern scepticism which assumes the whole philosophical
legacy to be self-discredited and which would no longer seek to go beyond
it or reform it, but remain sceptically poised, as it were, on its nether
side.
10. In this its most recent mutation, however, the project of
ultra-philosophy has been brought to the brink. In this sceptical form
the contradiction inherent from the beginning in the idea of thinking the
end of thought is escalated to suicidal intensity. For what would now be
accomplished is no longer just the overthrow of philosophy but also the
overthrow of the overthrow, the critique of the critique. What has come
to light for post-modernism is that there can be no decisive argument
to put an end to thought since all such arguments are but thinking again.
The only option, then, is simply to assume outright the nullity
of all argument, both philosophical or meta-philosophical, and to sustain
this stand through purely sceptical-intellectual activity (which Derrida
calls "deconstruction" and Rorty a neo-pragmatic "conversation") engaging
extant positions of every kind and seeing them as self-invalidating while
conscientiously seeking to remain position-less and inconclusive itself.
But with that, the essential project of ultra-philosophy, which was to
carry out the final overthrow of the philosophical legacy, is really abandoned.
There is now no longer any distinction between what is to be gone beyond
and the going beyond it, between the philosophical legacy or its critique.
All that remains is philosophy that has become totally and purely academic,
a reflection which has no content of its own beyond the endless evocation
and subversion of arguments, and which "means to say" nothing beyond this
exercise of a wholly negative reason.
11. The career of ultra-modernist thought may accordingly be
delineated in three principal phases. The nineteenth century saw the advent
of various doctrines that had as their common distinctive theme the dethronement
of the spiritual-speculative outlook of the western tradition and its replacement
with distinctly counter-speculative forms of world-explanation: a position
to be designated hereinafter as "counter-philosophy". At the turn
of the century new schools of philosophical inquiry appear which make it
their business to disclose and correct, from a second-order, critical standpoint,
what are alleged as the fatal fallacies of all western philosophy: thus
"meta-philosophy".
Finally the limit of ultra-philosophy is reached in the post-modernism
which declares both the dogmatic and the critical forms of the opposition
to philosophy self-defeating, and proposes instead to expose the whole
legacy of reasoned discourse as spurious and annulled in itself - "post-philosophy".
Each successive shape of the ultra-modernist thesis has its own distinctive
approach to how the end of philosophy is properly to be thought; each has
its unique interpretation - and indeed misinterpretation - of what it is
in the speculative tradition that must be rejected; and each, in its own
way runs afoul of an ineradicable paradox that plagues every step of the
way.
I. Counter-Philosophy: Scientism and Absolutism
12. What it was that originally provoked the ultra-modernist
turn in philosophy is a question that already has too many answers. From
Feuerbach to the present the account of what in the older speculative tradition
demanded its radical repudiation has been stated and restated in so many
conflicting ways that to cleave to one or another version would be arbitrarily
to fall in with some particular school. For to accept Nietzsche's answer
or Ayer's or Dewey's is thereby to reject Kierkegaard's or Marx's or Heidegger's
for these are wholly contrary accounts of the matter which cannot be reconciled.
What is more to the point is to go back to the beginning again to seek
to understand the ultra-philosophical project as whole, as a history, and
to consider how the argument takes shape, what conflicts arise and develop
in it, and what is its final outcome.
13. The boldest, most straightforward arguments are usually those
made at the beginning. The apocalyptic writers of the nineteenth century
were the first to challenge the traditional modern-western account of the
world and attempt to articulate entirely new perspectives considered appropriate
to the emerging ultra-modernist culture with its techno-political humanism
and appeal to a radical subjective freedom. There was the sense that history
had "broken in two",[4] and that the history of philosophy in particular
had reached an epochal impasse in which its limits had been reached and
exposed. The ancien régime of thinking reason was summarily jettisoned
and new modes of thought proposed whose thrust was distinctively realist,
non-conceptual, historical, experiential, humanistic and world-affirmative.
14. This counter-philosophical spirit took two chief forms: the
first would abandon speculative thought altogether for a dogmatic rationalism
appealing to positive, atheist and materialistic world-explanations - scientism;
the second somewhat retained a speculative appearance but such as posited
an explicitly counter-rational principle as its object and theme - absolutism.
Scientism set in opposition to the spiritual-speculative view of the world
- to "metaphysics" - another derived from one or other of the finite sciences,
elevated to the rank of a philosophy-surrogate; thus sociology (Comte),
politics (Feuerbach), psychology (Mill), biology (Spencer) or physics (Mach).
Absolutism would still make its case as philosophy, even as metaphysics,
though as inverse metaphysics, centring on a notion of being or "ultimate
reality" as in itself irrational, self-oppositional and paradoxical, a
perpetually self-reflexive "absolute-finite" in principle destructive of
every objective stability. In this is expressed again, in another way,
the basic thesis of counter-philosophy: namely that it is the finite self-consciousness
and world that is really absolute, a view which Schopenhauer, Stirner,
Kierkegaard and Nietzsche all champion.
15. Few any longer question the so-called "scientific view of
the world" that once gave fright to kings and popes. Its appeal rests on
the claim to have abandoned the vagaries of abstract thinking and to have
reestablished science anew on a wholly non-theoretical base, relying exclusively
on the brute facts of nature and society as should be obvious to a healthy
mind that has given up trying merely to "think" the world and has instead
wholly immersed itself in it. Condemning speculative metaphysics as a fraudulent
appeal to indemonstrable figments, it promotes in its place a comprehensive,
realist, de-mystified, "metaphysics-free" account of man, nature and history
which resolves not to stray from the finite, concrete, immediate and factual
human world; an account which, since "positive" and not theoretical,[5]
is immune to all theoretical doubts and distortions.
16. It is just this anti-intellectual bias, however, which renders
scientism un-scientific in practice. For its appeal to evidence is at bottom
dogmatic: some "general fact" is postulated and then ordinary facts conscripted
in "confirmation" - thus that the progressive evolution of species is the
brute fact of nature is demonstrated by the existence of certain frogs,
or the actual policies of Napoleon are evinced as "proof" of the class
struggle as the brute fact of history. But such a verification is wholly
circular and the notion that there are primordial general facts is in any
case clearly a fiction whose real function is to substitute for the appeal
to reasoned principle. As the theory of evolution, physicalism, mechanistic
psychology, historicism and other such doctrines demonstrate, what scientism
actually produces are crypto-metaphysical doctrines[6] which deal in postulates
no less figmentary than those they mean to replace. In short, scientific
positivism is just metaphysics again in another form, a metaphysics of
the finite or factual world posited as absolute, that is, as "unconditionally
given".
17. Though with similar roots and intent, absolutism stands utterly
opposed to scientific positivism; the two wage continuous war throughout
the nineteenth century and beyond. "The Absolute" in its ultra-modern meaning
embodies a distinctly contra-speculative reference, a radical affirmation
of the finite-as-absolute similar to scientism's, though now from the
side of the absolute. Typically characterised as what exists in itself
before all consciousness of it, thus in principle opaque and impenetrable
to reason, it is only the Absolute's own self-disclosure which make its
apprehension even possible, an apprehension that is for this reason pre-rational
or aesthetic. Schopenhauer's Will and the Kierkegaardian inwardness provide
early examples of this absolutist reference which appears in other guises
throughout the century: "the Unknowable", "the Incomprehensible", "Will
to Power" and so forth.[7] nineteenth century absolutism generated a whole
legacy of popular imagery - "ultimate reality" as Life, Self, Cosmos, Energy,
the Unconscious etc. - while the literary tradition was also much given
over to the same romantic-absolutist language of inscrutables and ineffables.[8]
What Heidegger, playing Parmenides to ultra-modernist Milesians, later
will simply call Sein, springs from the same ancestry.
18. There thus exists from the beginnings of counter-philosophy
a profound revolutionary-reactionary division that stems from a fundamental
ambiguity as to how the reality of a wholly finite, natural-historical
human existence might be comprehended and affirmed over against the idealityof
the world as it is for traditional philosophical thought. At this point
the goal is not conceived as one of bringing thinking itself to an end
but rather as discovering a distinctly counter-conceptual mode of thinking:
thus "science" (in this corrupted sense) or "subjectivity". For in its
innermost soul the intent of the ultra-modernist spirit is not to repudiate
modernity, but only to overcome what is still mediated in it, to affirm
its core principle of a concrete human freedom in the world as an actually
or virtually realized condition. And this is precisely its ambiguity: it
would go beyond modernity and its tradition and not go beyond it; it would
extend it to its most extreme form and yet withdraw from that. Accordingly,
both scientific positivism or absolutist nihilism would affirm a finite
reason in place of a universal and deny the idea of freedom for the sake
of an actual one conceived in social terms or as a self-affirmative life.
A most intense debate develops as to precisely how the "overthrow of idealism"
is to be appropriately effected and what a new, ultra-modern thinking-in-the-world
would be; whether the revolutionary repudiation of thought altogether or
its reactionary reconstitution in a self-negative form; whether simply
to step beyond reason or turn it against itself.[9]
19. This intense controversy within counter-philosophy embodies
the paradox intrinsic in the ultra-modern ideal of a purely finite reason
and freedom and the corresponding overthrow of the philosophical spirit
from this radical human standpoint. The counter-philosophers could only
solve the dilemma by sundering the classical modern idea of freedom, the
unity of reason and being, into its constitutive elements, and playing
these off against one another such that what one specifies as the epitome
of the metaphysical and abstract the other advances as the essence of the
this-worldly and concrete. Thus positivism and its variants abrogate universal
being in the name of the world as it is for a finite human reason, while
absolutism abrogates universal reason in the name of being as it is for
the finite existent. The one indicates as the key metaphysical superstition
it would repudiate precisely that which the other affirms as the truth
to be rescued from it; and vice versa. The great debate between
moralism and romanticism affords the popular paradigm: both affirmed a
radical finite freedom as the unity of self-consciousness with nature.
But for moralism freedom is preeminently realized in the human-practical
overcoming of nature so that nothing is so morally abhorrent as the doctrine
that freedom is something instinctive. But for romanticism it is just in
the natural immediacy of individual self-feeling that freedom is aesthetically
given, and nothing is thought to pervert this instinctive identity of freedom
with "life" so much as the divorce of reason from nature which moralism
promotes.[10] In this manner the modern principle of the unity of reason
and being would be at once subverted and conserved.
20. The same opposition pervades the thinking of the whole era.[11]
Strausss and Kierkegaard debated the revolutionary sense of the modern-Christian
principle of divine-human identity, the former representing it as commitment
to an objective human self-making to which subjective faith is to be given
over, the latter as precisely the subjective passion of faith which leaps
beyond all humanistic moralism and rationalism. Counter-metaphysics similarly
divided into polar arguments of positivism and nihilism: Comte would seek
a new ultra-rationalist basis for science and social morality in a being-for-man
of the world to which the traditional transhuman visions of philosophy
and religion are to be assimilated. But it is just the relentless in-itself-being
of reality, the utter un-reason of the absolute, which for Schopenhauer
annihilated everything that is merely positive or objective in human existence.
What is remarkable is how the one view negatively mirrors the other and
precisely and utterly abrogates just what the other asserts.
21. Counter-ethical thought had among its chief representatives
Feuerbach and Stirner in Germany, Mill and Spencer in England and James
and Royce in America. The same mutually oppositional relation of affirmation/abrogation
is manifest. Feuerbach, for example, describes speculative philosophy as
intellectualized Christian theology; its image of the God-man prefigures
freedom as the finite individual's immediate sense of his own human species-being.
The setting aside of the alienated spiritual-intellectual form in which
religion and philosophy represent this relation is a political emancipation
(Feuerbach: "politics is our religion"[12]) in which a subjective, un-humanized
individuality is awakened to the consciousness of its essential humanity.
To Stirner, nothing could be more alien than the notion of an objective
human essence. The belonging-to-self of individuality is an ethical absolute
and everything stands in relation to it as "its own". All objective ethical
"causes" dissolve in the infinite reciprocity of Der Einsige und sein
Eigenheit, of singularity and ownership,[13] and the "spirit", whether
of liberalism, humanism or moralism, is only the moribund after-life of
a religious-philosophical unfreedom - a "spook".
22. These are the same positions Marx and Nietzsche later refined
into doctrines that became enormously consequential for later ultra-modern
thought, culture and political life. Both were aware of the limits of earlier
counter-philosophical arguments which, continuing to play on the same field
they would abandon, were in the end self-defeating. Marx, recognizing Feuerbach
as mentor, complained that his overthrow of theology was still theological,[14]
while Nietzsche, acknowledging Schopenhauer as teacher, faulted him for
refuting morality only to advance a more decadent form of the same.[15]
The trouble with the arguments of their predecessors, both concluded, was
their one-sided dismissal of counter-positions had taken insufficient account
of the force of those positions, a defect Marx and Nietzsche would remedy
by seeking more definitely to identify their own specific counter-thesis
and negatively to comprehend it within their argument. Nietzsche's work
is wholly addressed to morality, the humanistic will-not-to-will as the
antithesis of will-to-power; he questions how it could even arise in the
first place - "how the saint is possible" - and how it has come to contaminate
the whole of historical culture. Marx on the contrary would account for
radical individualism and its anti-humanist ethic, which he saw as thwarting
man's natural species-life; he offered a logic of ideological power and
class dialectic to explain what he saw as the cruel anomaly of the rise
of bourgeois societies founded on a spurious subjective freedom. Thus humanism
becomes decadent individualism and individualism alienated humanism.
23. The appeal to totalistic, ideologically inspired theories
of human history to justify some one-sided repudiation of western philosophical
culture as a whole began in earnest with Marx and Nietzsche and established
violent prejudices which provided the fuel, first for the class struggle
and then the 20th century wars. For Marx, the revolutionary humanist, the
engine that impels history is the contradiction embodied in autocratic
individualism; for Nietzsche, the aesthetic autocrat, it is the apotheosis
of the life-denying, humanistic spirit. What again is remarkable is the
mutuallycontradictory
character of these accounts; how they explicitly cite one another
as opposites. But of course the same human history cannot be both the tale
of how objective social freedom was ever frustrated by the oppressive power
of the absolute individual will, and also the progressive perversion of
authentic subjective life at the hands of a repressive political-technological
idealism.
24. It is clear that the polar-opposite Marxist-Nietzschean accounts
of the past are pure concoctions whose real purpose is to substantiate
arguments which of their nature shun all appeal to rational grounds. It
is history that becomes the medium in which the contrariety between positivist
and absolutist accounts of freedom is sustained, and in such a manner that
each side declares itself to be the liberation from its own counter-thesis,
construed as having dominated the human past up to now. What is called
history becomes the chronicle of the progress of a spirit each would now
overthrow: for Nietzsche the apotheosis of the nihilistic human will against
which the new philosopher would now dare reaffirm "Life"; for Marx an epic
of ideological oppression on the part of the ruling classes, now at last
overthrown. Both the specific account of present cultural crisis and the
specific caricature of the past from which it is alleged to spring, belong
together as reciprocal facets of one argument, whose interest is not really
in world history but in reconstructing it to generate counterfoils to what
are essentially ultra-modernist positions. It is inevitable that history
itself, especially the history of philosophy, is barbarized in the process,
and the legacy of this barbarization is everywhere still evident and has
indeed become the accepted view of the past.
25. What scientism's atheistic, a-logistic positivism would defend
is objective progress toward a fully actual human world, a condition of
finite and tangible freedom such as traditional spirituality is said to
have written off as impossible and unworthy. Absolutism would similarly
affirm a radically finite freedom, the freedom of authentically subjective
individual life whose repression is alleged to have constituted the burden
and theme of traditional culture. These ultra-modernist forms of extreme
humanism and extreme individualism appear to themselves as if pitted against
a common enemy, the tradition of reason and its "idealism", but in reality
they are pitted against each other and with am intensity which, when translated
into political action, was to become fanatical.
26. The response of the philosophical tradition to nineteenth
century ultra-modernism was to attempt to erect bulwarks; the later part
of the century sees a rash of "neo-idealisms" - neo-Platonism, neo-Thomism,
neo-Kantism etc. - which were not true reversions to these earlier positions
but exploited them to fashion anti-anti-idealist weapons with which
to go to war with materialism. But doing battle on fields and with arms
chosen by the enemy, they succeeded only in further distorting the very
sources they would invoke - Plato became a Victorian moralist, Hegel a
Prussian nationalist or British imperialist. In the subsequent stand-off
between ultra-modernism and neo-idealism it became clear to the former
that its fuller conquest of the tradition of reason required that the attack
be taken into the precincts of philosophy itself, there to repudiate it
on its own turf. Accordingly, 20th century critical thought is more than
merely counter-philosophical; it carries out its subversion of reason from
a standpoint that claims to be at once beyond philosophy and itself philosophical:
meta-philosophy.[16]
II. Meta-Philosophy: the 20th Century Schools
27. The general standpoint and presumption of 20th century thought
is of self-consciously free, contemporary individuals existing in immediate
relation to a finite world they directly know as their own. All notions
of reality beyond this world are ruled false or "metaphysical". Scientism
and absolutism have so far become second nature that the thought-world
appears to have entirely receded into the past: a "traditional philosophy"
that can be no longer relevant for a confident individuality that has become
wholly attached to what is distinctly and concretely there and possible
for finite human practice and life. Schools of analytical and existential
philosophy arose to articulate this position. They would aggressively seek
to occupy the intellectual territory on the hither side of an epochal break
with the old world of reason, taken as a fait accompli, and would
rise to the adequate thought of a brave new world of subjective freedom
which is sustained through the definitive critique of the standpoint of
traditional philosophy: definitive since itself philosophical. Philosophy
is to carry out its own refutation.
28. From this standpoint the whole of traditional thought is
taken as vitiated through its habit of transcending limits now declared
insuperable. It has been guilty of ignoring the perspectival limits of
consciousness, for example, of thinking beyond time, of "forgetting" the
radical finiteness of being, of uncritically accepting non-factual statements
as true, of failing to realize "thinking" is only linguistic activity and
so on - to all of which offenses traditional philosophy itself would of
course readily confess. The new philosophy on the contrary will make no
claim to any first-order knowledge; it will constitute itself solely as
the second-order reflection whose only aim is to legislate against such
transgressions and to get investigations under way designed to expose,
arrest, curb and correct the perennial pretensions of rational thought
in its misguided aspiration to an impossible universal knowledge.
29. As logic and ontology are foundational in philosophy, the
new meta-philosophy initially took shape as attempts to establish a new
logic and ontology of the finite to supersede their traditional foundation
in thinking reason. Accordingly, a number of nineteenth century experiments
in mathematics and psychology paved the way for later reconstructions of
logic along essentially extra-logical lines: Brentano, Boole, Frege, Peirce
and others. The inward motivation of this revolution was not at all to
advance logical science itself but to bring logic as a whole under what
are essential ultra-logical criteria, drawn from mathematics, semiotics
or psychology. The analytical and phenomenological schools trace their
roots to such meta-logical and meta-ontological "investigations" of the
first decades of the 20th century: Husserl's Logical Investigations,
Principia
Mathematica, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus, Being and Time.
30. The aim of the new methods was completely to undermine the
traditional philosophy through methodical "clarifications" of all its alleged
obfuscations and fallacies. That such a meta-analysis of philosophy is
the only legitimate task of philosophy itself was to become the conventional
wisdom by mid-century. Ironically, "philosophy" appeared suddenly reborn;
for several generations the works of the grand masters of meta-philosophy
- Frege, Dewey, Russell, Husserl, Wittgenstein, Heidegger - became virtually
scriptural, the required class-texts of vast academic schools whose scholars
produced mountains of research aimed at completing the final critique of
traditional philosophy. The whole legacy from Plato and Kant was read and
taught again on a mass level, not on its own terms, but so as to provide
grist for the meta-philosophical mill to grind into fine critical dust,
or as a source of interesting themes to be suitably transposed into the
new key. Meta-logic and meta-ontology came to dominate academic philosophy
through the century; it precisely expresses the spirit of the ultra-modernist
heyday, the era of final solutions, whose art, popular culture and philosophy,
no less than its politics, affirmed as absolute the finite will to overthrow
all absolutes.
31. The claim of the new analysis to put philosophy on the side
of science did not mean philosophy was itself to become science but that
since knowledge is assumed exclusively to be the positive-scientific account
of the fact-world, the true role of philosophy must be to establish and
defend the rules of such scientific verification meta-scientifically.[17]
Though Russell's logical atomism looks much like a rehash of classical
British empiricism (for simple and complex ideas read atomic or molecular
facts; for laws of induction read truth-functions etc.) the difference
is that for Russell there no longer are any empirical things-in-themselves;
no ideas, no thinking subjects, no reasoned empirical inferences, in short,
no philosophical knowledge. There is only the positive "fact-world" and
individuals who use language to mirror it. Logic is not thought reflecting
on its own inward structure - there are no "thinking beings", only brain-equipped
linguistic animals. Logic is meta-logic, the second-order system of rules,
themselves wholly factual, for the correct formulation of positive statements.
The realm of propositionally pictured fact is for Russell the only real
world there is, the radically finite here-and-now world which analytical
philosophy would oppose to the thought-world of traditional metaphysics.
32. The commencement is thus decidedly not with any appeal to
a rational basis but to a series of dogmas which simply declare how things
stand with finite individuals fashioning statements about their equally
finite world. Among these dogmas: only the fact-world exists and nothing
else does; to "know" is correctly to state facts through propositions;
only propositions referring to empirical facts are true or false, all others
merely formal or empty expressions; empirical science alone judges as to
what the facts are and metaphysical or ethical statements are nonsense;
the exclusive business of logic (hence philosophy) is so to clarify the
rules of propositional statement that all non-factual claims can finally
be put to rest. These same positions are repeated in Wittgenstein's Tractatus
which more decisively makes it the sole business of philosophy, not to
frame propositions of its own, but only "to make propositions clear". The
work makes a beginning toward ridding the Russellian formulae of their
crypto-metaphysical residue, establishing more strictly the rule that of
what would lie beyond the facts and their verbal picturing "nothing can
be said" and so we should remain silent.
33. Later positivists develop the same emphasis in attempts to
formulate a "principle of verification"[18] through whose relentless application
every temptation to metaphysical judgement might be arrested. Through a
generation of analytical literature, however, the limits of the verification
criterion worked their way to the fore: it is impotent respecting scientific
generalities like E=MC2; it cannot explained why only physics-like
statements are factual without invoking empiricist metaphysics; the ghost
of an ultra-factual "world-out-there" always seems presupposed; its restriction
of meaningfulness to factual utterance in any case stretches credulity.
Moreover, its essential dogmatism is exposed in that its criterion cannot
apply to itself without self-destructing. It becomes apparent that the
regime that allows only factual statements to be meaningful is itself wholly
metaphysical and does not square with the intent of the new philosophy
which was to establish a meta-metaphysical beach-head in the everyday world
in such way as to demystify it of all metaphysical prejudices. The need
is felt for a less theory-laded approach to analytical investigation such
as would comprehend a multitude of meaningful ways in which individuals
use language to address and express their immediate world.
34. The later Wittgenstein will thus speak of propositional logic
as only one use of language which it is presumptious to rank above others.
His analysis asks that we avoid assumptions as to what may or may not be
meaningful or true and which privileges some particular use of language,
a step which can only be justified extra-linguistically, that is metaphysically.
The more adequate inoculation against metaphysics is the recognition that
the problems of traditional philosophy are really linguistic neuroses and
bottlenecks and true philosophy the analytical therapy which liberates
language from these fixations and shows "the fly the way out of the fly-bottle".[19]
Such analysis will avoid explicit counter-metaphysical refutations like
that of logical positivism; it will simply unravel the linguistic tangles
that constitute the knotty problems and puzzles, including positivist ones,
that engender what has been called "philosophy". The standard of normality
for this therapy is the everyday, spontaneous use of language as the "common
behaviour of mankind".[20] It is no longer a question of uncovering hidden
realities or even of comprehending or changing obvious ones; the simple
task of a linguistic philosophy is to bear witness to ordinary language-behaviour
and thus to "leave everything as it is". Thus would Wittgenstein affirm
the preeminence of the immediate, quotidian world of everyday talk over
the alleged tortured perspectives of reason. It is no longer a question
of a pre-given fact-world pictured in static empirical propositions, but
of a contextual, behavioural world of common linguistic usage, seen as
absolute since nothing whatever can be uttered or understood except in
its terms.
35. Wittgenstein's linguistic positivism sent everyone into the
cultural byways looking, "not for the meaning, but the use". With Austin
the everyday dictionary and thesaurus were elevated to the rank of philosophical
texts. The rule was to treat all instances of linguistic behaviour as differing
"language-games", each with its peculiar rules, each appropriate to its
context, and none, not even empirical propositions, affording privileged
access to extra-linguistic truth. It was now even possible to turn again
to religious "god-talk" or ethical or metaphysical pronouncements so long
as the same non-committal interest was maintained as would apply to the
analysis of the rules of the lingo that builders use on the job; that is,
without making any commitment whatever to what the language of theology,
ethics or science actually said. This studied reduction of every content
to the form of the language used to communicate it became one of the most
powerful paradigms of all 20th century academic teaching and research.
In philosophy it was thought a great liberation to be released from grappling
with first-order problems which one could now feel satisfied were in any
case bogus and easily resolved simply by reference to the ordinary language
one ordinarily spoke and in which one could presume to be already somewhat
expert. Philosophy of language provided a solid, readily available and
democratic vantage-point from which almost anyone could effect the summary
overthrow of philosophy and be instantly emancipated from all the illusions,
as well as the hard labour, of rational thought.
35. Husserl makes essentially the same commencement as Russell
with researches into mathematical foundations. His is also a revolt against
traditional metaphysics and "unscientific" ways of thinking.[21] He too
appeals to the immediate, temporal life-world as it is for existing individuals,
with stress on the subjective aspect of its givenness. His understanding
of the role of a new logic and ontology is the mirror-complement of Russell's:
what is important is not the fact but the facticity of the fact, not the
fact-world as objective but as a system of meaning. Scientific philosophy
will be the eidetic analysis of the modes of the "being-there" of the world
for the "consciousness-of" it, to which access is gained by suspension
of every thesis and inference that would go beyond the "things themselves"
in their primordial givenness. This epoché sets all appeal to metaphysics,
including empiricist metaphysics, in abeyance; in one para-Cartesian stroke
the world for thinking reason is summarily suspended and all that remains
is phenomenologically to describe the pre-reflexive being-for-consciousness-of-the-world
which is thereby revealed.
36. Heidegger's inspiration for Sein und Zeit was the
same intentional relation of existential consciousness to its own pre-reflexive
world. Dasein, as "the being for whom being itself is a question",
is quite the same "I" as Husserl's phenomenological subject though analyzed
rather in ontological terms of the modes of this finite-being (being-in-the-world,
fallen-ness, being-with, Angst) as also the modes in which being
stands related to it (available, useful, present or absent, disclosed,
concealed). Time is revealed as the essence of being; it is in its various
ecstatic modes that being presents and absents itself. Thus would Heidegger
express how things stand for the finite individual who affirms a radically
temporal, conditional and contingent world as his own. A whole mid-century
culture of popular existentialism took its cue from this kind of reflection
and developed it in all sorts of directions, particularly in the arts.
37. But like Wittgenstein, and for analogous reasons, the later
Heidegger drew away from the quasi-psychological approach of phenomenology[22]
into a more direct ontological format. For if access to being is sought
through analysis of the special case of Dasein, as Sein u. Zeit
proposed, it must remain problematical whether what is disclosed thereby
applies only to the special case, or to being itself; whether temporality,
for example, is a dimension peculiar to human being only or to Being as
such and on the whole.[23] Playing Spinoza to Husserl's Descartes, Heidegger
gave himself wholly over to the "question of being" as such and to the
thinking that might think it in this negative-ontological sense. His later
essays are thus occupied with giving an account of being quabeing
in the classical Thomistic-Aristotelian manner, except that instead of
the eternal, unitary, universal categories of being in the traditional
account, it now discloses itself through radically contrary, this-worldly
categories of particularity, temporality, fatality, difference, contingency,
eventuality, fortuity and so on. In short, Heidegger's is an inverse metaphysics,
a meta-metaphysics of the finite, which is to say a doctrine of being as
time.[24]
38. In so seeking an account of being as it would be for a wholly
finite subject and renouncing the conceptual thinking that would "transgress"
this limit, Heidegger resorts to more and more recondite neologisms, questionable
etymology and unhistorical histories, couched in a counter-conceptual,
quasi-theological and poetizing language that speaks in earthy woodland
metaphors of paths, turnings, inns, clearings, backtracking, harkening
and so forth, just as Nietzsche liked to speak of mountains and clear air.
The result is an arcane language that the most practised academics learn
to speak only with difficulty with ceaseless debate over lexical nuances
even then. This abstruseness is not just a weakness, however, but deliberate
on the part of the author who explicitly pronounces conceptual language
to be inappropriate to the standpoint of the finite subjectivity he would
establish and articulate. As what he means to say is thus intentionally
and in itself contrary to thought and cannot in principle be articulated
in any clear way, it can be grasped only aesthetically, or better, subjective-existentially,
which is of course the whole point.
39. The aim of the 20th century schools was to avoid the paradox
entailed in direct confrontations with philosophical reason by developing
meta-philosophical disciplines that could claim to be independent of it
while setting its limits and effecting its decisive critique - and doing
so philosophically. It would be a thinking-beyond-thinking, a radical thinking;
"ultra-philosophy" in the proper sense of the term. In an inverted replay
of the stoic and epicurean dogmatisms which sought a philosophical freedom
in but not of the world, the meta-philosophers of Language and Existence
promised disengagement from the thought-world of traditional morality and
metaphysics and triumphant return to the human here-and-now world of positive
fact and authentic existence.[25] This they would accomplish through new
ways of thinking that dissociate themselves from the philosophical legacy
while remaining critically engaged with it. Linguistic analysis allows
weighty issues of philosophy to continue to be addressed, while at the
same time assuring a complete and utter detachment from them. So also existential
ontology, which represents being as what is forever concealed in every
attempt to comprehend it in thought, but which declares itself nonetheless
in poetic intuitions which not only supersede thinking but claim to be
thinking itself at its deepest and most penetrating.
40. The more these ultra-philosophical programmes came to dominate
20th century inquiry the more professionalised and esoteric they became.
From the original revolutionary enthusiasm of a decisive redirecting of
thought to the human world and an absolute individual freedom within it,
philosophy withdrew into a nether-world of industrious paper-work, of interminable
critique-ing of critiques and circular interpretation of interpretation
addressed to the so-called "literature", that is, chiefly to its own journalistic
productions. Drawn into this purely intellectual process, the ordinary
issues and ideas that might spontaneously occur to a genuinely philosophical
spirit are institutionalized and dissipated in highly specialized forms
of argumentation. What passed for the teaching of philosophy became largely
a matter of the inculcation of the orthodox watchwords, formulae and conventions
required of any who might elect to participate in the esoteric business
of academic seminars and research, so that the meta-philosophical schools
tended finally to degenerate into a kind of scholasticism.
41. The reason for this lies in the way the ambivalence of the
ultra-modernist project recurs in the case of meta-philosophy. Its very
idea depends on assuming a double-tiered thinking: a division between a
first-order, uncritical thinking that in the case of philosophy spawns
illusory knowledge, and a second-order thinking which knows nothing itself
but is purely critical. Everything depends on keeping these two strictly
separated: second-order critique must not be confused with a first-order
knowledge - the axioms of logic are not facts, the epoché is not
a psychological event, linguistic analysis is not a Cambridge language-game.
And likewise, the basis of first-order knowledge must not be the product
of second-order reflection but be given independently - facts are just
there, language is ordinary behaviour, the encounter with being is prereflexive.
Yet the nature and limit of first-order knowledge is precisely what second-order
critique claims the right to dictate, though it can never say where it
gets its criterion for so doing. If it simply asserts it, that is arbitrary;
if it appeals to some theoretical justification it become itself a first-order
knowledge; if it applies the same criterion to itself - as if linguistic
analysis were itself a language-game, or Heideggerean being another way
being is present - then it becomes reflexively circular.[26]
42. The fate of meta-philosophy is thus that the need to hold
these two sides apart keeps foundering on their incipient reciprocity and
vice
versa. The objective of a final and decisive meta-philosophical critique
fades as argument and meta-argument pass inexorably over into one another
and as critique inevitably becomes theory and theory evokes the need of
new critique. This inevitable collapse into a vortex of mutual contradiction
may appear to be somewhat arrested by stop-gap measures, such as Gadamer's
hermeneutical circle which would artificially hold the moments of this
reflexivity apart and set them into an endless series. But as Kant pointed
out, a series with no beginning or end has no decidable interim locus either,
so that in truth nointerpretation of an interpretation can be significant
and is in fact meaningless precisely so far as circular. Reflexivity is
thus the reef upon which the whole meta-philosophical ideal is bound to
founder.[27]
III. Post-Philosophy: the Sceptical Result
43. Post-modernism springs from recognition of the insufficiency
of earlier, dogmatic forms of ultra-modernism. Though frequently presented
as a new and original view, it does not really take thinking in any new
directions but continues the directions of ultra-modern thought a further
stage. It sees that liberation is not achieved through meta-arguments that,
in seeking to limit the standpoint of philosophical reason, only tacitly
recognize it, thereby reinstating the same issues and conundrums of traditional
thought in another form. Post-philosophy will go further to affirm the
bankruptcy of all principle-centred thought as such, "logocentrism", whether
traditional, counter-traditional or meta-traditional. It will no longer
even pretend to bring philosophy to an end (though it may abandon it) for
that is to assume there is such a thing and that it somewhat makes sense
to end it; and this is just what must be denied. To aspire to a final solution
in philosophy, even one that would eradicate it altogether, is in any case
only to establish some further regime in its place.
44. By sceptically suspending, not only first-order thought,
but also the search for immaculate second-order critical conceptions, post-philosophy
would seem to realize the essential aims of an ultra-modern overthrow without
falling into the trap of simply reinstating philosophy again on the other
side of the critical boundary-line. For even a negative ontology is still
about being, symbolic logic still has rules and axioms, a strict science
is envisaged beyond the epoché, and some semiotic theory or other is inevitably
invoked in defense of the appeal to a pre-theoretical standard of words.
If both counter- and meta-philosophical critiques only resurrect philosophy
again, then how might the ultra-modernist project be refashioned such as
successfully to accomplish its aim of a radical overthrow of the traditional
thinking spirit of philosophy?
45. The post-modern answer is that we ought to resolve to rid
ourselves from the very outset of the "prejudice" that there are such things
as philosophical positions and arguments and that they make any sense;
a prejudice which leads to another, namely that it is up to us to expose
them as false by carrying out their decisive critique and declaring an
end to philosophy. The new scepticism will suspend all such assumptions
outright; it will not seek to promote any new first-order insights but
neither will it advance any new critical methodology, for that too becomes
irrelevant once the illusion that there are philosophical positions, correct
arguments, true judgements and so on have all been put to rest. Its sole
object will be to point out how all discourses of the kind which pretend
to a privileged viewpoint from which to execute true judgements of universal
accounts of the world are spurious; and not spurious from the point of
view of some alternative, more "correct" account, but spurious in themselves.
It follows that all attempts to carry out a critique of such accounts participate
in that discourse and so are equally to be judged spurious.
46. Post-modern thought thus represents the sceptical turn which
no longer seeks either the dogmatic or critical repudiation of philosophy
because it has come to the view that all argument for or against rational
foundations are in themselves pointless. If it remains "philosophy" at
all it is only as post-philosophy, the reflection which seeks no
more than to convince the philosophical legacy of its own self-defeated
irrelevance. This it might do in a number of ways: by juxtaposing or recontextualizing
fragments of texts drawn from the literature to expose the alleged self-conflictual
nature of philosophical arguments - that they flout their own rules, contravene
the very axioms they disavow and even conflict with the philosopher's personal
character.[28] Or, it might redefine philosophy as nothing more than a
type of cultural narrative, specifically "meta-narrative", and then argue
on grounds of the relativity of culture the illegitimacy of that genre.
Or it might commence with the pragmatic requirements of the extant democratic
societies showing how their interests and advancement must take precedence
over philosophical rumination which, if it might have once had a value,
now only deflects and confuses the commitment of progressive individuals
to the open society.[29]
47. Though post-philosophy takes many forms the common theme
is sceptical in the broadest sense. For the perspective for which
the futility of all reasoned argument has become axiomatic, after all,
there can be no longer be talk of positions or critical refutations thereof.
Adopting no position, philosophical or meta-philosophical, the post-philosopher
occupies a "non-locus" on the boundary between philosophy and its negation,
from which vantage point to interrogate positions and counter-positions
in such a way as will simply allow their self-refuting tendency to do its
own work. Thus Derrida:
48. I keep myself at the limit of philosophical discourse
...for I do not believe in what today is so easily called the death of
philosophy...[30] I have attempted to find...a non-site, a non-philosophical
site, from which to question philosophy. [This] search for a non-philosophical
site does not bespeak an anti-philosophical attitude. My central question
is: how can philosophy as such appear to itself as other than itself, so
that it can interrogate and reflect upon itself in an original manner.[31]
Rorty uses a similar language; he speaks of a rhetoric, "strong poetry"
or small-p philosophy whose specific business will be to take large-P Philosophy
to task, to force it to give up on itself. Such a thinking which withdraws
from itself to interrogate or renounce itself has already abandoned the
option of taking a stand within or outside philosophy. It stands
aloof to the tendency within philosophy to surmount oppositions, reduce
differences to unity and give itself a transcendental content; but it equally
disdains to stand outside philosophy passing judgement on this tendency
from some other position (science, meta-logic, praxis, poetry or whatever).
In the interest of a more complete undermining of thought it lets ambiguities
stand, embraces the metaphoric, undecidable character of meaning, and pursues
"philosophy" only as the means to an ironic suspension that sets every
philosophical issue whatever, including all resolutions thereof, in abeyance.
48. This of course is the classical form of all scepticism. In
lieu of categories, axioms or methods its appeal is to tropes, rhetorical
devices whose function is not to prove or disprove anything but to effect
the epoché which sustains detachment from all reasons and arguments.
Derrida's trope is "différance", described as neither concept nor
technique but the dynamic that predetermines all meaning as differential/deferential
rather than identical/referential. It is advanced as "the common root of
the oppositional concepts, sensible-intelligible, intuition-signification,
nature-culture" (also word-idea, being-thought, ontic-ontological, writing-speaking
etc.). The "logocentric" thinking of philosophy prejudices one term in
a dichotomy and represses the other so as to bring it to "presence" and
to link it to some fictional "transcendental signified" seen as the object
of a fictional intuition of thought - "idea", "being" etc. - which is thereby
made immune to ambiguity or controversy. To reverse this metaphysical tendency,
as critiques of metaphysics do, simply by affirming the opposite term -
matter rather than mind, say - is only logocentrism again since "every
transgressive gesture, precisely by giving us a grip on the closure of
metaphysics, reencloses us within this closure."[32] To restore the priority
of deférance, philosophical and meta-philosophical positions are "interrogated"
to reveal how metaphoric instability still clings to and corrupts their
terminology and unsettles the attempted fixations of meaning by which they
would sublate ambiguity only to retain it in covert ways.[33]
49. Rorty is a "positive" sceptic in that the standpoint from
which he would subvert and finally abandon philosophy springs from practical
considerations, namely, what is necessary to advance the cause of "post-modern
bourgeois liberalism".[34] Pragmatism is of course scepticism's other face,
its ethical counterpart, as in ancient times. Rorty's is not the approach
of the exquisitely erudite European who knows how to make words and texts
"tremble" and shatter every meaning into a maelstrom of nuances and conflicting
associations. He is the no-nonsense American pragmatist who has learned
from James and Dewey how to caricature philosophical verbalisms to make
them ridiculous in the eyes of common-sense individuals confident of their
objective freedom. Rorty also disdains to debate philosophy on its own
terms; rather he would challenge classical philosophical notions of the
thinking subject or a reason mirroring nature on ideological grounds rather
than in the quasi-metaphysical mode of semiotic analysis. He sees the acceptance
of philosophical beliefs as inimical to the openness to practical possibilities
that is essential to the advancement of "liberal society" which he describes
post-philosophically in terms of actually extant, ethnic-historical collectivities,
namely "the rich North Atlantic democracies" whose survival is for him
all that matters.[35]
50. This Anglo-American pragmatism contrasts sharply, of course,
with the anarchic sensualism of the French post-modernists; but it is evident
from the esteem they hold for one another's work that it is quite the same
interest that moves both a Rorty and a Derrida.[36] For Derrida, interrogating
the extant legacy of philosophical writing has the end, in the Nietzschean
tradition, of an aesthetic suspension of assent to all objective accounts
of existence; Rorty's rhetorical interrogation of Philosophy, on the other
hand, employs irony, satire and rhetoric to loosen habitual attachments
to theoretical abstractions, thereby to strengthen communal solidarity
among contingently constituted individuals. The aim and effect is in general
the same: the conservation of a radically concrete individual freedom through
the deliberate subversion of the abstract perspectives of reason.
51. Common also to Derrida and Rorty is the view that meta-philosophy
- the standpoint equally of Wittgenstein and Heidegger - is no longer supportable.
Such methods could not complete the decisive overthrow of reason because
even though claiming to occupy purely critical and thus "presuppositionless"
positions they founded philosophical positions nonetheless: a counter-metaphysics
of temporal as opposed to infinite being, a meta-logic of fact opposed
to a logic of thought, a transcendental deduction from contingency rather
than apperception, a semiotic a priori replacing an epistemological
one. This could not arrest and suspend the dominion of philosophical thought
but only divide it into two, a traditional and a contemporary philosophy,
the western-traditional legacy and its meta-philosophical critique, the
corpse and its autopsy. Oppositionally dependent on the very legacy they
would overthrow, they were doomed to remain entangled in it, the older
tradition persisting in the new meta-philosophical doctrines as their specifically
negated content.
52. Post-philosophy would rather accomplish the sceptical neutralization
of philosophy, not by direct refutation, but by sceptically-pragmatically
construing all its positions to make them appear self-refuting, to generate
their own contrariness, or to collapse, as it were, under their own weight.
This tactic again shows little interest in, or respect for the actual history
of philosophy, for it gives no credence even to the idea that there is
such. This amounts to a licence to manhandle traditional authors and texts.
Rorty cites Representation as the ruling myth of philosophy and assimilates
virtually the whole of the western tradition to this one idea, by which
he understands the invention of fictitious faculties or media (first Thought
and more recently Language) whose real purpose is to establish some static
perception of things as absolute and permanent; a view anathema to liberals.
Derrida rather speaks of a long-standing addiction of philosophy to the
idea of Presence, similarly an invention of universal, self-given objects
- "nature", "spirit", "being" - whose intent is to enable the denial of
what Nietzsche calls "Life" and Derrida the inescapable ambiguity and uncertainty
intrinsic to the determination of meaning.
53. Both belabour Descartes, Kant, Heidegger and many others
by way of exemplifying these alleged self-contradictory artifices of philosophy,
and this without much regard to the actual history of thought which in
fact offers precious little confirmation of such a consistent record of
specific delusions and indeed a great deal of plain evidence to the contrary.[37]
But for post-philosophy this it not to the point since it is neither its
aim nor intent to be an objective interpretation of philosophical history,
the validity of which it in any case roundly denies. Rather, as with ancient
scepticism, the sweeping judgements and clever reworking of the arguments
of an Aristotle or Hegel or Nietzsche in order to "demonstrate" the alleged
self-inconsistency of philosophical positions are sceptical tropes
whose sole purpose is to maintain a post-modern detachment from the standpoint
of thinking reason, whether in its universal or its historical manifestations.
54. But in post-philosophy the original ultra-modernist paradox,
as to how an end to thinking may be thought, is again not really resolved
but only brought more vividly to light. For not only is the ambiguity of
its outlook patent in the torturously obscure and deliberately indecisive
rhetoric in which it is obliged to couch its thesis, but also in the self-subverting
character of the task that it sets itself. For what it attempts is to abjure
in principle every appeal to principle; to render the absolute indeterminacy
of meaning meaningful; to deny that logic has force and then turn the logic
of positions against themselves; to affirm categorically and as a global
judgement that no overview is ever possible; and so on.
55. Were post-philosophy indeed to fall victim to the temptation
to give itself a definite content (Rorty is often suspected of such for
his blatantly liberal assumptions and Derrida for a tendency to relapse
into semiotic theory) it would cease to be authentically post-philosophical
and become just another meta-narrative - the problem to which Lyotard was
sensitive. It is therefore essential to post-modern thinking it not be
"about" anything, or at least not allow itself to say what it is about.
The only "content" it has is to be the relentless, subversive, inconclusive
reflection carried out on an extant philosophical literature which, paradoxically,
it is bound to conserve in order to sustain itself through the continuous
deconstruction of it.
56. Through it own very project, then, post-philosophy becomes
a wholly intellectual activity without result, thematic substance or reference.
In it the paradox implied in the attempt to think beyond thinking is no
longer merely latent, as in earlier ultra-philosophy; it is this
paradox itself in the active form of a self-annihilating thinking.
The restrictions it would set on all reasonable argument prevent it from
arguing its own case with reason, that is, intelligibly. Perched on a sceptical
fence it must withdraw in one moment what it asserts in the next: it says
philosophy is about the writing-reading of texts and then again that there
are no texts; or philosophy is an open, deliberately inconclusive conversation
and then draws the boldest, dogmatic conclusions about all and sundry.
That post-modern writing is given to wilful inconsistency, to ambiguous
sleights of language or has recourse to comic, anarchistic or even pornographic
rhetoric, expresses the predicament that it may never allow itself to say
what it means, identify a theme, or reach a conclusion, for to do that
would undermine the purity of the "post-philosophical" non-thinking it
would sustain.
Conclusion: The Recovery of Philosophy
57. In post-philosophy ultra-modernist thought reaches both an
impasse and a completion. Its project radically to affirm the modern principle
of a concrete, here-and-now freedom in contrast with the other-worldliness
of the spiritual-speculative tradition is articulated in its most extreme
form. In its purely sceptical reflection on the philosophical legacy it
is itself the attempted embodiment of the paradoxical idea of a self-annihilating
thinking. This is far from saying, however, that it has at last succeeded
in finally overthrowing and nullifying thought so that it really is now
all over for philosophy. On the contrary, post-philosophy, even more than
earlier forms of ultra-philosophy, remains tied to the tradition it disavows.
By its own admission it cannot think to bring about the actual end of philosophy
for that would not only be to revert to an ultra-modernist dogmatism whose
very difficulties it was meant to overcome, but also to eliminate the very
context whose deconstruction alone is what sustains it. And so it can only
remain on the sceptical margins and boundaries, a purely suspensive thinking
unable either to go beyond philosophy or return to it.
58. If the outcome of ultra-modern thought since Hegel has indeed
been the destruction of philosophy, this ought not to be understood as
the direct consequence of its arguments but rather as a significant side-effect.
While it is true that appreciation of the basic standpoint and argument
of the great western philosophical texts has atrophied or been distorted
and maligned to the point of extinction, this is not due to the success
of scientism or Marxism or analysis or existential ontology or post-modernism
in literally disproving, demystifying, repudiating, exposing or disposing
of it. Rather it is due to the real history of philosophy, the actual
tradition of thought, having been buried and obscured under so many layers
of misinterpretation and distortion visited upon it by generations of aggressive
ultra-modernist dogma that it has become barely recoverable. For as earlier
made out, not only is there a history of the ultra-philosophical argument
as such, but also a history of its various reconstructions of the philosophical
legacy, reconstructions which had little or nothing to do with that legacy
itself or with understanding it on its own terms, but with enlisting it,
appropriately misconstrued, in support of one or another version of the
argument for a radicalized modernity. As the form of the ultra-philosophical
dogma changed, so did the form of the attack on the philosophical tradition,
and so also the form of the reconstruction of it.
59. And its point in all this was to retain a relation to philosophical
history even while superseding it; to conserve itself as "philosophy" through
appeal to negative reconstructions of the whole tradition of reason in
lieu of a first-order appeal to it, which, in the interests of the affirmation
of a radical subjective freedom and finite humanity, it would avoid. Thus
what was unique about the attack on the philosophical tradition which has
here been called counter-philosophy is its apocalyptic outlook; its view
of being itself the legitimate issue of philosophical history whose final
chapter it would write. Thus for nineteenth century scientism the upshot
of intellectual history is the final conquest of the liberal-scientific
spirit over a pre-enlightened cultural past epitomized in religious and
metaphysical superstition. Absolutism on the other hand would find liberation
in escape from a dehumanized, reason-ridden past into a present existentialized
subjectivity. Both would repudiate philosophical history and give starkly
contradictory accounts of it. For their sole interest in history was imaginatively
to exploit it as a means of furthering a contemporary confrontation between
contrasting views of what ultra-modern liberation means: for one the triumph
of humanism and technology over a benighted past, the other a triumph of
subjective life over abstraction and morality. The point is, for all their
popular influence, the narratives which Nietzsche, Marx and their contemporaries
imposed on the history of western art, religion and philosophy were not
only mutually contradictory, they are fictional and ideological, not really
"histories" at all. Yet these not only still enjoy a preeminence, but compete
with, and have largely supplanted the comprehension of the authentic western
legacy on its own terms.
60. The meta-philosophies of the 20th century are extensions
of absolutist and scientistic beginnings but differ in no longer seeing
themselves as a culmination of world-philosophical history but as opposing
to it entirely new, "contemporary" insights into the foundations of philosophy
itself. They would thus seek to occupy an independent ultra-modern standpoint
from which to view the arguments of the past in terms of the basic misconceptions
on which they were alleged to rest which would now be their business critically
to reexamine and correct. Its approach to traditional philosophy would
be to root the whole of it in some alleged specific fallacy - forgetfulness
of being, misuse of language, wilful transcendence of fact, a category
mistake. Accordingly the great classical works were energetically reviewed,
rewritten and retaught from some such perspective - Heideggerean, Rylean,
Wittgensteinian - with the result that by mid-century a whole new generation
of academic philosophers had become thoroughly imbued with reconstructed
interpretations of Plato, Spinoza or Kant which not only openly conflicted
with the originals but violently with each other.
61. The history of philosophy was thus the object of a systematic,
comprehensive distortion from which it has yet to recover, carried out
in order to legitimize contemporary concepts that would lay hold of and
express the absolute commitment to a present, con-temporal human self-consciousness
and world. The enterprise fell into two general camps, an Anglo-American
which positively embraced a behaviouristic anthropology and liberal-technocratic
ideals and chiefly enlisted logic and language in its service; and a Continental-European
which sought to refuse and stand against just this humanist, technocratic
modernity through a cultivated pessimism which would turn philosophical
thinking into a kind of ponderous lament that might fill the void created
by the loss of a metaphysical tradition.[38]
62. For post-modernism again, the history of thought as a whole
is judged no longer meaningful so that even the distinction between contemporary
and traditional philosophy is likewise meaningless. The ruin of the western
cultural legacy lies at its feet; it constructs, reconstructs or deconstructs
it at its pleasure since the life has gone out of it. If, as Rorty puts
it, philosophy may once have been a useful tool for articulating the ideal
enhancement of the human condition, in a liberal-technocratic society that
is already free it must be abandoned as an outmoded, irrelevant relic.
Or, as Derrida suggests, while there can be no desire to rejuvenate a wholly
discredited philosophical literature, there might still be a virtue in
rummaging about in its rubble to confirm and remind ourselves of our intellectual
emancipation from all its reasons and positions.
63. With the idea of a meaningful tradition thus put to rest
one way or the other, everything can now be put on one post-modernist plane;
Plato can enter into dialogue with Freud, Gide be mated with Hegel, rock
poets refute Kant, the western canon dumped because patriarchal or Christian
theology is daily refuted in undergraduate seminars. In academe a belligerent
antipathy to the whole legacy of reason has become pervasive, inclusive
not only of historical culture but also of modernity itself. This outlook
is sustained through popular declamations against the relevance of the
past or against the very idea of reasoned argument having any exclusive
rights in the aftermath of the overthrow of intellect; or else through
exquisitely convoluted, literary-aesthetic arguments that would so thoroughly
fragment and relativize meaning as to prevent any possible recurrence of
the dread disease of definite thought.
64. What ultra-modernism would articulate is the extreme ideal
of Modernity as fully and literally actual, a concretely present condition
in which every reality or value has been thoroughly assimilated to the
interests and perspectives of existing individuals who are subjectively
convinced of their absolute freedom and of the world as subordinate to
that freedom. This human-existential condition it affirms as one already
or virtually accomplished, thus such as exists before all mediations of
history, culture or thought. For this reason it violently disengages itself
from such mediations, even those of its own western-intellectual legacy
from which it draws its ideals and its language. To the latter's notion
of a reasonable, universal and objective freedom it opposes the contrary
extreme of a finite, temporal, pragmatic, contingent and wholly subjective
one. But as this latter vision in the end is boud to contradict its own
very ideal of a concretely realized human freedom it falls into a scepticism
where freedom itself becomes dissipated, confused and degenerate.
65. For in its post-modern form ultra-philosophy has discovered
that since it can never complete the intellectual overthrow of reason,
its only recourse is sceptically to suspend or abandon it. But in this
it forfeits all legitimacy as philosophy and reaches an impasse beyond
which, as it itself admits, it is impossible to go. In this sceptical form
the ultra-modernist revolt is thus paralysed in its tracks; it can neither
establish any position beyond the philosophical tradition nor can it return
to it, nor can it give it up. The worlds now confronting each other are
no longer some one ultra-modernist doctrine set against another - scientism
contra
absolutism, liberalism contra existentialism - nor is it the triumph
of "contemporary" over "traditional" philosophy. It is now the philosophical
legacy as a whole in its historical integrity on the one hand, and the
utterly destroyed, annihilated post-modern account of it on the other.
Thus, it can no longer make sense either to remain attached to the ultra-modernist
critique or to the one-sided defense of traditional thought as against
it. From a viewpoint no longer intimidated by the biases which have dominated
the past two centuries it has become feasible to begin to speak of the
ultra-philosophical project as having reached its limit, making it possible
to recover again the connection between this revolt and the actual philosophical
legacy it thought to abandon. The issue thereby shifts to become that of
how the western tradition is after all to be reconciled to its ultra-modern
critique, or contrariwise, how the ultra-modern demand for a concrete and
worldly human freedom is to recover its roots in philosophical world-history.
This implies a number of obvious challenges: to reinstate and liberate
the authentic philosophical legacy from its ultra-philosophical distortions;
to revisit the question as to what inspired the ultra-modernist revolution,
what underlies its hostility to the philosophical spirit, and how it came
to its present post-modernist impasse; overall to restore the sense of
the unity, wholeness, continuity and the substance of world-philosophical
culture as comprehensive of and moving beyond the now tiresome negativity
of the ultra-modernist preoccupation with a history "broken in two".[39]
NOTES
[1] Heidegger in The Question of Being (New Haven 1958) also
recognizes that any simple counter-metaphysical "passing over the line"
is problematical, though he does not resolve it. Derrida also has argued
that, though known as spurious, it is important the classical philosophical
arguments not simply be set aside but continue to be taught and studied
since it is only their active deconstruction that sustains a post-philosophical
awareness.
[2] Ironically, the traditional logic has long known just these arguments
as modes of informal fallacy e.g. equivocation, amphibole, ad baculum
etc.
[3] Madison, J.B. Working through Derrida (Evanston, 1993), p.2.
[4] Marx and Nietzsche both independently employ this phrase, though
their accounts of the old history ending and the new beginning are the
exact inverse of one another. The point is elaborated in my "The Revolutionary
Origins of Contemporary Philosophy"; Dionysius, ix (1985), 129-171.
[5] The key to "positivism" lies in the claim that objectivity and self-consciousness
are not two realities but one, and that this is revealed in the simple
intuition of fact The proof is said to be directly witnessed in the "absolute
fact" of self-feeling, the immediate givenness of oneself to oneself. Comte
makes self-feeling, as opposed to the dualistic theoretical and practical
perspectives, the basis of an identification of the objective with the
phenomenal, and Mill and Russell likewise cite "feeling" as the final test
of the certainty of fact, in ordinary parlance, the criterion of "obviousness".
[6] Hegel, on the other hand, (Enc. 249. Zus.) makes the provocative
suggestion that both evolution and emanation (the fundamentalist "creationism")
are metaphysical schematizations of nature which begin at one extreme
(proto-biological or ultra-biological) and deduce the whole of the order
of species from it as an abstract series; neither of which really grasp
the dynamic of the totality nature as one that is objectively concrete.
[7] The absolute is no less Anglo-American than it is European - cf.
Spencer, Bradley, Whitehead or Royce. It has its political expression in
nineteenth century imperialism with its reverence for Queen or Kaiser as
an "absolute individual", Der Allerhochster.
[8] Hardy's The Dynasts features a whole Greek chorus of "absolute
spirits" declaiming about the fatality of human history. Like many of his
contemporaries Yeats' weakness was for occultism and its political expression,
the cult of nationalism.
[9] The starkest intellectual forms of the great revolutionary-reactionary
debate were those of the nineteenth century, whose paradigms spilled over
to fuel 20th century social, cultural and political tensions. The dilemma
is still the subject of learned (though tamer) debates among prominent
contemporary philosophers: see After Philosophy: End or Transformation?
(Cambridge, 1987).
[10] That the notion of an actual freedom underlies the romantic identity
of self and reality in self-feeling is exemplified in Nietzsche's definition
of will to power as the "instinct to freedom", which he everywhere opposes
to the unreality of a merely moral freedom.
[11] A more extended account in Jackson, F.L., "The New Faith: Strauss,
Kierkegaard and the Theological Revolution" (Dionysius, xii, 1988)
and "The Beginning of the End of Metaphysics" (Dionysius, xv, 1991).
[12] The thesis of his Principles of Philosophy. Feuerbach also
describes as his first principle "not the substance of Spinoza..the ego
of Kant [or] the absolute spirit of Hegel, but the true ens realissimum
- man." (Essence of Christianity, tr. Eliot p.xxxv).
[13] Stirner, M. The Ego and His Own tr. Byington, (Sun City
1982).
[14] Marx: Theses on Feuerbach, I.
[15] For example, Beyond Good and Evil, ss. 47, 56.
[16] "Meta-philosophy" in its ultra-modern sense is ambiguous, since
the "beyond" it refers to is not the "meta-" of traditional "meta-physics",
thinking that goes beyond the finite, but the reverse. Meta-philosophy's
"beyond" would leave the thought-world behind for a here-and-now defined
in specifically counter-metaphysical terms of language, temporality, the
fact-world, Dasein etc. Its appropriate image is Nietzsche's Zarathustra
who climbs down the mountain into wisdom. The "going-beyond" is
thus really "meta-meta-physical"; a drawing-back from first-order contexts
of thinking (ethics, logic, ontology) into a second-order counter-thinking:
(meta-ethic, meta-logic, meta-ontology).
[17] Russell's The Scientific Outlook (1931) and Ayer's Language
Truth and Logic (1936, c.2.) are typical manifestos of this fundamental
collusion of analysis with empirical science.
[18] Given the ultra-rational stand of Carnap and others it would have
been more proper to speak of a verification criterion rather than
arché;
a "criterion" is a dogmatic device, a "principle" implies a reason.
[19] Wittgenstein's specific views on philosophy are found in Philosophical
Investigations, ss. 89-133.
[20] Philosophical Investigations, s.206.
[21] Though he thinks of it very differently; see for example Cartesian
Meditations (The Hague, 1960) ss. 3-7, where scientific evidence is
spoken of, not in Russellian terms of factuality, but in terms of "apodeictic
certainty" or "givenness". "The evidence for the factual existence of the
world [is] not apodeictic" and is thus to be included in the "Cartesian
overthrow" (p.17). Husserl's narrow ties are with nineteenth century psychologism
(Brentano) and historicism (Dilthey). Like Russell he betrays a notorious
naivety respecting the actual history of philosophy, blaming Hegelian metaphysics,
for example, for the degeneration of the idea of a "philosophical science"
- a charge that would mystify Hegel who speaks of little else. But it is
not really naivety that renders meta-philosophical accounts of the tradition
characteristically cavalier and skewed but the deliberate intent negatively
to reconstruct it to suit the ultra-modernist thesis. This is evidenced
by the simple fact that the manner in which phenomenology and analytical
philosophy understood the history of metaphysics are not just different;
they are mirror images of one another.
[22] Phenomenology had indeed a strong impact on 20th century psychology.
Not only had Sartre, Jaspers and many others written extensively on psychological
subjects, but "phenomenological psychology", owing much to Merleau-Ponty's
seminal work, The Phenomenology of Perception, became for a time
in universities everywhere the chief rival to the Skinnerian behaviourism
which tended to be the model championed in analytical circles.
[23] A Heideggerean account of Heidegger's "turn" is found in Nicholson,
G., Illustrations of Being (Toronto 1992), c.4.4.
[24] A clear forerunner of Heideggerean being is "the world as will"
as Schopenhauer described it: the wholly inscrutable manifestation of an
absolute being-in-self that is directly the annihilation of what is so
manifest.
[25] Captivated by the Platonic vision of an oasis of reasonable life
removed from the shifting sands of world-bound opinion, stoicism and epicureanism
were able to attain to such only in the limited form of an inward, detached
self-consciousness to which an ineradicable outwardness and arbitrariness
still clung. (See Hegel, Lectures on the History of Philosophy {New
York, 1974}, v.2 sect.2.) Ultra-modern dogmatism takes a reverse course.
Its vision is a modern-Christian one of a divine-human reconciliation whereby
a free, rational, human spirit has reengaged the world to redeem it. But
though it is just this concrete spirit that ultra-modernism would get hold
of it only does so in a partial and one-sided way, such as loses hold of
the universal aspect of reason and freedom and sinks itself entirely into
their finite and existential expressions.
[26] Logical positivism was never able successfully to come to grips
with paradoxes of self-reference, to formalize the reference of propositions
to what they denote, or to avoid an empiricist metaphysics without lapsing
into solipsism. Likewise, in insisting that thinking is just language,
later analysis could sustain itself as philosophy only by turning into
a metaphysics of words. Again, the ontological reflection that would repudiate
any universal account of things by dint of the sheer finitude of existence,
is forced to exempt its own account from the same ban or else risk collapse
into a banal absurdism. And the argument in its later form could never
complete its turn to a stable thought of being as time, since this would
contradict what being is said to be, namely temporal, self-differential.
[27] An example of the emerging consciousness of this fact in Hilary
Lawson, Reflexivity, the Post-Modern Predicament (LaSalle 1985).
[28] This appeal ad hominem was one of Nietzsche's favourite
tactics: consider his diatribe against Strauss, his essay Contra Wagner,
the vitriolic attack on Aquinas in Geneology of Morals, or the chapter
of Beyond Good and Evil titled "On the Prejudices of Philosophers".
A recent post-modern example is Derrida's Glas (U.Nebraska, 1986)
in which Hegel's relations with his sister and others are made to appear
perversely at odds with his philosophy of the family. Such attacks are
of course not "personal" in the strict sense but they reflect a basic ultra-modernist
prejudice which refuses to accept that "thought" can have any other meaning
beyond the thought of some particular, finite individual.
[29] What Hegel called "objective spirit" becomes in its ultra-modernist
reformulation by Marxists, English liberals and American pragmatists the
apotheosis of the practical which assimilates all other dimensions of freedom
to itself. With Richard Rorty it assumes a post-modern form which no longer
speaks of a "free society" as a desired end-state or achieved revolution
as with earlier liberals or socialists, but only the contingent commitment
of individuals to an undefined social openness.
[30] Derrida, Positions (Chicago 1981), p.6
[31] In an interview with R. Kearney in Kearney, Dialogues with Contemporary
Continental Thinkers, (Manchester UP, 1984) p.98.
[32] Positions, p.12.
[33] Derrida's goes to great lengths to repudiate the logic of Aufhebung
in an effort to represent the wish to transcend difference as what primarily
moves Hegel's logical thought. This runs surprisingly contrary to how Hegel
himself represents the dynamic, for example in Encyc., ss. 79-82,
or how he treats difference itself in ss. 117-120 and in the Doctrine of
Essence of the Science of Logic where, far from "transcending" difference,
Hegel demonstrates how, in the concept of Ground, difference and identity
are revealed as presupposing one another. Derrida, on the other hand would
fix difference as absolute.
[34] Rorty, R. Objectivity, Relativism and Truth, (Cambridge
1991), pp.197-202.
[35] Objectivity, Relativism and Truth, p.15.
[36] Derrida's positive attachments to America are well know; for reciprocity
on Rorty's part see for example: "Is Derrida a Transcendental Philosopher?",
in Madison, G.B., Working Through Derrida, Evanston 1993.
[37] To depict Descartes as a "representationalist" as Rorty does entirely
affronts the actual Cartesian argument which commences precisely with the
suspension
of representational assumptions in order to proceed from self-conscious
thought alone. Similarly, Derrida's quite silly account of Leibniz's logic
or religious ambitions or his free-form Freudian speculations on Hegel's
feelings for his sister are the purest flights of trivializing invention
showing an almost perverse disdain both for the individuals and their arguments.
But again, for post-modernists, the point is never historical arguments
themselves but only how they may be exploited for the construction of their
own sceptical tropes, as post-modern architects freely borrow from
the styles of the past without much regard for their original spirit.
[38] Colourful insight into the existential sense of loss of a metaphysical
tradition as the root of the Heideggerean account of "denken" is
provided by Rorty in "Overcoming the Tradition" (Consequences of Pragmatism,
Minnesota, 1982).
[39] The important point is that the ultra-modernist revolt did not
"reject" the philosophical tradition; it co-opted and misconstrued it in
order to take certain of its key principles to their extreme. It is this
legacy of co-optive distortion that has, however, rendered the present
time largely incapable of philosophy as traditionally understood since
it no longer has a clear idea what it is or was on its own terms. The recovery
of the actual western tradition of thought is for this reason a paramount
challenge of the times, and a prime objective of Animus, the journal
in which the present essay appears. |