|
|
Explaining Postmodernism: Skepticism and Socialism from
Rousseau to Foucault, by Stephen R.C. Hicks. Scholargy Publishing,
2004, 214 pages.
Socialism's Last
Bastion by Gary Jason
Over the last 20 years or so the philosophic orientation
known as "postmodernism" (or "po-mo," to the cognoscenti) has become the dominant
mindset in many humanities departments in American universities, especially in
English departments. To the extent that professors in, say, science and
engineering departments have heard of postmodernism, it seems mystifying. They
see colleagues in humanities departments delivering papers filled with
incomprehensible prose, making outrŽ claims (such as that there is no correct
interpretation of any text), and offering bizarre courses (such as the history of
comic books). Stephen Hicks, a professor of philosophy at Rockford College, has
produced a clearly written, concise book explaining just what postmodern
philosophy is and how it arose, and he has done so in an admirable way.
| | Gary
Jason is a professor of philosophy at Cal State University Fullerton.
|
|
Hicks begins by sketching out in broad terms what modernism is. Modernism is
the worldview produced by the Enlightenment over the last four centuries. Roughly
characterized, modernism involves naturalism in metaphysics, with the confidence
that modern science is capable of, and is actually succeeding in, giving us an
understanding of the physical universe. Modernism involves what he calls
objectivism in epistemology, meaning the view that experience and reason are
capable of gaining real knowledge, although modernist philosophers have hotly
contested the specifics of this (with Rationalism, Empiricism, and Pragmatism
being the most historically active epistemological schools). Modernism involves
individualism in ethics, and a commitment to human rights, religious toleration,
and democracy in political theory. Modernism also involves the acceptance of
free-market economics and the technological revolution that it has spawned. In
sum, modernism is the mindset that is common to the West, the laborious product
of many great minds Bacon, Locke, Descartes, Smith, Hobbes, Spinoza,
Galileo, Newton, and Hume, among others. Most of us view this as a considerable
leap forward from the Medieval period of supernaturalism, mysticism, excessive
reliance on faith, and feudalist political and economic systems. In the
last 30 years or so, however, a group of thinkers have set themselves in
opposition to the whole Enlightenment project. These soi-disant postmodernists
reject the Enlightenment root and branch. Chief among the postmodern thinkers are
Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Jean-Francois Lyotard and (amazingly, an
American) Richard Rorty. These thinkers, together with a host of smaller fry
(such as Stanley Fish, Jacques Lacan, Andreas Huyssen, Frank Lentricchia and
others), have developed a large following in the humanities especially
literature, less so in philosophy and in the social sciences. They have
developed virtually no following in science, math, computer science, and
engineering for reasons that will become clear below. The postmodern mindset
views the whole Enlightenment project as a failure. The po-mo view is
metaphysically anti-realist and anti-naturalist, holding that the physical
universe is not ultimately describable in final terms. It is socially
subjectivist in epistemology, holding that the "world" is what we socially
construct, and each "group" (racial, gender, linguistic, ethnic, national or what
have you) constructs the world according to its group identity. Postmodernists
are egalitarian and collectivist in matters ethical and political. (If there are
any postmodern libertarians or conservatives, I have yet to hear of
them.) |
| The failure of
socialism, both empirically and theoretically, brought about a crisis of faith
among socialists, and postmodernism is their response.
|
|
Postmodernism has had a powerful impact on a number of areas of academic
study. In literary theory, it has rejected the notion that literary texts have
objective meanings open to better or worse interpretation, in favor of the notion
that the text is simply a vehicle for the critic to exercise wordplay upon, or to
deconstruct and thus expose the racial, class, or gender biases of the author. In
law, postmodernists known as Critical Legal Theorists reject the notion of
universally valid legal principles and objective legal reasoning, essentially
viewing legal reasoning as subjective plumping for one's race, class, gender, or
political preferences. In education theory, postmodernism junks the notion that
education should develop a child's cognitive abilities and impart factual
knowledge to enable her to function as a productive member of our free-market
democracy. Instead, the postmodernist believes education should mold a student's
racial, class, and gender identity. Postmodernists try to focus on the
achievements of women, non-whites, and the poor, exposing the history of American
democracy as a history of oppression, and denying the existence of any objective
scientific method. For this reason, natural scientists and engineers find
postmodernism silly try convincing engineers who have successfully sent a
robotic probe to the surface of Mars that objectively true scientific laws don't
exist. Also, most modern philosophers, who since Descartes have concentrated on
epistemology, have tended to view natural science as the most successful
knowledge-generating human enterprise, and thus are not inclined to dismiss it
lightly. In short, postmodernism is relativism run riot, skepticism on
stilts. In terms of the culture wars, it informs the arguments of those who think
that American society is inferior to others and on the decline, that there are no
"Great Books" of a higher order of merit than others, that science and technology
are socially constructed and are not making genuine progress, and that modern
free-market economics has lowered living standards. As Hicks notes, there is a
contradictory tone to all this all cultures are equal, but ours stinks;
all truth is relative, except the unquestionable po-mo truth; no race, class or
gender is superior, but middle class white males are clearly inferior; and no
books are superior, except, of course, those by third-world authors. Where does
this farrago of resentment come from? Hicks rightly views postmodernist
philosophy as the most recent manifestation of the reaction against the
Enlightenment, what we might call the Counter-Enlightenment. The
Counter-Enlightenment in Hicks' view goes back at least to the work of Kant and
Rousseau in the 18th century. The epistemological and metaphysical side of the
Counter-Enlightenment Hicks traces back to Kant. Kant, Hicks claims, should not
be considered an Enlightenment advocate of reason, for he held that we can know
only the phenomenal realm, i.e., the realm of what we directly experience via the
senses, while the noumenal realm the "world-in-itself" is beyond
our knowledge. The mind has built-in organizing features (causality, temporality,
and so on) which it imposes upon the raw input of the senses to construct the
world of experience. Kant begot Hegel, who sought to fuse the phenomenal and the
noumenal realms viewing reality as being ultimately all mental or
spiritual (metaphysical idealism). Hegel's ideas certainly informed Marx's
philosophy, contributing to the rise of collectivism. But Kant also begot the
strain of irrationalist philosophers, most importantly Schleier-macher,
Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, and Kierkegaard. This strand of thought attempts to get
around the Kantian problem of reason's inability to apprehend the noumenal world
directly by thinking that intuition or other non-rational approaches (leaps of
faith or super-human acts of will) will bridge the gap.
| All cultures are equal,
but ours stinks; no race, class or gender is superior, but middle class white
males are clearly inferior; and no books are superior, except, of course, those
by third-world authors. |
|
Hicks focuses upon two strands of 20th century metaphysics and epistemology as
direct precursors of postmodernism. He discusses Heidegger in some detail,
appropriately, given that Derrida and Foucault describe themselves as followers
of Heidegger. Heidegger grounded his philosophy in phenomenology, the close
examination of the given field of immediate experience. He came to the view that
logic and reason are impotent in answering ultimate metaphysical questions,
leaving dark emotions such as boredom, guilt, and dread as the only tools, and
reaching a metaphysical nihilism in which pure Being and pure Nothing are one and
the same. Heidegger thus provides the postmodernists with some of their core
beliefs: that reason and logic are subjective and metaphysically sterile; that
words and concepts are obstacles to be destroyed or unmasked; that feelings are a
more reliable tool than logic and scientific method; and that the Western
philosophic tradition (based upon the law of non-contradiction and the
subject-object distinction) is something that needs to be overcome. As Hicks
notes: "The postmodernists will effect a compromise between Heidegger and
Nietzsche. Common to Heidegger and Nietzsche epistemologically is a contemptuous
rejection of reason. Metaphysically, though, the postmodernists will drop the
remnants of Heidegger's metaphysical quest for Being, and put Nietzschean power
struggles at the core of our being. And especially in the cases of Foucault and
Derrida, most major postmodernists will abandon Nietzsche's sense of the exalted
potential of man and embrace Heidegger's anti-humanism." (p. 67) The
question arises, then, how can a philosophic trend so rooted (or mired) in the
Continental tradition of Kant, Hegel, Marx, Nietzsche, and Heidegger come to be
so attractive to the American academy indeed, apparently now more the
stronghold of postmodernism than Europe, its birthplace given the
Anglo-American tradition of Enlightenment empiricism? Hicks rightly puts the
focus on the collapse of the logical empiricist project. Hicks briefly surveys
the rise of logical empiricism from its early sources in the advances in modern
logic by Frege and Russell, and the work of the Vienna Circle, to its demise at
the hands of Hanson, Feyerabend, Quine, and Kuhn. The logical positivists had
attempted to rigorously analyze scientific method and the structure of knowledge
using the tools provided by modern symbolic logic, but their program was
demolished in the 1950s and 1960s. This left a vacuum which attracted skepticism.
That vacuum, together with the work of Kuhn and Quine which gave
perspectivalism a rebirth in an analytic context provided the soil for
anti-Enlightenment epistemology to flourish. Turning from metaphysics and
epistemology to politics, Hicks notes that postmodernists aren't just skeptics
who vary in their political beliefs. No, postmodernists are all committed
leftists. The fact that postmodernists are uniformly drawn to collectivism is
even more puzzling, given that socialists have traditionally, a la Marx, argued
that socialism is scientific, while postmodernists view science with contempt,
and worship subjectivity and irrationality. Hicks explains this in detail over
several chapters by exploring an external factor, namely, the collapse of
socialism in theory and practice. Postmodernism is a fusion between Leftist
politics and skepticism. But the dream of socialism died in the latter half of
the 20th century. Socialism was tried in a variety of forms, from Leninism to
National Socialism to Maoism and so on, with the clear result that, far from
being superior to capitalism, it is completely inferior. Socialism promised to
free workers from capitalist bondage, but it chained them to the means of
production they purportedly owned. It promised to outproduce capitalism, but the
prosperity achieved by capitalist economies totally eclipsed the poverty wrought
by socialism. Socialism promised to usher in an era of peace and humane values,
but it delivered decades of police states and gulags. Free-market democracy,
i.e., classical liberalism, won decisively in the developed world, and is rapidly
transforming the rest of the planet as well. The failure of socialism,
both empirically and theoretically (once Mises demolished socialist theory with
his publication of "Socialism" in 1920), brought about a crisis of faith among
socialists, and postmodernism is their response. Hicks puts it well:
| Natural scientists and
engineers find postmodernism silly try convincing engineers who have
successfully sent a robotic probe to the surface of Mars that objectively true
scientific laws don't exist. |
|
"Postmodernism is born of the marriage of Left politics and skeptical
epistemology. As socialist political thought was reaching a crisis in the 1950s,
academic epistemology had, in Europe, come to take seriously Nietzsche and
Heidegger and, in the Anglo-American world, it had seen the decline of Logical
Positivism into Quine and Kuhn. The dominance of subjectivist and relativist
epistemologies in academic philosophy thus provided the academic Left with a new
tactic. Confronted by harsh evidence and ruthless logic, the far Left had a
reply: That is only logic and evidence; logic and evidence are subjective; you
cannot really prove anything; feelings are deeper than logic; and our feelings
say socialism. . . . Postmodernism is a response to the crisis in faith of the
academic far Left. Its epistemology justifies the leap of faith necessary to
continue believing in socialism, and the same epistemology justifies using
language not as a vehicle for seeking truth but as a rhetorical weapon in the
continuing battle against capitalism." (90) I have a few slight quibbles
with Hicks' book. First, he has a tendency to blur the distinction between a
skeptic, accurately so called, and a failed anti-skeptic. The difference is
important in historical exegesis. Descartes tried mightily to devise a theory of
knowledge that would do justice to the rapidly rising scientific revolution of
his time a revolution to which he himself was a tremendous contributor.
But his program pure Rationalism, at least as it's coquettishly flaunted
in the "Meditations" clearly failed. Locke, following Bacon and Hobbes,
tried to devise an Empiricist epistemology that would do justice to the
scientific revolution an epistemology that ultimately failed to refute
skepticism, as Hume so deftly demonstrated. Locke and Descartes failed to refute
the skeptic but not for lack of sincere effort. It is with this
understanding that we need to look at Kant. Kant was no anti-objectivist
crypto-skeptic. He truly was challenged by Hume's devastating skepticism (which
roused him from his dogmatic slumbers, as he put it). His epistemology was a
brilliant attempt to answer Humean skepticism. That later philosophers, most
notoriously Nietzsche, used it to devise a perspectivalist skepticism shouldn't
lead one to think that Kant would have been at all sympathetic to it.
Second, Hicks might have looked a bit more at the pragmatic tradition. This
epistemology reached its apogee in the work of C. S. Peirce, who called himself a
pragmaticist to distinguish his thought from people such as James and
Dewey. Pragmaticism is a very novel and reasonable stab at combating
skepticism, with a more realistic approach to scientific enterprise. Unlike
Rationalism, Empiricism, and even Kantian Perspectivalism, Peirce (a prolific
polymath who actually did scientific research) gave up the idea of founding
knowledge on certainty. Instead, he noted that knowledge, while real, is
inherently fallible. Pragmatism of Peirce's sort is absolutely unsympathetic to
the po-mo pragmatism of Rorty. Third, Hicks leaves things hanging,
epistemologically speaking. Yeah, okay, the cheap, trendy collectivist skepticism
of postmodernism is silly, in the face of the continuing global advance of
scientific knowledge, new technology, free-market economics, and political
democracy. But does anyone yet have an adequate account of the nature of
knowledge and scientific method that Hicks can recommend? But I ought not
wax churlish. Hicks has written a lucid and readable book explaining an
influential, albeit puzzling, intellectual phenomenon. He has a balanced
internalist and externalist approach, discussing the narrow evolution of ideas
within philosophy and the wider influence of political and economic trends on the
evolution of those ideas. His book deserves a wide audience.
|
| | | |
|