Until 2013, then, this is it for me. No longer are Marxism, fascism, anarcho-syndicalism etc. incorrect. They’re interesting ideas, and I’d like to hear more about them.
Can you be more specific about what reaction you’d like from us? There are interesting and insightful points in post-modern thought, but there’s some junk as well, and figuring out the difference is important.
There’s a tendency for mainstream thought to co-opt the best of post-modern thought. That’s great, because I like this community’s ability to talk about social norms, something that I assert is only possible because of theory like imagined communities. But that co-opting of ideas leaves behind a lots of dreck, and judging post-modern thought (or marxism, or fascism, etc) by what has not been co-opted leaves a skewed viewpoint.
But I’m not sure that what I’ve said is responsive to your post.
Okay, well, yes—I maybe chose three really poor examples. I think it’s safe to predict that I’m not going to be a fascist in 2013. The problem I’m trying to solve is not being able to distinguish between the dreck and the not-dreck because I don’t want to feel like a traitor to my group.
I don’t know what group you refer to, but I think that Marxism and post-modern thought (particularly post-modern feminism and post-modern philosophy of science) have insights that one can accept without rejecting empiricism (i.e. finding out the truth by testing your hypothesis against the world).
Can you be more specific about what reaction you’d like from us? There are interesting and insightful points in post-modern thought, but there’s some junk as well, and figuring out the difference is important.
There’s a tendency for mainstream thought to co-opt the best of post-modern thought. That’s great, because I like this community’s ability to talk about social norms, something that I assert is only possible because of theory like imagined communities. But that co-opting of ideas leaves behind a lots of dreck, and judging post-modern thought (or marxism, or fascism, etc) by what has not been co-opted leaves a skewed viewpoint.
But I’m not sure that what I’ve said is responsive to your post.
Okay, well, yes—I maybe chose three really poor examples. I think it’s safe to predict that I’m not going to be a fascist in 2013. The problem I’m trying to solve is not being able to distinguish between the dreck and the not-dreck because I don’t want to feel like a traitor to my group.
I don’t know what group you refer to, but I think that Marxism and post-modern thought (particularly post-modern feminism and post-modern philosophy of science) have insights that one can accept without rejecting empiricism (i.e. finding out the truth by testing your hypothesis against the world).