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The Philosopher as Dangerous Liar (and Infantile Leftism exemplified by M. Moore)
The New Statesman ^ | Monday 28th June 2004 | Patrick West

Posted on 06/26/2004 11:15:34 AM PDT by Helms

The Philosopher as Dangerous Liar (and Infantile Leftism exemplified by M. Moore)

Patrick West

Monday 28th June 2004

Michel Foucault taught that might is right, truth is relative, and history just an interesting narrative. Why do we still lionise the French philosopher?

Upon Michel Foucault's death, 20 years ago this month, the historian Paul Veyne wrote in Le Monde that the philosopher's work was "the most important event of thought in our century". The rest of the world was all too ready to agree, and Foucault has become one of the most celebrated philosophers of our times, lauded as the godfather of postmodernism and extending his influence widely and deeply in academe. Foucault lords over the fields of history, literary theory, queer theory, medicine, philosophy and sociology, and his ideas have permeated society in general. His best-known theses, that the concept of "truth" is relative, that "madness" is a cultural creation and that "history" is mere storytelling, are now familiar fare at enlightened dinner parties (and those contemptuous inverted commas are mandatory).

Yet many lament his persistent appeal. The pervading theme in Foucault's philosophy is that human relations are defined by the struggle for power. Right and wrong, truth and falsehood, are illusions. They are the creation of language and the will to dominate. Socialists, for instance, believe in redistribution of wealth only because they want to get their hands on other people's money. Conservatives maintain the opposite merely because they want to keep hold of their property. Psychiatrists believe there is a thing called insanity only because they want to incarcerate others and subject them to their control and oppressive "gaze". A doctor just likes bossing people around.

Thus, there is no such thing as benevolence: men have created hospitals, schools and prisons not to cure, educate and reform, but to control and dominate "the Other". The rationalism of the Enlightenment was merely a mask for this malevolent impulse.

That this bleak philosophy should have gained such cultural currency is due at least in part to the cult of personality that grew around Foucault. A sarcastic and fiercely intelligent depressive, he took LSD, repeatedly attempted to kill himself, drove a Jaguar and attended sadomasochist parlours in California. He was also one of the first famous casualties of Aids.

Foucault loved being outrageous. He publicly urged inmates of French jails to escape from prison, and supported the Ayatollah Khomeini's revolution as well as Baader-Meinhof terrorists. He also declared that the happiest day of his life was in July 1978, when he was hit by a car while high on opium. "I had the impression that I was dying, and it was really a very, very intense pleasure," he later told a journalist.

However, one should not underestimate his philosophical appeal. Foucault's nihilism has tapped into a growing mood of pessimism in the west. He represents a generation of leftists who, despairing at the failure and the horrors of the socialist experiments in the postwar era, have sought intellectual solace in apathetic relativism. These postmodern pessimists reject the notion of human rights and progress. They mock the pursuit of reason as a chimera and blame the Enlightenment for everything from colonialism and environmental degradation to Hiroshima and Auschwitz. They owe a debt to Nietzschean anti-humanism, Freudian psychology and Saussurean linguistics, but theirs is also a political reaction.

Foucault was a Marxist who gave up the cause. He came to deride such abstract notions of truth and justice as representing class interests: socialists don't want justice, he told Noam Chomsky in a 1971 television interview - they just seek power. "Our task at the moment is to free ourselves completely from humanism and in that sense our work is political work," he once uttered. "All regimes, east and west, smuggle shoddy goods under the banner of humanism . . . We must denounce these mystifications."

Because there are no values, there can be no judgement. In 1978, looking back on the postwar era, Foucault said: "What could politics mean when it was a question of choosing between Stalin's USSR and Truman's America?" While conservatives will baulk at the proposition that the Soviet Union and the west were of moral equivalence, Foucault offered no alternatives for progressives, either: his repudiation of humanism renders impotent the opportunity to challenge any status quo.

Foucault derided the notion of rational justice as a bourgeois fiction, and "truth" as a coefficient of power. He espoused a return to barbarism. He praised the September Massacres of 1792, in which thousands of suspected royalists were butchered, as an admirable example of "popular justice". In Power/Knowledge (1980) he called for the abolition of all courts and the adoption of a "proletarian justice", in which there would be no third party present for the accused, no one to examine the evidence, no one to judge the impartiality of the facts. Only someone with Foucault's twisted logic could advocate tyranny in the name of freedom.

He epitomised what one of his critics called "infantile leftism", an egotistical school of politics which is concerned principally with making gestures; attempting to shock (think Michael Moore) and constantly criticising, but never proffering a coherent alternative. J G Merquior labelled Foucault a quintessential neo-anarchist. Whereas traditional anarchists were inspired by Pierre-Joseph Proudhon's mutualism and Kropotkin's co-operatives, and took pride in their embrace of science and humane Enlightenment values, Foucault owes more to the egotistical, destructive spirit of Mikhail Bakunin, whose anarchism luxuriated in its negativity and irrationality. Its beliefs consist entirely of what it opposes. This legacy can be seen in today's "anti- capitalist" demonstrators, who are clear about what they seek to destroy, but rather vague as to what they want to create.

Foucault captured the zeitgeist. His conceit that insanity is an invention of the Renaissance, designed to reify its opposite idea of reason, was gaining currency in the 1960s, when his seminal Madness and Civilisation was published. In Britain at this time, R D Laing was popularising the notion that insanity was an invention of modernity and schizophrenia the symptom of bourgeois oppression. Yet the move away from the idea that madness can be comprehended as a medical condition has brought immense suffering to those afflicted by chemical disorders of the brain. Thanks to the Foucauldian suggestion that mental hospitals are oppressive quasi-prisons, thousands of people who are a danger to themselves and to others have been left to fend for themselves in "care in the community" programmes.

Foucault's derision of modern medicine is said to have been prompted by an early personal experience. As a boy, he was taken by his father to a psychiatrist to be "treated" for his sexual interest in men. (Foucault famously loathed his father, a doctor from the bourgeois class.) This event aroused the suspicion in his mind that doctors did not exist to help the afflicted, but to reinforce contemporary mores.

His questioning of the reality of biological maladies and mental illness was doubly ironic: his hero Nietzsche died of syphilis, a physical condition that drove him insane; and Foucault himself succumbed to a disease that he did not believe to exist, having laughed off talk of a "gay plague" as homophobic hysteria.

Michel Foucault was not just wrong; he erased any possibility for proving himself to be right. He asserted that "the author" did not exist, that he or she is condemned to produce a work defined by customs of literature, and created through a language imposed on the mind from without. How can we believe an author who tells us the author does not exist, who writes in an objective prose that objectivity does not exist, this historian who tells us that we cannot write history? His canon is self-invalidating.

In his 1977 pamphlet Forget Foucault, the eminent French social historian Jean Baudrillard argued that Foucault's writings are themselves discourses in power that impose their own narrative, projecting their own will to truth. Those who lionise this "author" today, devoted as they are to this source of power-knowledge, continue to contradict themselves. Perhaps it is time to take heed of Baudrillard's exhortation. Perhaps it is time to forget Foucault.

Cite: New Statesman: http://216.239.41.104/search?q=cache:3lQjl1bgngYJ:www.newstatesman.com/site.php3%3FnewTemplate%3DNSArticle_Ideas%26newDisplayURN%3D200406280015+The+philosopher+as+dangerous+liar&hl=en


TOPICS: Extended News
KEYWORDS: foucault; postmodernism
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1 posted on 06/26/2004 11:15:35 AM PDT by Helms
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To: Mia T; Liz; writer33; TaxRelief; Huber

Origins of Postmodern Cultural Politics Ping.


2 posted on 06/26/2004 11:18:16 AM PDT by Helms (Terrorize then Memorize ( the Koran) , and Get Out of Jail Free)
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To: Helms
It its "time to forget Foulault" why the hell did you post a diatribe on him. GEEEZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
3 posted on 06/26/2004 11:28:44 AM PDT by Groutrig
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To: Groutrig

6-25-2004


4 posted on 06/26/2004 11:31:06 AM PDT by Helms (Terrorize then Memorize ( the Koran) , and Get Out of Jail Free)
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To: Helms

As this article suggests, Foucauld, Derrida, and their ilk are, like Nietzsche enemies of the Enlightenment. They correctly perceived that when you deify Reason it can become monstrous and led to many of the ills of modernism. But in place of Reason they set up Unreason or Nihilism, which is even worse that rationalism without foundations.

This brings us full circle to the Christian idea of the Logos, which as C. S. Lewis foresaw is the necessary foundation for sane rationalism.

Although he is not himself a believer, Thomas Nagel, a philosopher at NYU, has written that it is difficult or impossible to explain the importance or even the existence of rationality without turning to some religious model. This is, of course, what most medieval and Renaissance philosophers argued before the time of Descartes.


5 posted on 06/26/2004 11:34:18 AM PDT by Cicero (Marcus Tullius)
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To: Helms
Many liberal American college professors embrace a style of atheist pretension mixing Nietzsche with Marx and Freud in a bizarre, contradictory, apocalyptic nihilism. Either they are insane or they never studied logic.

Had Foucault NOT been a sodomite, we would have never heard of him.

6 posted on 06/26/2004 11:35:55 AM PDT by HowlinglyMind-BendingAbsurdity
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To: Cicero
Thanks for your reply. I cut Nietzsche some slack, but there simply is no excuse for the others. Note the current use of Cultural Politics emanating from Hollywood and also I had wanted to shed some light on the New Postmodern Radical Left and its origins. Regards.
7 posted on 06/26/2004 11:59:47 AM PDT by Helms (Terrorize then Memorize ( the Koran) , and Get Out of Jail Free)
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To: Helms
His questioning of the reality of biological maladies and mental illness was doubly ironic: his hero Nietzsche died of syphilis, a physical condition that drove him insane; and Foucault himself succumbed to a disease that he did not believe to exist, having laughed off talk of a "gay plague" as homophobic hysteria.

Foucault challenged the reality of the "gay plague" by spending time as a piece of butt meat, hung by chains from the ceiling of a SF gay bar. He lost.

8 posted on 06/26/2004 12:22:20 PM PDT by per loin (This tagline has not been censored!)
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To: Helms

I had never heard of Foucault until reading the article. Now I have to forget him. There goes my day.

I do know a bit of Neitsche though, having recently read some of his works. I became interested in Nietsche after reading a book about Hitler and those who influenced him. Nietsche, Schopenhaur, and Wagner were the primary three.

I found reading Nietsche to be the spiritual equivalent of walking slowly through a crowded cattle yard. It really stunk bad and I couldn't wait to get out. However, he had a brilliant mind as so many of the evil genius's of this world have. I think that, because of this, he and his ilk attract those who value intellectualism over all else. Hence, the insane college professors of today as mentioned in a previous post.


9 posted on 06/26/2004 12:42:22 PM PDT by fizziwig
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To: Helms

The crazy thing is people who consider themselves
intellectually superior buy into this
sh*t. It's just indicative of their delusions of grandeur.

Give me good ole' common sense anyday than
the ramblings of a French philosopher.


10 posted on 06/26/2004 12:43:11 PM PDT by jamfull
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To: Helms; Cicero

I made it a point to wade through some of Foucault's thought recently. My impression is this:

His habit, repeated again and again throughout my readings, is to make an unsupported assertion by one of the following manners.

"Some day we shall have to study why it took so long for people to realize that 'x' is so..."

"That 'x' is so is beyond question but the fact that people have long refused to accept it merits further study"

"The fact that 'x' is so is beyond the scope of this work"...

"The fact that 'x' is so I intend to fully explore in a later work"...

"x", the assertion, he would never bother to support. He was an intellectual con man.


11 posted on 06/26/2004 12:59:31 PM PDT by marron
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To: Helms

I myself have neither the time nor inclination to indulge the works of "modern" philosophers any more than I can stand to listen to "modern" composers but simply on the principle of "know your enemy" I believe we must have a passing acquaintance with the work of this ridiculously influential sociopath. For instance; I had not previously known that it was one of his little red pamphlets that eventually resulted in our gutters and jails being filled with those schizophrenics too sick to take their meds (Silly me, I thought it was Ken Kesey's "One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest"). What I DID know was that every odious concept excreted by our so-called intellectual establishment, from postmodernism to poststructualism to multi-culturalism to moral relativism to critical theory to queer theory to liberation theology to post-colonial theory to orientalism to dialectical materialism and so on and on seemed to have the fashionable frenchies slithering around at its root. The unreadability and intellectual incoherence of the sacred texts of these various 'isms had me scratching my head for years until I took a closer look at the sort of people who espoused them, their careers and their personal lives, etc. Then it gradually dawned on me what this was really all about--in the words of C.S. Lewis from "The Magician's Nephew"...

"Bother! said Digory." "It just means that he can do whatever he likes to whomever he pleases."

That about sums it up for me (besides the more obvious sacred principles of "white man bad!", "capitalism bad!", "technology bad!"). However, to effectively debate such creatures and their power-hungry adepts on their own turf one must needs a tongue-twisting vocabulary of neologisms and the ability to say in a ten thousand words what one can say in a single sentence. Ultimately, probably only a return of the rules of the marketplace to higher education may return sanity to the humanities and put such people out of business or at least in a musty backwater where they cannot cause so much harm.


12 posted on 06/26/2004 12:59:33 PM PDT by sinanju
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To: per loin
It is also believed that Nietzsche was homosexual.

These creeps also glamorized major mental illnesses.

This is part of the underpinning of the New Radical Left.

13 posted on 06/26/2004 1:06:25 PM PDT by Helms (Terrorize then Memorize ( the Koran) , and Get Out of Jail Free)
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To: sinanju
" What I DID know was that every odious concept excreted by our so-called intellectual establishment, from postmodernism to poststructualism to multi-culturalism to moral relativism to critical theory to queer theory to liberation theology to post-colonial theory to orientalism to dialectical materialism and so on and on seemed to have the fashionable frenchies slithering around at its root "

!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

14 posted on 06/26/2004 1:09:24 PM PDT by Helms (Terrorize then Memorize ( the Koran) , and Get Out of Jail Free)
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To: Helms

bump


15 posted on 06/26/2004 1:18:05 PM PDT by tophat9000
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To: Helms
Foucault is what one gets when one pushes classic Greek Skepticism to its extreme without making an effort to fortify ones basis of thought with a moral system.

People like Foucault are just self-indulgent jerks who are smart enough to plausibly present their personal, situational feelings and desires as ethical positions and grand philosophical ideals.

The great danger of people like Foucault and Chomsky is that impressionable persons with less sophisticated critical thought abilities confuse the brilliance of of these men's minds with correctness.

To that extent, Moore doesn't fall into the Foucault and Chomsky categories:  Moore does not possess a brilliant mind, just one that's very good at manipulation.

16 posted on 06/26/2004 1:25:59 PM PDT by Psycho_Bunny
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To: All

Michael Moore Is A Big Fat Stupid White Man Michael Moore Is A Big Fat Stupid White Man
by David T. Hardy
and Jason Clarke


17 posted on 06/26/2004 1:38:26 PM PDT by SunkenCiv (Unlike some people, I have a profile. Okay, maybe it's a little large...)
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To: Psycho_Bunny

In short Foucault is what I like to call a brilliant idiot. That follows with the statement Orwell made that some ideas are so stupid only an intellectual would believe them. With all their gods failing miserably, radical liberals had to come up with something to justify their worthless existence. Postmodernism is just another in the line of ridiculous liberal "philosophies" they come up with every now and then to ease the boredom of modern life. Being hip is valued more than integrity or living a basic life dedicated to ones family and allegiance to one's country. That is why the "hip" John Kerry is to be preferred over the very unhip George Bush.


18 posted on 06/26/2004 1:42:23 PM PDT by driftless ( For life-long happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: Helms
The New Left (old Democratism on steroids)---paralleling the homosexualist juggernaut---is all about decadence and the destruction of Western civilization. The dangers inherent in these social movements have already manifested themselves. The transition from the extravagance of art and culture of Realism, to the anti-cultural, anarchic art of Picasso and the Cubist Revolution tells us much about the New Left........it is a movement with a complete absence of sentimentality.

A left-imposed culture devoid of sentimentality gives one pause. Troubling prospects come to mind. Patriotism and loyalty to one's country follow sentimentality out the window. Objective truth is also a casualty.......as the New Left amply demonstrates...."truth" is in the eye of the ones who contribute the most money to a political party, and lands in the mouths of its candidates.

Finally, Socialistic Darwinism----survivial of the fittest---replaces the sacrosanct rule of law ---the thing that distinguishes America from Third World banana republics. Socialistic Darwinism is where the strongest survive at the expense of the weak (it thrives in Mideast countries). Survival measures consist of the most cunning and depraved individuals surviving by back-stabbing the weak and law-abiding.

So much for a constitutional republic built on the historic sentimentality of representative democracy.

19 posted on 06/26/2004 4:09:57 PM PDT by Liz
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To: Helms

Let's forget whats-his-name bump.


20 posted on 06/26/2004 4:20:19 PM PDT by aculeus
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