Why I am
Not a Postmodernist
Edward R. Friedlander,
M.D.
I'm an honest doctor. I have chosen science
over prejudice, health over disease, opportunity over slavery, and love and
kindness over mean-minded make-believe.
There was a time when people were openly
grateful to scientists and physicians who dedicated their lives to making us
healthier and happier. There was a time when it was fashionable to express
appreciation for the system of government and the practice of dispassionate
inquiry which have brought us the unparalleled health, freedom, and prosperity
which we enjoy today.
There was a time when people thought that a
proposition was "valid" or "true" if, and only if, it
ultimately squared with the observable world around us.
There was a time when people thought that
respecting the beliefs and experiences of others, even when they differed from
your own, was the mark of an educated, decent person.
There was a time when people thought it was
right to judge each person by what he or she had done as an individual, rather
than for their race, skin color, ancestry, religion, gender, sexual preference,
or anything else.
There was a time when people enjoyed
discovering how much we all have in common, and how most of us wanted the same
things despite the superficial differences. There was even a time when we
thought the best way to overcome misunderstanding, prejudice, and hate was by
means of reason, common sense, clear-thinking, and good-will.
We called this being scientific. We
called this being rational. We called this being enlightened. We
called this being liberal.
We called this being modern.
I am concerned here
only with the use of the word "postmodernism" as it usually gets used
in rhetoric, not with its use in real epistemology.
Real postmodernism is a thoughtful study
of the limits of scientific inquiry, the origins and perpetuation of
unreasonable prejudices, and the ambiguities of language. Even though I am not
a professional philosopher, I appreciate real postmodernism as far as I'm able
to understand it.
By contrast...
Here is my collection of
"postmodernism" links from the "Net."
Postmodern Culture. In the 1990's, it was
the principal site, and a good place to start. There is even a search engine.
It's no longer public. See NOTE 1.
Postmodernism by Michael Fegan. [Link is now
down.] "Postmodernism calls into question enlightenment values such as
rationality, truth, and progress, arguing that these merely serve to secure the
monolithic structure of modern capitalistic society by concealing or excluding
any forces that might challenge its cultural dominance."
Technoculture
Joseph Dumit's review of another writer's essay. "The Actors are Cyborgs,
Nature is Coyote, and the Geography is Elsewhere." This is the first site
I found which mentioned Sandra Harding, whose book "The Science Question
in Feminism" accused Einstein's relativity of being gender-biased, and
called Newton's "Principia" a "rape manual."
Postmodernism and Health: [link is now down]
"The body of the patient is inscribed by discourses of professional 'care'
as well as by pain and suffering." The author takes psychiatry at its most
unscientific as the prototype for scientific medicine.
Chantal Mouffe [link is now down.] She is
against democracy, and is the editor of "Gramsci and Marxist Theory",
"Deconstruction and Pragmatism", and so forth. When this page went
up, the link was to a review of her 1992 book, in which she envisioned a
postmodernist future dominated by minority group identities and minority group
grievances. "The book represents not just a discussion of the concept of democratic
citizenship, but the epitaph for it." Now down, we learn from her current
site that "she is currently elaborating a non-rationalist approach to
political theory."
Stanford Humanities Review 4(1): Link is now
down. Nobel laureate Herbert Simon thinks that great literature is about the
common experiences and concerns of all human beings. Professor Simon also cites
scientific work that he thinks shows that humans do, indeed, all have certain
understandings in common. Here are the postmodernists' outraged responses,
accusing Professor Simon of massive ignorance, bigotry and heartlessness. See
NOTE 5.
"Anything Goes". Link is now down.
Paul Fayerabend and his friends complain about scientific theories being
counter-intuitive, people who ask for "clarity, precision, objectivity,
and truth" are "impoverishing [history] in order to please their
lower instincts", "scientific theories are only justified by their
own standards and not by some objective criteria", the impossibility of
predicting weather accurately (ever heard of "chaos theory", Paul?),
"let's talk about Galileo's politics again", etc., etc.
Michel
Foucault For me, the best of the postmodernists. A likable man who writes
primarily about sub-science (lots of GOOD examples from old-fashioned
psychiatry) being misrepresented as knowledge by cliques seeking political
advantage. Unfortunately, Foucault and his followers have generalized this to
genuine (empirical, experimental) science. His prescription is radical skepticism.
Mine is free and honest inquiry.
Contemporary
Philosophy, Critical Thought, and Postmodern Thought. Philosophy links from
U. of Colorado.
Postmodern Nausea. "In time's absence
what is new renews nothing; what is present is not contemporary; what is
present presents nothing, but represents itself and belongs henceforth and
always to return. It isn't, but comes back again." -- Derrida. The
background of this site is a sketch of the large intestine, perhaps for the
obvious reason. Link is now down
Radical Afrocentrism: "Socrates and Cleopatra were black".
"The ancient Egyptians were black like Malcolm X, flew in gliders and had
psychic powers". "Melanin is a superconductor", etc., etc.).
You'll find this stuff persuasive if and only if "truth is whatever your
grievance-group says it is." This is typical of "postmodernist"
changing the ground-rules of rational inquiry. David
Muhammad's speech at Harvard. "A Brief
History of Afrocentric Scholarship": "As can be discerned from
this brief paper, Afrocentrism is not a new movement promoted by egomaniacal
pseudoscientists." Lavishes praise on Yosef ben-Jochannan, whose made the
famous claim that Aristotle stole his works from the black people's library at
Alexandria, which was not even built until after Aristotle's death. Asked by
Mary Lefkowitz about this, "Dr. ben-Jochannan was unable to answer the
question, and said that he resented the tone of the inquiry." ("Out
of Egypt", cited below). Professor Lefkowitz's subsequent scholarly
examination of the claim that Greek philosophy came from Egypt has been
"deconstructed" to make her a "racist". "Beethoven was
black": The Marxist Review of Books had a discussion of this; the link is
now down.
Postmodernism: The Drinking
Game
Danny
Yee, a real scientist, on postmodernism: "In general, when
'postmodernism' is restricted to literary criticism and cultural studies, it is
a lot more reasonable."
"How to Deconstruct Almost
Anything" by Chip Morningstar. His joyful hoax, in which he delivered
meaningless gibberish to a "cultural studies" audience and met with
approval and agreement.
"How to Speak and Write
Postmodern". "At some point someone may actually ask you what
you're talking about. This risk faces all those who would speak postmodern and
must be carefully avoided."
L'Isle de Gilligan --
Parody
Random Post-Modernist Essay
Generator Writes postmodernist double-talk using a computer-algorithm.
Compare its productions to the stuff at "Postmodern Culture".
It's a fact. People want to
believe lies that make them feel intellectually and spiritually superior to
others.
At its best, contemporary postmodernism
is a reaction against all the stupid people who pretend to have answers to
everything ("meta-narratives"). Science, rightly used, does the same
thing.
In its more typical forms, contemporary
postmodernism is a sustained attack on the three hopes of the
"modern" era:
· the "modernist" hope that we
could use rigorous and disciplined study to understand nature, and use the new
knowledge for our common benefit;
· the "modernist" hope that
people from different backgrounds and cultures could live together in a democratic
society, enjoying economic and personal freedom;
· the "modernist" hope that
people around the world could discover our common ground, and overcome hatred,
prejudice, or misunderstanding; and that sharing our literature and other works
of art would help us do this.
Science, at it is, or should be, practiced,
is the serious business of looking at the world of nature as it really is,
taking elaborate precautions against self-deception and one's own prejudices.
As such, it has proved its power again and again. Like it or not, we owe our
health and longevity to the public-health initiatives and therapeutic
techniques which scientific knowledge has given us. Like it or not, our planet
sustains six billion people only because of scientific agriculture. Like it or
not, the postmodernists can post their stuff on the "Net" only
because of our much-hated "technology".
Postmodernism grew out of literary criticism
and the focus on the ambiguities of language. I understand how this applies to
the language of literature, advertising, and propaganda. I understand all too
well how this applies to the "knowledge" of sub-sciences like
sociology, psychology (outside some narrow lab applications), and education,
where real experiments are (regrettably) almost impossible, successful theories
are (regrettably) few or nonexistent, and where ideology and politics dominate
in the public arena and do tremendous harm. (I'll stand by this controversial
statement, and believe that most readers who bring their own real-life
experience will agree. In fact, I've received appreciative notes from academic
psychologists and students of culture who deplore the misapplication of their
subjects by ideologues. Here, I'm with Michel Foucault completely, and my own god-awful
experiences with "expert" after "expert" underlies much of
my appreciation for this great thinker.) And works of literature are not
produced or read in a social or cultural vacuum. The latter is the focus of
today's literary criticism at its most intriguing.
But I am at a loss to understand how the
language of science ("centimeter", "oxygen",
"hemoglobin", "six") and fundamental human experience
("This is blue", "I itch", "I feel cold") shares
this indeterminacy.
Postmodernists complain that science is a
cultural prejudice, and/or a tool invented by the current elite to maintain
power, and/or only one "way of knowing" among many, with no special
privilege. For postmodernists, science is "discourse", one system
among many, maintained by a closed community as a means of holding onto power,
and ultimately referential only to itself.
No reasonable person would deny that
politics and the profit-motive do influence what science studies, and who gets
to use the laboratories. But it seems to me that the feature of real-world
science which distinguishes it from other forms of description is rigorous measurement
and the experimental method, which we can apply to atoms, to the galactic
radiation, to our bodies, and to the medical techniques of indigenous peoples.
All scientific knowledge is tentative, and scientific statements are judged by
their predictive value. (Postmodernists themselves sometimes say, "What's
true is what works.") As scientists look at nature, science corrects
itself over time, and all scientists thrive on finding flaws in one another's
works. Like it or not, science works. Superstition doesn't.
More seriously, postmodernists blame science
for Hitler's atrocities and the other evils perpetrated against humankind. This
is noxious falsehood. Every tyrant uses the language of science (who doesn't,
nowadays?) But oppression happens and continues because people choose to
believe (or pretend to believe) ugly lies. If anything will free us from this,
it's knowledge of the world as it really is. And if my own experience has
taught me anything, it's that reason, not make-believe, is the best way of
dealing with the real evils of our world. After all, it was superior science
and understanding, translated into superior military power, that gave the free
world the victory over Hitler.
We still hear a great deal today about
"multiculturalism" and "relative values". But everybody
that I know, regardless of race, gender, sexuality, or religion, seems to want
the same basic things. This begins with health, reasonable personal liberty and
security, and a reasonable chance to have one's initiative rewarded.
Postmodernists talk about being "dehumanized" by science and
technology. If they really believed this, they would trade their academic
positions for the lives of subsistence farmers in the world's poor nations, or
(if they could) the short, sickly, miserable lives of chattel-serfs in the ages
"before technocracy". There they will discover that what people want
isn't "cultural integrity" or "multicultural sensitivity",
but health, food, safety, and a reasonable opportunity to choose one's own
course through life. Those who would deny them these basic human needs aren't
the scientists. It is the tyrants and ideologues of the right and the left.
Of course, it's silly to believe that
science gives ultimate answers about our place in the cosmos, or what things mean,
or what's right and wrong. But as far as I can tell, the best way to make a
good decision is to understand a situation as it really is, and the best way to
do mischief is to choose make-believe instead.
I believe the material to which I've linked
this page speaks for itself, even though it is written in a peculiar
doublespeak that is hard for the uninitiated to understand. Postmodernist
writings consist largely of effusive praise for each other's works, and obvious
appeals to the prejudices of their liberal audience. Since the constituency is
liberals, there is a preoccupation with how wealth and opportunities are to be
redistributed by the government, and the question of how wealth and
opportunities are produced and defended gets ignored. A satirical website [now
down] about the postmodernist work ethic is a blank page.
The more recent writings are less hostile to
science itself. There are even writers at the "Postmodern Culture"
site who look to popular science writers to buttress postmodernism's attack on
the supposed monolithic ideology of classical science. Harvard's
paleontologist, Dr. Gould, is a favorite; unlike the creationists of the
1980's, the postmodernists who take Dr. Gould as an authority seem to really
want to understand him. Alongside this are the totally-discredited Duesberg
claims about the cause of AIDS. In between are various environmentalist and
social-science polemics papers. You'll need to decide on their merit; it's
interesting to see postmodernists using the evidence of empirical science after
all, when it suits them.
As a visitor to "Postmodern
Culture" who worked hard at literary criticism as a college undergraduate,
I'm struck by the lack of internal self-criticism at the site. In college, I
examined empirical evidence to decide whether Milton really drew on particular
neoplatonists in creating his "Chaos" scene, whether John the Baptist
was a conscious forerunner of Jesus, whether the Wellhausen hypothesis of the
origin of Deuteronomy was true, and what Shakespeare was trying to tell us in
"Antony and Cleopatra". I examined the ideas of others, compared them
with the facts of the real world, and had the same done to me. As a
scientist-physician, I have thrived on finding the errors in others' work. By
contrast, the world of postmodernism shows the same lack of internal criticism
that I've come to expect from pseudoscientists and charlatans of all stripes.
Somebody has to say "No!" to all
this. So far as I can tell, I'm the first person on the "Net" to do
so in an accessible way.
If you are a postmodernist, I'm fully in
support of your appreciation for your neighbor's culture, your concern about
the future of our planet, and your care for people who are genuinely oppressed.
I enjoy the great diversity of humankind, in our food, our dress, our music,
our literature, our sexuality, and our forms of spiritual expression.
I am only asking you to reconsider (1)
whether empirical science should have a privileged place in your thinking about
how the world of nature really is, and (2) whether western-style democracy
isn't the best way of getting what you and your neighbors really want. And if you love books as I do, ask yourself (3)
whether some passage in literature has touched you in a special way, reaching
something in you that is universal to humankind, something "beyond the
text", beyond all cultural prejudice.
Especially, look at the world around you.
Most scientists, most white people, most men, and most European-Americans, are
good, sensible people who care about the world in which we live. Science isn't
a conspiracy of power-hungry monsters against the human race. The real enemy is
superstition, ignorance, and silly lies. And if you live in America, Canada,
Australia/New Zealand, or Western Europe, most people in the world would gladly
trade places with you.
Learn about the world as it really is.
Health and friendship!
NOTE 1. Postmodernists typically cite Hitler's atrocities
and the evil A-bombing of Japan as the prototypical outcomes of science and
technology. ("Genocide! Mass murder! Let's talk about the death camps
again!") I used the search engine to find the references to Stalin.
Peter Baker [another Postmodern Culture link now down], who is against
"liberal democracy", speaks admiringly of an old French
"analysis that seriously attempts to contextualize Stalin's violence by
comparison to the violence present in liberal democracies", and explains
that this "shows a need to understand the argument for liberal democracy
within a specifically postwar historical context." Neil Larsen [another
Postmodern Culture link now down], notes that "postmodern philosophy
normally refrains from open anti-communism, preferring to pay lip service to
'socialism' even while making the necessary obeisances to the demonologies of
'Stalin' may make it appear as some sort of a 'left' option." No kidding,
Neil. Noam Chomsky [another Postmodern Culture link now down], (no
postmodernist, but at this site) mentions Stalin and his
"bureaucracy" as bad Marxists, not left-wing enough. Eric
Petersen presents a history of dialectical materialism. Marxism is "a
guide to human liberation by social revolution.... (d) Stalinism turned
dialectical materialism into an authoritarian state religion. (e) Mao used
dialectical materialism to justify Stalinist politics in China. (f) Trotsky
used dialectical materialism to misunderstand Stalin's
counter-revolution." And so forth. PMC-Talk [another Postmodern Culture
link now down], archives contain a single flame, from a Professor Kessler,
about folks such as Sartre who fell for Stalinism; he also has the insight to
call Lysenkoism "nonsense". Continuing, Kessler [another Postmodern
Culture link now down], mentions Stalin's paranoia and his one-time sparring
partner Norman Miller asks for "some pm words on such matters as Stalin's
murders and even more the bloody complicity of most of the left in these
events." The only contributor to take up the challenge said he didn't know
which was worse, right-wing tyrants or left-wing tyrants, and was too
preoccupied with his own liberal agenda to care. Marjorie
Perloff wonders whether Stalin's rejection of "modern art"
influenced Tom Wolfe. The bottom line is, despite all the postmodern rhetoric
about "genocide", and "mass murder" in modern times, one
could read the entire contents of the principal postmodernist site and never
learn that Stalin the Communist killed a single person.
The word gratitude appears only a few
times at the Postmodern Culture site, and never with respect to science,
medicine, or democracy. First, a reviewer of "Schindler's List"
[another Postmodern Culture link now down], talks about how appropriate the
gratitude shown to Oscar Schindler was. Nearby, you can find "The Fairy Tale
of The Just War" [another Postmodern Culture link now down], ("The
hero receives acclaim, along with the gratitude of the victim and the
community.") So how do you think the free world finally overcame Hitler?
Apparently, gratitude is a virtue or a fairy-tale, depending on whether the
postmodernists like (Schindler) or dislike (the free world) the recipient.
NOTE 2. It is obvious to me that people who are willfully deceiving the public
stay off the Internet. Pseudoscience targeted to exploit blacks ("melanin
science", "the Portland Baseline Essays") has almost completely
disappeared from the 'net. (See Gross & Levitt "Higher
Superstition", Johns Hopkins 1994 for a review of the "Baseline
Essays" author's falsified credentials; despite his claim to be a
distinguished research scientist, he reportedly has no education past high
school, and no record of scientific publication.) American
Federation of Teachers president Albert Shanker says "It uses
pseudoscience to promote a political agenda. At the same time, it cheats
students of a chance to find out what real science is like, and it deprives
them of a foundation on which to build future learning. This would be bad news
for any of our youngsters; it is criminal for poor, minority students."
Revisionist Discoveries by Anti-Racist
Historians (link now down) quotes the Baseline Essays: "Afrika was the epitome of
civilizations in times when western Europe lived in a state of savagery and
barbarity featuring filth, sexual disease, incest, homosexuality, bestiality,
and anarchy."
NOTE 3. These are the folks who spent a million dollars of tax money to
generate learning objectives for American History. The resulting document did
not mention George Washington as our first president, mentioned Abraham Lincoln
only as a speechmaker, and was utterly silent on America's contribution to
science (no mention of Thomas Edison, Albert Einstein, Alexander Graham Bell,
the Wright Brothers, or what they did). Yet there were nineteen separate
references to McCarthyism, and reverse racial, class, and gender prejudices
permeate the work. Check out the main site and its links yourself. The
influence of postmodernist pseudo-epistemology is obvious. In a site from CT
state which is now down. a participant cites thermodynamics against
"individualism", and quantum theory "indeterminacy" to
explain why it's not worthwhile mentioning the individual heroes and
achievements for which most of us are proud and grateful.
NOTE 4. There was one
essay
here (now down) on the relationship between the Chilean astronomers and Pinochet's brutal
repression of the people who brought about Chile's catastrophic experiment with
Marxism, many of whom sought a Castro-style communist state in Chile. The
author considers Chile's observatories to be collaborators in Pinochet's
human-rights violations merely for remaining open ("the ideological
indifference of scientific value-neutrality"), and frames an analogy
between astronomy and torture: "Astrophysics, which itself is a will to
pure fatuity, compels the universe to confess its secrets." (NOTE: I'll stand by my assessment
of Allende as a well-intentioned man. After his disastrous seizure of the
assets of the American corporations and his defiance of his own Congress and
the subsequent constitutional crisis, he lost control of his own Left. A civil
war and possible left-wing tyranny were averted at an awful human cost. This is
a tragedy which needs to be retold. Like me, Allende was a pathologist with a
social conscience.)
NOTE 5. Typical is the incident reviewed by Mark Turner [link is down]. When
cognitive scientists discover, based on their experiments, that human beings
everywhere agree on the meaning of "This is blue", the postmodernist
reply is that "human beings are a recent invention, a wrinkle in our
knowledge that will inevitably be displaced as new wrinkles arise." (Mark
Turner's written me, 1/1/97 to point out that he's describing the
postmodernists, and is himself a cognitive scientist. Shoulda been obvious...
Sorry, Mark! Thanks for speaking out for understanding and reason.) Also
typical is Suvir Kaul [link down], apparently thinks that the purpose of
literary criticism is to promote partisan positions in the struggle for world
ideological domination, and thereby solve "the problems of racism, sexism,
economic inequality, and lack of equal opportunity."
NOTE 6: "Whether you're talking about the manifestations of universal reason
in the final solution of the Holocaust or you're talking about the
manifestation of universal reason in nuclear arms, there seems to be something
inherently violent here." The authors are not the first members of the
religious right to: (1) assert that Hitler's atrocities are the logical outcome
of the Enlightenment and the triumph of science; (2) claim to champion the poor
and oppressed against evil, secular science and technology; (3) claim that
science etc. pretends to have answers to everything ("...the assumption by
means of universal reason that Western culture has the truth, and that
necessarily marginalizes..."). But these two are apparently the first to
identify as "Postmodern" their familiar right-wing overstatement of
the limits of rational inquiry. And while I appreciate your Christian zeal,
gentlemen, your statements are on a level with the creationist ("neck of
the giraffe") material elsewhere on your server. The root of tyranny,
lawlessness, over-population, racial hatreds, world hunger, avoidable disease,
and rank stupidity isn't "universal reason" or
"meta-narratives" or "modernism". It's something inherent
in human nature. Mainstream Christians like myself still talk about sin.
E-Mail to: scalpel_blade@yahoo.com![]()
To date (12-20-97), I have received over 170
expressions of strong support and encouragement from academicians and students,
one polite reminder from a real philosopher that "postmodernism" is
also the name of one of the two major schools of contemporary epistemology
(this correspondent regrets the use of the word by "English
departments" to express "angst-laden Marxism"), one
obscenity-laced personal characterization (too much truth here, Karen?), a very
long attack on my character from two graduate students in philosophy (I have a
"boring personality" and am "enslaved to modernist
thinking"), one complaint from a research scientist that he did not
understand what I was saying about Stalin, a remark from a Finnish sociologist
that my page was "highly offensive" without further explanation, a
reminder from a professor in Germany that Stalin joined the free world in
overcoming Hitler, a few angry folks who accused me of being stupid and
pretending to have answers to everything, one ideologue who insisted vehemently
there was no basis whatever for preferring one "way of knowing" over
another (he did not answer my inquiry about whether he'd go to a dentist or a
Christian Science practitioner if he got a toothache), two correspondents who
(as it turned out) agreed both with my appreciation of "postmodernism at
its best" and rejected its imbecilities, two notes from Bill Clearlake
("Beethoven was black. There, I've said it."), and no attempt at any
other kind of reply from any postmodernist. If postmodernism were true, I
would think that somebody would (by now) have told me how to deconstruct
"six", "hemoglobin", and "I itch".
The most interesting anecdote so far came
from a doctoral student in the humanities, who asked to remain anonymous:
"I have just gone through a huge battle in my 'supposed' doctoral seminar
[at a major university], where I pointed out some of the fallacious logic in
Postmodernist rhetoric. The professor, ___ ___, a PM author, could only respond
with 'F--- you.' A very literate thing to say... ". Joshua Hersh, one of
the students, described his own course at Ohio State University. "This one
is called 'Values, Science and Technology in a Global Perspective.' We learn
about things like the particle physicist's subculture in which their particle beams
represent a phallic symbol. We also learn about how all science is socially
influenced and knowledge does not really exist (epistemological relativism).
Finally, we learn that the people in the class that have bad vision are cyborgs
because they augment their vision with eyeglasses."
I also ran (Jan. 15, 1996) a MEDLINE
literature search for "feminist theory". I found 52 references. Of
these, 50 were postmodern-style rhetoric, ranging from common-sense-common
decency stuff to the familiar we-hate-men stuff. There was a large
representation from the nursing literature, including an exhortation to
"include feminist theory as a major component of the nursing
curriculum." Only two were empirical studies, both of sexual violence. In
each case, the predictions of "feminist theory" turned out to be
totally wrong. Try it yourself; there's MEDLINE links nearby. In science, any
"theory" which has, even once, failed to show predictive value must
be modified or discarded. That's the key difference between science and
politics.
The conservative anti-science,
anti-empirical, anti-common-sense movement is every bit as vigorous and nasty
as its liberal counterpart. These people have not (yet?) discovered
postmodernism as a rhetorical device. I'd welcome your suggested titles for a
essay to stand as a counterpart this one.
Other people who are happy
not to be postmodernists, either:
· Postmodernism Disrobed: E=mc2 is sexist because
it gives "privilege" to the speed of light. Link is now down.
· The Nation ran
"Pomolotov Cocktail", a comment on Dr. Sokal's hoax from "The
Nation". Even genuine liberals are disgusted by postmodernism. Welcome to
the club, Katha!
· "Transgressing
the Transgressors: Toward a Transformative Hermeneutics of Total Bullshit"
Welcome to the club, Gary!
·
· A
workbook for Evangelicals, including a section on "Assessing
Postmodernism" which one does not have to be Christian to appreciate. It
is VERY refreshing to hear an Evangelical say of postmodernists, "They
exaggerate the difficulties involved in scientific objectivity and neutrality."
Highly recommended.
· Camille Paglia.
LesBiGay activist. "Culture is an achievement made more in opposition to
nature than in concert with it. Nature is not the pretty innocence of
Greenpeace agitprop or Bambi... Culture requires overcoming nature, creating a
human realm apart from the natural, that provides a context and the hubris to
paint, write novels or songs, fall in love, die for one's beliefs.... If we are
whatever we say we are..., if our freedom consists in constructing an identity
all our own, if there is no larger historical continuity, then it is tempting
to define ourselves to serve only our immediate interests." Nicely put.
· Postmodernism
in Daily Life Christian (Evangelical Protestant) site summarizes
postmodernism as pseudoscience and goofball left-wing politics justifying
itself by a radical skepticism. It's pleasant to see these people (apparently
soft-creationists) with a generally good overall understanding and appreciation
for "western science".
· Postmodernity [was at Brown U., link is now down]:
"Whereas modernity was characterized by creativity and production, energy
and meaning, the postmodern world signals the death of these values." From
liberal Brown, even!
· Barbara
Ehrenreich in "The Nation", not noted for being conservative.
"No sooner had the word 'experiment' passed her lips than the hands shot
up. Audience members pointed out that the experimental method is the brainchild
of white Victorian males. Ellsworth agreed that white Victorian males had done
their share of damage in the world but noted that, nonetheless, their efforts
had led to the discovery of DNA. This short-lived dialogue between paradigms
ground to a halt with the retort: 'You believe in DNA?'... This climate of
intolerance, often imposed by scholars associated with the left, ill suits an
academic tradition rhetorically committed to human freedom. What's worse, it
provides intellectual backdrop for a political outlook that sees no real basis
for common ground among humans of different sexes, races and cultures."
· Lee
Campbell, Ph.D. on the postmodernist hostility to science. Quotes
anti-science postmodernist Paul Feyerabend's complaint that "he is still
not permitted to demand that his children learn magic rather than science in
school."
· Ohio Board of Regents [link is now down]: "There is one
component of today's university life (by no means the major component) that
springs from campus thought and behavior, and not from the larger external
marketplace. In this component there are extremes of political correctness and
ideological faddishness such as relativism or deconstructionism, espousing the
belief that no such thing as truth exists -- only how you perceive it. Try
setting up a system of fiscal support for universities under that ideology."
· Mary Lefkowitz on Afrocentrism [link is now down].
"Bernal argues that Greek philosophy was "massively borrowed"
form Egypt, others have alleged that Aristotle stole his philosophy form the
library in Alexandria (even though the library was only built after his death),
and that Socrates and Cleopatra were black. These contentions, and others like
them, are apparently being taught as truth in a course on 'Africans in
Antiquity' at Wellesley College. When I mentioned to the then-dean of Wellesley
that there was no evidence to back these claims, she assured me that the
instructor of the Africans in Antiquity course had his view of ancient history
and I had mine. Another colleague insisted that the issue was
unimportant."
· Radical Afrocentrism. Ibrahim Sundiata, an
Afrocentrist who tries to regain credibility by urging his colleagues to be
truthful; Camille Paglia
(no conservative); The "Beethoven was black" sites have mostly
disappeared from the 'web (there was this incident at Stanford...); I'll let
you find the remaining few yourself.
· Jonn J.
Reilly (link is now down) -- Review of "The Higher Superstition"
· Lynn
Cheney -- the former head of the National Endowment for the Humanities (!)
-- on why "culture" no longer makes sense. Lots on the National
History Standards.
· The
"R" Word (Reality) David Pocock
· Eric Walker -- see his page on R A Lafferty
· Frank Kermode was
among my favorites when I was at Brown
· Bad
writing contest (link is now down) -- journal Philosophy and Literature
·
Vaclev
Havel (link is now down), president of the Czech republic and hero of the liberation from
Soviet domination, on "The Need for Transcendence in the Postmodern
World". Urges people to set aside both cultural differences and the
reliance on "modern" institutions. "The Declaration of Independence
states that the Creator gave man the right to liberty. It seems man can realize
that liberty only if he does not forget the One who endowed him with it."
The Sisters of Mercy.
"Postmodernism finds itself in a vicious circle of cynicism and
disappointment. It has no hope to break the circle; it doesn't admit to knowing
what's beyond the circle. If that's a 'reasonable' acceptance of the fact that
so many citizens are ignorant of the past and have no immediate prospect of a
better future, then the Sisters reserve the right to be unreasonable. And
angry. Anyway, postmodernism doesn't offer you the kind of fun which satisfies.
The Sisters just might."
Michael Brannigan, from the Center for the
Study of Ethics, La Roche College, Pittsburgh PA, writes (Health Care Analysis 8:
321, 2000): "If postmodernism is losing its grip, it may well be due to
its cognitive nihilism, that is, its thesis regarding the corruptibility of
objective standards. This thesis cannot be either verified or non-verified. It
cannot be refuted on its own terms. In this way, postmodernism self-destructs
since it forecloses dialogue and debate in incessant swirls of
question-begging. Moreover, the consequences of applying this postmodernist
thesis to ethics in healthcare are especially pernicious when it precludes the
ability to make legitimate cross-cultural moral judgments about the plight of
Hindu widows, or of women in Afghanistan under the Taliban movement, of or
young girls and women subjected to female circumcision."
Mike Adams (link is now down): "Someone once told me that an idea that
fails repeatedly might just be wrong. Why can't seemingly educated people abandon
such obviously wrong ideas?"
The New Criterion 1993 essay on Michael Foucault as a person is no longer online.
Ultimately, he denied love and kindness both in
society and in individual relationships.
On May 23, 2005, I received
an e-mail which I very much appreciated.
Hi
Dr. Friedlander. My name is ____ ____. I'm a second year medical student at the
Kirksville College of Osteopathic Medicine. I found your website while
searching for some pathology info for the upcoming COMLEX. While looking around
I found your article regarding postmodernism. My undergraduate majors were
English and Philosophy, with my senior honors thesis dealing with postmodern
literary theory (specifically with revisionist history in literature).
Anyway, since leaving undergrad I have often thought of my
education in postmodernism (and relativism by default) and wondered, honestly,
how I could have been so involved in that idea. As you bring up, it is now hard
for me to rationalize the ideas of linguistic relativism prevalent throughout
the philosophy. I wish I could remember the specific piece, but I remember an
article by Derrida or maybe Robert Detweiler(I believe that's his name... He
was at Emory for years) about the lack of certainty in language. The whole
point (and I think this gets to the belief that science is based on
ambiguities) was that when I say "tree" you might picture a fir or a
beech or an oak, while I might picture a pine or cedar. So when you say "anemia"
you might mean a specific range of values, while others might just imagine
someone with a Hgb of 7. The point of all of this is to say that as I've moved
from my philosophical background to one of science, I have come to realize that
the postmodern argument is really just an intellectual exercise. It's not
applicable or relevant because if it was, communication would fail.
Communication might be relative in symbol, but only in things that lack strict
definitions like the word "tree" or "air". Things like
"oxygen" have specific definitions that eliminate the possibility of
interpretation... You either know what an oxygen molecule is with its
attributes or you don't. Science (medicine specifically) is not relative. When
you say "liver" I picture a normal liver. When you say
"cirrhotic liver" I have a good idea of what you mean. Medicine, in
my limited experience so far, is about learning the definitions so that
relativism in symbol is minimized and ideally eliminated. The point of looking
at a thousand normal eardrums first is so that you know that a diseased one is
different when you see it.
Mark
McIntyre, philosophy professor
I operate the world's
largest free personalized medical
information service. It's an outgrowth of my modernist vision of a world
made healthier by science, communication, mutual understanding, and common
kindness.
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