Maybe your definition of deconstruction is different from mine. I understand it as interpreting thoughts, texts and systems from many different aspects. It is not act of "isolation", but rather interpretation. — Corvus
Deconstruction... only points to the necessity of an unending analysis that can make explicit the decisions and hierarchies intrinsic to all texts. — Wikipedia
t's possible, within text, to frame a question or undo assertions made in the text, by means of elements which are in the text, which frequently would be precisely structures that play off the rhetorical against grammatical elements. — Paul de Man
the term 'deconstruction' refers in the first instance to the way in which the 'accidental' features of a text can be seen as betraying, subverting, its purportedly 'essential' message. — Richard Rorty
Deconstruction begins, as it were, from a refusal of the authority or determining power of every 'is', or simply from a refusal of authority in general. — Niall Lucy
[Deconstruction] signifies a project of critical thought whose task is to locate and 'take apart' those concepts which serve as the axioms or rules for a period of thought, those concepts which command the unfolding of an entire epoch of metaphysics. — David Allison
Sorry to derail the thread, but I'm the sole defender of postmodernism on this forum, gotta put the hours in. :) — Kenosha Kid
The idea is that by studying a text, we can determine which side of a dichotomy the author favours. This — Kenosha Kid
And according to the deconstructionist, the Bible is definitely irrelevant for modern times living, because it had been written thousands years ago. Everything has changed. Historicism doesn't work for the present time ...etc. Interesting thoughts and methods, I would say. Great system for art critic analysis of course. The traditionalist will not approve it of course for obvious reasons. — Corvus
I so want to do it, either side, and my posts on this are scattered all over the forum. But I just don't have the time, I can't even log in to the forum every day, sometimes even for several days in a row.but what about someone else? — 180 Proof
Indeed. I wouldn't say Feyerband invented post-truth, but his "science fails, therefore God it is" brand of pomo oughtn't to have been difficult to deconstruct. Derrida himself said that deconstruction is not an equaliser. There's a lot more to unpack in a work of theology than in a scientific paper. — Kenosha Kid
Anyway, now we really are derailing the thread. I'm waiting with baited breath to see who Wayfarer and/or 180's seconds will be now that Wayfarer has declined the invitation. — Kenosha Kid
How about The Grand Trismegistus. — Noble Dust
have a question:
What is the purpose of a debate? What is attempted to be accomplished by a debate — baker
hate debates. It is the folly of the age to reduce every important or pleasant activity to a mere competition. Even fishing! I await with despair the first series of The Great British Fuck Off *. — unenlightened
I challenge Wayfarer to affirm the proposition (or very close to it): "Both philosophical and scientific materialisms are fallacious" in a formal debate against either myself or someone else in opposition to the proposition.
Wow, I forgot about the Shriners. — Noble Dust
Post-Modernists are art critics. Their interest is not in truths, but in desconstruction. — Corvus
I'm only pointing out that debaters aren't always so disagreeable that they can't even agree to a debate. It's not always that hostile. It really depends upon the personalities. — Hanover
Yes; but useful (self-consistent) or useless (not self-consistent) is more like it. — 180 Proof
I'm not distracted by the competition. It's hard to fight when it's not clear what the weapons to be used are and what counts for victory.As to these two comments, I agree that the competition can be distracting, leaving open the question of why we'd do that to ourselves. — Hanover
Peirce & Dewey, Popper & Witty, for example, don't equate 'useful' with 'truth' (that's a vulgar form of pragmatism associated with William James or Richard Rorty IIRC). Metaphysical, like methodological, positions (e.g. materialism) aren't truth-apt or theoretical explanations, but are, instead, conceptual descriptions, interpretations or procedural criteria. So yeah, philosophy itself is "a very low bar" – anyone can "have" one to live by – the significance of which, however, consists in a combination of its relevant questions' rigour and probity. — 180 Proof
In any case, the things that need agreement before a debate include:
Post length.
Number of posts
Time between posts.
Permissible links and images
Sequence
Right of reply
Moderation. If a moderator is used there is an implicit agreement to abide by their decisions.
including or concluding or excluding a poll to decide winners and losers. — Banno
I'd add these:In any case, the things that need agreement before a debate include:
Post length.
Number of posts**
Time between posts.
Permissible links and images
Sequence
Right of reply
Moderation. If a moderator is used there is an implicit agreement to abide by their decisions.
including or concluding or excluding a poll to decide winners and losers.
— Banno
↪180 Proof
So after this discussion, what would you change on this list? — Banno
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