Right. That's one of the complexities of Zizek. And yet what is the Cause but world-fixing? I'm not against the Cause. I just find it indeterminate. — Eee
Creating temporary crutches so we don't get snuffed out?
Belief in the fight itself seems to require that the world remain imperfect. — Eee
Since no one fixes the world, perfection is never reached.
I suspect that the wicked human heart will always find a new antagonist, a new injustice. — Eee
A new constitutive trauma creates a new world with its own story, complete with mysteries to uncover.
We are meeting 'in reason,' since we are both identified with articulating our positions in a way that assimilates criticism. — Eee
Fair enough, though I suspect Zizek, with his Freudian leanings, believes in reason less than I do.
Well I think there's wisdom in that. It's also just sophisticated Christianity. — Eee
Zizek says he's a "Christian atheist"; that is to say, neither a Christian nor a proper Marxist. What he really believes in is the one thing that every side hates: the Christian messianic component of Marxism itself! Zizek says that with the modern church being what it is, only an atheist can be a religious Christian who loves the Truth as much as he does. After reviewing the links below, can you honestly say he's wrong? He goes as far as to say that God died with Christ on the cross. Therefore, he believes that Christ was God even more literally than Christians do. Who was Christ? Only the most sublime hysteric (Stage 6) and eradicator of hypocrisy. Definitely a God fit for Leftists.
And it's not obvious to me, anyway, how to get the right politics out of it. — Eee
Look into Alain Badiou's philosophy of the Event. My starting point was Frank Ruda's For Badiou: Idealism Without Idealism.
I think of what I'm doing an phenomenology. — Eee
Zizek has a complex relationship with phenomenology. He's not a fan of Husserl's bracketing method because he thinks it turns people into zombies. For example, he notes that Zen training where the warrior reflexively cuts off enemies that "appear" is based on theory that is very close to the phenomenological method. The only way to be a person and not a tool is to let yourself feel emotions. On the other hand, Zizek is a phenomenologist in the sense implied by Freud's "analysis of the transference". Identifying actions that appear emotionally "impossible" is an important part of Zizek's approach.
But what of the gap between 'is and 'ought'? — Eee
Zizek is what would by now be called an old school leftist in that he wants non-pathological subjects to refuse to compromise with what they truly desire. For example, he tries to show that Heidegger's Nazism doesn't come from emotionalism, but from not going far enough. Conservatism comes from people obscuring their true desires out of fear. Universalism is not a metaphysically truer position per se, but a more sublime, hysterical and admirable position, like Christ against the Pharisees in the Gospels. The problem with theology is not the figure at its center, its logical rigor or its desire for truth. These are all good things. What's wrong is its cowardice in not going far enough with all these qualities to the point of rejecting worldly injustice with the sublime master it claims to worship.
Some of them may secretly be self-conscious thugs muddying the water. Others are clearly sincere. — Eee
You can't possibly tell me they support Trump sincerely even now. He's more of a troll candidate than ever. Conservatives like the fact that he pisses off "libtards". I can't prove what Trumpists really think, but don't you think that if conservatives were genuinely politically engaged, then they would at least make an effort to find out whether Fox News talking points match the facts rather than judging them solely by the criterion of whether or not they piss off liberals? It's not hard to discover that this is the quality of reporting you get on Fox News:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2vMK-p6-M5E Yes, there are complete patsies who are incapable of verifying the truth, but surely they are in a minority?
I thought we already had a fairly good idea of why people support Trump. There are demographics in America that are losing their social status and falling back into the situation faced by the non-white poor. We know from empirical studies that losing what you have creates more fear than gaining more stuff brings satisfaction. We also know from terror management theory that people become more conservative and extremist when they are afraid. There have been extensive analyses of the structure of right-wing talking points commonly found on the internet:
https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLJA_jUddXvY7v0VkYRbANnTnzkA_HMFtQ
Since I can't prove what they really think, all I can do is keep gesturing at the inconsistencies in this picture. I mean, we know that people active in politics tend to at least be aware of the facts themselves. Well, there are 200 women who are accusing Trump of sexual assault or rape. Are you seriously telling me that the women who support Trump now are rationally defending a different set of values? If that's possible, I can't honestly say I understand it. At least I'm not alone in seeing that something is off about these people:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZEpLKRkVFwU https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mMcAwqsk3eg
And many choose Trump as a stand against something they perceive as a matriarchy, a culture of not of the guilty but the sick. — Eee
This is just the thing. There is no matriarchy. Ergo, they hate the truth. They claim to love it, of course, but they are clearly lying.
Anyway, the Trumpians are our neighbors. So what does that mean? — Eee
Personally, I think conservatives are my Neighbors. We should be fighting for their interests too, at least insofar as these are universally emancipatory and not oppressive towards others, while mourning the fact that they are actively trying to screw us over for shits and giggles, but I can't say for sure that Zizek would agree. After all, they are not comrades.
Zizek has said many times that he loves reading intelligent conservative theorists, but I don't remember him addressing their place in the community. He keeps going on about how everyone fighting for universal causes should join one macro-rebellion, and how he sees the perfect figure of this dream in the alliance between Bernie and AOC, an old white guy (like Zizek) and a young colored woman joining forces for everyone's benefit.
Exactly, and liberals are (some of them) trying to install a new type of man. — Eee
Zizek doesn't stand for Leftism per se so much as breadth of vision. Leftism just happens to be closer to universal emancipation than conservatism.
Also is Derrida's Spurs the 'man' (a mode of personality and not a biological sex) identifies his face with his mask. His mask is his face. The woman knows that she is faceless, that she is nothing but a system of masks concealing a void. — Eee
That's exactly right. This is a deep issue.
To a masculine subject, his world consists of objects, though some of them are subjective projections. Some feminists protest against the objectification of women. While agreeing that objectification can be harmful, Zizek points out that objectification is not the primary patriarchal fantasy. The patriarchal fantasy is women enjoying giving pleasure to men. With his usual tact, he illustrates this with the example of porn, where the man is an objectified tool and the primary content is the woman's pleasure. It is this pleasure of the subordinate which titillates the exploiter. This is not objectification so much as a false (secondary) subjectification where the woman is not a monstrous Neighbor but a friendly subject somehow created by a perfect subdivision of society (Stage 7). Therefore, true freedom is the freedom to partially objectify yourself in whatever manner pleases you.
For Zizek, sexuality is a Hegelian triad. Masculinity is the substance, femininity is the void and "transgender" is loosely the real antinomy, the inability to commit to either of them. The rise in sublimity from masculinity to transgender is the radical negativity operative in the return of the repressed. Meanwhile, the desublimation from transgender to masculinity is a form of speciation, a move towards positive substance.
In general, this is how Hegelian triads are structured for Zizek, by the difference between the two voids. Contemporary philosophers have all but given up trying to find necessary and sufficient conditions for empirical objects. This is the ambiguity dividing the idea from what it's not, but this ambiguity is not identical with the other void, namely the negation of an idea. When a subject grasps an object, it follows conceptual categories down to the unit level, such as animal, mammal, human. But at the unit level, it finds the three stages of subjectivation, substance (Stage 3), void (Stage 2) and the ambiguity between them (Stage 1). Human is the substance, the "and nothing else" is the void and the ambiguity is the difference between these two. In line with Hegel, the substance is the thesis, the void is its negation, and the ambiguity is the negation of the negation. It's a bit abstruse, but an example of an really existing ambiguity could be a man created in a lab from scratch, only inspired by the real thing. Is he human or not? He is, as it were, a man who is not a man, in the flesh. This ambiguity is what Zizek calls the absolute Real.
A foundational antinomy or undecidability is the source of Zizek's metaphysics. Immanuel Kant says that Reason as understood by (primarily Leibnizian) idealism runs into antinomies or relativisms in trying to provide a complete description of the world. The dynamic antinomies say that Reason is unable to decide whether or not there are exceptions to the order of the world. Namely, whether or not there are "spontaneous" exceptions to deterministic causality (Bohmian mechanics versus the Copenhagen interpretation) and whether or not there is a necessary entity of some sort within the world or beyond it (theism versus atheism). These dynamic antinomies are a negative point of contact with the noumenal Sublime, of whose positive content we can have no knowledge. How does that work? The Rational Being is confronted by neighbors with immensely greater worldly might than his own, money, health, wealth, and so on, or he feels on the point of being blown away by a natural disaster like a storm. But with the dynamic antinomies in mind, he feels the supernatural weight of moral principles that transcend the order of the natural world. Thus he is enabled to think of natural might as insignificant and sacrifices his material body to uphold the moral law. In para-Freudian terms, a man acts as though the world is lawful (castration anxiety), but there is an exception to this rule whose existence is ambiguous (object small a).
According to Kant, the mathematical antinomies say that Reason is constitutionally unable to ascertain the extent of the world. Namely, whether or not the world is infinite in extent (multiverse theories) and whether or not the world is composed of elements of finite size (analytic philosophy calls the various possibilities junk, gunk and hunk: search
plato.stanford.edu for these terms). Zizek argues that the mathematical antinomies are an alternative negative point of contact with the noumenal Sublime. The Rational Being is confronted with a mass of immense size that, for one's tiny material body, appears impossible to shift. However, Reason presents the mind with the idea of an object exactly like the one present before the senses, except literally infinite in extent. Comparing the immovable object with actual infinity, the Rational Being sizes up sensuous reality, responds, "Is that all?" and sacrifices oneself rather than bending before natural might. The feminine subject thus has an opening to reject boundaries placed on her by Master figures in the form of social roles or biological natures. This coincides with the aims of feminism by supporting women in their quest to lose their traditional chains along with the benefits it may have compensated them with according to Chesterton. In para-Freudian terms, a woman acts as though not everything is subject to finitude (non-all), while at the same time ambiguously admitting that nothing is free from subjection to the law (castration anxiety).
Because femininity locates the transcendence of nature in the terms supplied by the world, not as moral principles insisting from beyond it, femininity is pure subjectivity that does not rely on the perception of external objects such as "principles". Because castration anxiety is experienced as ambient noise in femininity while it constitutes the foremost experience of masculinity, masculinity is a paper tiger that has been contingently cut out from the radicalism immanent in the feminine subject. Since we can never actually access the noumenal, men are constitutionally terrified of being "unmanned" somehow.
Moreover, there is no noumenal world. Kant produces his conclusions by analyzing the gap between the empirical world and noumenal reality. The Ljubljana school says that there is a void immanent to the world of ideas dividing them from within. The void of undecidability is what functions as the "gap" in place of the boundary between the two worlds. Kant says we can know nothing positive about the noumenal and his philosophy positively depends on us being ignorant of what these are, so we lose nothing by doing away with them altogether.
Often the thinkers I like take the side of the woman, the goddess. Her sons are the masks that think they are faces. The philosopher or analyst is like a woman who wears the right mask for the task at hand. — Eee
Zizek would say that men who promote "feminine"-centrism are often disseminating patriarchal ideas by putting women on a pedestal. Have you noticed how often chauvinists argue that women were truly free in traditional society, which lets them be women, cooking and cleaning to their heart's content? Have you noticed how many neopagans, people who, claim to worship goddesses, are Nazis? The founder of Armenian neopaganism was himself a radical ultranationalist. Many forms of traditional paganism are also unfriendly to women's liberation. The danger of conceptualizing femininity as a positive substance is that our very idea of what femininity is has been shaped by traditional gender roles. Truly freeing women means letting them be as "manly" as they want to be (though no more).
Also, if I can be a straight male chauvinist for a moment, there is nothing hotter than a woman doing manly things. Just watch the video of the Primal Father in contemporary media that I will link somewhere. Sometimes I wonder whether the men who want women to be women are all gay. Since when do boys actually want girls to do girly shit? That's just surreal!
There are lots of ways to use these symbols — Eee
Here we return to the foundational antinomy.
The maximally masculine position is something like the mad emperor who no longer bothers to justify his will in terms of the universal. — Eee
I believe this is called the figure of the Primal Father. Surprisingly, Lacanians classify him as a feminine figure. Here's an example from contemporary media:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iPE0n8mtD_Q Classical examples include Pan and Dionysus in
The Bacchae. In early modernity,
Casanova and Don Juan were salient. In the 20th century, there was Dr. Frank-N-Furter. The most popular version outside the West is probably Krishna's Rasa Lila:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJLzaCSZQyI https://vedabase.io/en/library/sb/10/29/ https://vedabase.io/en/library/sb/10/33/
Zizek says perversity is the necessary dark shadow of the injunction to obey the law. I would elaborate, but this is what he talks about half the time. He also says God is the figure of the ultimate criminal. It would be very Hegelian to say that femininity is nothing but maximal masculinity. As you bring each form of consciousness to its limit, you enter the next.
This reminds me of Derrida. — Eee
Zizek probably thinks Derrida is too feminine. Femininity is a necessary limit of masculinity, but the ordinary subject is masculine, and that's what interests Zizek. "The day after the revolution..."
The serious political thinker must read the ironist as an irresponsible child. But the ironist can also read the serious political thinker as lost in the illusion that he has a face. — Eee
Zizek is the philosopher of our inability to commit to either. Neurosis is freedom.