Title: The Postmodern Condition
1The Postmodern Condition
- A Report on Knowledge or a glaring example for
Harry Frankfurts On Bullshit?
2Jean-François Lyotard(1925 1998)
- The Man and His Works
- The Accidental Philosopher
- In his book Peregrinations Law, Form, Event
(1988) Lyotard points out that as a child he
really wanted to become either a monk, a painter
or a historian. However, after attending the
Sorbonne University, he says, that he - soon became a husband and a father when I was
still really only old enough to be a son, and
was compelled by this drastic situation to earn a
living for a family. As you can see, it was
already too late to pronounce monastic vows. As
for my artistic career, it was a hopeless wish
because of an unfortunate lack of talent, while
the obvious weakness of my memory was definitely
discouraging my turn toward history. Thus I
became a professor of philosophy at a lycée in
Constantine, the capital of the French department
of East Algeria. (1-2)
3Jean-François Lyotard
- Member of the revolutionary group, Socialism or
Barbarism (1954 1966) - Independent Political Activist and Writer
- Major Publications
- The Postmodern Condition A Report on Knowledge
(1979) - The Differend Phrases in Dispute (1988)
- Peregrinations Law, Form, Event (1988)
- The Inhuman Reflections on Time (1991)
- Libidinal Economy (1993)
- Towards the Postmodern (1993)
- Political Writings (1993)
- Postmodern Fables (1997)
4 Modernism, Modernisation, Modernity,
Postmodernity, and Postmodernism
- Modernism is a name for a period in the history
of art which emerged around late 1880s in Europe
and America and lasted until the Second World
War. Values that consistently underpin modernism
include a propensity to create culture shock by
abandoning traditional conventions of social
behaviour, aesthetic representation, and
scientific verification the celebration of
elitist or revolutionary aesthetic and ethical
departures and in general the derogation of the
premise of a coherent, empirically accessible
external reality (such as Nature or Providence)
and the substitution of humanly devised
structures or systems which are self-consciously
arbitrary and transitory. (Craig 1998) - Modernisation is a social process in which it is
tried to make changes in the social, political
and economic institutions and relations so that
they become more harmonised with the requirements
of the modern age. Large scale programmes of
modernisation, especially in the third world,
tend to give rise to unwanted consequences which
are contrary to the expectations of those who
have planned and engineered the changes. - Â
5Modernism, Modernisation, Modernity,
Postmodernity, and Postmodernism
- Modernity, from an ontological point of view, is
a vast and complex social entity (in the rich
sense of the term social) whose time and
location of emergence can only be approximately
and to some extent, arbitrarily, defined. Since
its appearance, this entity has constantly
evolved and undergone various changes and has
assumed various forms and shapes. - Different writers have suggested different
starting points for this phenomenon. Thus for
example, Milan Kundera says that Modern time was
stared when Don Quixote left his home and began
his knight errantry. (Kundera 1980) Others have
regarded the publication of Copernicus De
Revolutionibus (1543) as the starting point of
the modern world. However, the common thread
among all these various suggestions is that
modern time, and hence by implication the
phenomenon of modernity, have emerged in Europe
around 16th century.
6Modernism, Modernisation, Modernity,
Postmodernity, and Postmodernism
- From an epistemological point of view the very
notion of modernity, as used by different
writers, denotes a set of stories or models
created to account for and give meaning to a huge
number of complicated and complex events,
processes, activities which cropped up in a
certain space-time and since then and from there
its influences have touched almost all corners of
the globe. These events, processes and activities
were the result of interactions between various
social actors with each other and with their
surroundings. - From a methodological point of view it should be
borne in mind that each and every one of the
stories or models constructed to make sense of
and explain the phenomenon of modernity are
necessarily simplified pictures of the entity in
question. In each of these models, to varying
degrees, simplifying assumptions, idealised
structures, abstract mechanisms, and approximate
accounts are being invoked in order to make the
task of explaining a messy reality manageable.
7Modernism, Modernisation, Modernity,
Postmodernity, and Postmodernism
- In the books on modernity usually a number of
factors are listed as major causes which gave
rise to this phenomenon. Chief amongst these
factors are emergence of bourgeoisie and decline
of feudalism, discovery of new lands, religious
Reform Movement, artistic and literary
Renaissance, and the advent of modern science. - The modern age which emerged from the old one
witnessed the explosion and release of huge
amount of energies in various artistic,
scientific, social, spiritual, and intellectual
fields. These energies, in turn, paved the way
for the appearance of a plethora of diverse forms
of life and accelerated the pace of social
changes. The rapid tempo of change and
development helped to create a fluid situation in
which in Marxs words All that was solid melted
into air. (Marx Engels 1848)
8Modernism, Modernisation, Modernity,
Postmodernity, and Postmodernism
- Amongst the main features which distinguished
modern time and modernity from the old world, the
notion of mans coming of age which Kant has
succinctly and brilliantly described in his What
is Enlightenment? is worth-mentioning.
Enlightenment, according to Kant is man's
release from his self-incurred tutelage. Tutelage
is man's inability to make use of his
understanding without guidance from another.
Self-incurred is this tutelage when its cause
lies not in lack of reason but in lack of
resolution and courage to use it without the
guidance from another. Sapere aude! "Have courage
to use your own reason!"- that is the motto of
enlightenment. (Kant 1784)
9Modernism, Modernisation, Modernity,
Postmodernity, and Postmodernism
- Mans use of his own critical reason gradually
enabled him to not only improve his first order
knowledge, that is, knowledge about the material
and the social world, but also his second order
knowledge, namely, knowledge about the first
order knowledge and how to improve it. Modern
man, among other things, realized that what he
calls knowledge is the product of his endless
conjectures for understanding and explaining
phenomena. Conjectures which are constantly being
refuted in the light of fresh evidence and
experiments or new arguments and analyses. Modern
man gradually realized that his ignorance is
boundless and yet it is not impossible to improve
his knowledge by means of methodic investigation
of various realms of reality. Moreover, he also
became aware of the fact that it is not
impossible to achieve emancipation and spiritual
freedom through knowledge.
10Modernism, Modernisation, Modernity,
Postmodernity, and Postmodernism
- However, making use of the capacities of critical
reason and relying on the promises of
enlightenment which had an optimistic view of
future of the mankind was not the only
significant trend within the complex phenomenon
of modernity. There were other moderns who were
suspicious of critical reason and were opposing
the project of enlightenment. In view of these
critics, what the modern man needed was a strong
will to move beyond the present order and create
a new order according to the vision of the
Uberman (Nietzsche ) or to revive the lost links
with a glorious tradition which had disappeared
in the mist of history (Heidegger).
11Modernism, Modernisation, Modernity,
Postmodernity, and Postmodernism
- Postmodernity is a challenge to mostly
critical-rational version of modernity.
Postmodern thinkers argue against the modern form
of social and political organisation. They claim
that modern ways of organising knowledge and the
world have become outmoded and need to be
rethought. For example, the American critic
Fredric Jameson argues that recent developments
in capitalism such as its international spread
and its movement away from industrial
organisation in factories towards the virtual
trade of the internet and global communications
means that the ways of analysing it developed in
19th century by eriters such as Marx have to be
rethought. (Jameson 1991)
12Modernism, Modernisation, Modernity,
Postmodernity, and Postmodernism
- Postmodernism is basically a movement in art,
architecture and literature. It marks a return to
concerns about the past rather than a continual
drive towards newness. However, the recovery of
the past is ironically used to disturb traditions
and problematise the present. - In this way, postmodernism is a radicalisation of
modernism in which artistic experimentation is
pushed to extremes in order to disrupt
established ideas about class, gender, race and
politics.
13Modernism, Modernisation, Modernity,
Postmodernity, and Postmodernism
- Postmodern world is viewed fragmented into many
isolated worlds it is a collage, a pastiche of
elements randomly grouped in a plurality of local
discourses which cannot be unified by any grand
or meta narrative. - Lyotard describes the route to the postmodern
perspective as follows - A recognition of the heteromorphous nature of
language is a first step The second step is the
principle that any consensus on rules defining a
game and the moves playable within it must be
local (PC 66) - Similarly Zygmunt Bauman argues that
- The postmodern perspective reveals the world as
composed of an indefinite number of
meaning-generating agencies, all relatively
self-sustained and autonomous, all subject to
their own perspective logics and armed with their
own facilities of truth validation. (1988)
14Modernity Postmodernity Projects in a nutshell
Irony
Rationality
Truth
Realism
Solidarity
Contingency
15Lyotard and Postmodern Condition
- PCs Table of Contents (1)
- The Field Knowledge in Computerized Societies
- The Problem Legitimation
- The Method Language Game
- The Nature of the Social Bond The Modern
Alternative - The Nature of the Social Bond The Postmodern
Perspective - The Pragmatics of Narrative of Knowledge
- The Narrative Function and the Legitimation
Function of Knowledge
16Lyotard and Postmodern Condition
- PCs Table of Contents (1I)
- Narrative of the Legitimation of Knowledge
- Delegitimation
- Research and Its Lgitimation through
Performativity - Education and Its Lgitimation through
Performativity - Postmodern Science as the Search for
Instabilities - Legitimation by Paralogy
- Appendix Answering the Question What is
Postmodernism?
17Gist of Lyotards Main Claims
- In Postmodern era
- Science has lost its Legitimacy and
- The nature of knowledge has altered.
- What Postmodern Writers Ought to do is to pave
the way for the emergence and legitimation of a
new type of Science
18Lyotards Main Arguments (1)
- In the Computerized Societies and with the advent
of Digitalisation, the nature of knowledge
has changed Whatever cannot be digitalised will
be thrown away. - Knowledge, once an aim in itself, is now a mere
commodity. - Knowledge and Power are two sides of the same
coin. - Political and Economic Powers compete over the
control and dissemination of knowledge.
19Lyotards Main Arguments (2)
- Science is a narrative on a par with all other
narratives. - Scientific knowledge and other types of
narratives are all language games. - Narrative knowledge obtains its legitimacy from
its use in the everyday life of the people. - Legitimation of Science is much harder On the
one hand, Science should provide proof for its
claims. On the other, it need to invoke
Meta-Narratives or Grand Narratives which provide
necessary basis for its legitimation.
20Lyotards Main Arguments (3)
- Historically, Two Meta-Narratives/Grand
Narratives have been used to legitimate Science
Enlightenment and the Hegelian Zietgeist. - In Postmodern era both of these Meta/Grand
Narratives have become discredited. - As a result, Science has lost one of its
legitimation foundations. Its other foundation,
namely, establishing the Truth of the
Scientific Statements has also become untenable.
21Lyotards Main Arguments (4)
- To regain its legitimacy, Modern Science, has
resorted to Performativity. But in doing so it
has turned into a commodity. - In Postmodern era, the process of delegitimation
of Modern Science should be sped up in order to
pave the way for the emergence of Postmodern
Science. - Postmodern Science uses Paralogy, which is part
of its main discourse, to legitimate itself. - Such a Science, contrary to Modern Science, is
against the established universal systems of
organisation and therefore provides power that
destabilizes the capacity for explanation. and
hence makes resistance and critique more
effective.
22A Quick critical assessment of Lyotards project
- Knowledge vs. Information Data
- Narratives Science vs. Fables
- Meta and Grand Narratives
- Language Games and Legitimation (justification)
- Legitimation (Justification) Epistemological vs.
Socio-political - Paralogy