Einherjar86
Active Member
I don't think the argument on consciousness or cognition is purely semantic or organizational. The core of the attack is on the dependability of human thought. If human thought is undependable, that includes the thought of questioning it.
Again, I see no difference between arguing against thought compared to "Trying to sneak up on the thing itself from behind". It's impossible to understand something else from an objective perspective, much less to understand our understanding. If you can explain how this is somehow vastly different I'm interested.
Well, you can choose not to see it; but Brassier provides a fine philosophical rejoinder. The content can communicate something about its form. Someone can say: "The argument I'm making relies on cognitive tricks performed by your brain." The truth of that statement does not retroactively drain it of any meaning.
Well we can stop thinking of ourselves as saviors, but that is a semantic difference. The fact is that we take action (ignoring the motivations, or conscious/subconscious/unconscious factors, etc), and that these things have effects, up to and including destruction or creation (although obviously not really in the technical material sense: No matter is ever destroyed). Maybe a more accurate phrasing would be we constantly reassemble to new forms. When we do not reassemble in what we deem a "destructive" way, we "save" something. Or maybe by destroying one thing we "save" something else.
It's a semantic argument.
Salvation implies teleology, eschatology, and a slew of other theologico-mythological elements. Refusing to call it salvation does more than simply redefine the act; it removes any sense that we should act, that it's historically determined, or that we have some moral duty.
I could understand how you think this, since we disagree on what constitutes collectivism and individualism.
If you look at almost every philosophical writer of note, they are overwhelmingly collectivist, if not communist. The United States is the "Nation that Bacon Built" (not talking about Krig's favorite food). Bacon was a collectivist utopian like the rest of his peers.
Even the supposed lone voices "crying in the wilderness", like Jefferson, were only lone to a point. Then you get all this talk of "an Empire of Liberty".![]()
Come on, Dak. You can't seriously believe that academic leftism has been heavily influential in cultural organization. I'm making a distinction here between a vulgar democratic collectivism (which, you're correct to point out, I don't really believe is collectivism) and academic leftism.
Individualism does not have to equal atomism. This is the biggest shortfall of homeschooling for religious reasons, although it's not the homeschooling itself that's the issue, as the atomization takes place across the full range of activities excluding those of the religious practices (or sometimes even including those).
The P2P structure is incredibly individualistic, and very free market. We all benefit as each on of us benefits, rather than one section benefiting at the expense of another, which is collectivism: The daily sacrifice of the individual.
In the final section you quoted (which doesn't show up in my quote), it says that libertarianism/the free market promotes coordination and cooperation through a "shared system of rules or traditions" rather than a "mediator." I don't see a difference. Here we achieve a real semantic indistinction since libertarianism basically wants to do away with Law while still retaining laws (in the form of economic rules, norms, etc.). As a system and economic program, it cannot sustain itself without recourse to laws that define it.
Furthermore, the Law (perceived as a transcendental apparatus, having existed since the dawn of complex, conscious humans) is fundamentally tied to organisms that relate to their world in representational, fetishistic ways. There's a reason why philosophers from Plato down to Badiou, and those in the analytic/political/legal traditions as well, consistently talk about the Law as though it is an entity that actually exists. For Plato, of course, it did; for people like Badiou and Žižek, the matter is more complicated.
Since complex conscious organisms emerged, we have had systems based on exchange (whether Western global capitalism or primitive tribalism). Law always manifests in these traditions because they carry with them structural binaries and prohibitions that must organize themselves into a system of rules and regulations. While these rules and regulations may indeed persist without any mediating body to enforce them, it is highly unlikely and improbable (the materialization of the super-ego, if you will). This is not to say that, once a governing body comes into being, it doesn't make any fallacious and meretricious laws; it certainly does. But a system that abandons the governing/regulating body altogether is not a practical solution, and in fact begs of its citizens a mystical, cognitive revolution as equally impossible as the one that communism asks of its citizens.
I realize this may not have been the direction you wanted a discussion on that excerpt to go, but this is what stood out to me.