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9 - Postmodernism and ethics against the metaphysics of comprehension

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 May 2006

Steven Connor
Affiliation:
Birkbeck College, University of London
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Summary

Postmodernism, ethics and European “success”

Postmodern ethics is often described in vague terms such as “openness,” “otherness'” and “fracture” and an “opposition to totalizing systems.” In this chapter, I aim to explain, in one way, why these terms are vague and why they have come to mean so much for postmodern thought. I also argue that postmodernism is first an ethical position before anything else.

Mary Midgley writes that

the strong unifying tendency that is natural to our thought keeps making us hope that we have found a single pattern which is a Theory of Everything – a key to all the mysteries, the secret of the universe . . .A long series of failures has shown that this can’t work. That realisation seems to be the sensible element at the core of the conceptual muddle now known as postmodernism.

Midgley’s comment is clearly right about postmodernism: it is a “conceptual muddle” (just what does it mean?) and there is some form of “core element,” however expressed. She is also right that there is (more than) a tendency in western thought (but perhaps not a natural tendency) to reduce everything to a system. Is she also right that this tendency has failed to work and that the “sensible element” of postmodernism is the “realisation” of this failure?

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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