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Thread: Understanding Michel Foucault

  1. #31
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    First of all, I'd like to take a brief sentence to point out that I usually mix ideas, so that I don't really paraphrase any philosopher on any particular subject -- my personal writings have of course minimal relation as to what Foucault really wishes to say. I'm sure 75% of that is beyond my current grasp, to begin with!

    A) I don't think this is a good understanding of why religion formed. A bit of a strawman actually. In fact, depending on how you look at it, it could be convincingly argued I think, putting divine revelations aside, that almost all the Abrahamic religions began as systems to prevent subordinate groups from being dominated--a cultural defense mechanism if you will.
    I certainly agree that mine is the easy reading of why such a thing as religion exists. Many more factors are most likely involved. What I was trying to point out was that, like the human sciences, religion ended up serving those with the strongest means. So, as you might suggest, religion may have started off being quite innocent, or as a cultural defense mechanism, etc, but in our days, it is clearly something which is propelled by those who have the best means of propelling it forward to begin with. As such, in a kind of Marxist reading perhaps, everything becomes slave to an overarching paradigm; psychology, sociology, religion, etc, become hopelessly corrupted by economic forces. Here, I think, is where the contingent becomes transparent: rather than having a certain pure fixed 'essence', if you will, the human sciences are modified by the subject that uses them to study himself, which causes the uncertainty that is meant by contingency. I'd say our current understanding of the human psyche only holds true under capitalism (or whatever you wish to call our current economic paradigm); it breaks down after this. So, the contingent then becomes the unpredictable aspect of where the human sciences eventually end up going, since the future itself is radically uncertain, and we cannot know whatever economic principle will rule the future (Unless you're one of those people who claim history has ended and 'this is it').

    B) Even more importantly than point A, I think this fails to capture what Foucault is really driving at. When he says what is apparently necessary is really contingent, well, he means almost everything in our reality is in fact contingent; history, our intellectual disciplines, our relationships to our body, our sexuality, our relationships to others. No structure in society has to be the way it has to be. In other words, I think Foucault would say there is no natural NEED to dominate since there is no underlying human nature.
    This is a good correction; indeed, with Foucault, there would be no basis to build on. Domination, then, is the result of religion, not its prime drive. It just so happens to be that as time passes religion becomes a means of control... but it didn't start out as such.

    The very belief in a particular human nature whether as inherently good, bad, needing to dominate, altruistic, inherently selfish, etc., is all a contingent illusion based off your historical circumstances and what the current episteme would have you believe.
    Indeed.

    I also should use the word, "illusion" hesitantly. Foucault is not denying that human beings act a certain way once historical circumstances create and formed that human being as a subject through power-knowledge.
    Most certainly; without adding this, Foucault would undermine his own thesis.

    I think your metaphor of a factory is apropros. It is a factory of the social-historical-power system that pumps out new human beings as subjects of their individual society.

    I think where you seem to be misunderstanding Foucault is in your commencts that still seem to hint at an underlying human nature, which for Foucault doesn't exist. And your comments that seem to suggest Foucault specifically is only talking about our modern age and when the episteme shifted onto the soul rather than the body.
    This is because I treat Foucault as a reaction to other philosophers of his time. Foucault can only talk about our modern age, since he is hopelessly trapped within it -- there can never be any transgression to another age. Our current understanding of previous ages is inevitably tainted by present trends in thinking - exactly Foucault's point. If I hint at underlying human nature, then it is perhaps because human nature cannot be eradicated once one treats it as merely an illusion. It is a vital illusion.

    Foucault in the later part of his writing goes all the way back to the Greeks and puts his analysis to them. There is NO such thing according to Foucault as a society outside of power with particular power relations. There is no such thing as a non-contingent subject for Foucault (with some minor exceptions). You are always the product of power-knowledge whether you are an Ancient Greek, a modern person in the episteme of the soul, or even the pre-modern man who lived under the episteme of the body. The only difference is in the techniques and the formation of the power relations.
    I'd have to agree, of course, and perhaps point out that here we might stumble over something we might call human nature, but of course, the representation of such a thing as human nature cannot possibly match with its raw actuality. Neither can defining all things in terms of power-relations. Foucault here merely stumbles over what any philosopher has done before him and which Nietzsche (and Im sure someone before Nietzsche) would define as 'every x is actually y'-kind of thinking. The ultimate irony of the French philosophers that tried to 'fight' off capitalist ideology's tightening grasp on our society is that they are ultimately serving it. This holds true for Foucault's ideas as well... And shatters any hopes for a truly contingent state of affairs, I'd say. Perhaps this is part of your 'minor exceptions'?

    Foucault later offers an ethics that he takes from the Ancient Greeks as a way of working within, not escaping, power relations so that you have room for a certain amount of self-formation and experimentation.
    Typical French existentialist optimism.

    Also, the episteme of the soul does NOT want to exterminate the soul. Foucault is very clear in his belief that power is productive. It doesn't just say no; it's not just "thou shalt not." Power-knowledge CREATES the soul.
    Death is transformative; power-knowledge doesn't just create; it replaces the obsolete.

    It forms individuals. Every urge, desire, and thought you could possibly have was formed by your society's current power-knowledge relations, not just big things, but even the tiny little things like the conversation we are having right now.
    And my soul shall never be the same; my older soul's state has perished in favour of the new one. The extermination of the soul in our modern world I wish to point out: by hammering individuals with heaps of one-sided information, the soul is extinguished and instead the serial number that once merely differentiated between souls now becomes pure essence itself. You ARE a number, rather than you just having one. Eduction, the factory, etc, all serve to induce monism, in the sense that they attempt to create doubles of a certain model.

    The very idea of a "soul" is contingent.
    But of course; it is merely a word. But I'd say the why of the word is not merely contingency, but necessity. The word is a tool of power, a means to get what one wants. This conversation, too, revolves around this, even though we attempt to remain 'civilized'. It's not that we actually want to dominate each other, but rather, that a certain fantasy drives us to have this discussion; it's all about self-fulfillment, no?

    Foucault most likely thought that no such real entity called a soul with a true metaphysical existence whether you believe in it or not, actually exists. In many ways it functions more as a metaphor for the psyche.
    And I agree with him on that.

    Therefore, I'm not sure your society-wide Auschwitz metaphor works because power-knowledge is doing the complete opposite; it isn't trying to crush the soul, but in fact create it. The implication of course is that your entire individuality is a product of your society that helps serve a particular function within your society and maintain the status quo of power-knowledge.
    What our society produces is corpses... Not even these, it creates undead, that is to say, negative 'life'... I'd say the power of the internet is, for example, to gain a soul to begin with. Our society's institutions these days seem to produce only the opposite of what they originally were created for... The church creates atheists, schools create the silent masses, factories the consumers, etc. It is meaningless to talk about my individuality when I'm in a traffic jam together with others stuck in our iron cells on wheels!

  2. #32
    Bibliophile Drkshadow03's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ~Sado View Post

    What our society produces is corpses... Not even these, it creates undead, that is to say, negative 'life'... I'd say the power of the internet is, for example, to gain a soul to begin with. Our society's institutions these days seem to produce only the opposite of what they originally were created for... The church creates atheists, schools create the silent masses, factories the consumers, etc. It is meaningless to talk about my individuality when I'm in a traffic jam together with others stuck in our iron cells on wheels!
    I should point out that although I think I have a strong understanding of Foucault, I don't necessarily agree with anything he says. By the way, your Youtube lecture on Baudrillard amused me, especially when you pointed out the affectation of the books behind you and a person's hairstyle. I need to read Baudrillard some day he sounds interesting; although it also sounds like yet another philosopher I'll inevitably disagree with.

    I personally find the world to be an enjoyable wonderful place for the most part, despite it's obvious warts.
    "You understand well enough what slavery is, but freedom you have never experienced, so you do not know if it tastes sweet or bitter. If you ever did come to experience it, you would advise us to fight for it not with spears only, but with axes too." - Herodotus

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  3. #33
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    I should point out that although I think I have a strong understanding of Foucault, I don't necessarily agree with anything he says.
    You're in a good spot then - I don't necessarily agree with anything I myself say!

    By the way, your Youtube lecture on Baudrillard amused me, especially when you pointed out the affectation of the books behind you and a person's hairstyle.
    I'm happy this bit amused you, since it was the whole point of the video to begin with. McLuhan's 'the medium is the message' gains a whole new meaning on youtube: I am the meaning, I am the medium. Even a person with hair tied up, using white backgrounds, etc, is merely exaggerating his/her profession of minimalism, in the hope anyone will notice. I most certainly catch myself having this motivation many a times. This is perhaps the isolation that is inherent to being human, especially a human in the media age - we're connected by mutual isolation.

    I need to read Baudrillard some day he sounds interesting; although it also sounds like yet another philosopher I'll inevitably disagree with.
    Baudrillard represents what everybody hates about French philosophy: he is dense, impossible to read... But full of wit and funny remarks, for the one who dares to try. Kind of like the philosophical equivalent of, say, Joyce or Pynchon.

    I personally find the world to be an enjoyable wonderful place for the most part, despite it's obvious warts.
    The world is very enjoyable and wonderful; this is why philosophy to me is so important. To discover the truly enjoyable; the truly wonderful; things which seem to fade. How can it be that I'm mostly enjoying myself while on holidays, and rarely at home?

  4. #34
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    Reading Eric Paras' (not me...I swear!) "Foucault 2.0: Beyond Power and Knowledge" is a great way of understanding how Foucault's focus on and understanding of certain important concepts (especially "subjectivity") shifted and evolved throughout his life. It is a quick and interesting read.
    "A man must dream a long time in order to act with grandeur, and dreaming is nursed in darkness." -- Jean Genet

  5. #35
    Bibliophile Drkshadow03's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by EricP View Post
    Reading Eric Paras' (not me...I swear!) "Foucault 2.0: Beyond Power and Knowledge" is a great way of understanding how Foucault's focus on and understanding of certain important concepts (especially "subjectivity") shifted and evolved throughout his life. It is a quick and interesting read.
    I skimmed Eric Paras' Foucault 2.0 after my teacher recommended it. I think his argument boils down that Foucault basically abandons his earlier phases and adapts a kind of Sartrean existentialism. According to my professor who recommended the book and other reviews, it is NOT the mainstream view of Foucault's thinking.

    Better books for an overview and gloss of Foucault's thinking and major ideas would be:

    Foucault: A Very Short Introduction by Gary Gutting and Philosophy of Foucault by Todd May*

    * If you click on the link you'll notice the Philosophy of Foucault book is extremely expensive. You might be better off finding it in your library than purchasing it, but it's a really good book, which puts Foucault's philosophy theory into real world examples.
    "You understand well enough what slavery is, but freedom you have never experienced, so you do not know if it tastes sweet or bitter. If you ever did come to experience it, you would advise us to fight for it not with spears only, but with axes too." - Herodotus

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  6. #36
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    I have just started Paul Rabinow's The Foucault Reader, which I suspect I should have started before Discipline and Punish, and I cannot say much yet, as I am only in the introduction, but I like how Rabinow frames Foucault against universalist concerns, pitting him against Chomsky and Chomsky's innate grammar theory as leading to abstractions like, "Does human nature exist?" to Foucault's "How has the concept of human nature functioned in our society?"

    I actually understand this distinction!

    I have always been a little leery of Kantian universalist concerns, even if Levi-Strauss does a persuasive job, through The Raw and The Cooked, of showing how applicable they are. I prefer the observation of concrete phenomena, even if I am impatient with Flaubert's nihilism which his observation of daily life led him to. As I've read in one student thesis, perhaps I'm looking for a *third way*.

    I also think Foucault is more fluid than Drk gives him credit for, but I cannot defend this, nor indicate where it takes me.

  7. #37
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    We must try to proceed with an analysis of ourselves as beings who are historically determined, to a certain extent, by the Enlightenment.
    p43, The Foucault Reader
    I find this a weighty claim for Rabinow to make, and I have my doubts about how true it is, despite that this was Kant's active period, that Goethe put Romanticism on the map, and that the American Revolution started the long slow process of breaking colonial economics, and the French Revolution defanged monarchy to the extent that it would never truly recover. I mean, you can say what you like, but European royalty, to the extent that it is still part of British national and cultural norm, plays the part of show pieces, much like the modern invention of the mega-star, like Tiger Woods, or Michael Jackson.

    I like what he has to say about Kant, and his redefinition of Modernism is quite interesting, in that he relies heavily on Baudelaire to make his point, but to say today's multi-cultural love fest Western civilization is historically determined by the retrenchment of the 18th century feels a bit stretched to me.

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