Рostmodernism
Under the post-modern
onslaught, all boundaries and distinctions rapidly fall. Some of the losses
associated with the collapse of traditional distinctions have been trivial, but
others have been earthshaking, and there seems to be no way to distinguish
between the two in a post-modern context. People no longer know where the lines
fall.
Some sociologists believe we
are now moving into a new and very different type of society. The social
change, that began to accelerate 300 years ago, has continued at such a pace
that the theories and assumptions we had about modern society no longer explain
the society we find around us.
The
main characteristic of postmodernism
seems to be a loss of faith in the ideas of the Enlightenment. It is argued by
postmodernists that people have become disillusioned with the idea that we can
use science and rational thought to make the world a better place. People have
become disillusioned with the idea of progress. There is greater understanding
of negative effects of so-called ‘progress’, such as pollution, environmental damage
and damage to human populations.
We
are also seeing the disappearance
of old certainties.
In the past gender roles, ethnic differences, social class differences were all
clear cut and people generally conformed to societal expectations. Today the old
distinctions are blurring and people choose who they want to be, and how they
want to behave.
Postmodernists also argue
that other characteristics of modern
societies are disappearing.
- The big production companies making
vast quantities of the same product are becoming more diversified and
there has been a growth of small companies producing goods for very
specialized markets.
- New social movements are connecting
people across traditional class and ethnic boundaries; movements such as
gay rights, environmentalism, feminism, and new religious movements.
- The significance of nation states is in decline.
Today many multi-national companies are larger and have more power than
most countries, and within countries more provision is being privatized
and less is provided by the state.
- Employees are less likely to
have long-term careers and jobs for life, employment is more uncertain and there has been a
big increase in part-time, temporary and agency employment.
Despite
all this evidence, the concept of a postmodern society is a very controversial
one. Many sociologists accept that society is changing a great deal but do not
accept the term postmodern. Some sociologists, including Anthony Giddens, prefer to describe
society as in a stage of ‘late-modernity’.
Modernism
always celebrated the new and considered ideas from the past to be
‘old-fashioned’. Postmodernism borrows from the past and combines a wide range
of styles together - a ‘pick and mix’ approach. A good example of a postmodern
building is a shopping centre called the Trafford Centre, in Manchester. This
looks like St Paul's Cathedral from the front, a Norman castle from the back,
inside one section is the deck of an ocean liner, and in another is a Victorian
palm house.
Distinctions
between the cultures of the different social classes have been blurred, for
example by the use of opera as a theme tune for the football world cup. The
process of globalisation has also meant the blurring of traditional cultural
boundaries. Today Coca-Cola can be found in the remotest regions of the world.
Contemporary,
or postmodern, society is characterized by a newfound ability to control the
world of nature and worlds of illusion. It immerses people in a virtual
environment of images and simulations, and encourages the acting out of
desires, including desires that once seemed off-limits to action and
experience. Ultimately, it seeks to turn reality into a simulation and make
simulations seem real, so humanity will have the ability to control and create
its surroundings at will.
How
does postmodern society use this newfound power? It certainly has used it to
enormous good. But it has also used it to create an emerging worldwide culture
in which images, simulations, story lines, performances and rhetoric are
employed to manipulate the public and sell it products, phony candidates and
false ideas. Thus postmodern society turns out to be a realm of illusion
in more than one sense.
Stephen
Connor says that the "concept of postmodernism cannot be said to have
crystallized until about the mid-1970's…”. Modernity had received some strong
criticism, and it was becoming more and more tenable to assert that the
postmodern had come to stay, but it took some time before scholarship really
jumped on the bandwagon. At this point it is important to distinguish between postmodern
and postmodernism. Postmodern refers to a period of time, whereas
postmodernism refers to a distinct ideology. As Veith points out,
"If the modern era is over, we are all postmodern, even though we
reject the tenets of postmodernism.
So
exactly what is postmodernism? The situation is profoundly complex and
ambiguous. But basically speaking, postmodernism is anti-foundationalism,
or anti-worldview. It denies the existence of any universal truth or
standards. Jean-Francois Lyotard, perhaps the most influential writer in
postmodern thought, defines postmodernism as "incredulity towards
metannarratives." For all intents and purposes, a metanarrative is
a worldview: a network of elementary assumptions. . . in terms of which every
aspect of our experience and knowledge is interrelated and interpreted.
Metanarratives are, according to postmodernist scholar Patricia Waugh,
"Large-scale theoretical interpretations purportedly of universal
application." The postmodernist's, it would seem, would tolerate having a
coherent worldview so long as it is kept from being asserted as universal in
its application. This is not the case though. The goal, so to speak, of
postmodernism is to not only reject metanarratives, but also the belief in
coherence. Not only is any worldview which sees itself as foundational for all
others oppressive, belief that one may even have a coherent worldview is
rejected as well. Nevertheless, there are many worldviews around today, and the
postmodernist finds it to be his responsibility to critique, or
"deconstruct" as they call it, such worldviews and "flatten them
out," so to speak, so that no one particular approach or belief is more
"true" than any other. What constitutes truth, then, is relative to
the individual or community holding the belief.
As
we have seen, for the postmodern thinker, there are no absolute truths or
foundations to work from. Properly speaking, then, postmodernism is not a
worldview per se; it does not attempt to construct a model or
paradigm that orders reality; reality alludes attempts at conformity for the
postmodernist, and so he deconstructs all attempts at creating such
absolute foundations. Modernity and Christianity debated as to which view was
true; postmodernism attacks both Christianity and modernity because they claim
to be "true." Christianity affirms certain necessary beliefs that
must be assumed in order to make sense out of the world (e.g., that the triune
God exists, that he is both transcendent and immanent, that the Bible is his
Word). Postmodernism rejects the idea that reality makes sense in any absolute
fashion, and reduces any construction to personal or cultural bias. Truth is a
social construct, pragmatically justified, so as to make it one of many culturally
conditioned approaches to the world. Postmodernism, then, is not so much an orthodoxy
(a positive belief system or worldview), as it is an orthopraxy (a
series of methods for analysis).
In continuing
to remove the possibility of any ultimate knowledge, postmodernism confuses the
traditional distinction between the subject of knowledge (the knower) and the
object of knowledge (the thing being known). Man does not sit back and
passively receive knowledge about the world; rather, man's interpretation is,
ultimately, the way the world actually is, as it is revealed to him, or
to a culture. This confusion of subject and object has earned postmodernism the
labels of nihilism and relativism. Logic, science, history, and morality are
not universal and absolute; they are the constructs of our own experience and
interpretations of that experience.
Why
do the postmodernists draw these conclusions? As we saw above the idea that
reality was orderly and that man was simply a passive observer was called into
question. Kant's "Copernican Revolution" in philosophy argued that
the mind "brings something to the objects it experiences . . . The mind
imposes its way of knowing upon its objects.” It is the object that conforms to
the mind, not the mind to the object. It would seem then that reality is what
we perceive it to be. Charles Mackenzie observes:
If
in knowing an object the human mind virtually creates knowledge, the question
has been raised then, What is the external world when it is not being
perceived? Kant replied that we cannot know a thing-in-itself (ding an sich).
The world, as it exists apart from our experience, is unknowable.
As
such reality, as it really is, is unknowable. The "thing in itself,"
cannot be known. The only thing that can be known is our personal experience
and our interpretation of that experience. Since each person's experience is
all that can be known, it cannot be concluded that man can know anything in any
absolute sense. All one has is his own finite, limited experience. Logic,
science, history, and ethics are human disciplines that must, and do, reflect
human insufficiency and subjectivity.
Another
reason the postmodernists draw these conclusions comes from the fact that the
existentialists, with their rejection of rationalism and empiricism, focused
philosophy on the human experience, especially as it is communicated through
language. Language is the way man expresses these experiences of the world,
therefore to understand the world, as best we can, we must look to what is said
about reality. But subjectivism is all we can have since the best we can do is
experience and interpret what others have experienced and interpreted reality
to be, and so the spiral continues downward. Thus, for the postmodernists, any
assertion of absolute knowledge is seriously questioned and ultimately
rejected. Therefore history is seen as a series of metaphors rather than an
account of events as they actually happened. After all, the one
recording the events was writing and recording the events as he saw them.
Someone else may have seen it differently had they been there. In issues of
morality no one particular view is seen as foundational. Rather, each
culture's, and ultimately each individual's, view on ethics is just as valid as
the next. This view is the basis for the assumptions of
"Multiculturalism," and the "Political Correctness"
movement in today's society. Rather than affirming any one morality as
absolute, every person's moral persuasion is to be respected no matter what it
is, and language must be revised so as to not favor any one outlook and thus
offend another.
Irving
Kristol, a fellow at the American Enterprize Institute, describes the current
time as "a shaking of the foundations of the modern world."
Allen
says: A massive intellectual revolution is taking place that is perhaps as
great as that which marked off the modern world from the Middle Ages . . . The
principles forged during the Enlightenment … which formed the foundations of
the modernmentality, are crumbling.
The
collapse of Enlightenment Humanism is imminent, and the attacks on it are from
all angles. From religious conservatives to scientific liberals, the desire to
overhaul the presuppositions of modernity is a shared goal, although the
motives differ greatly. Christians welcome the opportunity for credible public
discourse concerning their faith, and many scientists are eager to see a shift
in scientific outlook that will account for the anomalies that modern science
has avoided. These are exciting times, times when the church should be alert.
In
a postmodern world Christianity is intellectually relevant. With the demise of
the absoluteness of human reason and science, the super-natural, that which is
not empirical, is once again open to consideration. The marketplace of ideas is
wide open, and opportunities abound. It is important that the church understand
these important times in which it finds itself. But in addition to opening the
door once again to the Christian faith, postmodernism, with its critical apparatus,
has a few lessons for the church to learn.
What
is interesting is that postmodernism strikes at the very same thing God did:
language. Without language, logic and science are meaningless; they have no
application. As we have seen, its each man for himself in his own private
world. The arrogant, pseudo-unity that man had claimed to find was now just one
of the many ways of looking at things. Logic and science were now relative to
cultural interpretation. Like the people at the Tower of Babel, modern man has
been fragmented and scattered. There is no center of discourse any longer.
In
this light perhaps the most significant contribution of postmodernism is that
it reminds us of our finitude. It reminds us that God is creator and we are his
creation. It tells us that he must be the beginning of all of our thinking,
that apart from him we could know nothing.
For
our personal life, postmodernism shows us the futility of autonomy. It forces
those of us who know Christ back to the basics of depending on Christ for
everything, whether it is salvation or standards. That in him we have meaning
and purpose for our lives; he is the vine, we are the branches, and apart from
him we can do nothing.
To
sum it up, postmodernism need not be seen as a mortal enemy. In many ways it
drives us back to complete and total dependence on God. It reminds us that he
is the foundation for every area of life, whether it is logic or law. It shows
us that there exist no neutral, impartial domains that we can lean on in
addition to him. Postmodernism points out that we all have presuppositions, and
that no one is unbiased. We all bring our assumptions to our experience; each
fact about the world is theory-laden. The question then becomes, "Which
presuppositions are true?" The answer is clear: the Christian worldview is
true. It alone is the only escape from subjective nihilism, for it alone
provides the necessary foundations to make the facts intelligible. This being
the case, the Christian is able to glean what is good from postmodernism, and
reject the extremes.
Individual
identity is fundamentally dependent on the mediation of the others. The self
appears to be dependent on the other in its being. It is through intercourse
with others that one finds one’s self. I am, says Hegel, a being in myself, but
only by myself through another. The individual perceives himself, in an
inseparable way, in relation to the others and in relations to himself, but
without the intervention of the others he would not be able to perceive
himself.
Apart
from being dependent on the intervention of the others in producing his own
understanding of himself, the individual is dependent on creating a positive
image of himself in order to endure himself and his surroundings. First and
foremost, the positive image of self-esteem should be brought about by and in
the individual himself, but it is dependent on the others’ gaze. Self-esteem is
created through action and negotiation with others, by committing oneself, by
playing a role for the others and for oneself. In other words, built in to the
identity as a process is a striving for self-esteem, and this self-esteem is
shaped by doing. Thus, identity is not only a matter of evoking an image of
oneself. One seeks other people’s respect and confidence. In order to become
something in one’s own eyes one must feel appreciated by others for what one is
and what one does. It is not only a matter of just being there, but of being of
importance, of making a difference.
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