Fishy

Stan the man is back, with a follow up to last week’s article on “French theory.” Some notes:

-His point that Derridean recurisve writing (of which he gives a good summary) is in some ways comparable to (for instance) St. Augustine is very interesting. My Augustine is more than a bit dusty, but the idea strikes me as excellent outside-the-box thinking.

-He runs into problems with this assertion: Derrida sometimes called this “writing under erasure”: you receive the words but are blocked from finding either comfort or knowledge in their conventional or standard meanings. Comfort is a perjorative, or perhaps trivializing, term to use, and makes we wonder about the larger bent of his.
The larger issue becomes Fish’s conflation of “standard meanings” with non-standard meanings, insofar as “blocking…knowledge” is concerned.

-To whit; I think most people do have “an account of truth.” Most folks just aren’t capable of viewing and/or articulating it in any sort of systematic or comprehensible fashion. Which is understandable.

-Combining these last two points brings knowledge of my major issue, which is his massive understatement of how epistemology (or simply, belief) influences one’s everyday life. Reading Nietzsche, Thoreau, Butler, Plato, etc certainly changed the way I acted on a day-to-day basis, and I presume plenty of people have similar experiences. albiet some less highbrow.

A good way to start the day.

6 responses to “Fishy”

  1. That made my head hurt. I will be riding Goose at this time in three days…

  2. Dude, what in the world are you trying to do to us backwoods bike riders – ouch!More pictures please :-)Ed

  3. Yeah – more pictures!!!

  4. “Not only does deconstruction not threaten anything or deliver anything, it doesn’t change anything. This is not to say that it is useless,…”Sounds pretty useless to me for the most part.I liked the gravity analogy. You might argue about it, but you still won’t “disbelieve” in it enough to jump out a top floor window. You might not know your theory of truth, but you know truth when you see it.Dave I like your comment about epistemology. It absolutely affects how you live.

  5. Reading those same philosophers changed my day to day life. After a semesters worth of them I changed majors. :)So instead of a Philosophy degree, I earned something much, much more practical. A degree in film.

  6. I’m one of the few people I know that went through four years of college and two of graduate school without taking a philosophy class.I’m kind of proud of that.Love your posts and photos. Wish I could spend more time in the open spaces of the Southwest.I’m looking into getting a 29er. Would you recommend a single speed or 1×9. I’m not the strongest rider, but I’m getting better and I thought the 1×9 would give me more versatility on various trails and forest roads.

Leave a reply to Epic Adam Cancel reply