Bo Isenberg
Associate Professor | Senior Lecturer
Postmodernity and its Archive. The Principle of Insufficient Reason Revisited
Author
Editor
- Mikael Carleheden
- Michael Hviid Jacobsen
Summary, in English
The principle of insufficient reason tells us that a historical process, an event, an action could have been otherwise since it lacks a sufficient, an absolute reason, such as God, tradition, myth, or reason. From what we learn from the discourses of classical modernity and postmodernity, the principle of insufficient reason may be used when outlining the logics of transformation of the modern epoch. In fact, postmodern understanding of modernity appears as a recurrence of classical modern theory and philosophy. Classical modernity - represented by figures like the early Lukács and Kracauer, Simmel and Weber, Freud and Musil, and above all Nietzsche - continues to constitute the horizons of contemporary philosophy and theory. In it, we discover the archive of postmodern thinking, to use an image first outlined by Foucault.
In consequence, postmodern theory does not break off that cultural self-understanding expressed and indeed heightened by classical modernity. Rather, it varies themes already discussed.
Department/s
- Sociology
Publishing year
2001
Language
English
Pages
71-82
Publication/Series
The Transformation of Modernity. Aspects of the Past, Present and Future of an Era
Document type
Book chapter
Publisher
Ashgate
Topic
- Sociology (excluding Social Work, Social Psychology and Social Anthropology)
Keywords
- sociologi
- sociology
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISBN: 0-7546-1763-7