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A Sociology of Modernity (1) II `The Birth of Modern Thought‘. Prof. Dr. Joost van Loon Institut für Soziologie, LMU Nottingham Trent University, U.K. Outline. Modernization and Modernity The Birth of Modern Thought - Foucault Examples of Modern Thought: Kant, Hegel, Marx and Weber
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A Sociology of Modernity (1) II`The Birth of Modern Thought‘ Prof. Dr. Joost van Loon Institut für Soziologie, LMU Nottingham Trent University, U.K.
Outline • Modernization and Modernity • The Birth of Modern Thought - Foucault • Examples of Modern Thought: Kant, Hegel, Marx and Weber • Romanticism – a second modernity? • Nietzsche’s Philosophy • Appropriations of Nietzsche • The Dark Side of Modernity: The Holocaust
The issue of ‘beginnings’ • 1266 Marco Polo meets Kublai Khan in Bejing (Europe no longer represents the whole universe)
Diseased Beginnings • 1348: The arrival of the Black Death in Europe and the Collapse of European Feudalism
Technological Beginnings • 1439 Johannes Gutenberg ‘invents’ the moveable typeset printer
Artistic Beginnings • 1470 The Renaissance emerges with the works of Leonardo Da Vinci, Michelangelo Buonarroti and others under patronage of the De Medici Family in Florence
Colonial Beginnings • 1492 America discovers Christopher Columbus
Cynical Beginnings • 1513 Machiavelli publishes ‘the Prince’
Argumentative Beginnings • 1517 Martin Luther nails his Ninety-Five Theses on the Power of Indulgences to the door of the Castle Church in Wittenberg
Most common mentioned beginnings of Modernity • Enlightenment (mid 17th century) • Industrial Revolution (mid 18th century) • American & French Revolutions (late 18th century) • The combination of the latter two is referred by Karl Polanyi (1944) as ‘the Great Transformation’
It all depends on definitions • Modernity as ….. • An economic process: The rise of (Industrial) Capitalism • A political process: The rise of the (Nation) state • A Cultural Process: The separation of faith and reason, the rise of techno-science, and secularization
Theorists of modernity • Scotland: Hume, Ferguson, Smith • France: Descartes, Montesquieu, Rousseau • Germany: Kant, Hegel, Nietzsche
Immanuel Kant • The existence of God is beyond the realm of Reason, • Faith and reason are completely separate • What is true and what is just are completely separate • Validity = questions of truth -> critique of pure reason • Ethics = questions of justice –> critique of practical reason • Aesthetics = questions of taste –> critique of Judgment Concept of Radical Evil: Doubt at the Heart of Reason?
Modernity • Man over Nature (through technology) • Man over God (through reason and science) • Man over history (planning rather than fate)
Hegel and Marx • Dialectical reason: Justice and truth are not separate but realised in history (= progress); • The laws of history can be known • The task of knowledge is to facilitate practices that enable the unfolding of history according to its own logic • Marx: men make history but not under conditions of their own chosing.
Weber • Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism • Entzauberung der Welt - disenchantment (a reverse Harry Potter) • Dominance of rationality • Bureaucracy
The Rise of Romanticism • Against the idea that reason grants mastery • Creativity rather than productivity • Spirit rather than mind • Subjectivity rather than objectivity • Pessimism rather than optimism • Tribal rather than universal
Friedrich Nietzsche • Writes in the context of an Emergent Romanticism and Nationalism • Rather than ‘reason’ driving history, Nietzsche stressed it was the Will to Power • Critique of ‘Enlightened’ Philosophy as a ‘hypocrisy of denial’ and ‘mediocratic’ (Herd Mentality) • Critique of emancipatory politics as infused by Slave Morality • ‘ethos of suspicion’: there is no universal grounding of morality • Nihilism: history does not have a `grand destiny´
The Will to Power • section 514 (p. 365): • Eine Moral, eine durch lange Erfahrung und Prüfung erprobte bewiesene Lebensweise kommt zuletzt als Gesetz zum Bewußtsein, als dominierend … und damit tritt die ganze Gruppe verwanderter Werte und Zustände in sie hinein: sie wird ehrwürdig, unangreifbar, heilig, wahrhaft; es gehört zu ihrer Entwicklung, daß ihre Herkunft vergessen wird… Es ist ein Zeichen, daß sie Herr geworden ist… freely translated as • A morality, a tried and tested and proven way of life, finally enters into conscience as Law, as dominating… and with it engages the entire collection of values and conditions of the group; it becomes honourable, untouchable, holy, truthful ; it belongs to its development, that its origin is being forgotten… It is a sign that it has become ‘Lord’
Friedrich Nietzsche • Writes in the context of an Emergent Romanticism and Nationalism • Rather than ‘reason’ driving history, Nietzsche stressed it was the Will to Power • Critique of ‘Enlightened’ Philosophy as a ‘hypocrisy of denial’ and ‘mediocratic’ (Herd Mentality) • Critique of emancipatory politics as infused by Slave Morality • ‘ethos of suspicion’: there is no universal grounding of morality • Nihilism: history does not have a `grand destiny´
Appropriations of Nietzsche • His work used by Nazis who failed to see the critical irony of, for example, his concept of the Übermensch • Disliked by left-wing radicals because he exposed their inherent slave morality • Liked by critical philosophy (e.g. Bataille, Debord, Deleuze, Foucault) because he abandoned universalism • Nihilism: dominant ethos of postmodernity • Re-ignites a concern over the question of evil
Bauman: Modernity and the Holocaust • ideal typical’ modern event and organization: • The precise and perfectly programmed coordination of biological and medical science, bio-chemical technology, engineering, logistics, management and propaganda. • The extermination of Jews was carefully planned in population-administration, the logistics transport, the appropriation of science and technology, the setting into work of the death machine, and the use of images and ideas for propaganda purposes • The role of radio – disembodied tribal drum (McLuhan, 1964).
Why? • The separation from action and consequences (just doing one’s job, just following orders) - Eichman • Fascism is within us - Deleuze & Guattari (1977) – it is a neurotic disorder caused by capitalism and modernity, justified by psychoanalysis and driven by a will to power and to know