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continental philosophy (European thought) :: Derrida -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
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continental philosophy

Derrida

The other major representative of philosophical post-structuralism is Jacques Derrida (1930–2004), who burst onto the philosophical scene in 1967 with three important publications: Speech and Phenomena, Writing and Difference, and Of Grammatology. Unlike Foucault, who was chiefly concerned with the relationship between the humanistic disciplines and power, Derrida concentrated on the history of philosophy. Finding inspiration in Heidegger’s program of a “destruction of the history of ontology,” Derrida engaged in what he called a deconstruction of Western metaphysics.

Derrida criticized the Western “metaphysics of presence” for its systematic tendency to emphasize or favour (“privilege”) concepts such as unity, identity, and totality over otherness, difference, and marginality. Especially pernicious was the tendency to conceive of linguistic truth as the “presence” of that which is spoken of through its representation in words. To the contrary, the ungrounded nature of meaning—the fact that meanings are not given by any natural connection with things in the world but only by their systematic relations with each other—ensures that the spoken-of is never fully “present” but instead endlessly mediated through an infinite chain of meanings. The Western conception of truth as presence, therefore, is impossible. Derrida’s concepts of différance—a neologism meaning both a difference (in space) and a deferring (in time)—and “dissemination” characterize the infinite character of meaning and the futility of attempts on the part of metaphysics to reach a point of finality or closure.

One of the principal goals of deconstruction was to unravel the conceptual dualities, or “binary oppositions,” that had been endemic in Western metaphysics, according to Derrida, since the time of the ancient Greeks. Among them were mind versus body (or matter), nature versus culture, intelligible versus sensible, internal versus external, present versus absent, literal versus metaphorical (or figurative), and speech versus writing. In each of these oppositions, one member of the pair is assumed to be primary or fundamental, the other secondary or derivative. To deconstruct an opposition is to show how this assumption of primacy is contradicted or undermined by various aspects of the meaning of the text in which the opposition appears—and particularly by aspects of meaning that depend on figurative or performative uses of language. Thus it is commonly assumed that the opposition between “nature” and “culture” is absolute. But in reality it is a distinction that possesses meaning only within culture itself.

Derrida cautioned that a mere reversal of the relation of primacy within the opposition would solve little, since it was the opposition itself that was problematic—the inversion of a metaphysical opposition is still a metaphysical opposition. Moreover, he insisted, the result of deconstruction is not an end to metaphysics, since there is no alternative set of nonmetaphysical concepts with which it could be replaced. As Derrida remarks in “Structure, Sign, and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences” (1966), “The passage beyond philosophy does not consist in turning the page of philosophy…but in continuing to read philosophers in a certain way.”

In “Signature, Event, Context” (1971), Derrida recommended a program of “displacing” (rather than reversing) the binary oppositions of metaphysics and then reconstituting or “reinscribing” them. Yet the details of this process of reinscription were never clarified. Like Foucault’s critique of pouvoir-savoir, deconstruction, in the end, left its practitioners empty-handed and directionless: once metaphysics’s pernicious influence had been condemned, it was by no means clear along what lines philosophy should proceed—or even why it should continue at all, since the metaphysical tendencies of language are ultimately inescapable. (It was perhaps in this sense that the American pragmatist Richard Rorty [1931–2007] recommended that the philosophical search for first principles or “truth” should simply be abandoned; instead, philosophy should take the artifices of literature as its model in order to make the general “conversation of mankind” more stimulating and interesting.)

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