DrZoidberg
Contributor
Here's the new best thing since sliced bread, Metamodernism.
So what is it? It's the synthesis of modernism and post-modernism. It cherry picks the best from the two while mitigating the damage of the bad.
If this sounds abstract it might help to get an explanation of what modernism is. Another word for modernism is "positivism". Or "scientism". Everything is measurable. If it isn't, it's worthless, unimportant or doesn't exist. By measuring we can we can know objectively what is superior or desirable. Scientific racism (eugenics and Nazism) was part of this paradigm of thought, ie essentialism. Another aspect of this is "what is your true inner self". Utilitarianism is another type of modernism. We got technocracy where the idea was to take governmental decisions out of the hands of people and leave it to algorithms alone. This would lead to a more efficiently run economy.
But everything isn't measurable. And even if something is, doesn't make it a valuable measurement. We collected miles and miles of data on the shape of skulls. Turned out didn't correlate to jack shit, a phrenology. We built institutes to measure racial characteristics. Turned out that the tools we had to measure with 1870-1930 just weren't good enough. So all the research was pseudoscientific garbage. Science couldn't answer every question. What if somebody gets immense pleasure from killing others, should they be allowed to kill?
So we got post-modernism, which was a direct reaction to modernism. Post-modernism was great as long as modernism was the dominant school of thought. It could poke little holes in the assuredness of beautifully constructed modernist/positivist modes of thought. Slowly destabalising things we took for granted.
But after the 60'ies post-modernism became the dominant school of thought. No everything isn't measurable. Lots of things can only be subjective. Like human experiences. We have no way of knowing how other people feel other than through metaphors or other proxies. Ie, every idea is as good as any other. Ultimately, nothing is knowable in this paradigm. Every truth is as valuable as any other. Everybody is the same, reality is subjective and that we can't know anything really, so therefore we shouldn't have opinions about anything really. Anybody is taught that they can be anything when they grow up. Women shouldn't feel restricted by their gender. Anybody making a statement elevating anything above anything will be attacked. You have to respect me no matter what, and if you don't I will be offended and you should care just because.
The main problem with this is that it is impotent. You can't do anything in this mode of thought. Modernism at least had some balls to it. Say what you will about Hitler, but dress well he could. Nobody is going to build a monument over anything post modernistic. The art of postmodernism is cynical and ironic. It just makes fun of anybody who wants anything. It's not attractive.
The postmodernist thought is unattractive. That is why it's dying. And has been for about 20 years now. So what replaces it? There's no going back to modernism. That died for a good reason. We need something new.
Enter "metamodernism". I personally think this is where it's going now. It's not a rejection of postmodernism. But it aims to be a happy marriage of modernism and postmodernism. It's a bit like, if you don't measure you don't know where you're going. But truth is always temporary and always open to re-interpretation and change.
A nice image for it is to acknowledge that everything isn't measurable, but we can agree on that the truth lies within a range of options. And stay within these boundaries. Perhaps races aren't in an intrinsic hierarchy. But can we agree on that sexy people are better than not-sexy people and make a hierarchy of that? And leave it a bit open what constitute sexiness. Can we agree on that environmentalism is good, but leave it a bit open which way to pursue it is best?
Or perhaps there's discreet options. Like dressing like a hipster, having a suit, a burning man hippie, sporty/gangster or well manicured dressed down middle-class wear. And we have one of each in our closet and we switch depending on mood. We can identify with all of these. We don't need one single inner truth. We have a couple. But we also accept our limitations. Sure, a woman can dress masculine. But will then have to accept that the only people who will flirt with them will be lesbians.
We pick out a couple of disarable ideals who all share the top position. And arrange a number of hierarchies. Each hierarchy is as good as the other hierarchies.
I like it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metamodernism
Anyhoo... while I'm a big fan of metamodernism, this will give ammunition/wind in the sails to white supremacists and scientific racists. It's going to rise. But I doubt it'll rise to the levels of the 30'ies. We've already tried that, and it didn't work.
After all, accepting genetic changes in behaviours between humans does not automatically imply a hierarchy, or that either is superior. It's just flavours of human experience. Also, racial characterists map badly to genetic grouping. It's too shallow of a measurement to be a valuable metric. But the working class tend to be too stupid to understand subtle differences like that. So instead we get a rise of 30'ies style racism.
Here's some resources. The biggest shining stars of this is the Dutch philosophers Vermeulen and van den Akker
http://www.metamodernism.com/
http://metamoderna.org/?lang=en
Here's a short video with Vermeulen and van den Akker explaining what it is. Perhaps the best start.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dH6zJULTVgQ
Note: Before modernism identity was more fluid. Duty and expectation decided what a person was. Identity wasn't something you had innately, it's something you had to aspire to achieve. Modernism was a reaction to this. So it's all a endless long string of dialectical reactions to whatever preceded it.
Thoughts? Do you think this is where it's heading? If not, why not? What are the risks and benefits of this way of thinking?
So what is it? It's the synthesis of modernism and post-modernism. It cherry picks the best from the two while mitigating the damage of the bad.
If this sounds abstract it might help to get an explanation of what modernism is. Another word for modernism is "positivism". Or "scientism". Everything is measurable. If it isn't, it's worthless, unimportant or doesn't exist. By measuring we can we can know objectively what is superior or desirable. Scientific racism (eugenics and Nazism) was part of this paradigm of thought, ie essentialism. Another aspect of this is "what is your true inner self". Utilitarianism is another type of modernism. We got technocracy where the idea was to take governmental decisions out of the hands of people and leave it to algorithms alone. This would lead to a more efficiently run economy.
But everything isn't measurable. And even if something is, doesn't make it a valuable measurement. We collected miles and miles of data on the shape of skulls. Turned out didn't correlate to jack shit, a phrenology. We built institutes to measure racial characteristics. Turned out that the tools we had to measure with 1870-1930 just weren't good enough. So all the research was pseudoscientific garbage. Science couldn't answer every question. What if somebody gets immense pleasure from killing others, should they be allowed to kill?
So we got post-modernism, which was a direct reaction to modernism. Post-modernism was great as long as modernism was the dominant school of thought. It could poke little holes in the assuredness of beautifully constructed modernist/positivist modes of thought. Slowly destabalising things we took for granted.
But after the 60'ies post-modernism became the dominant school of thought. No everything isn't measurable. Lots of things can only be subjective. Like human experiences. We have no way of knowing how other people feel other than through metaphors or other proxies. Ie, every idea is as good as any other. Ultimately, nothing is knowable in this paradigm. Every truth is as valuable as any other. Everybody is the same, reality is subjective and that we can't know anything really, so therefore we shouldn't have opinions about anything really. Anybody is taught that they can be anything when they grow up. Women shouldn't feel restricted by their gender. Anybody making a statement elevating anything above anything will be attacked. You have to respect me no matter what, and if you don't I will be offended and you should care just because.
The main problem with this is that it is impotent. You can't do anything in this mode of thought. Modernism at least had some balls to it. Say what you will about Hitler, but dress well he could. Nobody is going to build a monument over anything post modernistic. The art of postmodernism is cynical and ironic. It just makes fun of anybody who wants anything. It's not attractive.
The postmodernist thought is unattractive. That is why it's dying. And has been for about 20 years now. So what replaces it? There's no going back to modernism. That died for a good reason. We need something new.
Enter "metamodernism". I personally think this is where it's going now. It's not a rejection of postmodernism. But it aims to be a happy marriage of modernism and postmodernism. It's a bit like, if you don't measure you don't know where you're going. But truth is always temporary and always open to re-interpretation and change.
A nice image for it is to acknowledge that everything isn't measurable, but we can agree on that the truth lies within a range of options. And stay within these boundaries. Perhaps races aren't in an intrinsic hierarchy. But can we agree on that sexy people are better than not-sexy people and make a hierarchy of that? And leave it a bit open what constitute sexiness. Can we agree on that environmentalism is good, but leave it a bit open which way to pursue it is best?
Or perhaps there's discreet options. Like dressing like a hipster, having a suit, a burning man hippie, sporty/gangster or well manicured dressed down middle-class wear. And we have one of each in our closet and we switch depending on mood. We can identify with all of these. We don't need one single inner truth. We have a couple. But we also accept our limitations. Sure, a woman can dress masculine. But will then have to accept that the only people who will flirt with them will be lesbians.
We pick out a couple of disarable ideals who all share the top position. And arrange a number of hierarchies. Each hierarchy is as good as the other hierarchies.
I like it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Metamodernism
Anyhoo... while I'm a big fan of metamodernism, this will give ammunition/wind in the sails to white supremacists and scientific racists. It's going to rise. But I doubt it'll rise to the levels of the 30'ies. We've already tried that, and it didn't work.
After all, accepting genetic changes in behaviours between humans does not automatically imply a hierarchy, or that either is superior. It's just flavours of human experience. Also, racial characterists map badly to genetic grouping. It's too shallow of a measurement to be a valuable metric. But the working class tend to be too stupid to understand subtle differences like that. So instead we get a rise of 30'ies style racism.
Here's some resources. The biggest shining stars of this is the Dutch philosophers Vermeulen and van den Akker
http://www.metamodernism.com/
http://metamoderna.org/?lang=en
Here's a short video with Vermeulen and van den Akker explaining what it is. Perhaps the best start.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dH6zJULTVgQ
Note: Before modernism identity was more fluid. Duty and expectation decided what a person was. Identity wasn't something you had innately, it's something you had to aspire to achieve. Modernism was a reaction to this. So it's all a endless long string of dialectical reactions to whatever preceded it.
Thoughts? Do you think this is where it's heading? If not, why not? What are the risks and benefits of this way of thinking?