
I have a curious and complex relationship with philosophy, as may possibly gleaned by checking out the very few posts in this blog devoted to the subject. I have tried reading Derrida but have found this to be quite excruciating. On the other hand, listening to him all those years ago; reading bits and pieces by others about him, and watching clips of him on YouTube I always feel strangely fascinated - I'm not sure why.
The most interesting and fulfilling way to do philosophy is in my opinion the conversation. I had the good fortune to have a conversation with someone who actually met Derrida and has read him extensively which to some extent was enlightening in other ways not.
In a way I think that what (some) philosophy, and authors like Derrida, in particular, can offer us is
-patience (you have to wait for it; and it may not come)
-respect (respect the fact that even if you do not understand this may be your problem and not the others)
-precision (A) (every single statement and avenue into thinking is already situated and based on assumptions that can, and will, be questioned, queried and eventually if really interesting deconstructed)
-mindfulness (staying with the flow of the arguments and ideas from all over with an acute feeling for the circumstantial, physical, psychological 'reality' at play)
-precision (B) (always defining your terms until you are maybe left with nothing)
-unfinished (the business of thinking and being is clearly, utterly and always open-ended, deeply fascinating and is a challenge we all must face as individuals)
... I think you could possibly connect a Buddhist idea of the non-binary; where dualism is rejected but not in favour of a clear monism - nevertheless non-binary....
.... the philosophy of Derrida is in this context firmly situated in the Platonic-Socratic traditions and thus anti-Aristotelean (not my theory - but it makes sense to me) .... there is clearly a hint of something a wee bit zen in his approach as well...
.... you do not have to read everything ever read to start writing (just almost everything) - you can always start with what you have read, pretend and also base your stuff on what you will read (avenir)....
... deconstruction is thus non-relativism....
(sic) .... decided to leave the two (?) mistakes in....
ReplyDelete