from Introduction to Modern Thought Modern thought
- What is Modern thought?
- = Post-structuralism
- It mainly focuses on Derrida, Deleuze, and Foucault
- They all aim for Deconstruction of binary oppositions
- It allows us to understand complex things without simplifying them.
- Oh, I thought it was the opposite.
- I had the image that Deconstruction consolidates things that were divided into one and simplifies them.
- Well, I feel the importance of this in the Bajiro Seminar.
- Oh, I thought it was the opposite.
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Contemporary thought is cautious of movements that strengthen order and focuses on the differences that deviate from order.
- I agree with the importance of paying attention to differences from rules and structures (blu3mo).
- However, I thought that we also think about new orders/structures that can consolidate differences (blu3mo)(blu3mo)(blu3mo).
- We do think about new orders/structures, but it’s a worldview where we continue deconstructive thinking, so there are no static orders or structures.
- Relationship with other concepts
- It coincides with postmodernism in terms of historical classification.
- It is also said to be relativism.
- However, it’s not about accepting any ideology in a chaotic world, but about thinking about new ways/orders of coexistence based on relativism.
- It was also post-Structuralism.
- As I mentioned earlier, there was a motivation to look at things that deviate from patterns/structures.
- = Post-structuralism