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    History, civilization, and progress: outline for a criticism of modern relativism

    Home » DB Items » History, civilization, and progress: outline for a criticism of modern relativism
    History, civilization, and progress: outline for a criticism of modern relativism

    History, civilization, and progress: outline for a criticism of modern relativism

    Authorship Murray Bookchin
    Date 15 February 1994
    Source Anarchy Archives
    Tags
    Murray Bookchin
    Theory
    USA
    Content Type
    Academia/Reports
    Description

    Murray Bookchin reviews aspects of the history of the US and abroad in recent decades leading of up to the 90’s from a political lens; the academy and a subculture of self-styled postmodernist intellectuals have nourished an entirely new ensemble of cultural conventions that stem from a corrosive social, political, and moral relativism. This ensemble encompasses a crude nominalism, pluralism, and skepticism, an extreme subjectivism, and even outright nihilism and antihumanism in various combinations and permutations, sometimes of a thoroughly misanthropic nature. This relativistic ensemble is pitted against coherent thought as such and against the “principle of hope” (to use Ernst Bloch’s expression) that marked radical theory of the recent past. Such notions percolate from so-called radical academics into the general public, where they take the form of personalism, amoralism, and “neoprimitivism.”

    Photo: Jean Wimmerlin

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