Rick Roderick on Derrida - The Ends of Man [full length]

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 28. 05. 2024
  • This video is 7th in the 8-part video lecture series, The Self Under Siege: Philosophy in the Twentieth Century (1993).
    Lecture Notes:
    I. Richard Rorty may be viewed as an "Americanization" of Derrida: widely considered the postmodern thinkers (perhaps wrongly). Here we will use Rorty as a guide to Derrida.
    II. Derrida's emphasis is on fallibility, contingency, finitude; positions partially demonized as relativism, deconstruction, and vaguely connected to radical politics, multi-culturalism, and so on.
    III. "Deconstruction" originates in Heidegger's project of the deconstruction of metaphysics, an "uncovering" of the history of Being. Derrida notes, as he proceeds through a series of techniques of deconstruction as reading or misreadings of texts, that philosophers have always tried to fill in the blank in "Being is __________."
    IV. But they have failed due to the nature of language which is constituted by difference, materiality of marks and phonetic signs, marginality, materiality. Words do not stand for things, they stand in for them.
    Meanings depend not only on presence but also on absence. Words can always misrefer; a possibility once is a necessity forever.
    V. The upshot is that there are no final interpretations, no last books. Better and worse readings depend on context and purpose. Meaning is not fixed "humanly" (against "humanism"). Philosophy has always already thought the end of man in thinking the truth of man.
    VI. For Derrida, "man" is implicated in the "white mythology" that is philosophy and whose time is rapidly passing. This leaves the "self". the "I", as no more than a vanishing positionality in a text. And this is a long way from the kind of story that might provide us with meaning for our own lives.
    VII. Finally, when reading Derrida, remember, he may just be joking. If he is right, even in part, the same might be said for Plato.
    For more information, see www.rickroderick.org

Komentáře • 394

  • @JabraGhneim
    @JabraGhneim Před 5 lety +190

    His words still live in his radical absence. RIP.

    • @stellario82
      @stellario82 Před 4 lety +2

      You do not even realize the absurdity of what you say. If what you say was true, then you would have squarely contradicted Derrida's belief that "there is no way to ascertain the intentionality of an author". As long as Derrida's is concerned, in fact, those words might have been written by a robot, and you would have no right to interpret them as the absence of human being.
      And so, yes, let's condemn Derrida to his radical futility of a dead French charlatan.

    • @kylerodd2342
      @kylerodd2342 Před 4 lety +13

      stellario82 Were they attempting to extract the intent of Derrida? It doesn’t so to me. Simply that Derrida’s words, even though he is not here to explain their intent, still exist and influence people and other words.

    • @rosscunliffe925
      @rosscunliffe925 Před 2 lety +10

      @@stellario82 You didn’t watch the video. He was commenting on Rick’s shopping list analogy. This was a tribute to Rick, not Derrida. Like Rick explained with excellent clarity, there is room for better or insufficient interpretations as opposed to the caricature of “everything is valid!” You’re interpretation of the OP is incorrect.

    • @MsClaireEverett
      @MsClaireEverett Před 2 lety +1

      Best comment

    • @mentalitydesignvideo
      @mentalitydesignvideo Před rokem

      Are you trying to say he's dead?
      But won't be pigeonholed into concrete meanings of simple sentences, so you couch it in unnecessary verbiage.
      Radical - you mean, he's completely dead, not a zombie, or an apparition, he dead and it's irreversible? So, dead, like all the other dead people that ever died?
      Absence? - he stepped out to get a smoke? He missed the class? He's not there? Is that because he's GASP dead?
      By God, the human fluff percolating in the wake of the grand trick Paul de Mann played on America...

  • @screamomaster102
    @screamomaster102 Před 6 lety +489

    Someone should show this to Jordan Peterson

    • @matthewtrevino525
      @matthewtrevino525 Před 5 lety +67

      Or the typical banal Objectivist.

    • @johnmiller7453
      @johnmiller7453 Před 5 lety +42

      He wouldn't look at it.

    • @Ramenmemes
      @Ramenmemes Před 5 lety +9

      hahaha. yes.

    • @ztpatterztpatter1897
      @ztpatterztpatter1897 Před 5 lety +26

      Peterson is a signifier that we should be weary of Anglo American ego 'strengthening' based pop psychology(ists)
      Which is also a deviated normalization/institutionalization precedence of psychoanalysis. Accordingly after Freud's brilliant insights into the prevalent of unconscious and libidinal excess he's daughter Anna Freud and cousin Bernard basically just wanted a quick buck by demonstrating the potent capacity of psychoanalysis in the name of the masses must be lead and ruled thru subjugation. But yes Peterson is a pathetic altruist praying off mass ignorance of the being and the mind.

    • @Sunnsetter
      @Sunnsetter Před 5 lety +39

      I'm really happy this comment is so upvoted. I thought peterson was heralded. Glad to see he actually has other critics.

  • @Tppywater
    @Tppywater Před 7 lety +142

    Roderick was such a brilliant, though bare (as he intended in these talks), lecturer...I never tire of his charming drawl and clear elucidation.

    • @annereidy7981
      @annereidy7981 Před 3 lety +2

      yes! totally agree, he was so accessible and yet, lost none of the rigour of the subject, great!

  • @niriop
    @niriop Před 11 lety +80

    A hugely underrated educator, he should be watched far more widely

    • @nightoftheworld
      @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety +4

      niriop but that would empower people to become fuller selves? why would corporate management want that?

    • @__loafy__
      @__loafy__ Před 11 měsíci

      Marxist educators have ample representation. I think we're good

  • @lilmoesk899
    @lilmoesk899 Před 4 lety +65

    Genius lecture. I literally laughed out loud at several points... "flattened like a tortilla" and "I gotta compete with Jurassic Park and Arnold Schwarzenegger." Rick Roderick is a damn national treasure.

    • @nonyadamnbusiness9887
      @nonyadamnbusiness9887 Před rokem +1

      was

    • @lilmoesk899
      @lilmoesk899 Před rokem +5

      @@nonyadamnbusiness9887 His digital facsimile lives on and influences people still. Because this copy is still causally operable, influencing how people think, act, and interpret the world, I'm going to use the present tense. Sad he died though. He is the kind of teacher that exemplifies the ideal of the university.

    • @__loafy__
      @__loafy__ Před 11 měsíci

      We need more effeminate southern intellectuals.

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety +38

    40:41 *spirit of pedagogy* “The fact that he [Derrida] has a sense of humor I don’t hold against him-I wish more academics did. I think it’s _pedagogically useful_ *not to be a damn bore all the time* and just you know put people to sleep, is pedagogically useful. After all you know professors and lecturers have to compete with MTV, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Jurassic Park so I hardly think it’s in our interest to be boring.”

  • @reubencanningfinkel5922
    @reubencanningfinkel5922 Před 3 lety +12

    Reading 'The Politics of Friendship' now. Rick, you're words are here, now, misread and reread, learned and unlearned, mastered, lost, regained. I owe you so much for bringing Derrida closer to me. Incredible lecture series. I wish all professors could talk like you could, can, will. A real presence.

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety +11

    32:14 *poetic torture house of language* “What I’m trying to say here is that *words are not Things.* That the attempt that philosophers have made to _hook words to the world_ has failed but it’s no cause for anyone to think that we’re not talking about anything. See this doesn’t make the world _disappear_ it just makes language into the muddy, material, somewhat confused practice that it actually is.”

  • @frankfeldman6657
    @frankfeldman6657 Před 4 lety +45

    This is so terrific and so desperately needed these days.

  • @lettersfromanihilist9092
    @lettersfromanihilist9092 Před 3 lety +37

    That is a “straw person” argument
    God I love Rick Roderick

  • @mechanesthesia
    @mechanesthesia Před 8 lety +45

    Wow, I love how he explains things.

  • @steik6414
    @steik6414 Před 3 lety +9

    This is the best interpretation of the history of philsophy, reading philosophy as a detective, not a priest

  • @RichInk
    @RichInk Před 11 lety +12

    Rick Roderick is an educator rejected by the publishers who present him here. He is an explainer who brings understanding to the working class and others who bought the lies. He is a favorite of mine.

    • @tackthenite5096
      @tackthenite5096 Před 4 lety +1

      Richard Murphy I love these videos. His drawl along with the video make me feel like I’ve stumbled onto some evangelical outfit but then “nope, that’s not it.”

  • @the_famous_reply_guy
    @the_famous_reply_guy Před 11 lety +36

    What a fantastic lecture on Derrida. I find Derrida difficult to read along with Habermas. Funny how I understand Ricks interpretation but not the sources. Maybe the source is different. Maybe I don't understand at all. Yet I think I do. That'll do.

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety +14

    12:37 “I mean we use metaphysical phrases all the time-even when we don’t think we do.”

  • @lizardpeoplepoetry
    @lizardpeoplepoetry Před 11 lety +14

    That southern drawl is to die for

  • @DestructoMonkey
    @DestructoMonkey Před 11 lety +12

    I've had 2 professors in Uni discuss, as in a part of course material, not offhand or offtopic, about Derrida. But Roderick explains the man better than the ones who included him in my coursework over two semesters.

  • @CraigJS91
    @CraigJS91 Před rokem +4

    his analysis of Derrida's infinite interpretations of an object not implying that each is equally valuable essentially defeats the argument. If some ways are clearly better than others, then that immediately creates a hierarchy where there is some best way... i.e. the right way. Can't have your cake and eat it, there is either infinite equally valuable ways to interpret an object, or there is a right/best way.

    • @franciscogomez-paz
      @franciscogomez-paz Před rokem +3

      I think this reasoning is incorrect. Just because there are infinitely many good readings, this does not mean that every reading is good. There might be an infinite set of "correct" reading (all of which are of equal standing and value) and at the same time another infinite set of "incorrect" readings (which are of less value than those "correct" readings). It seems perhaps a little counterintuitive but can be explained by analogy to mathematically "correct solutions".
      Consider the equation Ax = 0, where A is some N by N matrix, and x is an N dimensional vector. From here we observe that if A is a matrix of rank M, the null set ( which is precisely the set of solutions we are interested in) is of dimension N - M. Thus when A has rank M = N, then we can say that the null set is of dimension 0, and as such there is only one correct solution, namely x = 0. However if M < N, we find that the null set is of non-zero dimension, and as such there exist an infinite set of correct solutions ( or readings in this analogy) to the original equation. Furthermore we find that they are equally valid solutions and that they are all equally correct. However this is not to say that every vector ( or reading in this analogy) is a correct solution (or interpretation for the purposes of this analogy). in fact we may find that almost all vectors are not adequate solutions.
      In the same manner we may conclude that just because inifinitely many readings are proper interpretations, this does not necessarily entail that every reading is a proper interpretation. To put it in simpler terms this is equivalent to saying that there are a multitude or multiplicity of "best" readings.

    • @CraigJS91
      @CraigJS91 Před rokem

      @@franciscogomez-paz you are creating a false binary though. There isn't an infinite number of right ways and an infinite number of wrong ways. There is an infinite number of ways to read an object that lie on a spectrum from just plain wrong to totally on point. There may be a number of ways that are technically correct but when you create a hierarchy something has to be at the top.
      For example a bowl can not be interpreted as a dog, or a door, or a pair of socks, but technically can be worn as a hat, so a bowl could be interpreted as a piece of headwear, however a bowl is best interpreted as a deep dish used to hold food or liquids. A few wrong examples, a right one, and the best one.

    • @franciscogomez-paz
      @franciscogomez-paz Před rokem +2

      @@CraigJS91 But could we not perhaps imagine a case in which there are several "best" interpretations. For example if we imagine scoring each interpretation, with 1 being the lowest score and 10 being the highest, then we can imagine a a scenario in which there are multiple 10s.
      I also believe that you example of the bowl is unconvincing for several reasons. The first being that bowls are considerably less complex than almost any text, and such there is no reason to expect the interpretation of bowls to share the same properties of the interpretation of books.
      Secondly I believe even with the given example, there remain other valid interpretations. Take for example, a child who has found a bowl creates a particularly pleasing sound when struck, and as such chooses to treat the bowl as some sort of drum. Are we to say that the child has somehow made an " incorrect" interpretation of the bowl simply because it does not align with the interpretation which society has cast upon it?
      This is ( I believe) exactly what Derrida was trying to get at. He wanted to bring back that creative child-like joy of experimentation.
      Again this is not to deny that there are interpretations that are of course for practical reasons often "better" for certain activities. For example if I were to use the bowl for cooking, or If I were looking for the most common interpretations of the object, then your approach would be spot on. However it is to bring light to the fact that a interpretation only becomes the "best" when we bring in some external contextual normative standard. ( for example when we define best as that which is closest to the common usage of the object). However there is no universally "best" interpretation, when we remove the object from our goals and the context in which we consider it.

    • @franciscogomez-paz
      @franciscogomez-paz Před rokem +1

      To put it in less pretentious simpler terms.. Just because there is a hierarchy, doesn't mean there must only be a "single" object at the top. There could more than one "best" interpretations.

    • @CraigJS91
      @CraigJS91 Před rokem

      @@franciscogomez-paz Okay thought experiment, you go ahead and use bowls as a percussive instrument and I'll use them to eat cereal out of. And lets do this with every object in life, I'll use it for the socially accepted best option, you use it for a silly but perfectly plausible one. Repeat this for every object for 20-30 years, who is more likely dead from trying to dry his hair in the oven, or seriously injured from an accident where he tried to use his feet to steer his car, or in a mental institution for using a a carving knife instead of a razer to shave his beard, or simply is viewed as that weird guy wearing underwear on his head tapping on a bowl like he's Neil Peart? Countless generations of lessons have been learned to optimize life and ignoring that in favor of the child-like joy of experimentation is just silly.
      This isn't to say that you can't be creative or go against the grain ever, go ahead, that is typically where new discoveries are found. My main point was just that if some ways of interpreting things are greater than others, then the only realistic conclusion is that there has to a best. There could be multiple other ways that are really close, but just by the way numbers work the chances of them being identical is infinitesimally small. Say if interpretation A leads to success (whatever you define success as) 99.12345% of the time and option B also leads to success 99.12345% of the time, if we were to expand the resolution of the experiment to get more decimal places we would eventually find a difference at some point. so even if they are literally 0.00000000001% difference, one way is still better than the other.

  • @david196609876
    @david196609876 Před 8 lety +32

    I love this guy.

  • @elel2608
    @elel2608 Před 5 lety +6

    This was pretty brilliant. I’m getting the idea that “reading” has political implications: that is, “right” reading is imposed by institutional fiat so that right reading is accomplished by hegemonic violence and that we have to “discover” valid interpretation and not have it be imposed on us in an top-down manner.
    Also that Derrida was against epistemological certainty and that perhaps it’s human to be uncertain and thus inhumane to expect humans to be certain?

    • @R0DisG0D
      @R0DisG0D Před 5 lety +2

      Not an expert on Derrida (have read Of Grammatology), but what your describing sounds more like Foucault, who described power dynamics and how power and "truth" interact.

  • @JS-dt1tn
    @JS-dt1tn Před 3 lety +2

    so great. A wonderful calm came over me.

  • @mattgowel5025
    @mattgowel5025 Před 4 lety +12

    Does anyone know where he is buried? I would like to go there and pay my respects.

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety +6

    15:19 _”Because_ I have all these *words* I don’t have to carry a kitbag of _all the entities_ in the universe to point to when I talk-I mean in other words..”

  • @kategoss5454
    @kategoss5454 Před 5 lety +4

    That last line... "There won't be a last word." He already established that word is not a word, at 32:01 "is the word 'word' a word? Not really!" He describes it as a 'token', standing in for the hypothetical word that it represents. And so too, the last thing he uttered, standing in for a recursive 'word'. Pretty cool line.

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety +3

    13:04 “For Derrida our language is chipped through with metaphysical moments, _fragments_ in our languages-there’s no way around it.”

  • @kylerodd2342
    @kylerodd2342 Před 4 lety +2

    I’ve yet to read a full text of Derrida but I’m happy to have an enthusiastic review before I do.

  • @cluxseltoot
    @cluxseltoot Před 9 lety +2

    In a movie I once watched, James Stewart said to his son, 'see that tree over there, it has given me more trouble than the entire range'. I did not understand what he meant then as I was a thick child. I perceive that Derrida proposes that words can be used to state how one feels or what ones senses state, specifically, as I have grown into a thick adult.
    I loved this lecture thought it was way over my head. Happy Birthday Eiffel Tower - 31 March.

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety +3

    14:33 *relations of language* “I am speaking about some present horse-my word *stands* for that horse.” [...] “words do not _stand_ for things-they *stand in* for them.” [...] “now it also doesn’t get its meaning in isolation. Words are not atomic bits of anything, words are part of _systems_ of speech-systems of language.” [...] “For that system to work, the objects _so referred to_ *do not have to be present.”*

  • @palantyr
    @palantyr Před 4 lety +1

    He is a very good speaker indeed.

  • @adl6500
    @adl6500 Před 6 lety +6

    Interesting that his opening introduction is still relevant today, with certain subcultures...

  • @jahanschad1445
    @jahanschad1445 Před 4 lety +1

    Brilliant Prof with one of the best interpretation of the Language of Derrida; Thank you Sir!

  • @arthurmartinson4370
    @arthurmartinson4370 Před 10 měsíci

    I think I like these more basic style videos from The Teaching Company better than their newer, fancier ones. The content is still wonderful.

  • @liveoak227
    @liveoak227 Před rokem

    Uncle Rick, the uncle we all needed growing up...

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety +2

    20:08 *polysemy of interpretation/slipperiness*
    “Many philosophers have wanted to tie meaning to what the speaker (and/or language user) *intends.* But words have their functions.. their (to use Derridas phrase) _’their disseminating meanings,’_ apart from those intentions.” [...]
    “This doesn’t mean that we cannot intend-we can. But it means we cannot _fix_ meaning by our intentions. This is very important when we read a text by an author in philosophy because we are frequently led to ask the question, _’What did he intend to say?’_ And a deconstructive reading will lead us in the direction of not, _’What did he intend to say?’_ *but* _’What are these physical marks. How can I interpret these physical marks?’”_ [...]
    “In a way there‘s no more powerful idea in the discipline of philosophy than the idea that there _can be_ the *right* interpretation.” [...]
    *”There is no such thing as the right reading-the right interpretation.* There is no interpretation that can bring interpretation to an end. _Good books,_ really great texts, do not cut off interpretation-they lead to multiple interpretations. Great examples of this would be _the Bible,_ which I think is pretty obvious, has not yet reached closure on interpretation.” [...]
    “This does not at all mean that we don’t, in _loose rough and ready ways,_ judge interpretations all the time. And this does not at all mean that, _practically speaking,_ some interpretations are obviously slightly better than others.” [...]
    “Philosophers call someone a *relativist* by which they mean it’s a person that holds that, _’any view‘s as good as any other view.’_ My simple response to that is this: *that is a strawperson argument-no one, in the world believes it or ever has believed it.* No one-Derrida or anyone else believes that every view is as good as every other view. That’s only a view we discuss in freshman philosophy class in order to quickly refute it.“ [...]
    “No, Derrida’s kind of _slippage_ is to remind us that the text of philosophy is not *fixed,* _cannot be fixed._ It is of the nature of the text of philosophy and its relation to language that we cannot _fix it_ once and for all. In a way it’s like the _leaky ship_ where we haven’t gotten anything to stop the leak so we just keep bailing-I mean *the leak is in the language.”*

  • @BeingAndRhyme744
    @BeingAndRhyme744 Před 8 lety +14

    +Syncopator Derrida is merely stating that there is no absolute interpretation of a text. That is the end of deconstruction. There are many other means of interpretation, and some are more valid where others are invalid. With that said, a proponent of a certain interpretation cannot state that their interpretation is the only proper one. Deconstruction cannot solve all problems, for it is a negative critical force, at least in Derrida's early-mid writing. Only in his later writing can we see deconstruction as a positive force.

  • @worldpeace8299
    @worldpeace8299 Před 9 lety +1

    certainly down to interpretation. such is the mischieveous nature of the creator

  • @stopmakingeyesatme1
    @stopmakingeyesatme1 Před 11 lety

    I think you're right to an extent, but I just wanted to put in a footnote to spare Derrida from that idea. As Roderick said he was a pretty nice guy, and he was pretty public for a philosopher. I think most of the difficulty in Derrida comes from 1) the fact that he's constantly being so careful with the words he uses, trying not to fall back into what he's deconstructing and 2) his work alludes to so many other texts from Heidegger to Rousseau to Plato, each with unique terms

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety +1

    13:19 *ontological incompleteness* “What he wants to do is to get a better take on why the language can’t solve the problem that is central to metaphysics and ontology. The problem of answering the question of: *what is being?* you know.”

  • @scoon2117
    @scoon2117 Před 7 dny

    Rest in peace mister Roderick.

  • @charlesmcg
    @charlesmcg Před 4 lety +10

    Key discussion points/notes:
    The Problems of Modernity
    @00:07
    'Modernity
    "...means the processes by which factories were instituted based on the division of labour and the processes by which institutions came to be rationalised, rule-governed across the whole terrain of our social lives with few exceptions."
    @01:47
    Derrida and Deconstruction
    "Perhaps one of the trickiest and strangest philosophers - if he is a philosopher - around today"
    "Responsible in many ways for deconstruction"
    "That dreaded enemy that has invaded our literary departments that according to popular mythology tells us that any way to read a book is as good as any other, that there's nothing outside books, that we're always reading, and every reading is a misreading, and so on. Now, in my view, Derrida believes none of these things that I've just outlined, I'm trying to give you the popular demonising mythology about Derrida."
    @03:00
    Margins of Philosophy
    'Seeks to examine philosophy as a broad long standing cultural institution stretching back to the Greeks.'
    Attempts to use a framework that reminds us that philosophy is the product of Indo-European languages and the product of western civilisation, not an eternal project in the mind of god. It is a project with a certain materiality and history. Many of the most interesting things we will find out about philosophy won't be from bad readings or claiming any reading is as good as any other, but by paying attention to the very things that the philosopher tried to repress in his text - the things the philosophy tried to put 'in the margins', to exclude.
    @04:50
    In Defence of Derrida
    "..the image by right wing lunatics conjured up of lesbian deconstruction literary critics dancing at Brown University burning Chaucer and Shakespeare is utterly a fantasy of paranoid dimensions that surpasses anything that the John Birch Society ever dreamed up."
    @6:59
    "What the hell is this stuff anyway?": Origins of Deconstruction.
    The term 'deconstruction' originates in Heidegger's project to uncover the hidden history of Being.
    What is Being?
    'Being is (*blank*)'
    - Derrida has realised that the blank cannot be filled in. The history of philosophy has not yet presented us with final wisdom, total coverage and ultimate truth.
    - Deconstructive readings try to work this out in detail case by case.. different attempts to answer it and how they fail to answer it.
    "Deconstructive readings are not a single technique or even a special set of techniques. They're more like housework. See, philosophy is not like building a house where you start with a firm foundation and build it up and you're finished and you walk off and that's philosophy. Philosophy, under the heading of deconstruction is housework, which means every day the floor is to be swept again, the dishes have to be done again... So deconstruction if I wanted to compare it to some other practice it'd be housework - it doesn't get finished."
    @12:12
    Derrida on Language
    - Believes that theories of language are still to be completed, and that the language that we speak now is still a part of our metaphysical heritage.
    Metaphysical phrases are commonplace:
    'That horse appears to me to be lame'
    Invokes the metaphysical concept of appearance and its long philosophical history
    'That kid has the potential to hit 300'
    Invokes the metaphysical language of potentiality and its 2500 year history
    "For Derrida, our language is chipped through with metaphysical moments, fragments in our languages. There is no way around it, and in that sense Derrida certainly wouldn't say that he has avoided metaphysics. The reason he wouldn't say that is that he speaks a language. What he wants to do is to get a better take on why the language can't solve the problem that is central to metaphysics and ontology: the problem of answering the question of what is Being?"
    "It is the nature of language, and Derrida takes it to be something quite other, language, to be quite other than what many other philosophers and linguists take it to be"
    "For Derrida... language is NOT constituted by reference, which is a standard positivist account. In other words, what constitutes reference would be: I use the word 'horse' to refer to a horse. Of course, that makes it sound as though what would constitute my talk, that it refers, namely, to the world, would be that I'm speaking about some present horse, my word stands for the horse. Now you may have noticed there's no horse up here with me, Derrida has noticed that. *Words do NOT stand for things, they stand IN for them*"
    - Words standing in for things means we can communicate about those things even without those things being present.
    "Words are not atomic bits of anything, words are parts of systems of speech."
    @16:10
    Systems of Language: Chess Analogy
    "If I take a pawn off the chess board and just put it here, you'll still know that it's a pawn but it won't be able to make any pawn moves. To make the right moves it'll have to be on a chessboard and deployed in a game. In other words there'll be conditions within which it'll make sense to move the pawn two squares forward. One of them won't be to set the pawn on this thing (off the chess board) and say I'm going two squares forward because looking ahead of me I don't know what would count... in other words, it's just not the way the game is played. With systems of languages they're constituted by the way the words work in these sets of constituitive rules which frequently overlap and are holistic. For that system to work the objects so referred to do not have to be present... it is the absences of objects, that make the use of nouns and languages interesting."
    @17:50
    'Language is a system with materiality. Language is phonetic sounds that can be heard in finite lengths and measured, and it is sensible marks on paper.'
    @18:23
    Radical Absence
    "Just like reference couldn't be what gives our words their meanings and our uses of them, neither can intentionality of speaker."
    If you write a shopping list for someone, that shopping list can still function as a shopping list even if you wrote it for some other purpose, or died before the list was used. The signs retain their functionality in the absence of intentionality, or even in the radical absence of the list writer.
    "This does not mean that we cannot intend, we can. But it means we cannot *fix* meaning by our intentions."
    *I'm coming back to this*

    • @nightoftheworld
      @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety

      Charles M Always love doing transcriptions like this, good consolidation. Do you take these notes primarily to refer back to later?

    • @nightoftheworld
      @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety

      Charles M Charles M regarding “margins of philosophy” - sounds like he was a good Hegelian scientist in the sense of describing a structure by way of its _incompleteness._ He participates in the eternal project of the mind of God as he is exploring the _truth_ of the word..

  • @wielebna444
    @wielebna444 Před 10 lety +3

    can anybody explain or write down the last 15 minutes of the lecture?

    • @johnbelingheri3438
      @johnbelingheri3438 Před 5 lety +6

      Here you can find the transcript rickroderick.org/307-derrida-and-the-ends-of-man-1993/

  • @davidfost5777
    @davidfost5777 Před 2 lety +1

    I'm always looking for new interesting lectures on Psychology/Philosophy, please let me know if you guys have any recommendations, would be highly appreciated

  • @four4633
    @four4633 Před 6 lety +3

    The most fucking brilliant explanation without convolutions or pretensions to empty concepts

  • @yazandudin9820
    @yazandudin9820 Před 4 lety +1

    does anyone know a podcast that discusses things similar to this ?

    • @lachlandale3108
      @lachlandale3108 Před 2 lety

      Very bad wizards at their best. Their second segments are deep dives into texts or concepts. Their first segments are usually a little silly.

  • @jali4000
    @jali4000 Před 3 lety

    so if i'm understanding this correctly, in the infamous "il n'y a pas de hors-texte" quote Derrida is actually saying there's nothing that an author can put outside what they're writing, like in the margins, footnotes, preface etc., that all of those things should be considered when you approach the text? could someone help me understand this a little better?

    • @jantineruinard-geurts2334
      @jantineruinard-geurts2334 Před 3 lety +1

      With that phrase I believe he means to say that (this is my own interpretation), when we engage with text, or more generally with meaning, there is no 'outside' guarantee, no external anchoring point, which ensures that meaning is 'correctly' constituted. A text is instead more like a self-referential circle, where meaning is only constituted by reference to other meanings which are always internal to the text itself. (where we take the idea of 'text' in a really broad way)
      Suppose you find a book in an ancient language that has no links to any currently known languages. Even though the book may have a whole world of meaning to someone who had known the language, to you it has no meaning at all. This means that in text, meaning is self-contained. There is nothing external to which the book could possibly refer, unless that thing is already part of the context which constitutes the meaning of the text in the first place. You already need to know the language for the book to have any meaning, thereby when you know the language, you are already 'within' the text, or, the text is already 'within' you.
      There is thus no external guarantee to which a text, or more broadly we as human beings, can refer back to in order to find some primordial, universal meaning. (In this view, Derrida's statement is basically the same as Nietzsche's "God is Dead")

  • @alainhussenotdesenonges4749

    Pouvez-vous donner une traduction simultanée, faite par un vrai philosophe de préférence. Merci.

  • @wouldbegood
    @wouldbegood Před 3 lety +3

    If I give instructions to build something, something fulfills the instructions and I agree the end product is as intended. Why can't that be considered a final correct interpretation of the words/instructions/meaning?

    • @wouldbegood
      @wouldbegood Před 3 lety +1

      Ah so this philosophy fundamentally Derridas truth.

    • @Veneda1
      @Veneda1 Před rokem +1

      It should be considered a final correct interpretation, and it is, you are right, but nor for the postmodernist.

    • @tomisaacson2762
      @tomisaacson2762 Před 7 měsíci

      In your example, written text isn't sufficient as your actual perception and judgment (eg you perceiving the thing that was built, judging it, and then affirming it) is necessary. Now we're not strictly talking about the interpretation of texts.
      What if the thing you wanted to create wasn't something you could perceive or judge directly and you communicated it with written text? Like a story, or a metaphysical scheme, or a religious doctrine.

  • @chipbipple2593
    @chipbipple2593 Před 4 lety +1

    I really wish these were numbered according to the order that they were given. I hate having to suss that out.

  • @willfourth
    @willfourth Před 10 lety +6

    Hey Vince, care to elaborate?

    • @rafaelmiramontes7953
      @rafaelmiramontes7953 Před 7 lety

      willfourth that's an aggressive act of power dominance!!! Lol

    • @mattgreen3696
      @mattgreen3696 Před 4 lety

      @@rafaelmiramontes7953 intellectual irony, should we laugh or cry?

  • @rifqim9485
    @rifqim9485 Před 7 lety +1

    What university does he give the lecture?

  • @dellmoney6369
    @dellmoney6369 Před rokem

    So he is saying antiquity style writing such as cuniform is possibly "mis" interpreted and what we think it says may be something else or just a little bit off?

  • @mehrdadmohajer3847
    @mehrdadmohajer3847 Před 5 lety

    Thank you Rick to bring us joy by your way of seeing things. I get to know some philosophers through you. You see it is not philosophy or any other disciplines, that they are interesting, rather than they are considerd as different ways to reach the aim/s. Due to them, now we have something to gather and share about. I enjoy , appriciate and support any disiplins causing so. They give us the chance to come together for more richness and joyfulness, simply said ; loving ourself/myself😊

  • @DarkAngelEU
    @DarkAngelEU Před 5 lety +1

    This is exactly why I love Derrida. To acknowledge that which most of us try to deny and shove away, into the margins. What is called marginal within a certain culture is often the most profound expression of that specific culture you will be able to encounter. Culture is expressed by those who others attempt to hide. They need to find ways to be accepted by those who call them marginal and so, by being so graciously bold, they create poetry that simply blows away all baffoons in their miserable necktied suits. I consider him much more to be an author that writes in a philosophical style, discursive, than a philosopher. It reminds me much of how Plato used to write and use mythology to describe his points.
    Derrida talks about ghosts when it comes to recording technology, for instance. It is truly fascinating to see these ideas come to work in visual art like the movies of David Lynch. It's simply haunting, jarring to see the world in such a different way yet all of it is real. We were simply conditioned to believe it is not and have accepted those lies as convenient truth.

  • @alainhussenotdesenonges4749

    Encore une conférence en langue étrangère.J'attends une traduction simultanée, ou écrite.

  • @stopmakingeyesatme1
    @stopmakingeyesatme1 Před 11 lety +1

    ('He' meaning Derrida in that last sentence)

  • @Han-rp6zm
    @Han-rp6zm Před 21 dnem

    Richard Feynman once said: "IF YOU CANNOT EXPLAIN TO ME WITH CLARITY WHAT YOU KNOW, THEN YOU DON'T KNOW ANYTHING." That is a lesson Jacques Derrida NEVER learned; and I know, because I took a course with him at Yale.
    Reply

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Před rokem

    11:14 *eternally unfinished work* “See philosophy is not like building a house, where you start with a firm foundation and build it up and you are finished and you walk off and that’s philosophy. Philosophy under the heading of deconstruction is housework, which means every day the floor is to be swept again, the dishes have to be done again, and I’ll be damned, the next day it's just like that again, and it's just like that again, and it's just like that again. So deconstruction, if I wanted to compare it as a practice to some other practice, it would be housework-it doesn’t get finished. In fact that is at the heart of - I think - the best of philosophy in the late 20th Century, is the idea that it’s not getting finished and it can’t be.”

  • @DrewRoshambo
    @DrewRoshambo Před měsícem

    "Nobody actually believes all ideas are equal."
    Millennials: "Hold my Philosophy 201 textbook!"

  • @neththom999
    @neththom999 Před 5 lety +6

    The act of Derrida's characterization of western philosophy as "white mythology" requires the very tradition he critiques in order for it to take place. His thought is part of this "white mythology" and therefore it can't offer a critique which is not itself more mythology. On what grounds then is he even right? Or even wrong?

    • @StreetsOfVancouverChannel
      @StreetsOfVancouverChannel Před 5 lety +1

      well noted...

    • @R0DisG0D
      @R0DisG0D Před 5 lety +7

      You're misunderstanding what mythology means in this context. Mythology doesn't mean that there isn't reasoning, logic and value to find in that mythology, but that it doesn't hold absolute truth or even the possibility of absolute truth.
      Derrida held western philosophy in very high regard. He was also aware of the difficulties that come from deconstructing texts by using the very tools provided by those texts and incorporates that in his philosophy and writing style. He tries in his reasoning to be reflexive, to point out where his thought is caught in the discourse of western philosophy and he knows that his deconstruction isn't definitive. It is however well-reasoned and of value.

    • @neththom999
      @neththom999 Před 5 lety +2

      ​@@R0DisG0D You make good points. I didn't realize he had gone to such lengths to avoid the performative contradiction-->there is no absolute truth and that's the absolute truth. I suppose that, as a bit of an outsider regarding Derrida, the use of the phrase "white mythology" seems akin to Freud's idea that all mystical states are simply regressions to infantile states or even the idea that rocket science is just white basket weaving.

  • @libatonvhs
    @libatonvhs Před 3 lety +1

    what's the word he says at 36:09?

    • @patroane75
      @patroane75 Před 18 dny +1

      Vedic hymm

    • @libatonvhs
      @libatonvhs Před 17 dny +1

      @@patroane75 thank you bro English is not my native language

  • @popoioopoo2088
    @popoioopoo2088 Před 7 lety +1

    oh my gosh!
    now i get it!
    I understand derrida's shit now!
    This Roddick guy is probably capable o reading Linear B

  • @99tonnes
    @99tonnes Před rokem

    Where's Rick Roderick from? Southern US, I suppose but where? I never heard that accent before. At times he sounds Australian.

    • @99tonnes
      @99tonnes Před rokem

      OK I googled: Abilene, Texas. 27th-largest city in the state. Thank you, Abilene!

  • @macswarthy
    @macswarthy Před 5 lety +2

    LOL @5:10 How's that observation about the effects of Derrida's ideas holding out over time?

    • @nirvana324
      @nirvana324 Před 5 lety +9

      still your delusional fantasy, unfortunately.

    • @cf6713
      @cf6713 Před 4 lety

      Hurr Durr woof, comment aging worse every year.

  • @Sportinglogic
    @Sportinglogic Před 7 lety

    Should there be sufficient interest in such introductory course, I would avail myself for it. I would however need preparation time - mainly to arrange the relevant sources to back up claims as any scholar ought to.

  • @nightoftheworld
    @nightoftheworld Před 4 lety +2

    31:41 *all words are metaphorical* _the word is the murder of the thing, the price we pay for language_

  • @theuberman7170
    @theuberman7170 Před 4 lety +1

    Is there a last word in mathematics?

  • @waquarist
    @waquarist Před 5 lety +8

    "is word word a word?"

  • @HoovyTube
    @HoovyTube Před rokem

    42:14 The fact that only two people laughed absolutely crushed me.

    • @lackryx4166
      @lackryx4166 Před rokem

      Hoovytube on a philosophy video is sth

  • @mentalitydesignvideo
    @mentalitydesignvideo Před rokem +1

    Begins lecture: "Hey, no one believes that everything is relative and nothing is better or worse than anything else." 43:30 "Everything is as good as anything else, obfuscation (mythology) is as good as clarification (philosophy) because French cocktail-party wit Anatole France was being clever and ornate (and completely facetious and philistine) for 10 minutes"

    • @fede2
      @fede2 Před rokem

      Nope. He's saying that our foundational mythololy should be critically scrutinized, not "everytihng is as a good as anything else".
      Bad strategy to time-stamp. Anyone can check to see how thin your "performative contradiction" case is.

    • @mentalitydesignvideo
      @mentalitydesignvideo Před rokem +1

      @@fede2 that is literally what he's saying, that any philosophy is as good any other philosophy, myth, or whatever else. You are fantasizing the rest.
      Do you dare critically scrutinize Derrida's mythology, resting entirely on an absurd Saussurian proposition that there are arbitrary things in this Universe?

    • @fede2
      @fede2 Před rokem

      @@mentalitydesignvideo If you're going to dig in your heals, at least make an argument. Tell me *why* I'm wrong.

    • @mentalitydesignvideo
      @mentalitydesignvideo Před rokem +1

      @@fede2 you read my argument, yours was "it's thin" and then you invented a favorable meaning to what he said. What is there to argue and why should I bother?

    • @fede2
      @fede2 Před rokem

      @@mentalitydesignvideo I explained *why* it was thin. You haven't done that once.

  • @QUAKERSATTACKS97
    @QUAKERSATTACKS97 Před 4 lety

    It’s funny he says “there are no relativists” (24:40 or so) when that’s the exactly what Kelsen and neo-Kantian positivists were. Such “relativism” is very much evident in political philosophy, as it is the core of pluralism and parliamentarianism (something addressed by such obscure thinkers as Carl Schmitt and Eric Voegelin).

    • @QUAKERSATTACKS97
      @QUAKERSATTACKS97 Před 4 lety

      Relativism can quite obviously be the functional result of a great deal of moral/ethical/political systems, regardless of the supposed “intent”, and itself is a position contra an absolutism or certainty in relation to a problem (relativism is frequently a polemic term, which does not mean, as suggested, that it lacks meaning because it’s content is ill-defined or refuted as such by the defender of positions which result in “relativism”).

    • @annereidy7981
      @annereidy7981 Před 3 lety

      There is a distinction between the analytical tradition and the continental tradition, and I think you are using the analytical method which is more commonly accepted throughout the Anglo/American world, a standard measurement of ethics and morality in the style of Kant, and at the heart of German law, post WWII. When Rick Roderick speaks of plurality of meaning in the face of intent, he isn't talking about context or action, so, it is no contradiction on his part, to say that relativism is not that all meanings are equally valid, but that meaning is slippery, and, some what like systems theory, unpredictable and unstoppable. In Continental Philosophy that is!

    • @annereidy7981
      @annereidy7981 Před 3 lety

      @@QUAKERSATTACKS97 the logical positivist's were a small group called the Vienna Circle, who believed in the value of logic to solve all problems! Logic is not a part of Continental Phil as it is in the Analytical School, that doesn't mean that the are not aware of each other. But it is Analytical Phil which subdivides itself into different discipline's, such as Political Philosophy. Continental Phil cannot recognise relativism in the sense that Analytical Phil does, and this is the point Rick R is making! Analytical Phil critiques Continental Phi on its own terms and by its own rules and thus completely misrepresents the ideas that Continental Phil attempts to understand. Sorry if you think you were misunderstood, I was just trying to explain what might have sounded strange to you. Moral relativism is considered to be bad by A phi where as C phil would see it as an inevitable part of existence! As in Kant's categorical imperative in A phil, as moral absolutism. Sorry if I have gotten it wrong and this was not the problem!

  • @peterpeterson3266
    @peterpeterson3266 Před rokem

    Ah jes hate suthin acceyents but this brilliant guy knows his stuff!

  • @stopmakingeyesatme1
    @stopmakingeyesatme1 Před 11 lety +1

    Christopher Hitchens wrote a good essay about obscure language called Sentenced to Death in which helabels such language as a kind of double-edged sword: it can lead us to new places, but can also be exploited by hacks (Hitchens thought Louis Althusser was one of those). I'm also interested in Thomas Kuhn's observation that he didn't understand Aristotle until he read his work on Aristotle's own terms, which sounds similar to Derrida to me. He would btw, agree with your last sentence :)

  • @rgaleny
    @rgaleny Před 3 lety

    BEING IS STRATIFIED LEVELS OF STASTIC ORDER

  • @michaelpresberg3817
    @michaelpresberg3817 Před rokem +1

    Great lecture, but 5:25 hasn't aged well.

    • @MiloMay
      @MiloMay Před rokem

      Has nothing to do with Postmodernism

  • @SK-le1gm
    @SK-le1gm Před 3 lety +2

    I wish I could send him messages back in time from 2021. He’d run for president and win. That would be a cool timeline.

  • @sylviavasquez9523
    @sylviavasquez9523 Před rokem

    "There is no interpretation that can bring interpretation to an end." Sadly, so many contemporary novels are preachy and insist on the 'right' interpretation.

    • @Veneda1
      @Veneda1 Před rokem

      Rightly so, because the writer intended it in a particular way. The point is to get it.

  • @bandicootrandicoot
    @bandicootrandicoot Před 6 lety

    OMG!

  • @doublenegation7870
    @doublenegation7870 Před 3 lety

    Roderick misspoke. Heidegger was not "deconstructing" the history of western metaphysics, he explicitly says destruction. It was Derrida who decided to move away from the language of destruction to the de-con-struction of metaphysics.

  • @christinemartin63
    @christinemartin63 Před 2 lety +1

    I find it intriguing that Comments are turned off for the Baudrillard lecture--the one on overpowering, sinister technology 😉. So telling of our current censored life.

  • @JR-zp7lw
    @JR-zp7lw Před 2 lety

    The lecture is his attempt at answering the following question posed by a reporter on deconstruction: “What the hell is this stuff anyway, that’s causing so much trouble?” Lol

  • @indonesiamenggugat8795

    🌹🌹

  • @dr.danzigm.d.6845
    @dr.danzigm.d.6845 Před rokem

    The partially examined life confuses the hell out of me. This is clear and makes perfect sense, in a Derrida sort of way. It might be that this format lends itself to philosophy better than the soy boy rambling on zoom style. Please model your future episodes on his balance of metaphors and examples, pacing, and contrasts. Just try and steal this entire technique, as if you were studying under a learned master

  • @paulholzherr2993
    @paulholzherr2993 Před 8 lety +4

    @ 25:00 I think it was William James who said that everyone is right as everyone inhabits their own unique reality

  • @matthewkwak8934
    @matthewkwak8934 Před 6 lety +1

    Is this why I see so many articles charging certain people with racism or sexism, etc., without regard to the author's intention? How can these interpretations be justified?

  • @tomasbeltran04050
    @tomasbeltran04050 Před 3 lety +1

    36:35

  • @rauldjvp3053
    @rauldjvp3053 Před 4 lety +6

    Interesting that Jordan Peterson type mischaracterizations of post-structuralists date back to the 80’s and they manifested in almost the same way

  • @fetusimao7018
    @fetusimao7018 Před 5 lety +5

    Being is.

  • @derwandschauer
    @derwandschauer Před 2 lety +2

    5 30. Badly aged...

  • @Cooliofamily
    @Cooliofamily Před 3 lety

    It is much better to have a toothache now than it was in previous periods of time. But what of sleeping under the bridges at night?

    • @blackphillip564
      @blackphillip564 Před 3 lety +3

      Homeless people today r far better off. Starvation was normal till about 150yrs ago.

    • @Cooliofamily
      @Cooliofamily Před 2 lety +1

      My point was was they're still sleeping under bridges at night. Sorry this took me a year to reply to lmao

  • @sylviavasquez9523
    @sylviavasquez9523 Před rokem

    The leak is in the language.

  • @stopmakingeyesatme1
    @stopmakingeyesatme1 Před 11 lety

    Je m'intéresse aussi à l'observation de Thomas Kuhn qu'il ne comprenait pas Aristote jusqu'à ce qu'il lisait son travail sur les propres termes d'Aristote, qui semble similaire à Derrida moi. Il aurait d'ailleurs, d'accord avec votre dernière phrase :) (par Google Translate)

  • @alainhussenotdesenonges4749

    Réponse incompréhensible

  • @asdfghjk6493
    @asdfghjk6493 Před 4 lety

    I love his accent lol

  • @codyjeter553
    @codyjeter553 Před 3 lety

    33:52

  • @jakalamanewtown6814
    @jakalamanewtown6814 Před rokem

    Rick Roderick does not lead my mind, he just expects to be lapped up.

  • @MnemoHistory
    @MnemoHistory Před 5 lety +4

    I have personally met defenders of relativism....

  • @myles1451
    @myles1451 Před rokem

    Such a shame jordan Peterson has seen this. His entire thesis on post structuralist’s being the root of all evil is quickly dismantled.

  • @blackphillip564
    @blackphillip564 Před 3 lety +8

    25:01 straw*person* argument?! Rodrick was woke 30yrs ago, smh.

    • @johnnytocino9313
      @johnnytocino9313 Před 2 lety +2

      And he f-ing paid the price for it too.

    • @Asrg
      @Asrg Před rokem

      @@johnnytocino9313 How did he pay the price? I'm unfamiliar with him so I'm super curious.

  • @percivalyracanth1528
    @percivalyracanth1528 Před 3 lety

    But the thought of a white mythology being even to other mythologies is a mythos derived of the prevailing white mythology, t.i. forthat Derrida was within the prevailing bourgeois (white) liberal tradition could he have even thought of setting an even playing field at all amongst philosophies, mythologies, and ways of thinking. The conditions amongst other groups has made it so that they are not so friendly to, well, the thoughts of even further other groups. Which can only mean that something is awry between different ways of thinking, and not so even as Derrida would think. Or, further, it would mean that there is not a drive to multiculturalism, as Derrida thinks he has put into this thinking, but rather a monoculturalism faking at being multi-. That is, to take things as even is pretty much to take them as the same, for only if they weren't even could they be different and of the same worth at all. To take up all mythologies is to make one greater mythology that shuns all others by either destroying or consuming them.

  • @Gandalf98
    @Gandalf98 Před 9 měsíci

    Did this guy just say, "my wife?"