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  • This week, we're going to be changing gears yet again.

  • Talking about some thinkers who were known as the founders of critical theory.

  • The the original Frankfurt School philosophers who wind up immigrating from

  • Germany during the Nazi period. And some working in the United States New

  • York, California, elsewhere. and we will be looking today at a brief

  • text. Brief but as you know, if you've tried to

  • read it dense text from Horkheimer and Adorno, and then we'll go on to the next

  • generation really, of critical thinkers, sometimes associated with even with

  • deconstruction. We'll talk about that next time with

  • Michel Foucault. So, we're moving quickly toward the

  • present of the Horkheimer and the Adorno's text was published in in 1947.

  • but Foucault is doing his most important work in the 1960s and in beyond.

  • So we're, we're getting closer to the present.

  • And some of the issues that they're talking about will be, I think, much more

  • obviously relevant to the contemporary stage than, perhaps than were some of the

  • issues talked about from our 18th and 19th century thinkers.

  • Horkheimer and Adorno and Foucault this week.

  • I, I, I entitled this week on the syllabus, Getting out of Totality.

  • Getting out of Totality and I thought. Maybe I should begin with a word about

  • why I've used that, that header that, that title.

  • at getting out of totality refers to the ways in which Horkheimer and Adorno, and

  • the thinkers associated with their school saw a system of enlightenment that had

  • become ever tighter in its organization. More global in it's reach, and more

  • powerful in it's sort of ability, in it's ability to control people.

  • They saw this really nefarious globalization as a product of the

  • enlightenment. They saw modernity and enlightenment

  • joining hands to create a new universal myth.

  • That entrapped us with its appeal while controlling us and diminishing our

  • freedom at every step. Foucault had a different take on some of

  • those same issues, but he too saw the growth of a kind of global accumulation

  • of power. A global accumulation of power from which

  • it is increasingly difficult to escape. And even, one can say, that the attempts

  • to escape that power fed the oppressive power itself.

  • And and, and that really is the theme of, of these thinkers.

  • That there, that, ironically, if I could put it that way, ironically are attempts

  • at liberation, wind up being steps in our own oppression.

  • Our attempts in liberation wind up being steps in our own oppression.

  • I, I, I want to just start off by, by situating Foucault in relation to some of

  • the other theorists you've been hearing about and philosophical tradition you

  • know about. and and that for me is to, is to

  • emphasize that Foucault is a Nietzschean thinker.

  • and Nietzsche was for Foucault an important instrument for getting out of

  • historicism. and getting out of a mode of thinking

  • that the generation before his had developed as an extension of Hegelian

  • Marxist. The age we thinkers who really emphasized

  • they had a formation of the self was deeply formed by or conditioned by

  • temporal dimensions. And that by understanding temporal

  • dimensions, one had a confrontation either with politics or with

  • authenticity, with freedom, or with struggle.

  • that was the generation that preceded Foucault's.

  • So, Horkheimer and Adorno writing in the Nazi period what problem are they trying

  • to address? What issue are they trying to explain?

  • they come out of the Hegelian Marxist tradition.

  • That is one where the, the path of reason, the path of the master-slave

  • dialectic, which we spoke about early on in the semester.

  • accelerates becomes evermore prominent. But Horkheimer and Adorno the, the, the

  • dialectic that Marx saw as the engine of eventual freedom, the dialectic actually

  • accelerates our oppression. How so?

  • well, before we get to the solution or the, the mechanism, I just want to say

  • one more word about the problem they see. Remember, Marx in the Communist Manifest

  • that talked about how the accumulation of wealth would also result in the

  • accumulation of of the power of the proletariat.

  • The power of the lower classes to free themselves from the tyranny of capitalist

  • wealth accumulation. According to Marx and Engels, as we

  • became as the proletariat became more aware of it's oppression, they would turn

  • against the system that created that oppression.

  • What Adorno and Horkheimer are trying to understand is how, when the oppression

  • gets even more visible, as it does with the growth of fascism.

  • How when the oppression gets even more visible, masses of people don't rebel

  • against the oppression. In other words, they're trying to

  • understand the attractions of fascism and Nazism.

  • They're trying to understand why the working classes don't rebel against their

  • owners of capital. Why they don't rebel against the massive

  • corporations or the political parties that feed them.

  • Horkheimer and Adorno are trying to understand why we participate in our own

  • control or oppression. Why we give power to the things that turn

  • us into less free and less capable human beings.

  • they are interested in the persistence of domination despite the possibilities for

  • freedom. And they, they traced this problem, the

  • persistence of domination, back to the enlightenment.

  • As you see in the first sentence of the reading for this week they identify

  • enlightenment as the problem. And I'll just remind you of that

  • sentence, I'll read it to you now. Enlightenment, enlightenment, understood

  • in the widest sense as the advance of thought, has always aimed at liberating

  • human beings from fear. And I've highlighted that in my, it's

  • like, liberating human beings from fear and installing them as masters.

  • Yet the wholly enlightened earth is radiant with triumphant calamity.

  • Enlightenment's program was the disenchantment of the world.

  • I want to just focus on a couple of pieces of that text.

  • I'll leave biographies of the thinkers and things like that for you to find on

  • yourself, your, your computers. But I want to focus on the text here of

  • Horkheimer and Adorno. Enlightenment focused on the liberating

  • human beings from fear and installing them as masters.

  • Remember that master slave dialectic is being echoed here.

  • Liberating human beings from fear. But, in fact, what happens in

  • enlightenment is they create conditions for a new kind of fear.

  • And then this sentence, the wholly enlightened earth is radiant with

  • triumphant calamity. It's a great phrase.

  • That is in the very triumph of technology of progress of industry of global global

  • reach of, of our of our tools, we have created the conditions for calamity.

  • and you can see this in, Horkheimer and Adorno see this in Nazism.

  • They see this in the weapons of mass destruction, we point today to the, the

  • environmental degradation or other global warming or other forms of calamity,

  • triumphant calamity. Calamity that is a result of the very

  • progress that we have been so proud of. for Adorno and Horkheimer, enlightenment

  • is a myth. Enlightenment starts out as a way of

  • getting rid of myth, remember? Voltaire says, you must squash all the,

  • this, the nonsense, the infamy get rid of it.

  • Adorno and Horkheimer's enlightenment's program,becomes so self-fulfilling,

  • self-justifying.It is itself a myth, and a myth that works against human beings

  • and comes to dominate us. Domination is a key term Horkheimer and

  • Adorno, and I I want you to think about what they mean by that.

  • This is really just from the second page of the reading they link technology and

  • domination. Here's what they say.

  • Technology is the essence of this knowledge.

  • That is enlightenment knowledge. It aims to produce neither concepts nor

  • images, nor the the joy of understanding, but method, exploitation of the labor of

  • others. What human beings, they write, seek to

  • learn from human nature is how to use it to dominate wholly both it and human,

  • other human beings. Nothing else counts.

  • This is a phrase that they could've said again and again.

  • Nothing else counts. For Horkheimer and Adorno, knowledge

  • comes to mean domination of the world. It sets up the knower in a position to

  • dominate other things. And as knowledge gets equated with

  • domination, all other forms of understanding are pushed aside.

  • Hence, one of the roots of, of the, the problem, the problem of how our, our

  • methods of understanding come to actually oppress us.

  • What they see in this process is that quantification comes to be the only

  • framework for, that counts as knowledge. In other words in the 19th century, you

  • might have narrative. You might have philosophical explanation.

  • You might have other modes of qualitative experiments or qualitative investigation.

  • Counting is knowledge. by the middle of the 20th century,

  • Horkheimer and Adorno say that the only thing that really counts is knowledge.

  • The only thing that really will count as science is knowledge that can be

  • quantified, knowledge that results in the domination of the object studied.

  • That's key for them. That we, we come to think understanding

  • is grasping and dominating something. and this doubles back against us.

  • It's doubled back against us because it sets up the knower, what they call the

  • subject on pages five and six of the text.

  • It sets up the knower as the, as an agent who shows his or her power.

  • And it's usually a him, a man, shows his or her power through control of others.

  • Here is Horkheimer and Adorno man's likeness to God consists in sovereignty

  • over existence, in lordly gaze, in the command.

  • So, what they're trying to show here is that enlightenment pictures the human

  • being in his or her full capacity as someone who comes to dominate the world

  • through understanding. But like the master in the master-slave

  • dialectic, when you come to dominate the world, you actually destroy the

  • conditions of your own understanding.

This week, we're going to be changing gears yet again.

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