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An Exchange between John Griffin and Takis Fotopoulos. (2000.)
This article is licensed under the Creative Commons. Source: Anarchist Voices. John Griffin: Dodgy Logic and the Olympians. Whilst considering this book and Richard Griffin's (no relation) article in TL4 about science and "postmodernism", my thoughts strayed to the earliest of the ancient Greek philosophers, those who came before Socrates. A good deal of what they had to say really lay in the realm of science, as we would now call it, for their purpose was to grasp what made the world tick. As the centuries unfolded, the sciences developed as separate branches of enquiry, and philosophy increasingly concerned itself with how we humans fitted into the world, that is with mind. Faced with contemporary disasters like Marxism and nuclear bombs, one branch of "postmodernism" has made the separation with science the more emphatic by expressing disenchantment and even hostility towards it. I persist in using the inverted commas because I’m not sure what "postmodernism" is. If it were limited to a critique of the philosophy and science spawned by our authoritarian cultures - the inhuman bigness, reductionism and needless gadgetry ― i would have no quarrel with it.
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