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  1. I don't think it's fair to cite only the working through phase and declare that's what postmodernism is. Plus, it doesn't help one understand the postmodern problem because it ignores the fact that working through was a specific response to acting out which was a specific response to the perceived failure of modernist epistemology.

  2. Sep 30, 2005 · That postmodernism is indefinable is a truism. However, it can be described as a set of critical, strategic and rhetorical practices employing concepts such as difference, repetition, the trace, the simulacrum, and hyperreality to destabilize other concepts such as presence, identity, historical progress, epistemic certainty, and the univocity ...

  3. Responding to the crisis: change socialism’s epistemology 156 Marcuse and the Frankfurt School: Marx plus Freud, or oppression plus repression 159 The rise and fall of Left terrorism 166 From the collapse of the New Left to postmodernism 170 Chapter Six: Postmodern Strategy Connecting epistemology to politics 174 Masks and rhetoric in ...

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  4. v. t. e. Postmodern philosophy is a philosophical movement that arose in the second half of the 20th century as a critical response to assumptions allegedly present in modernist philosophical ideas regarding culture, identity, history, or language that were developed during the 18th-century Age of Enlightenment. [1][2] Postmodernist thinkers ...

  5. Jan 1, 2021 · The postmodern theory of knowledge creation must answer questions such as “How do I know that my understanding of a $20 bill as legal tender is correct (i.e. real)?” As is the case with objective knowledge, subjective knowledge is validated via an appeal to other minds achieving the same image of reality (e.g. the worth of a $20 bill).

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  7. Aug 6, 2021 · Michael Lackey. Friedrich Nietzsche’s famous claim that truth is a conceptual illusion that language-users have forgotten to see as provisional and evolving was one of the main ideas informing the major postmodern writings of Gilles Deleuze, Jacques Derrida, Paul de Man, Michel Foucault, Sarah Kofman, and others from the 1960s and 1970s.

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