Enlightenment contra humanism: Michel Foucault’s critical history of thought.
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Date
06/2002Author
Dalgliesh, Bregham
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Abstract
In this dissertation I claim that Michel Foucault is a pro-enlightenment
philosopher. I argue that his critical history of thought cultivates a state of being
autonomous in thought and action which is indicative of a kantian notion of
maturity. In addition, I contend that, because he follows a nietzschean path to
enlightenment, Foucault’s elaboration of freedom proceeds from his critique of who
we are, which includes a rejection of humanism’s experiential limits. At the same
time, and perhaps most importantly, I also suggest that Foucault articulates a posthumanist
conception of finitude and being.
To begin with, I show that on humanism’s path to edghtenment, which is
established by Rousseau, Kant and Hegel and currently advocated by Rawls and
Taylor, a philosophy of the autonomous subject who desires self-actualisation
through recogrution precedes the epistemologcal and political critiques which
generate humanism’s objective, normative and subjective axes of experience. On
the basis of Foucault’s archzological, genealogical and, when they operate together,
critical historical critiques of these conditions of possibility for autonomy and
recogrution, I maintain that humanism fails to teach us how to think or act freelythat
is, as critical thought that delivers enhghtenment-and that humanism’s
knowledge of the world and its justice in politics necessitate the confined exclusion
of those who are different and the submission of subjectivity of those who are
normal.
In response to the immaturity that is at the heart of humanism, I illustrate that
Foucault deploys archeology, genealogy and critical history to excavate his posthumanist,
enlightenment alternatives of savoir, pouvoir and ethico-morality. After
he relocates an explanation of cause and effect in the human sciences from savioir to
the relations between savoir and pouvoir, I explicate how Foucault reconceives,
firstly, the way pouvoir is exercised by productive mechanisms, which discipline the
body and regulate the citizen, and, secondly, the nature of pouvoir, which he
characterises as governmentality, or one’s action upon the actions of others. He
then retlunks freedom as the vis-a-vis of pouvoir/savoir, and I demonstrate how
critical history reveals that, prior to the hermeneutic relation to self wluch is at the
centre of humanism’s conception of moral identity, ethical subjectivity in antiquity
is formed through an ascetic, agonistic freedom that is based on a practical relation
to self. Foucault uses this as a blueprint for the present, in which an ethico-political
state of being autonomous in thought and action is constituted over against our
limits of pouvoir/savoir.
I thus claim that Foucault’s portrayal as an anti-enlightenment philosopher,
who proffers nothing but anormative critique and amoral freedom, represents the
perspective of those for whom to be anti-humanism is akin to being antienlightenment.
These criticisms are exposed as misguided by the thesis that I verify
in this dissertation, which is that critical history qua critique, thence an ontology,
namely, Foucault’s critical ontology, brings about maturity and endorses an
ehghtenment that is both contra- and post-humanism.