Submitted by BernardJOrtcutt t3_107f3ud in philosophy
oryxmath t1_j41awdl wrote
Reply to comment by lauren_1995_uwu in /r/philosophy Open Discussion Thread | January 09, 2023 by BernardJOrtcutt
I find this interesting but hard to really evaluate. Pretty much any time I see a philosophical thesis that is chalk full of words/phrases like "capitalism", "modernity", "praxis", I think it is helpful to try to rewrite your thesis in as simple and straightforward language as possible and see if a) it still makes sense, and b) it isn't a trivial truth.
You'll see this issue even with famous philosophers (usually French philosophers that aren't read much in philosophy departments but worshipped in some other humanities). They'll say something like "Under late capitalism, the wisdom of modernity falls into the crux of folly, for only if we deconstruct capitalist production itself can existence be retained in the post-structural sense" and it's like oooh it sounds so deep but when forced to state the point simply it's just an obvious simple thing like "some forms of industry are bad for the environment".
walterbryan13 t1_j423jg7 wrote
Yeah makes some reading of their work feel tedious and you get lost and bored.
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