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Noam Chomsky & Michel Foucault : Human Nature – Justice vs Power

INFO
Sunday, January 26 2014
7:30PM
 
 

PART OF THE USM PHILOSOPHY SYMPOSIUM FILM SERIES

The now-legendary 1971 debate between two very different heroes of the intellectual Left: linguist and activist Noam Chomsky, and cultural theorist and historian of ideas Michel Foucault.

Brought together to discuss their divergent views on the concept of human nature, these two heavyweights trace arguments that resonant well into 21st century politics and thought. At the time, both thinkers were not only heroes within academia, but within the burgeoning counterculture as well, making this meeting one of the most important intellectual events of the early 1970s.

Working from his background in linguistics and his theory of a ‘universal grammar’, Chomsky posits a human nature premised on a structure of limitations and capabilities “built into the mind.”  Foucault counters that our conception of these supposedly innate capacities is, by necessity, circumscribed by contemporary social forms. Behind Chomsky’s political arguments, he sees lurking unspoken the notion of immovable ideals.

Both thinkers agree on a view that the history of science does not simply consist in adding new knowledge to previous knowledge, but in examining problems from different perspectives and creating new frames of reference, but their disagreement on human nature has continued to define – implicitly and explicitly – the central tensions within the Left and within contemporary philosophy.

Followed by discussion with Jason Read, University of Southern Maine Professor of Philosophy.

Part our our continuing film series collaboration with the USM Philosophy Symposium