Fitting and Fudging: On the Folly of Trying to Define Post-truth

Analyse & Kritik 43 (2):331-350 (2021)
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Abstract

I propose that the ‘post-truth condition’, i.e., the vulnerability of our institutions for establishing and negotiating what is true and worth knowing, is not primarily a pathology, a susceptibility to external manipulation or coercion, as tends to be stressed in the literature, but has first and foremost to do with the unraveling of certain epistemic assumptions. In analogy with T.S. Eliot’s modernist notion that the attempt to capture and concretize an experience or a state of mind requires ‘objective correlatives’ which it conveys, I argue that the trope of post-truth to express the embattled status of expertise can be understood in terms of failed symbolization. In the second section, I spell out what this means in terms of Donald Davidson’s discussion of the problem of defining truth. In the last section, I propose a ‘poetics of political theory’ for understanding the post-truth condition.

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The Fixation of Belief.C. S. Peirce - 1877 - Popular Science Monthly 12 (1):1-15.
Between past and future.Hannah Arendt - 1961 - New York,: Viking Press.
The life of the mind.Hannah Arendt - 1977 - New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich.
Marxism and the philosophy of language.V. N. Voloshinov - 1973 - Cambridge: Harvard University Press. Edited by Ladislav Matejka & I. R. Titunik.

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