The psychological motivation of those who embrace postmodernism

Can a person be postmodern and a Christian? Not for long
Can a person be postmodern and a Christian? Not for long

Famous analytical philosopher John Searle has written a book “Mind, Language And Society: Philosophy In The Real World”, explaining what’s factually wrong with postmodernism. In the introduction, he explains what postmodernism is, and what motivates people to accept postmodernism.

He writes:

[…][W]hen we act or think or talk in the following sorts of ways we take a lot for granted: when we hammer a nail, or order a takeout meal from a restaurant, or conduct a lab experiment, or wonder where to go on vacation, we take the following for granted: there exists a real world that is totally independent of human beings and of what they think or say about it, and statements about objects and states of affairs in that world are true or false depending on whether things in the world really are the way we say they are. So, for example, if in pondering my vacation plans I wonder whether Greece is hotter in the summer than Italy, I simply take it for granted that there exists a real world containing places like Greece and Italy and that they have various temperatures. Furthermore, if I read in a travel book that the average summer temperature in Greece is hotter than in Italy, I know that what the book says will be true if and only if it really is hotter on average in the summer in Greece than in Italy. This is because I take it for granted that such statements are true only if there is something independent of the statement in virtue of which, or because of which, it is true.

[…]These two Background presuppositions have long histories and various famous names. The first, that there is a real world existing independently of us, I like to call “external realism.” “Realism,” because it asserts the existence of the real world, and “external” to distinguish it from other sorts of realism-for example, realism about mathematical objects (mathematical realism) or realism about ethical facts (ethical realism). The second view, that a statement is true if things in the world are the way the statement says they are, and false otherwise, is called “the correspondence theory of truth.” This theory comes in a lot of different versions, but the basic idea is that statements are true if they correspond to, or describe, or fit, how things really are in the world, and false if they do not.

The “correspondence theory of truth” is the view of truth assumed in books of the Bible whose genre is such that that they were intended by the authors to be taken literally, (with allowances for symbolism, figures of speech, metaphors, hyperbole, etc.).

But what about the postmodernists, who seek to deny the objectivity of external reality?

More Searle:

Thinkers who wish to deny the correspondence theory of truth or the referential theory of thought and language typically find it embarrassing to have to concede external realism. Often they would rather not talk about it at all, or they have some more or less subtle reason for rejecting it. In fact, very few thinkers come right out and say that there is no such thing as a real world existing absolutely, objectively, and totally independently of us. Some do. Some come right out and say that the so-called real world is a “social construct.”

What is behind the denial of objective reality, and statements about external reality that are warranted by evidence?

It is not easy to get a fix on what drives contemporary antirealism, but if we had to pick out a thread that runs through the wide variety of arguments, it would be what is sometimes called “perspectivism.” Perspectivism is the idea that our knowledge of reality is never “unmediated,” that it is always mediated by a point of view, by a particular set of predilections, or, worse yet by sinister political motives, such as an allegiance to a political group or ideology. And because we can never have unmediated knowledge of the world, then perhaps there is no real world, or perhaps it is useless to even talk about it, or perhaps it is not even interesting.

Searle is going to refute anti-realism in the rest of the book, but here is his guess at what is motivating the anti-realists:

I have to confess, however, that I think there is a much deeper reason for the persistent appeal of all forms of antirealism, and this has become obvious in the twentieth century: it satisfies a basic urge to power. It just seems too disgusting, somehow, that we should have to be at the mercy of the “real world.” It seems too awful that our representations should have to be answerable to anything but us. This is why people who hold contemporary versions of antirealism and reject the correspondence theory of truth typically sneer at the opposing view. 

[…]I don’t think it is the argument that is actually driving the impulse to deny realism. I think that as a matter of contemporary cultural and intellectual history, the attacks on realism are not driven by arguments, because the arguments are more or less obviously feeble, for reasons I will explain in detail in a moment. Rather, as I suggested earlier, the motivation for denying realism is a kind of will to power, and it manifests itself in a number of ways. In universities, most notably in various humanities disciplines, it is assumed that, if there is no real world, then science is on the same footing as the humanities. They both deal with social constructs, not with independent realities. From this assumption, forms of postmodernism, deconstruction, and so on, are easily developed, having been completely turned loose from the tiresome moorings and constraints of having to confront the real world. If the real world is just an invention-a social construct designed to oppress the marginalized elements of society-then let’s get rid of the real world and construct the world we want. That, I think, is the real driving psychological force behind antirealism at the end of the twentieth century.

Now, I’ll go one step further than Searle.

People, from the Fall, have had the desire to step into the place of God. It’s true that we creatures exist in a universe created and designed by God. But, there is a way to work around the fact that God made the universe and the laws that the universe runs on, including logic, mathematics and natural laws. And that way is to deny logic, mathematics and natural laws. Postmodernists simply deny that there is any way to construct rational arguments and support the premises with evidence from the real world. That way, they imagine, they are free to escape a God-designed world, including a God-designed specification for how they ought to live. The postmoderns deny the reliable methods of knowing about the God-created reality because logic and evidence can be used to point to God’s existence, God’s character, and God’s actions in history.

And that’s why there is this effort to make reality “optional” and perspectival. Everyone can be their own God, and escape any accountability to the real God – the God who is easily discovered through the use of logic and evidence. I believe that this is also behind the rise of atheists, who feign allegiance to logic and science, but then express “skepticism” about the origin of the universe, the fine-tuning of the universe, objective morality, the minimal facts concerning the historical Jesus, and other undeniables.

5 thoughts on “The psychological motivation of those who embrace postmodernism”

  1. Shameless Nicolas Gomez Davila plug:

    “Modernism ingeniously finds a way not to present its theology directly, but rather through profane notions that imply it.

    It avoids announcing to man his divinity, but proposes goals that only a god could reach, or rather proclaims that the essence of man has rights which assume he is divine.”

    Part of being a god is creating the reality you want.

    (Original in Spanish

    El modernismo se ingenia con astucia para no presentar su teología directamente, sino mediante nociones profanas que la impliquen.

    Evita anunciarle al hombre su divinidad, pero le propone metas que sólo un dios alcanzaría o bien proclama que la esencia humana tiene derechos que la suponen divina.)

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  2. This is a longwinded academic way of saying what I was rehersing to myself in my car on the way to work this morning:

    Some people are born with a tendency to the right and some to the left, and the right accepts reality and finds a way to work within it while the left creates chaos by attempting to change what cannot be changed because they favor change merely for change’s sake. The best explanation is those born left are empty shell bodies into which chaos demons entered and so have no human soul as those who were born right do.

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      1. As those that accept truth we can agree with things being evil.

        Much like I oppose the things you listed and I agree with non Christians that also oppose those things. You don’t have to agree with us on points of Christianity to oppose the abhorant and evil acts.

        The Bible does say God doesnt like sin and all are guilty but some sin is far worse and as society embraces things that are called acts from before the days of Noah or a society on a path to destruction as are called to warn people if their end.

        People may call me judgy or whatever but it is no different than a prophet of the Bible standing up to a corrupt leader and society

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  3. There are also many that don’t view and actual reality as we do.

    They love the odd size of quantum mechanis as it is Wierd so they go see weird stuff happens you can’t trust reality.

    Hey maybe a multiverse or stars wars like force exists don’t say you trust reality.

    Unlike a Christian of a real world that had a supernatural world together, a God that is the creator of absolutely everything and other spiritual beings created by the God.

    They embrace an odd mix of eastern mystic ideas and a lot of denying reality.

    It is why they claim ideas of manifesting their reality. A fancy way to say deny the real world to make what you want which is opposed to God’s created order.

    We believe in a real world with a God and his created spiritual beings that do interact with this world. But it pleases God to allow us humans to do our best to try and take care of this world and those on it to the best of our abilities in behalf of God.

    Only when we totally mess up does he come in to do deep fixes in this earth.

    I don’t condone only deism as I fully believe in a spiritual world and accept miracles and many things can occur but all must include obedience and submission to God and his will.

    Not bending the world to our own pleasure alone as the is truly demonic and the kind of things that are condemned in the flood account

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