Explorations

Future Paths of Phenomenology

1st OPHEN Summer Meeting

Repository | Series | Book | Chapter

147761

Foucault and historical nominalism

Thomas R Flynn(Department of French & Italian, Clemson University)

pp. 134-147

Abstract

Sartre once claimed that existentialism was "nothing else but an attempt to draw the full conclusion from a consistently atheistic position."1/ One could characterize Foucault's approach to history as an attempt to draw the full conclusions from a consistently nominalistic position. For the "archaeologies," "genealogies" and most recently "problematizations" of human discursive and nondiscursive practices that have issued from his pen over the quarter century preceding his untimely death are united by their aggressively anti-Platonic and individualist stance. Foucault has noted this proclivity on several occasions.2/ Given the privileged place of history in his writings (all of his major works are "histories" of a kind), if the nominalist position is so central to his thought, it should afford us a valuable perspective on his work overall.

Publication details

Published in:

Durfee Harold, Rodier David F T (1989) Phenomenology and beyond: the self and its language. Dordrecht, Springer.

Pages: 134-147

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-1055-3_10

Full citation:

Flynn Thomas R (1989) „Foucault and historical nominalism“, In: H. Durfee & D.F.T. Rodier (eds.), Phenomenology and beyond, Dordrecht, Springer, 134–147.