Hi, everyone.
I just started reading Total Freedom by Chris Sciabarra (warning: politics book), and a good half of it seems to be about 'dialectics' as a thinking tool, but it's been total rubbish in trying to explain it. From poking around on the internet, it seems to have been a proto-systems theory that became a Marxist shibboleth.
Am I understanding that correctly? The LW survey says about 1 in 4 of us is a communist, so I'm hoping someone can point to me resources or something. Also, I've read through most of the sequences, and it didn't use the word dialectics in there at all, which seems strange if it's such a useful thinking tool. Is there something wrong with it as an epistemological practice? Is the word just outdated?
Sorry about the (tangentially) political post, I'm just kind of confused. Help?
Interesting. That's pretty much orthogonal to what I heard as what dialectic is about: that when two systems - ideas, political, social, scientific - come into conflict, each expose some weaknesses of the other, and then both end up being replaced with a synthesis.
(Obviously, that's even more abbreviated than what you wrote)
That isn't actually orthogonal. Hegel's whole thesis-antithesis-synthesis thing is his conception of how the analytical method fails. When you analyze a system's parts without regard for holistic context you often run into apparent contradictions. One piece of sound analysis seems to suggest one thing about the nature of what you're studying, while another piece of sound analysis suggests the exact opposite.
The problem, acciording to Hegel, is the process of analysis itself - trying to understand the nature of the parts prior to an understanding of how the... (read more)