Saturday, May 18, 2019

Is Postmodernism an Echo from the Grave? (Part 2)

    Of the five general tenets of postmodernism, the first is that there can be no universal absolutes.  What is held to be sacrosanct by one may be rejected or ridiculed by another, since to accept or expect some philosophical, sociological or theological absolute is irrational.  Has that notion been suggested and tested by a previous generation?
     Yes, in fact, we can go back as far as the very first generation.  In Genesis 2:17 God said to the man and woman, "But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die" (KJV).  Notice, "thou shalt not" and "thou shalt surely".  Here were two clear absolutes...no compromise, no equivocation, no second option, just two patent absolutes.
     Not long after, the first postmodern tenet surfaced.  If the present is the modern (and that is its definition), then Genesis chapter three was postmodern.  Postmodernism comes early with its attack upon irrational absolutist thinking flatly declaring it wrong.  "And the serpent said unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die" (vs. 4 KJV).  But die they did.  There was an absolute after all.
     One might object on the ground that the Genesis account is only metaphor, but even if it were purely a metaphor, it is one antedating postmodernism by at least the latest supposed date of its historically verifiable emergence in literature making it not less than 3,500 years an earlier copyright holder on the notion of no absolutes.   Furthermore, as early as 3,000 years ago, the preacher of Ecclesiastes (as noted above) predicted that copyright claim jumpers would eventually discover that someone was there before them.


     In no way do we intend to suggest that Genesis chapters one and two are the only verifiable examples of the no absolutes idea being antedated.  We only have noted it to have been the earliest.  Furthermore, it is a bit amusing to hear postmodern proponents suggest that there are no absolutes since the very statement is a pronouncement of an absolute!  Can there be only one absolute?  Absolutely not!  General tenet number one seems to be nothing new, but only a sophist echo from the grave, and a very tired echo at that.
     We now take up postmodernism’s general tenets two and three:  2). Community is important, but never static, it must always evolve.  3). Reality is perception, and perception is personal not corporate.  The reaction against a static community calls for the continual evolution of community.  What is considered required, proper, taboo or essential by one generation must give way to more enlightened or more expedient forms of community.  In other words, each person in each generation has just as much right as the community at large to determine what is acceptable.
     Is such an idea of community novel?  At the end of the Book of Judges, which is the historical record of Israel’s dalliances with apostasy, it was noted, "In those days there was no king in Israel: every man did that which was right in his own eyes" (21:25 KJV).  That’s community evolving; nothing new there.  The verse from the Book of Judges corresponds with the fourteenth century B.C.
     According to postmodernism, reality is perception, and perception is personal not corporate.  In other words, everyone has a right to his own idea of reality whether anyone else likes it or not, and such reality is just as legitimate as the reality of anyone else.
     Reality as perception has a deeply sinister side.  As long as one’s perception of reality fits within the parameters of a civilized society, and does no violence against others, it may be considered only strange.  Unfortunately, when personal perception of reality is given its full due, it can easily become a vent for the machinations of the darker side of mankind.
     This is precisely what happened between Cain and his younger brother Abel.  Cain’s perception of reality was that his sacrifice was just as honorable as his brother’s, and when faced with an alternative reality that offended Cain’s sense of what was real, he decided to eliminate the alternate point of view by killing Abel.  When perceptions of reality clash and one proves to be true, the false often seeks revenge, whatever it may cost.  The Genesis chapter four account easily antedates postmodernism’s notion of perception as reality.  Again, nothing new, only more echoes from the grave.

Next, we will examine the the final two tenets (four and five).

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