Creativity, Truth, and Their Conditions: Chomsky, Foucault, and the Grid of Discourse
Introduction: Where Does Creativity Come From? In 1971, Noam Chomsky and Michel Foucault took part in a public debate at the Eindhoven University of Technology in the Netherlands. Moderated by the philosopher Fons Elders, the discussion focused on fundamental philosophical questions: how should creativity and truth be explained? Are they grounded in the capacities of individual subjects, or do they emerge from historically specific systems that precede and shape those subjects? These questions are not only at the heart of the debate itself, but also central to Foucault’s inaugural lecture, The Order of Discourse . Read together, these texts reveal two opposing strategies for accounting for novelty: Chomsky’s restoration of the speaking subject and Foucault’s displacement of the knowing subject in favor of what may be called a " grid of intelligibility. " Chomsky: Creativity and the Speaking Subject Chomsky’s intervention in linguistics responds to a specific theore...