Method in the Madness: The Logic of Indeterminacy in Post-Structuralism
The Globe. AI image Introduction — Is There Method in the Madness? “Though this be madness, yet there is method in’t.” The line, spoken by Polonius in Hamlet, captures a paradox that extends well beyond the stage. It proves especially suggestive when approaching post-structuralist writing, which often appears, at first encounter, disordered, playful, even erratic. Readers of Jacques Derrida or Michel Foucault frequently describe a sense of instability: meanings shift, arguments double back, and clarity seems continually deferred. This first impression, however, can be misleading. What looks like looseness is often the product of careful construction. These texts are not casual or improvised; they are highly deliberate. The real question, then, is not whether method is present, but why such disciplined procedures are used to produce instability. If meaning cannot settle, why is the reasoning so exact? The Non-Finality Thesis Post-structuralist thought is commonly associated with...