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Slippage and Play: Interpretation, Decision, and the Ethical Turn of Poststructuralism

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The Horizon of Play. AI image The Decentering of Structure In “Structure, Sign, and Play in the Discourse of the Human Sciences,” Jacques Derrida identifies a decisive shift in modern thought: the recognition that structure has no natural center. For centuries, Western metaphysics secured meaning by positing a stable origin — God, reason, consciousness, man — that organized the system while escaping its internal movement. The center limited what Derrida calls the “play” of the structure. It permitted substitutions among elements but was not itself subject to substitution. The rupture Derrida describes does not abolish structure. It reveals that the center is not an immutable presence but a function, a “non-locus” successively occupied by different names. Once this becomes thinkable, the consequences are profound. As Derrida writes, “in the absence of a center or origin, everything became discourse.” No transcendental signified stands outside the differential system of signs. Meanin...

Difference, Opposition, and Similarity in Saussure’s Theory of the Linguistic Sign

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Introduction Ferdinand de Saussure’s assertion that “in the language itself there are only differences” (Saussure, 1916/2011) is among the most frequently cited formulations in twentieth-century linguistics and critical theory. The statement often appears as a sweeping declaration that language is nothing but negativity. Yet the Course in General Linguistics presents a more complex architecture. Saussure distinguishes between difference within the series of sound patterns and concepts, opposition between complete signs, and associative relations grounded in resemblance. Each operates at a distinct structural level. Clarifying these distinctions reveals a system more sophisticated than the familiar maxim suggests. Difference: The Differential Constitution of the Orders When Saussure writes that language contains only differences, he is speaking of signifier and signified considered separately. At this level, there are neither ready-made ideas nor pre-existing acoustic images. “...

From Cognitive Illusion to the Ethics of Meaning: Bacon, Kant, and Poststructuralism

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  Sapere aude Introduction Across early modern and modern philosophy, a recurring concern is the distortion of human understanding. Thinkers have repeatedly asked why our judgments go astray and how such errors might be corrected. From Francis Bacon’s analysis of cognitive bias in Novum Organum , to Immanuel Kant’s account of “self-incurred immaturity” in What Is Enlightenment? , and finally to poststructuralism’s attention to instability within systems of signification, the same emancipatory ambition persists. Each framework diagnoses a distinct source of distortion and proposes a corresponding mode of liberation. This essay argues that poststructuralism can be read as a radicalization of the Enlightenment project. It inherits Bacon’s suspicion of illusion and Kant’s demand for autonomy, yet relocates the problem from the individual mind or external authority to the very structure of language itself. In doing so, it transforms epistemological critique into an explicitly ethi...