Justice After Metaphor: The Dispute Beneath the Dispute in the Chomsky–Foucault Debate
Neo-Caravaggist Version of The Debate. AI Image Introduction — Before Political Disagreement The 1971 exchange between Noam Chomsky and Michel Foucault is commonly framed as a confrontation over power, authority, or human nature. Yet beneath these visible disagreements lies a more prior tension, one unfolding at the level of language itself. Before they disagree about politics, they diverge over whether the terms that make political judgment possible possess any stable authority. Throughout the conversation, certain words recur with quiet insistence: creativity , justice, legal, illegitimate, correct. Their repetition is not incidental. Each thinker is attempting, in real time, to determine who, if anyone, has the authority to stabilize their meaning. This instability does not interrupt the debate; it gives it urgency. The exchange reveals a philosophical difficulty that precedes ideological division: are political concepts entities awaiting clarification, or historical formatio...