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The Language Reformers of Lagado: Swift and the Myth of Linguistic Transparency

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The Great Language Reform, lithography. AI image "We next went to the school of languages, where three professors sat in consultation upon improving that of their own country." — Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels Introduction Imagine attending a scholarly conference where every participant arrives carrying sacks, baskets, tools, household objects, and perhaps a wheelbarrow or two. Instead of speaking, the scholars communicate by displaying physical objects. A discussion about agriculture requires seeds and farming tools. A debate on government demands maps, coins, and legal documents. A geologist presenting a lecture on the Earth’s formation must somehow transport a vast collection of rocks, minerals, and fossils that stand in for epochs and geological strata. The more learned the speaker, the heavier the burden. This is not a scene from a surrealist novel. It is one of the linguistic reforms proposed at the Academy of Lagado in Jonathan Swift's Gulliver...

From the Machine of Lagado to ChatGPT: Descartes, Swift, Harris, and the Dream of Automating Language

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The Machine of Lagado, lithography. AI image “Methinks I hear some objector, demanding with an air of pleasantry and ridicule: ‘Is there no speaking then without all this trouble? Do we not talk every one of us, as well unlearned as learned; as well poor peasants, as profound philosophers?’” — George Berkeley, Alciphron, or The Minute Philosopher Introduction In the third part of Gulliver's Travels (1726), Jonathan Swift describes one of the strangest inventions in literary history. At the Academy of Lagado, Gulliver encounters a gigantic apparatus composed of wooden frames covered with words. Students turn handles, rearranging verbal combinations at random. The machine's inventor proudly claims that, with sufficient effort, anyone could produce books on philosophy, law, science, and politics without the inconvenience of study. The episode was intended as satire. Yet nearly three centuries later, readers find themselves in an unusual position. Machines now translate doc...

“Schuld” and the Limits of the Genealogy of Morality: A Saussurean Reading of Nietzsche

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Aber wie ist denn jene andre »düstre Sache«, das Bewusstsein der Schuld, das ganze »schlechte Gewissen« auf die Welt gekommen? Nietzsche, On the Genealogy of Morality (II §4) Thesis This article argues that Nietzsche’s genealogy of guilt in On the Genealogy of Morality depends upon a distinctly nineteenth-century philological assumption: that the history of a word can illuminate the history of a concept. By tracing the moral notion of Schuld (guilt) back to Schulden (debts), Nietzsche reconstructs the emergence of conscience from economic and juridical relations. From a Saussurean perspective, however, this procedure is methodologically problematic. Meaning does not survive within words as a historical residue but emerges from differential relations within a synchronic linguistic system. Through a dialogue with Saussure, and subsequently with Lacan and Derrida, this article examines the tension between genealogical explanation and structural theories of signification. The issue...

Historicizing Objectivity: Lenin, Poststructuralism, and the Loss of Epistemic Innocence

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Introduction: facts, interpretation, and an uneasy confidence In a recent televised exchange, a journalist invoked a familiar Leninist gesture: political claims, he suggested, must ultimately submit to facts; analysis begins and ends with what can be verified in practice. The appeal carried a certain force. It suggested clarity in a landscape often saturated with interpretation, narrative, and suspicion. Yet something in that gesture feels historically displaced. Not because facts have disappeared, nor because material reality has become secondary, but because the philosophical confidence that once accompanied such appeals no longer appears self-evident. The issue is not whether Lenin was “right” or “wrong.” It is that the conditions under which his epistemology could appear unproblematic have shifted. What once functioned as a relatively direct theory of knowledge now emerges as one articulation within a broader and more complex history of how truth is produced, stabilized, and ...

The Blind Spot of the Sovereign Individual: Nietzsche and Derrida on the Limits of Self-Mastery

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Triple Self-Portrait. Norman Rockwell 1960. Source: Wikipedia Thesis Although Nietzsche's sovereign individual appears to embody self-mastery and responsibility, Derrida's analysis of blindness in Memoirs of the Blind reveals a structural limitation already operating within Nietzsche's account. Just as the self-portraitist cannot fully see himself while drawing, the promising subject cannot fully know the future self who must fulfill the promise. In both texts, selfhood emerges not from pure presence but from a relation to absence, interruption, and temporal distance. Introduction At first glance, Nietzsche's sovereign individual and Derrida's self-portraitist seem to inhabit entirely different philosophical worlds. One belongs to a genealogy of morality, responsibility, and promise; the other emerges from a meditation on drawing, vision, and memory. Yet both figures confront a surprisingly similar problem: the impossibility of complete self-presence. In th...