Human Nature, History, and Structure: Foucault’s Challenge to Chomsky Through Saussure
Introduction The 1971 debate between Noam Chomsky and Michel Foucault stages a fundamental confrontation about human nature, political critique, and the grounds of emancipation. Chomsky defends the need for a concept of human essence to orient moral judgment and guide social transformation. Foucault, by contrast, warns that such a move risks projecting historically specific norms under the guise of universality. This disagreement is not merely ideological; it reflects a deeper methodological divide concerning whether “the human” precedes social and historical formations or is produced within them. When read alongside Ferdinand de Saussure’s distinction between synchronic and diachronic linguistics—and his rejection of a panchronic perspective—Foucault’s challenge appears less ad hoc than structurally grounded in a broader theoretical logic. Saussure’s theory of language helps clarify why Foucault is suspicious of transhistorical claims about human nature and why Chomsky’s searc...