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8/6/2019 Habermas, Foucault and Nietzsche- A Double Mi Sunders Tan Ing
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foucault studies Thomas Biebricher, 2005
ISSN: 1832-5203Foucault Studies, No 3, pp. 1-26, Nov 2005
ARTICLE
Habermas, Foucault and Nietzsche: A Double
Misunderstanding
Thomas Biebricher, University of Florida, Gainesville
Doyoumean tosay thatmyfundamentalNietzscheanismmightbeat the
originofdifferentmisunderstandings?1
1. Introduction
It wasJrgen Habermas himself who conceded at the funeral address for
MichelFoucault thathehadmet theFrenchphilosopheronlyonce:and
perhapsIdidnotunderstandhimwell.2Inthesocialsciencesthereishardly
anydisagreementthattheHabermasFoucaultdebateifthereeverwasone
hasinfacttobeconsideredacaseofseveremiscommunication.Thisfailure
toengageindialogueappearstobeevenmorepuzzling,sinceHabermasand
Foucault, as well as many of their respective followers, share at least an
interestinthesamemattersandoftenevenarriveatalmostindistinguishable
political conclusions. Certainly, the two philosophers differ greatly in their
accountsofreason,powerandlanguage,whichgoesalongwayinexplaining
lasting disagreements between the respective positions. However, what
commentators have often found more troubling than these substantial
controversies are the serious misunderstandings between the two thinkers,
startingwithHabermassextensivetreatmentandcritiqueofFoucault inthe
Philosophical Discourse of Modernity.3 While Foucault has been thoroughly
defended against the Habermasian accusations in the aftermath of the
PhilosophicalDiscourse ofModernity,4 these defences have mostly focused on
1 Foucault,Michel.FinalInterview,Raritan5(1985):5.
2 JrgenHabermas,TakingAimattheHeartofthePresent,inCritiqueandPower.
RecastingtheFoucault/Habermas Debate,ed.MichaelKelly(Cambridge:MITPress,
1994),103.
3 SamanthaAshenden&DavidOwen,Introduction:FoucaultandthePoliticsof
Critique,inFoucaultcontraHabermas.RecastingtheDialoguebetweenGenealogyand
CriticalTheory,eds.SamanthaAshenden&DavidOwen(London:Sage,1999),1.
4 BoIsenberg,DiekritischenBemerkungenvonJrgenHabermaszuMichel
Foucault,DeutscheZeitschriftfrPhilosophie39:13861399;JamesTully,ToThink
andtoActDifferently:FoucaultsFourReciprocalObjectionstoHabermasTheory,
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foucault studies, No 3, pp. 1-26
refutingthe immediateobjectionsraisedbyHabermaswithouttryingto link
these points of criticism to his general and possibly faulty portrayal of
Foucault. However, it is this problematic portrayal, as I will argue, which
constitutestheheartofthemiscommunicationbetweenthetwothinkersand
the rectification of which is required for a more productive dialogue.According to the thesis put forward here, Habermas fundamentally
misunderstands Foucaults genealogical approach in projecting the
methodologicalmaximsofthelattersearlierarchaeologicalapproachontohis
genealogicalwritingofhistory.Hence,Habermasmissestheuniquecharacter
ofFoucaultshybridapproach thatblendsscienceand literature.Thereason
for this misreading, as I will suggest, is Habermass misunderstanding of
Foucaults reading of Nietzsche, which is ultimately rooted in Habermass
own interpretationofNietzscheanphilosophyand theconceptofgenealogy
in
particular.
Themeritsthatlieinredeemingthisclaimaretwofold:notonlydoesit
become clear that the fiercenessof Habermass attacks is largely fuelledby
this misunderstanding of the general approach,but a clarification of these
matterswillalsofacilitateamoreproductive,albeitstillcontroversial,debate
betweenthetwoparadigmsofcritique5inwhichtheyactuallyarguewithone
another.Tobemoreprecise,IwillarguethatHabermastakesthegenealogist
Foucault tobeengaged indevelopinga superscience thataspires to reach
trueobjectivity,whereasFoucaulthimselfseesgenealogyasanapproachthat
makes
massive
use
of
rhetorical
strategies,
provides
a
fictional
re
writing
of
historyandthusbynomeansaspirestoreachobjectivitybut,onthecontrary,
onlyraisesverymodesttruthclaimsofapeculiarcharacter.Totheextentthat
Habermass objections rest on the failure of genealogy to reach the aim of
scientific objectivity, these objections lose their persuasiveness if it canbe
shown that this isnot theaimofgenealogy.Thereal issuebetween the two
inFoucaultcontraHabermas,eds.SamanthaAshenden& DavidOwen(London:Sage,
1999),90142.
5 Recently,thetermcritiquehasoftenbeenusedwithexclusivereferenceto
HabermassapproachincontrasttogenealogydenotingFoucaultsapproach.Cf.
DavidOwen,OrientationandEnlightenment,inFoucaultcontraHabermas,eds.
Ashenden&Owen(London:Sage,1999),2144.FollowingJudithButlerIwillusethe
termcritiqueinanonspecificsensethatcanrefertobothHabermassapproachand
whatFoucaultsometimescallscriticalpracticecriticalattitudeorsimplycritique.
Cf.JudithButler,WhatisCritique?AnEssayonFoucaultsVirtue,[online2001].
AvailablefromtheWorldWideWebat
andMichelFoucault,WhatisCritique,inWhatisEnlightenment?Eighteenth
CenturyAnswersandTwentiethCenturyQuestions,ed.JamesSchmidt(Berkeley:
UniversityofCaliforniaPress,1996),382398.Iassumethattherearedifferent
grammarsofcritique,butthetermcritiqueitselfshouldremainemployablewith
regardtobothHabermasandFoucaultaswellasothers.
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzscheapproaches then is the question, what role rhetoric can play for a critical
approach. Iwill argue thatHabermassown attempt todiscard approaches
that make heavy use of rhetoric as illegitimate ultimately fails. Thus, the
debate between the two paradigms could shift to discussing the relative
meritsandshortcomingsofaparticular grammarofcritique.Furthermore,this might clear the way for debates about the potential of productive
articulations, e.g., between Foucaults microanalysis of disciplinary
institutions and Habermass macrodiagnosis of a colonisation of the life
world, or Foucaults strategic analysis of the state on the basis of
governmentality and Habermass deliberative democracy. The Habermas
Foucaultdebatehasbeenrestrictedforfartoolongtomisunderstandingsand
polemicsaboutmetacriticalissues.Itistimetomoveontothenextstagein
this debate, a stage more concerned with substantive issues and less with
defending
some
dogma
of
how
to
practice
criticism.
Accepting
a
pluralism
of
different grammars of critique and articulating their relative merits in a
creativeandproductivewaymightbeamorepromisingoption.Thispaper
hopestocontributetosuchashift.
Theargumentisstructuredasfollows.First,Iwillprovideanaccount
ofHabermassreadingofbothNietzscheandFoucault,showinghowhelinks
the two thinkers and thereby arrives at his conclusion regarding the
Foucaultian approach. This section will be followed by a different
interpretation of Foucaults genealogical project that portrays the latter as
roughly a combination of science and literature. Based on this it will be
possible toshow that it isHabermassreadingofNietzschewhichunderlies
hisimpoverishedinterpretationofFoucault,erasingalltheliterary/rhetorical
elements.Finally,IwilltrytoreconstructaHabermasianpositionvisvisthe
genealogicalapproachincludingtheliterary/rhetoricalelements.6Theseclaims
willmakeuseofHabermasswritingsonJacquesDerrida,whoseparadigmis
treatedasstronglyrhetoricalinthePhilosophicalDiscourseofModernity.Itwill
becomeclearthateventhoughHabermasatfirstseemstobeopposedtothe
useofrhetoricingeneral,itturnsoutthathisaccountacceptsitasanecessary
device,notonly in literaturebutalso inphilosophy.Thus,Foucaultsgenealogy
maybedefendedasaphilosophicalapproachonHabermassownterms.
Finally,ageneralcaveatregardingtheterminologicaldifficultiesofthis
paperoughttobementionedattheoutset.Asthisintroductorysectionshows,
many of the arguments under scrutiny revolve around the (potential)
distinction among the spheres of science, philosophy and literature, and,
particularly, the use of rhetorical elements in each of them. Hence, the
6 Readerswhoarelessinterestedinanexplanatoryaccountofthemisunderstanding
betweenHabermasandFoucaultandwouldliketofindoutmoreaboutthe
significanceoftheissueofrhetoricfortherelationbetweenthetwoapproachesmay
finditconvenienttoskiptothissectionrightaway.
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foucault studies, No 3, pp. 1-26
respective definitions gain critical importance. Since my aim is to question
HabermassunderstandingofNietzscheandFoucault immanently,Iemploy
his terminology throughout thepapernot least topointout its limitations
and inconsistencies. Unfortunately, in my view, Habermas himself is not
entirely consistent in his usage of the terms with regard to Nietzsche andFoucault.Atthe leastthere isaslightshift inemphasis.Iwilltrytoremedy
this potential source of confusion by inserting some explanatory notes
regarding thesekey termswherenecessary.ForHabermassmostelaborate
andsystematictreatmentofthevariousdefinitionsanddistinctionsIreferthe
reader to theExcursuson theLevellingof theGenreDistinctionsbetween
PhilosophyandLiteratureinthePhilosophicalDiscourseofModernity,aswell
astosection4ofthispaperwherearespectivesummarycanbefound.
2. Habermas on N ietzsche and Foucault
2.1 Habermass Reading of Nietzsche
Habermassjudgment of the philosophy of Nietzsche has remained quite
consistentovertheyears.Nevertheless,hisviewshavechangedconsiderably
regardingthesignificanceofNietzsche.Hisfirstcriticalengagementwiththe
latters philosophy dates back to 1968. In this essay Habermas still feels
comfortable enough to write that Nietzsche holds nothing infectious
anymore.7 What is still of some, if only narrow, scholarly interest in
Nietzsche, according to Habermas, is the rudimentarypragmatist theoryof
knowledgethatcanbefoundinNietzscheswritingsstartingwiththesecond
ofhisUntimelyMeditations,On theUses andDisadvantages ofHistoryforLife,
and becoming even more prominent in the later writings. In Habermass
view, Nietzsches protopragmatism conceptualises knowledge and the
theoryofknowledgeasinextricablylinkedtohumaninterests.Manconfronts
andimposesuponnatureusefulillusionstogainmasteryoveritoratleastto
lessentheexistentialinsecurityhehastoendure.Categoriesofepistemology
and
ontology,
like
substance
and
causality,
are
not
true
in
the
sense
that
they
correspondtoanythinginreality:theyarerathersurvivalstrategiesemployed
bymankind thataredeeplyengraved inand reinforcedby the structureof
human language as well.8 Nietzsches initial aim is a critique of such
7 JrgenHabermas,Nachwort,inFriedrichNietzsche.Erkenntnistheoretische Schriften,
ed.H.Holz(Frankfurt/M.:Suhrkamp,1968),237[mytranslation].
8 ThesentencestructureofSubjectPredicateObjectissupposedtogiverisetoand
continuallyreinforcetheillusionofidentityandthemistakendistinctionofaction
andsubject,forexample.Cf.R.J.Hollingdale,TheoriesandInnovationsin
Nietzsche:Logic,TheoryofKnowledgeandMetaphysics,inNietzsche:ACritical
Reader,ed.PeterR.Sedgwick(Oxford:Blackwell,1995),111122.
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzschemetaphysics, a critique that exposes human reason in its contingency and,
moreover, reveals the will to power that always lurksbehind it.Nietzsche,
saysHabermas, concludes that truth in the classical senseof the term isan
obsoletecategorybecausethetruthofanidearestsonitsusefulnessandnot
itscorrespondencetoreality:wecanonlygiveinterpretationsthevalidityofwhich relies on valuejudgments related to a certain perspective and
therefore remains fundamentally relative.9 As a consequence, cognitive
(true/false) and normative (right/wrong) judgments are assimilated to
aestheticpreferencesthatarerelatedtoaperspectivismofvalues.Nietzsches
world thus turns out to be one of perpetual masquerade, deception and
illusionforwhichtheattitudeofanartistappearstobemoreappropriatethan
the traditional theoryofknowledge.Behind theveilofappearances there is
no longer an essence to be discovered (which would be a motif of
conventional
metaphysics),
and,
strictly
speaking,
the
semantics
of
veil,
illusionandsoonthereforeceasetohaveanymeaning,dealingyetanother
blowtometaphysics.
What Habermas finds intriguing in this pragmatist theory of
knowledge ismostly theaffinity tohisown thoughtson theconceptual link
betweenknowledgeandhumaninterestsastheyarefoundinhisbookofthe
same title.10 Here Habermas tries to argue against the positivist self
understanding of the social and natural sciences in favour of quasi
transcendental human interests that inform the formation of scientific
knowledge
and
thereby
negate
the
ideal
of
strict
objectivity.
While
both
philosophersagreeintheircritiqueofthepositivistsciencesthatdenythelink
betweenknowledgeandinterests,Habermastreatstheillusionsofmankind
as elementsof a conception of possible control over nature specific to the
speciesthathasbeenformedinacollectiveformationprocessofthelatter.11
Hestresses thepointthat there isadifferencebetween theuseful illusionof
causality, forexample, thatenables successful interventions intonatureand
otherratherdreamlikeillusions,theimplementationofwhichnecessarilyfails
in the face of the materiality of nature. Nietzsches refusal to distinguish
between these two sensesof illusionandhisassimilationof the firstone to
deceptionconstitutesHabermassmainpointofcriticism.Thelatterinstead
opts for a critical reflection of mankinds useful illusions and the quasi
transcendentalintereststhatguidethem.
WhileHabermasusesNietzscheashardlymorethananegativefoilin
Knowledge and Human Interests, his evaluation of Nietzsches significance
changes dramatically in the following twenty years. In the Philosophical
DiscourseofModernity,Nietzschesphilosophysignifiesnothing lessthan the
9 Habermas,Nachwort,256[mytranslation].
10 JrgenHabermas,KnowledgeandHumanInterests(Boston:BeaconPress,1971).
11 Habermas,Nachwort,525[mytranslation].
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foucault studies, No 3, pp. 1-26
entry point to postmodernity. Habermas famously portrays the different
branchesofpostmodernismasmodifiedcontinuationsofdifferentelementsin
Nietzschesphilosophy.
According to Habermas, the radical character of Nietzsches
philosophynowliesinitsattempttoleavebehindthediscourseofmodernitythathasbeenevolvingaroundvaryingselfcritiquesofreasonandinsteadopt
for myth, which, in its illusory character, is linked to the realm of the
aesthetic.12As inhisanalysisof1968,HabermasseesaNietzschean fixation
on theaestheticaspectofreason. Therespectiveconsequencesappear tobe
more severe to Habermas now as he perceives the aesthetic to havebeen
assimilated to the irrational myth and to hold no connection to reason
anymore. For Habermas the quintessence of Nietzsches philosophy is still
contained in the view of the world as one of illusion and deception. In it
theoretical
and
practical
validity
claims
have
been
reduced
to
power
laden
evaluationsthatareasrelativeasartisticpreferencesandtheonlyrationality
of which lies in an attempted augmentation of power. This most extreme
assaultofreasonyetthatunmasksitsunderlyingwilltopowerandconfronts
reasonwithanewartisticmythologysupposedlyprovides theblueprint for
thepostmodernistcritiquesofreasonthatHabermasattributestoDerridaand
FoucaultwithHeideggerandBatailleasrespectiveintermediaries.
CrucialtoHabermassreadingofthepostmodernistsishisportrayal
ofwhatheperceivestobethedilemmaofNietzschescritiqueofreason:the
selfreferentialityofacritiqueofreasonthatitselfhastomakeuseofreasonas
a resource. Habermas identifies two strategiesbetween which Nietzsche is
saidtooscillate.Ontheonehand,thereistheattemptofascientificallyoriented
critiqueofreasonthatshouldtakeontheformofanartisticcontemplationof
the world.13 This critique of reason would employ psychological and
historicalmethodstounmaskthepowerbehind it.Thisstrategysupposedly
becomes a template for Batailles analysis of the sacred and Foucaults
genealogical writing of history. On the other hand there is thephilosophical
critiqueofmetaphysicsthatclaimstheknowledgeoftheinitiatetogobeyond
philosophyitself.ThisstrategysupposedlyanimatesHeideggersontological
critiqueofmetaphysicsandDerridasdeconstructiveproject.
Aswillbeshown,itisthisclearcutdistinctionbetweentwostrategies
and two respective paths into postmodernity that lies at thebottom of
HabermassmistakenoratleastimpoverishedaccountofFoucault.
12 JrgenHabermas,PhilosophicalDiscourseofModernity.TwelveLectures
(Cambridge:MITPress,1998),107.
13 Habermas,PhilosophicalDiscourse,96.
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzsche
2.2HabermassReadingofFoucault
HabermasstreatmentofFoucaultinthePhilosophicalDiscourseofModernityis
extensive.Twoentirechaptersaredevoted to theanalysis,more than in the
case of any other author discussed in thebook. As mentionedbefore, the
criticismsofFoucaultthatthechapterscontainhavebeenputunderscrutiny
on numerous occasions and therefore I shall focus on Habermass general
interpretationofFoucaultsapproach. It isnot thecriticismsbut thegeneral
interpretation thatultimatelystands in thewayofa fruitfuldebatebetween
thetwopositions.
HabermassreadingofFoucaultdealswithafairlywideselectionofhis
works, ranging from Madness and Civilization to The Order of Things, the
Archaeology of Knowledge, The Order of Discourse, Discipline and Punish and,
finally,theHistoryofSexualityVol.1.14Whatdeservesmentioningfirstisthata
large part of the chapters devoted to Foucault displays an admirable
explicativeandanalyticalsophisticationonHabermasspart.Theaccounthe
presentsisahighlysynthesizedonethatformsafairlycoherentwholeoutof
whatmanycommentatorshaveoftenperceivedasaKafkaesquelabyrinthof
thought.Yet, for all the empathyHabermas shows inhis analysisof single
works,hisfinalcharacterisationofFoucaultsapproachdoesnotdojusticeto
itscomplexitiesandsubtleties.
Before we can begin an inquiry into the reasons for this
misrepresentation,ashortsynopsisofHabermass interpretationofFoucault
isrequired.Asfarastheearlyworksareconcerned,Habermasprovestobe
aninsightfulreaderwhoisawareoftheintricaciesandspecificidiosyncrasies
of an author. Foucaults archaeology is depicted as a protostructuralist
attempt to write a history of the human sciences that doubts the
progressivism of Enlightenment thought and points out the random
emergence of certain knowledge structures (the episteme, as Foucault calls
them).Theseneitheradhere toaPopperian logicof sciencenoreven to the
much weaker progressivism of a Kuhnian approach. Habermas accurately
depictshowFoucault criticizes the currenthuman sciencesbecauseof their
paradoxical humanistic epistemicbasis15 and the way in which Foucault
14 VolumesIIandIIIoftheHistoryofSexualitywerepublishedrightbeforethe
publicationofthePhilosophicalDiscourseofModernityandthereforecouldnotbe
included.Habermassupposedlyhasreadthosevolumes(ashehasstatedinan
interviewwiththeauthor)buthasneverwrittenonthem.
15 Whatismeantbythis,istheframeworkofthePhilosophyoftheSubjectwhich,
accordingtoFoucault,isthefoundationofallthemodernhumansciences.This
epistemeiscriticizedinthefinalchapterofTheOrderofThingsbecauseofits
conceptualisationofmanasanempiricaltranscendentaldoublethatissupposedto
leadtothreeinsurmountableparadoxesthatkeepresurfacinginthehumansciences
andcanonlybeovercomeinastructuralistparadigmifatall.
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foucault studies, No 3, pp. 1-26
flirtswith the ideaof structuralist antisciences.These shouldpossibly take
theplaceofthetraditionalhumansciences,which,accordingtoFoucault,do
not even deserve tobe called sciences in the strict sense of the term. The
starkest contrast between these and their structuralist version lies in the
professedantihermeneuticalapproachofthelatter;theirdetachedgazeaimsto dissolve meaning into the anonymous play of discourses, thus trying to
circumvent the paradoxes that haunt the traditional human sciences and
accountfortheirshakyfoundation.
Habermasthengoesontodiscusstheproblemsandinconsistenciesof
such an archaeology, most of which havebeen voicedbefore and some of
whichevenFoucaulthimselfhasacknowledgedasvalid.16Thecrucialpoint
in Habermass discussion is his view of Foucaults introduction of a new
historical research design for which the latter uses the Nietzschean term
genealogy.
Habermasassumes that this isa response to the shortcomingsof the
archaeological approach, the aims of which remain unaltered. Foucaults
genealogy is to startamodified attempt tobreak free from theparadoxical
humanist framework of the pseudosciences and, in Habermass reading,
aspires to gain true objectivity of knowledge.17 According to the
PhilosophicalDiscourseofModernity,Foucaulthopes tohave found thekey to
this new science in the form of a theory of power. The latter is said to
inform the genealogical gaze and explain the (re)formation of discursive
landscapesasmanifestationsoftheeverchangingfaceofpower.
HabermasconcludeslaconicallybypointingoutthatFoucaultssuper
science cannot meet its selfset standards and turns out to be even less
scientific than its traditional counterparts in its subjectivism, presentism,
relativismandcryptonormativism.18IfHabermasiscorrectaboutFoucaults
ambitiousaims,onecanhardlycharacterisegenealogyasmorethanafailure
butwhatifgenealogyweresupposedtobetheoppositeofwhatHabermas
thinks?
16 Cf.JeanPiaget,StructuralismandPhilosophy,inMichelFoucault.Critical
AssessmentsVol.II,ed.BarrySmart(London:Routledge,1994),404407andMichel
Foucault,ArchaeologyofKnowledge(NewYork:Pantheon,1982),320.
17 Habermas,PhilosophicalDiscourse,323.
18 Forabriefsummaryoftheseobjectionsseethefollowingchapter.
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzsche3. A Different Reading of Foucaults Genealogy
Topindowngenealogyasa researchdesignhas remaineda taskburdened
with difficulties, as the continuous debate especially among readers
sympathetic toFoucaultproves.19Still, itappears thatsome traitshavebeen
widely agreed on:20 genealogy is a historical method that emphasizes the
writingofhistory,whichisstronglyopposedtoasearchforauthenticorigins
(Ursprnge) and undistorted essences. These categories are perceived as
belonging toametaphysical framework that imposesanorderuponhistory
thatdoesnotexist.Onthecontrary,thegenealogicalhistoriantriestodepict
herobjectasacomplexinterplayoffactorsandwillcultivatethedetailsand
accidents that accompany every beginning.21 Genealogical history, as a
consequence,ischaracterisedbyadiscontinuitythatdeniesthepossibilityof
apresent that that canbeunderstood as the simple culminationof a linear
processinthepast.Thisleadstoadefamiliarizationofboththepastandthe
present,sincetheyarenolongerconnectedbyastraightlineofeventsbutby
a contingentandprecariousprocess that shows that thepresent isahighly
improbable outcome of the past,just as this past turns out tobe a highly
improbable antehistory of the present. Finally, it is not just the way
genealogy envisionshistorybutalso itsprofessedgoal to show thatcertain
phenomena exist within history in the first place that accounts for it as a
specific approach. Just as Nietzsche tried to write a natural history of
something that was not even supposed to have a history at all (morals),
Foucault setsout todescribephenomena like the souland thebodyamong
many others as products of history.22 Exposing phenomena in their utter
historicityunderlinesthestronglyantimetaphysicalthrustofgenealogythat
tries to undermine the certainty of the absolutes23 in a manner that is
potentially liberating:24 if things have been different before and their
present form isan improbableoutcomeof thepast then these thingscanbe
19 Cf.Owen,OrientationandEnlightenment.
20 Cf.MichaelDonnelly,FoucaultsGenealogyandtheHumanSciences,inFoucault.
CriticalAssessmentsVol.II,ed.BarrySmart(London:Routledge,1994),329343;David
Hoy,Nietzsche,Hume,andtheGenealogicalMethod,inNietzsche,Genealogy,
Morality,ed.RichardSchacht(Berkeley:UniversityofCaliforniaPress,1994),251268;
JohnRajchman,TheStoryofFoucaultsHistory,inFoucault.CriticalAssessments
Vol.II,ed.BarrySmart(London:Routledge,1994),363388.
21 MichelFoucault,Nietzsche,Genealogy,History,inLanguage,CounterMemory,
Practice,ed.DonaldF.Bouchard(Ithaca:CornellUniversityPress,1977),144.
22 Cf.MichelFoucault,DisciplineandPunish(NewYork:Vintage,1979).
23 Foucault,Nietzsche,Genealogy,History,153.
24 Rajchman,TheStoryofFoucaultsHistory,394.
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foucault studies, No 3, pp. 1-26
different, which opens up a space of concrete freedom, that is of possible
transformation.25
However,byascribingapotentiallyliberatingeffecttogenealogy,one
has alreadyventured slightlybeyond its ratheruncontroversial tenets since
therealdebaterevolvesaroundtwointerconnectedquestions:isgenealogya
criticalapproach,and ifso,howdoesthiskindofcritiqueorcriticalpractice
operate? In other words, what is the grammar of this critique? For
Habermassobjectionstogenealogytheallegedstrictlyscientificambitionsof
the latter acquire utmost importance. Admittedly, Foucault speaks of his
approachaspatientlydocumentaryandgoeson toargue that ifhistory is
the endlessly repeated play of dominations and the development of
humanity is a series of interpretations, then the role of genealogy is to
record its history.26 This reminds one of the selfunderstanding of the
archaeological observer who claims neutrality and objectivity for her gazethat aims to historicize everything except for itself.27 A lack of self
referentialitywidelyconsideredtobeoneofthemostseriousshortcomingsof
thearchaeologicalmethod.28
Nevertheless, as I will argue, these scientific sounding remnants of
archaeology are more and more supplemented by a strictly genealogical
element that is still relatively weak in Foucaults early essay on Nietzsche,
Genealogy,History,which isaprolegomenon tohisgenealogicalworkphase,
but virtually rises to dominance at the height of this phase. These two
elements
can
help
illuminate
not
only
the
methodological
standards
of
Foucaultsnewapproachbutalsoitscriticalcharacter.
Corresponding to the archaeological element that stresses the detached
descriptionofadiscontinuousandcontingentcourseofhistorythereisafirst
25 MichelFoucault,CriticalTheory/IntellectualHistory,inCritiqueandPower,ed.
MichaelKelly(Cambridge:MITPress,1994),127.
26 Foucault,Nietzsche,Genealogy,History,139,152.
27 Asaremindertothealmostscientisticandstronglypositivistambitionsoftheproto
structuralistarchaeologicalprogramme,onemayciteFoucaultsselfportrayalasa
happypositivistwhoidentifiestherulesofdiscoursealmostinductivelywith
referencetoobservableclustersofrealstatements.MichelFoucault,Archaeologyof
Knowledge,125.Moreover,theviewofarchaeologyasanethnologyofthecultureto
whichwebelong.Itrytoplacemyselfoutsideoftheculturewebelongto,[]in
ordertofindouthowitcouldactuallyemerge.MichelFoucault,WersindSie,
ProfessorFoucault?,inMichelFoucault.Schriften,Band1,ed.DanielDefert
(Frankfurt/M.:Suhrkamp,2001),776[mytranslation].NotealsoFoucaultscontention
thatanarchaeologicaldiscourseanalysiswouldbesuperiortotheestablishedhuman
sciencessuchasthatsetofdisciplineswhichwecallhistoryofideas,historyof
sciences,historyofthought,historyofknowledgebecauseoftheshaky
epistemologicalfoundationofthesewouldbesciences.MichelFoucault,Politics
andtheStudyofDiscourse,inTheFoucaultEffect,ed.ColinGordonetal.(Chicago:
UniversityofChicagoPress,1991),63.
28 Cf.HansHerbertKgler,MichelFoucault(Stuttgart:Metzler,1994).
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzschelevel of critique that has been characterized as a critique of aspectival
captivity.29Theaimofthislevelofcritique,whichisstill,ifonlytoacertain
extent,compatiblewiththescientificselfunderstandingofarchaeology,isto
show that things can be different. It is to undermine their selfevident
character that leaves no room for any plausible alternative and is largelybasedonverifiablehistoricalsources.Thispartof thecritiquesimplypoints
outthatlogicallythereisnonecessityatalltothestatusquobeingthewayit
is. It tries toargueagainstan impoverished imagination that is caught ina
certainperspectivebyconfrontingitwithadifferentone.30
The question of the status of this other perspectivebrings us to the
second level of critique that corresponds to its strictlygenealogical element.
Mostimportantly,thiselementtakesthenotionofselfreferentialityseriously.
Foucault leavesbehind the notion of an outside perspective on the power
laden
discursive
formations
from
which
to
speak
the
truth
about
these
objects
in theclassicsenseof theword.ThegenealogistFoucaultacknowledgeshis
beingimmersedinpowerrelationsandselfconsciouslyapplieshisaxiomofa
circular relationbetweenpowerandknowledge tohisowngenealogies.As
onecommentatorhasputit:
Unlike theneutral,disinterested,archaeologicalhistorian, theNietzschean
genealogistadmits thepolemical interestsmotivating the investigation.[]
nolongerclaimingtobeoutsidethesocialpracticesanalysed.31
Thus,
genealogy
consequently
ceases
to
raise
strong
truth
claims
and
considers itselftobeoneamongmanymoreor lessbiased interpretationsof
(historical) reality. It explicitly subscribes to a radical perspectivism in this
sense, which obviously is at odds with conventional truth claims in the
naturalandeveninthesocialsciences.
Still, while Foucault would never claim a privileged position for his
interpretationof thesocialworldon thebasisofbetterarguments,he isnot
contentwiththejuxtapositionofhisperspectivetoothers.32However,instead
29DavidOwen,KritikundGefangenschaft.GenealogieundKritischeTheorie,inMichel
Foucault.ZwischenbilanzeinerRezeption,eds.AxelHonneth&MartinSaar
(Frankfurt/M.:Suhrkamp,2003),140.
30 Owenthinksthatthiscritiqueofaspectivalcaptivitydescribesthecriticalpotentialin
itsentirety.Aswillbeshown,thislargelyignorestheaspectofFoucaultscritique
fromwhichitderivesitsuniqueandinnovativecharacter.
31 DavidHoy,Introduction,inFoucault:ACriticalReader,ed.DavidHoy(Oxford:
Blackwell,1986),6.Cf.MichelFoucault,QuestionsofMethod,inAfterPhilosophy.
EndorTransformation?,eds.KennethBaynesetal.(Cambridge:MITPress,1987),103;
MichelFoucault,Body/Power,inPower/Knowledge.SelectedInterviewsandOther
WritingsbyMichelFoucault,ed.ColinGordon(NewYork:PrenticeHall,1999),62and
ThomasSchfer,ReflektierteVernunft(Frankfurt/M.:Suhrkamp,1995).
32 AlthoughithastobementionedthatFoucaultsowncommentsonhisapproach
sometimespointintothisdirectionwhenhemaintainsthathisanalysesarenothing
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ofusingadiscursive framework toargue for the superiorityofhisaccount
overothers,whichwouldnot sitwellwithhisprofessedperspectivism,he
uses the nondiscursive framework of rhetoric to make his history of the
present more appealing and suggestive. This rhetoric, which has to be
consideredan indispensableaspectof thegenealogicalapproach,33
hasbeenscrutinizedby several commentators. They have mostly stressed Foucaults
hyperbolism, his suggestive analogies, his drastic generalisations and other
textualmicrostrategiessuchassubstitutionofnounsbyverbsasthecoreof
his rhetorical repertoire.34 What Speech Act Theory would call the
perlocutionary effect of these devices is to give the genealogies an air of
drama,urgencyandanalmostapocalypticundertone.Thus,itbecomesclear
that Foucault does notjust want to present another perspective on social
reality;he also tries topersuade (not convince) the readers to adopt anew
perspective
by
painting
the
status
quo
in
overly
disconcerting
colours.
The strictlygenealogicalelementofFoucaults approach turnsout to
bring genealogy close to fictional discourses:35 the genealogist reduces his
truth claims tomoreor less literary interpretations thatmakeheavyuseof
rhetoric, which is most closely associated with poetic language. In sum,
genealogy presents itself as a unique and hybrid blend of scientific and
fictional elements, incorporating accounts based on verifiable facts and
documentsaswellas the rhetoricallyladen arrangementof thismaterial to
producefictionalhistoriesofourpresent.36
The hybrid character of this critical approach that contains heterogeneous
elementshasperhapsbeenbestcapturedbyFoucaulthimself:
Astotheproblemoffiction,itseemstometobeaveryimportantone;Iam
wellawarethatIhaveneverwrittenanythingbutfictions.Idonotmeanto
say,however,thattruthisabsent.Itseemstomethatthepossibilityexistsfor
fictiontofunctionintruth,forafictionaldiscoursetoinduceeffectsoftruth,
morethananofferofstrategicknowledgetobeusedorrefusedbyreaders.Cf.
MichelFoucault,PowerandStrategies,inPower/Knowledge,ed.ColinGordon(New
York:PrenticeHall,1999),145.
33 MartinSaar,GenealogieundSubjektivitt,inMichelFoucault.Zwischenbilanzeiner
Rezeption,eds.AxelHonneth&MartinSaar(Frankfurt/M.:Suhrkamp,2003),175.
34 Cf.HaydenWhite,TheHistoriographyofAntiHumanism,inMichelFoucault.
CriticalAssessmentsVol.III,ed.BarrySmart(London:Routledge,1994),4876;William
E.Connolly,Taylor,Foucault,andOtherness,PoliticalTheory13(1985):365376;
Hoy,Introduction,126.
35 Cf.Butler,WhatisCritique,1516.
36 Cf.forthisinterpretationButler,WhatisCritique;Schfer,ReflektierteVernunft;
Hoy,IntroductionandPaulPatton,MichelFoucault:TheEthicsofan
Intellectual,inMichelFoucaultCriticalAssessmentsVol.III;ed.BarrySmart(London:
Routledge,1994),162170.
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzscheand forbringing itabout thata truediscourseengendersor manufactures
somethingthatdoesnotasyetexist,thatis,fictionsit.37
Onthebasisofthistwodimensionalaccountofgenealogy,itisnowpossible
toanalyseHabermassmisreadingandtoinquireintothereasonsthatmight
liebehindit.
Firstofall itshouldbenoted thatan interpretationofgenealogyasa
largely rhetorical framework numbs the sting of Habermass accusations
considerably.Even if onedoesnot question thevalidityof theseobjections
entirely, theiracuity isderived from the inconsistencyofFoucaultsalleged
superscientificambitionsandthecompletefailuretoreachthesestandards.If
itisFoucaultsintentioninsteadtowriteafictionalhistoryofthepresentthat
doesnotaimtobesuper butrathersubscientific,thenHabermassproofof
relativism, subjectivism and to a certain degree presentism and crypto
normativism in Foucault ceases to have an unmasking effect.38 In the end,
Foucault himself would concede a certain subjectivism, relativism and
presentism as being an integral, though not the only, aspect of his
genealogies.
How doesHabermasarrive at a reading ofFoucaults approach that
implicatestheseillaimedcriticisms?TheproblemlieswithHabermassrather
staticandhomogenizingapproach toreadingFoucault.Somecommentators
have argued that this is an intentional strategy that imposes themodernist
viewoftheauthorandthecoherentoeuvreonthepoststructuralistFoucault
inordertoshowhowhefailstoliveuptothestandardsthataccompanythis
view.39Ratherthanfollowingthesespeculationsaboutthestrategicintentions
behind Habermass intelligent, calculated and deliberate40 misreading of
Foucault,Ishalltrytoexplainitsonesidednessbyplacingitinthecontextof
HabermassreadingofNietzsche.ThemisreadingofFoucault,Iwillcontend,
37 MichelFoucault,TheHistoryofSexuality,inPower/Knowledge,ed.ColinGordon
(NewYork:PrenticeHall,1999),193.
38 Inshort,subjectivismandrelativismbothrefertoFoucaultsrefusaltoidentifysome
kindofcognitiveornormativeorderasafoundationofhiswritingofhistory.Ifatall,
thenormativeorderremainsimplicitandunacknowledged,whichisemphasizedby
thechargeofcryptonormativism.Presentism,finally,referstoFocaultsattemptto
describepracticesfromanoutsideperspectivewithoutrecoursetohermeneutic
procedures,which,accordingtoHabermas,leadstoahistoriographythatis
narcissisticallyorientedtothestandpointofthehistorianandinstrumentalisesthe
contemplationofthepastfortheneedsofthepresent.Habermas,Philosophical
Discourse,278.
39 Cf.MitchellDean,CriticalandEffectiveHistories(London:Routledge,1994);Ingeborg
Villinger&BernhardDotzler,ZweiKapitelfrsich.NotizenzuHabermas
FoucaultKritik,kultuRRevolution11(1986):6769.
40 DanielConway,Paxdedeux:HabermasandFoucaultinGenealogical
Communication,inFoucaultcontraHabermas,eds.Ashenden&Owen(London:Sage,
1999),75.
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is rooted in a debatable decision Habermas makes in reconstructing
Nietzschesphilosophy.
Asmentionedabove,Habermas seesNietzschesattemptata radical
critiqueofreasonasconfrontedwithachoicebetweentwostrictlyseparable
strategies: either it is the scientific strategy that makes use of historicaland/orpsychologicaldevicesandisultimatelyinformedbyatheoryofpower,
or it is the philosophical strategy of a fundamental antimetaphysics that
operatesonthebasisofanesoteric,privilegedinsight.41
BeforeIturntotheimpactthisconceptualdecisionhasonHabermass
portrayal of Foucaults approach, it is important to note that it is a highly
debatable conceptualisation that goes strongly against the grain of more
recent research done on Nietzsches genealogical framework. While
commentators widely differ on a wide array of questions surrounding
Nietzsches
approach,
most
of
them
are
adamant
about
its
strongly
hybrid
character,42aposition that Iwill try todefendhereaswell. Inshort,On the
Genealogy ofMorals combines the virtually positivist claims of the natural
scientistofmoralswiththeantimetaphysicalsubjectivismofthephilosopher
artistwhohaslostallfaithinobjectivity,scienceandtruth.
Ontheonehand,onecanstillfindtracesofthepositivistNietzsche
ofHuman,All TooHuman inOn the Genealogy ofMorals. Nietzsche himself
positions his latest treatise in continuity with his first attempt at writing a
history of morality in the former book,43 an attempt that was just as
41 InthiscontextHabermasemphasisesthedifferencebetweenscienceandphilosophy.
Aswillbecomeclearinthefollowingparagraphs,hisdepictionssuggestthatthe
formertendstobebasedonapositivistmethodologyandaspirestoprovidean
objectiveaccountofhowthingsreallyareincontrasttomystificationsand
superstitions.Philosophysignifiestheattempttocallintoquestionthemetaphysical
frameworksdevelopedbyKantandothersthatlendepistemologicallegitimacytothe
claimsofthesessciences.Incontrasttothisdistinction,theonesintroducedinthe
followingsectionsaremuchmorefocusedonthevariousfunctionsof(metaphorical)
languageinthesegenresnottheleastbecauseliteraturegainsmoreimportanceas
anotherpotentiallydistinctgenre.Thisleadstoaslightincongruenceofthevarious
definitions/distinctions.
42 MacIntyredescribestheprojectasamixtureofencyclopediaandgenealogy.
AlasdairMacIntyre,GenealogiesandSubversions,inNietzsche,Genealogy,Morality,
ed.RichardSchacht(Berkeley:UniversityofCaliforniaPress,1994),293.Leiterpoints
outthetensionbetweenNietzschesrelativisttruthscepticismandhisprotoscientific
EmpiricismandNaturalism.BrianLeiter,PerspectivisminNietzschesGenealogyof
Morals,inNietzsche,Genealogy,Morality,ed.RichardSchacht(Berkeley:Universityof
CaliforniaPress,1994),339.Hoydescribesgenealogyinthefollowingway:There
arefacts,butonlyinsofarastheyinhereininterpretations.Theinterpretationwill
determinewhatcountsasafact.Hoy,Nietzsche,262.
43 FriedrichNietzsche,OntheGenealogyofMorality[Translated,withandIntroduction
andNotesbyMaudemarieClarkandAlanJ.Swensen](Cambridge:Hackett,1998),1.
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzschenaturalistic44initsapproachastheoneinOntheGenealogyofMorals,which
is another indication of the scientific aspect of the project that plots the
soberedscientificviewofmoralityasastrictlynaturalphenomenonagainst
metaphysicalandreligiousinterpretations.Notealsothenumerousreferences
Nietzschemakestothenecessityofwritingtherealhistoryofmorality,themoralitywhichhasreallyexisted,reallybeenlived.45Thisemphasisonthe
real may well be considered to betray the ambitions of the scientific
investigator.Moreover,whenhewritesthathewantstosavePaulRe46from
hypothesizing into theblue, since the real colour of genealogy is gray,
which is to say that which can be documented, which can really be
ascertained, which has really existed, in short, the very long, difficultto
decipherhieroglyphicwritingof thehumanmoralpast,47 itsoundsalmost
reminiscent of positivisms call for a scientific reasoning that ought tobe
strictly
based
on
observable
evidence.
Nietzsches
On
the
Genealogy
of
Morals
incertainpartsbreathesthespiritoftheenthusiasticallypositivistsciences
ofhistime.48However,wefindhimgoingbeyondthisscientificreasoning
when he mocks the natural sciences about their seemingly most objective
realmandassertsthattheystillstandundertheseductionoflanguage in
theirenterprises.Hence,Nietzsche considers ithis task to take the analysis
beyond the confinements of metaphysics as they are exemplified in
language.49 How the scientific and the philosophical strategies that
HabermasascribestoNietzscheblendinavirtuallyindistinguishablemanner
in the approach taken in Genealogy is probablybest demonstratedby the
ambivalentstatusof languageand thestudyof it in the treatise.On theone
hand, Nietzsche uses etymology as a device that provides him with major
clues regarding his hypothesis about the origin of good and bad. He
obviouslyfindsnothingwronginmakinguseofetymologyasaconventional
scienceof language toapproach theproblem.On theotherhand,asalready
stated,heblamesthenaturalsciencesandWesternpostSocraticthoughtin
generalforfallingpreytothemetaphysicalspellsoflanguage,whichmakes
aprofessedly antipositivistphilosophical inquiry into thematterofmorals
44 MaudemarieClark,introductiontoOntheGenealogyofMorality,byFriedrich
Nietzsche,xxii.
45 Nietzsche,OntheGenealogyofMorality,56.
46 RepublishedabookcalledDerUrsprungdermoralischenEmpfindungenin1877.The
GenealogyofMoralsispartlyacriticalresponsetoit.
47 Nietzsche,OntheGenealogyofMorality,6.
48 OnemightalsoaddthatthejargonofTheGenealogyofMoralsseemstobehighly
influencedby(pseudo)scienceslikeDarwinism(althoughNietzschethoughtthat
thelatterssurvivalofthefittestsignalledonlythearrivalofTheLastMan),
EvolutionaryBiologyingeneral,butalsooftheoriesofraceandeugenics.Thisisnot
tosaythatNietzschewasaspiritualancestorofNazism,butthathewasinfluenced
bythediscourseofhistimes.
49 Nietzsche,OntheGenealogyofMorality,12,25.
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necessary. Thus, while working within the limits of language/metaphysics,
Nietzschesimultaneouslyistryingtogobeyondthem.Still,thesearenottwo
separablestrategiesbetweenwhich there isachoice,asHabermassuggests.
The historical, psychological and etymological aspects of Nietzsches
enterprise would remain helplessly within the gravitational field ofmetaphysicswereitnotfortheaccompanyingantimetaphysicalthrustofthe
analysisthattriestotheorizemoralitywithoutresortingtotheconceptofthe
freewilled subject, leavingbehind the prejudices that we inherit from our
collectiveuseof language.Thisantimetaphysics,however, stillneeds tobe
informedbyconventionalscientificanalysesliketheetymologicalonethat
is so integral to the theses of On the Genealogy ofMorals. Science without
philosophy remains nave;philosophy without science remainsblind. Since
these two elements of the genealogical framework presuppose each other
(while
at
the
same
time
undermining
each
other
to
a
certain
extent),
they
should ratherbeviewedas twoaspectsofonehybridapproach.Otherwise
the originality of Nietzsches On the Genealogy ofMorals, which is largely
constitutedbythisveryhybridity,getsdissolvedintothemoreconventional
Habermasianchoicebetweentwopartiallyconflictingapproachesthatcannot
formawhole.
Nietzschesownversionofgenealogyhasaremarkableresemblanceto
itsFoucaultiancounterpartinthatittriestointegrateheterogeneouselements.
However, the point to stress here is not that Nietzsches and Foucaults
genealogiesareidentical,50butthattheyatleastshareahybridcharacterthat
50 Theydiffermostimportantlyinthenormative/criticalclaimstheyraiseandtheway
thesearesupported:Foucaultsclaimsareweakerandstronglyrhetorically
supported,whileinNietzschescasetheyarecertainlystronger,meaning,theyclaim
superiorityoverotherviews,andaresupposedtobesupportedbyeitherthe
aforementionedtheoryofpower(Habermas,PhilosophicalDiscourse)orthestructure
ofthegenealogicalinterrogationfromwhichitsrelativevalidityisderived.Daniel
Conway,GenealogyandCriticalMethod,inNietzsche,Genealogy,Morality,ed.
RichardSchacht(Berkeley:UniversityofCaliforniaPress,1994),325.Alternatively
thesupportissupposedtocomefromamethodologicallyturnedtheoryof
health/sickness(Hoy,Nietzsche,266).RecentlyithasbeensuggestedthatFoucault
wasutterlywrongtoeverassumethatgenealogywasaNietzschenprojectatall,
sincethelattersuseofthetermjustmockedgenealogistsandtheirenterprise.
JacquelineStevens,OntheMoralsofGenealogy,PoliticalTheory31(2003):559.
AccordingtoStevens,Nietzschewasnotpostulatingagenealogy(OntheGenealogyof
MoralsissaidtobeacritiqueofsuchagenealogybyPaulRe)butahistoryoforigins
(Entstehungsgeschichte)ofmorals.AlthoughIdisagreewiththisclaim,therestriction
ofspacedoesnotpermitmetoengageinadetailedcritiqueofit,and,moreover,it
doesnothaveanyimmediateimpactontheargumentpresentedhere.AsStevens
herselfconcedes,itwouldbefairtosaythatmuchofwhatNietzschecallshistory,
Foucaultandhisfollowerscallgenealogy.Stevens,OntheMoralsofGenealogy,
578.Thus,FoucaultcanstillproperlybeconsideredafollowerofNietzscheinterms
ofthesubstanceoftheirrespectivewritingofhistory,eveniftheonewastocall
history(Geschichte/Historie)whattheothercallsgenealogy.
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and NietzscheHabermass respective accounts miss in both cases, with the first miss
partially causing the second one. Thisbrings us to the impacts of such a
readingofNietzsche.
Ifonedistinguishes categoricallybetween two separableNietzschean
strategiesanddoesnottreatthemasaspectsofonehybridproject,thenoneisalmostbound to compartmentalize the Discourse of (Post) Modernity the
way Habermas does it, with one strictly scientific and one purely
philosophical passage. It is not difficult to imagine, then, how Habermas
arrivesathisreadingofFoucault.Guidedbythatconceptualdecision,itisall
tooeasy to find textualevidence that supports thenotionofFoucaultasan
epigone of the scientific Nietzsche. Foucaults archaeology actually is the
manifestation of a scientific Nietzscheanism and since the archaeological
element is still present even inNietzsche,Genealogy,History, Habermas can
easily
assume
that
the
archaeological
goal
of
a
scientific
critique
of
reason
remainsunalteredandthatgenealogyisjustasupplementationofthisproject,
a supplementationbased on a scientific analytics of power that has its
analogy regarding content and function in what Habermas perceives tobe
Nietzschesscientific theoryofpowerbasedondescent thatwas toenable
thegenealogisttoevaluateanddistinguishcritically.
Insummary,muchofHabermassmisunderstandingofFoucaulthasto
be attributed to the way the former conceptualises the work of Nietzsche.
Habermas seeks to pin down various distinguishable strategies, though it
wouldhavebeen farmore appropriate to approach Nietzschesphilosophy
with his own pragmatist theory of knowledge in mind. This theory of
knowledgepictures theworldasoneofconstantflux, inwhich thereareno
strictlyseparableentitieswhichonlyourgrammaticalconventionsandour
willtosurvivesuggestbutonlyhybridamalgamations.Thefailuretodoso
mightbeevenmoresurprisingconsidering that,asstatedabove,Habermas
himselfcametoseethispointofviewasoneofthecentralNietzscheantenets
in his comments in 1968. Habermass more recent reading of Nietzsches
genealogy ignores this hybridity, structuring his perception of Foucaults
genealogysuch that theapproachof the latterundergoesanaggravatedde
amalgamation,i.e.,thereisnotonlythedoublingofoneintotwostrategies,as
in Nietzsches case,but the second element of Foucaults hybrid approach
virtuallyvanishesfromHabermassaccount.
4. Towards a New Dialogue
What Ihope tohave shown so far is thatHabermassmisunderstandingof
Foucaultdoesnothave tobeseenasan intentionalmisreading.Neitherare
we dealing with a strategic deformation of the Foucaultian oeuvre, the
creationofastrawman. Instead,one canargue that this isnothingmore
thanabonafidemisunderstandingthatcanbeexplainedbycertainconceptual
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decisions in Habermass Nietzschereception. This explanation and the
corresponding clarification of the more complex character of Foucaults
approachthatIhavetriedtogiveultimatelyaimtoclearthewayforafruitful
debatebetweenHabermasianandFoucaultianpositions.
Still, it appears at first as if this newbasis could hardly lead to aproductivedialogue,butmightrather intensify theconflict. Ifanything,one
wouldassume, therhetorical/fictionalcharacterofFoucaultsapproacheven
widens the gulfbetween his model of critique and the Habermasian one.
After all, the normativity of Habermass version of critical theory since the
TheoryofCommunicativeAction isbuiltupon theprimacyof the illocutionary
overtheperlocutionaryuseoflanguageandthecorrespondingprimacyofthe
normal or original mode of language over parasitic forms like irony and
rhetoric in general.51 Hence, it couldbe assumed that Habermass position
regarding
such
a
rhetorical
fictional
approach
that
is
alien
to
his
way
of
thinking is characterised by a complete lack of understanding and/or a
condemnation inthenameofcommunicativerationality.Inthisfinalsection
ofthearticleIwilltrytomakethepointthatneitherofthesetwoassumptions
iscorrectatleastnotwithoutqualificationandtherebymakeanattemptto
initiateaproductivedialoguebetweenthetwotypesofcritique,oneinwhich
thefundamentallegitimacyofaparticulargrammarofcritiqueisnolongerin
question, whereas their relative merits, strengths and their respective
suitability to address various questions is scrutinized to arrive at creative
articulations of thesegrammarsor at least a cooperative divisionof critical
labour.
The reconstruction of Habermass view of a rhetorically understood
FoucaultcanagainmakeuseofHabermassconceptualisationofNietzscheas
a starting point. Here, the scientific and the philosophical are strictly
separated, a result of which is that the nonscientific rhetorical Foucault is
missinginHabermassaccount.However,onecanfindthelattersperspective
onrhetoricbytakingalookattheothersideofthe(post)moderndivide:all
the fictional aspects lacking in the chapters on Foucault are found in
HabermassanalysisofDerrida,especially intheExcursusontheLevelling
of the Genre Distinction between Philosophy and Literature in the
Philosophical Discourse of Modernity. This enables us to apply Habermass
criticismofDerrida,mutatismutandis,toFoucaultsapproachinsofarasthisis
arhetoricalfictionalapproach.
Habermas assumes that Derridas strategy to escape from the self
referentialityofacritiqueofmetaphysics isnot toplacehimself ina lordly
fashion above the objection of pragmatic inconsistency [as Heidegger
51 IthardlydeservesmentioningthatHabermasstheoryinthisrespectisinaccordwith
mostoftheWesternPhilosophicaltraditionstartingwithPlatoscritiqueofthe
sophists.Cf.Schfer,ReflektierteVernunft,79.
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzschesupposedlydoes]butrenderitobjectless.52Thisisachievedbyareductionof
truthclaimsthat,Habermascontends,isonlyplausibleifDerridasucceedsin
erasing thegenredistinctionbetween science/philosophyand literature that
corresponds to the abovementioned primacy of logic over rhetoric. This
blurring of the lines would enable Derrida to read philosophy like literaryworksofart thatgive rise tonumerous contradicting interpretations.Allof
these would be equally valid and thereby frustrate attempts at a
pragmaticallyconsistentauthoritativereading,leavingrhetoric,notlogic,asa
usableguidetointerpretation.53Habermassetsouttodisprovethepossibility
ofsuchalevellingofgenredistinctionsbycommentingonthedebatebetween
DerridaandAustin/Searleaboutapotentialdemarcationlinebetweennormal
and derivative forms of speech. Obviously, he wishes to defend this
distinction,but the argument is transposed onto the fields of different and
separable
languages.
According
to
Habermas,
different
languages
have
different communicative functions and therefore correspond to different
genres.Hesuggests,ontheonehand,aspectrumwithexpertlanguagesthat
arenearlycleansedofallmetaphoricaland rhetoricalelements,and,on the
other hand, poetic languages in which rhetoric is the most prominent
characteristic. While those cleansed expert languages have as a function to
make problems in the world solvable, and therefore are used by the
practitioners/experts of sciences, law etc., poetic language has rather the
functiontoplayfullycreatenewworlds,oratleastcastaradicallynewlight
ontheexistingone.Thisworlddisclosivecharactermakes ittheappropriate
medium forpoetryand literature ingeneral,aswellasphilosophy tosome
extent. Locatedbetween those two ends of the spectrum there is everyday
communicative practice. While this everyday normal language is
ineradicably rhetorical, the worlddisclosive linguistic framework is
almostatastandstillwithin it,bringing itcloser to theexpert languages in
thesciencesandlaw,etc.54
Before we can inquire into the implications of this Habermasian
spectrum, we have to address a potential reservation that concerns the
possibilityofananalogousapplicationofHabermasscriticismofDerridato
theFoucaultian framework.Onehas tobewarynot tooverlyassimilate the
approaches of the two French thinkers who far too often find themselves
being labelledtogetherasthepoststructuralists.Foucaulthimselfhasbeen
adamantinpointingoutthedifferencesbetweenhismethodsandthepractice
52 Habermas,PhilosophicalDiscourse,188.
53 Cf.JacquesDerrida,Spurs.NietzschesStyles(Chicago:UniversityofChicagoPress,
1979).
54 Habermas,PhilosophicalDiscourse,209.Notethatthesedistinctions/definitionsare
muchmorebasedonthelanguageusedinthesegenrescomparedtoHabermass
distinctionofaphilosophicalandascientificstrategyinNietzsche.
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ofdeconstruction.55Afterall,FoucaultsandDerridasanalysesdealwithvery
different objects and it makes a considerable difference whether Derrida
claims an undecidabilitybetween various interpretations of a Nietzschean
text or Foucault maintains that there is an undecidabilitybetween various
perspectivesofhistoryor,more specifically, thehistoryofmodernWesternsocieties.Thus,Ishallrefrainfrom levelling thegenredistinctionbetween
genealogyanddeconstruction, forwhich theirdifferingobjectrealm isonly
themostobviousindicator.Nevertheless,foralltheimportantdifferences,on
the one question that is crucial for the present context there is strong
agreementbetweenFoucaultandDerrida:whatever their respectiveobjects,
bothembracethenotionofselfreferentiality,andasaresult theclaimsthey
raisewith theiranalysesareno longersuper butsubscientificones located
somewhere in between the genres of science and literature. Although
Habermass
initial
attacks
focus
on
Derridas
treatment
of
the
textual
objects
of deconstruction and hence cannot be applied to Foucaults framework,
ultimatelysomethingelseisatstakebetweenthetwo,andthereforeFoucault
as well: it is the status of Derridas and Foucaults own analyses. In other
words, it is the question of whether their use of rhetorical and fictional
elementsislegitimateordisqualifiestheirapproaches.
TakingalookatHabermassspectrumasIhavereconstructeditsofar,
onecaneasilyarriveattheconclusionthatheforcesachoiceuponwriterslike
Foucault and Derrida: on one side there is the path of serious approaches
modelledafter the socialand thenatural sciences inwhich languagehas to
performaproblemsolving functionandconsequentlyhas tobecleansedof
almost all rhetorical sediments that would only introduce a
counterproductive ambiguity. Whoever refuses tobe pinned down to the
discursiveobligationsofphilosophyandscience56canonlychoosetheother
side and produce literary works of art in which the worlddisclosing or
constitutingfunctionoflanguageisunleashedandbecontentwiththestatus
of a novelist.57 One way of countering the implications of this clearcut
dichotomybetweenscienceandliterature,whichaimsatadisqualificationof
Derrida and Foucault as nothing more than rather talented novelists is to
applythequestionofrhetorictoHabermassowntextualbody.
Suchan immanentcriticismofHabermassapproachhasbeencarried
outbyRomandColes.Heassumesthattheformercannotplausiblycondemn
rivalframeworksfortheirrhetoricalelementsifitcanbeshownthathisown
is equally contaminated by such elements. Coles states that Habermass
theoryitselfderivesitsplausibility[]andissustainedbyunproblematized
55 MichelFoucault,Polemics,Politics,andProblematizations,inTheFoucaultReader,
ed.PaulRabinow(NewYork:Pantheon,1984),389.
56 Habermas,PhilosophicalDiscourse,189.
57 HabermasmentionstheworksofTrumanCapoteasanexample.Supposedlythey
areliteraryworksbutmakeuseofhistoricalsources.
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzschemetaphors.58Asanexamplehechoosesthetermconsensusandanalysesits
metaphoricalcontent.AccordingtoColes,inusingexpressionslikereaching
a consensus, Habermas suggests that a consensus is always already
somewhere out there and that there is a somewhat natural character to
agreement.Similarly,theuseofnouns like obligationandverbs like mustsuggeststhat there isacertain inevitability tocommunicativeactionand the
resultingconsensus. Inshort, thepositiveconnotations thatmost readersof
Habermasian texts usually ascribe to the concept of consensus are derived
from the metaphors surrounding it rather than from the discursively
redeemablenormativecontent.Finally,Colesattemptstoprovideconclusive
proof for his point by denaturalising the term consensus.59 Were a
consensus not reachedbut rather forged, its normative meaning would
alreadybe altered considerably, and even more so if the word discipline
were
to
appear
in
the
context
of
the
term.
Spontaneously,
one
is
prompted
to
respond that this is hardly a valid argument since the combination of
disciplineandconsensusisaneasytoseethroughrhetoricalstrategy.Ittries
to discredit the notion of consensus through its affiliation with the term
disciplinethatcarriesstronglynegativeconnotationswith it.However,this
is exactly Coless point: just as his construction makes use of a negative
metaphorical image,Habermasmakesuseofpositiveandmuchmoresubtle
metaphors that shed a more agreeable light on the notion of a consensus.
Thus, although Habermas never implies that scientific language could be
entirelyvoidofrhetoricalelements,butratherthatthelatteraretamed,asit
were, and enlisted for special purposes of problemsolving,60 Coless
argument shows persuasively that even in Habermass own theories the
status of rhetorical elements cannotbe reduced to a mere problemsolving
device,sincetheystabilizethewholenormativearchitectureofthesetheories.
Still, although Coless demonstration is sound, the purpose of this
sectionisnottopushthisimmanentcriticismofHabermassapproachfurther
buttodemonstratethatheavyuseofrhetoriccannotbeusedasaknockdown
argumentagainstaparticulargrammarofcritiqueevenonHabermassown
terms. Inorder to redeem this claim, it isnecessary to takeanother lookat
Habermass spectrum of languages and valuespheres that is not complete
yet. The title of the Excursus in the Philosophical Discourse of Modernity
suggeststhatHabermasaimsataclearseparationofliteratureandphilosophy.
However, in the course of the chapter a shift occurs to the effect that the
argumentismainlyoneaboutthedemarcationlinebetweenliteratureandthe
sciences. What is the status of philosophy then? Habermas has frequently
58 RomandColes,CommunicativeActionandDialogicalEthics:Habermasand
Foucault,Polity25(1992):81.
59 Coles,CommunicativeAction,82.
60 Habermas,PhilosophicalDiscourse,209.
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commentedon the selfunderstandingofphilosophyasadisciplineand the
main thrust of these remarks has alwaysbeen to ask for a more modest
philosophystandinginclosecooperationwiththevarioussciences.61Itcould
beinferredthattheargumentaboutsciencevs.literaturethereforeappliesto
philosophy as well. Yet, Habermas deals with the role of philosophyexplicitly,ifonlyattheveryendoftheExcursus.Ibelievethathereliesthe
key to resolving or at least defusing some of the pending metacritical
controversiesbetweenHabermasianandFoucaultianpositions.
InthesefinalsectionsoftheExcursus,philosophy isdesignatedthe
task of interpreting between isolated expert cultures and their respective
expert languageson theonehandandeveryday communicativepractice in
thelifeworldontheother.Inordertounderstandthisfunctionofphilosophy
as an interpreter more clearly, it is necessary to take a look at Habermass
more
recent
comments
on
philosophy
and
to
place
them
in
the
larger
frameworkofHabermasstheoryofsociety.
In theTheoryofCommunicativeAction therewere twocritical theses to
befound.InthefirstthesisHabermasidentifiedaproblematiccolonisationof
the lifeworld. The far less popular second thesis, complementing the
colonisation thesis, was the segmentation thesis.62 In the tradition of the
KantianWeberiandiagnosisofadifferentiationofreasonand therespective
institutionalised valuespheres of science, morals/law and art, Habermas
voiced concerns about these expert cultures being splitoff from the life
world. The rationalisation waves that occur within these cultures as they
developarelessandlessretranslatableintotheeverydaylanguageofthelife
worldwhich,intheabsenceofsuchtrickledowneffects,threatenstobecome
culturally impoverished. Experts cannot understand each other across
differentvaluespheres,andbetweentheseexpertculturesasawholeandthe
lifeworldcommunication isno longerpossible.Thiswas thecontentof the
segmentationthesisformulatedin1981.
Inaspeechgiventhesameyear,Habermasofferedapotentialsolution
to this problem, or at least identified a promising way of overcoming it.63
Philosophyistotakeupthechallengeofsegmentation,whichaddsanewrole
to the selfunderstanding thatHabermas recommends for thediscipline.As
stated above, philosophys main job was to be a pioneering science that
venturesintounexploredfieldsofknowledgeandtransformsthisamorphous
terrain into material to which the methods of the various sciences canbe
61 JrgenHabermas,WozunochPhilosophie,HessischerRundfunk,January4th1971.
62 JrgenHabermas,TheTheoryofCommunicativeActionVol.II.LifeworldandSystem:A
CritiqueofFunctionalistReason(Boston:BeaconPress,1987),330.
63 Cf.JrgenHabermas,PhilosophyasStandInandInterpreter,inAfterPhilosophy,
eds.Baynesetal.(Cambridge:MITPress,1987),296318.
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzscheapplied;inotherwords,philosophyprovidesaframeworkofintelligibility.64
Nowthistaskofastandin65issupplementedbytheviewofphilosophyas
an interpreter.Thediscipline should act as amediator in thebrokendown
communicationbetween the lifeworldandexpertcultures tocounteract the
ongoing fragmentation of the lifeworld. In the Excursus Habermasexplicates the reasons for hisbelief that philosophy isbest suited for this
mediation.Philosophy,hemaintains,has the invaluableadvantageofbeing,
so to speak, multilingual. On the one hand it can relate to more or less
esotericandhighlyspecializedexpertdiscoursesthattakeplaceinthevarious
valuespheresanddifferentiateddisciplines.Ontheotherhandphilosophyis
able toconnect to theeverydaycommunicativepracticeof the lifeworld in
which aspects of validity are intermeshed and that, moreover, is
characterised as ineradicably rhetorical.66 It is philosophys position
between
the
two
ends
of
the
aforementioned
spectrum
and
its
capability
of
relatingto the languages thatarespokenatbothends thatqualifies itfor its
interpretingtask.Importantly,though,Habermasholdsthatphilosophycan
only resolve this paradox [the mediation between these spheres] by
rhetoricallyexpandingandenrichingthespeciallanguageofthediscipline.67
Leaving aside all the difficult questions that arise from this role
attribution,68thecrucialpointforthepresentpurposeisthatrhetoricplaysa
legitimaterole inphilosophy.Asamatterof fact, ifoneacceptsHabermass
account,ithastoberhetorical,sincethisisanecessarypreconditionforittobe
asuccessfulinterpreterbetweenthespheres.Wewillseelaterthatthisholds
forphilosophysroleasastandinaswell.
The first conclusion tobe drawn from this is that Habermas could
arguethatColessobjectionisofftarget,at leasttotheextentthatHabermas
considershisownconceptstobephilosophicalones.Thisiswhypushingthe
immanent criticism does not necessarily deal a fatal blow to Habermass
framework.DoesthisalsomeanthatFoucaultandDerridahavetobeleftoff
theHabermasianhookiftheirworkscanbeconsideredphilosophicalones?I
think that this is the case, because there is only one last Habermasian
argument that could potentially delegitimize Foucaults critique as mere
literature. According to Habermas, the rhetorical element of language
64 Habermasdemandsuniversalisthypothesesthatsuccessivelybecomesubjectto
empiricaltestingfromthiskindofphilosophythatisexemplifiedbytheagendasof
NoamChomsky,JeanPiagetbutalsoHabermassowndiscourseethicalproject.
65 Habermas,PhilosophyasStandIn,310.
66 Habermas,PhilosophicalDiscourse,2089.
67 Habermas,PhilosophicalDiscourse,209.
68 Forexample,howisthefollowingparadoxtoberesolved.Shouldphilosophystrive
foradifferentiationoftheintermeshedaspectsofvaliditythatcharacterisethelife
worldorshoulditorientitselfatthisintegratedideaofcommonsensereasoninits
workasaninterpreter.Toremainstrictlyneutralregardingthisquestionhardly
seemstobeapossiblestrategy.
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occursinitspureformonlyintheselfreferentialityofthepoeticexpression,
whereasintherealmofphilosophythetoolsofrhetoricaresubordinatedto
thedisciplineofadistinctformofargumentation.69Inotherwords,hetriesto
drawalinebetweenrhetoricasanendinitselfasitoccursinpoetry/literature
and rhetoric as a means employed in arguments that are of an essentiallydifferentnature,namelyphilosophicalones.70Butevenifoneconcededthata
hardandfastdistinctioncouldbedrawninthiswaywhichwouldbehard
tooperationalize, I imagine thecase fora philosophicaluseof rhetorical
elements, first and foremostmetaphorical language, can easilybemade for
Foucault.Amongother thingsFoucaultsrhetoricand fictionareemployed
toshedaradicallynewlightonourpresent,toofferanunlikelyredescription
oftheworld.Thisrhetoricquestionstheacceptedmetaphorsandoffersanew
way of making social reality intelligible. Making the world intelligible and
offering
new
frameworks
of
perception
not
the
least
through
new
metaphors,onemightaddisexactlytheroleofphilosophyasapioneering
standin thatHabermashasemphasized inaddition to the interpreting task.
Thus,IcannotseehowFoucaultsgenealogycouldbedeniedlegitimacyasa
philosophicalframework,evenonHabermassownterms.71
5. Conclusion
Thefirsttaskofthisarticlewasananalyticalone.Itriedtofindanexplanation
for Habermass impoverished interpretation of Foucault in thePhilosophical
Discourse of Modernity, a misinterpretation that initiated a longlasting
miscommunication between the respective paradigms of critique. While
Foucaults genealogical approach is properly characterised as a hybrid
combination of scientific and literary elements that is factbasedbut makes
heavy use of rhetoric, an approach that is often scientifically rigid in
constructing its argumentsbut at the same time dramatically reduces in a
perspectivistmannerthe truthclaimsraisedby it, themore literaryoriented
side of the project vanishes entirely from Habermass view. He ascribes to
Foucault the onesided project of a superscience, thereby incorrectly
projecting the aims of Foucaults archaeological work phase onto the
genealogical phase, which is fundamentally different in character. The
69 Habermas,PhilosophicalDiscourse,209.
70 Cf.JrgenHabermas,PhilosophyandScienceasLiterature?,inJrgenHabermas,
PostmetaphysicalThinking(Cambridge:MITPress,1992),205227forananalogous
attempttodistinguishthetwogenresinanessayonthenovelistItaloCalvinowho
leanstowardsDerridasposition.
71 Tellingly,Foucault,whowasalwaysreluctanttoacceptlabelsattachedtohim,
cautiouslyembracedthephilosophicalone,referringtohisworkasphilosophical
fragmentsputtoworkinahistoricalfieldofproblems.Foucault,Questionsof
Method,101.
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Biebricher: Habermas, Foucault and Nietzschegenealogist does not claim to be a detached and objective observer who
describestheworldas it really is,asthearchaeologistattimestriedtoasa
happypositivist.Asshownabove,notonlyhas thismisreading led toan
intensification of the Habermasian criticisms directed at Foucault,but to a
large extent it is also responsible for the deeplyrooted mutual lack ofunderstanding for which controversy and debate sound almost
euphemistic because Habermass criticisms are based on and aimed at a
seriously distorted version of Foucaults genealogy an unfortunate
constellationthatmightbesaidtoapplyintheoppositedirectionaswell.
HavingidentifiedthisHabermasianmisreadingIhaveemphasisedhis
interpretationofNietzscheasinvolvingaconceptualdecisionthatgoesalong
wayinexplainingtheonesidedaccountofFoucault.Habermasssplittingof
the Nietzschean project into scientific and philosophical strategies that
can
be
separated
from
one
another
an
interpretation
that
is
highly
debatable
in itself isalso thekey tohisconceptualisationof thediscourseof (post)
modernityinwhichBatailleandFoucaultfollowthescientificpathlaidout
by Nietzsche, whereas Heidegger and Derrida choose the philosophical
one. This decision leads Habermas to disregard all those heterogeneous
elements inFoucaults approach incongruentwith the scientificpath that
would threaten to undermine the clearcut twolane conceptualisation of
(post) modernity. This tendency is reinforced by the fact that Foucaults
earlierarchaeologicalprojectneatlyfallsintoplacewiththisconceptualisation
and supports Habermass view ofFoucault as an unambiguous followerof
thescientificNietzsche.
Toshow thatHabermasmisunderstandsFoucaultand toexplain this
misunderstanding in the manner described above have been the main
analytical tasksof thisarticle.Thisanalysishasservedasaprecondition for
the following reconstruction of the relation between the two frameworks
basedonthesenewpremises.Oneofthemostimportantquestionsraisedby
therectificationofHabermassmisreading isobviouslywhataHabermasian
positionvisvisFoucaultsgenealogy including the rhetorical elementwould
look like. Ihave tried toanswer thisquestionwith reference toHabermass
comments on Derrida, which portray this latter approach as a highly
rhetorical one. The conclusion from the analysis presented here is that
Habermassattempt todisqualify the rhetoricalapproachesbyproving that
there isa cleardemarcation linebetween science,philosophyand literature
failsby and large. Thus, according to Habermass own account, Foucaults
genealogicalcritique,although largelyrhetorical incharacter,wouldhaveto
be considered a valid philosophical approach. Only, one might add, if
Foucault had aimed to make conventionally scientific claims in his
genealogiescouldHabermassargumentdodamagetohisapproach.
FortheHabermasFoucaultdebatethiscouldhavebeneficialeffects.If
theclaimsofthispaperarevalidonthewholethenHabermasiansshouldno
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longer hope to achieve a wholesale disqualification of the Foucaultian
approach,basedoneithertheclassicalobjectionsraisedbyHabermasand/or
the rhetorical character of Foucaults framework. I believe that such a
wholesale disqualification of Habermass approach has not even been
attemptedbyFoucaultians.72
Thismeans thatweare leftwith twodifferentgrammarsofcritique,eachwith itsown relativemeritsandshortcomings. If
thisconstellationcouldbeagreedonasacommondefinitionofthesituation,
thenext stage in thisdebatecouldconcern itselfnotonlywith spellingout
theserelativemeritsataskthatcouldbecarriedoutbysiftingthroughthe
less polemical contributions to the first stage of the debate throughout the
1980s and 1990s and building on these accounts but with creative
articulations between these grammars of critique. As noted in the
introduction,thiscould taketheformofmediatingbetweentheframeworks
of
deliberative
democracy
and
governmentality,
between
disciplinary
micro
analysesandmacrodiagnosesofcolonisationorevenbetween thenormsof
discourseethicsand theethicsofanaestheticsofexistence.73While Idonot
mean to claim that these attempts of articulation would always yield
productive frameworksof critical inquiry, so far the impossibilityof suchan
articulationhaslargelybeentakenforgranted.Intheend,evenifitwereonly
afewcasesinwhichthiscombinationwouldprovetobefruitfulandprovide
newcriticalinsights,eachoneofthemthatwehavefailedtoworkoutsofar
shouldbe seen as one too many not for the sake of a Habermasian or
Foucaultiangrammarofcritique,butforthesakeofcritiqueasawhole.
72 Cf.Owen,OrientationandEnlightnmentforanaccountofthispeculiarasymmetry
andpotentialexplanations.
73 Cf.ThomasBiebricher,SelbstkritikderModerne.FoucaultundHabermasimVergleich
(Frankfurt/M.:Campus,2004)foramoreelaboratetreatmentofpotential
articulations.Cf.alsoSimonThompson,TheAgonyandtheEcstasy:Foucault,
HabermasandtheProblemofRecognition,inFoucaultcontraHabermas,eds.
Ashenden&Owen,195211andHarryKunneman,DerWahrheitstrichter.Habermas
unddiePostmoderne(Frankfurt/M.:Campus,1991)forspecificexamples.