Originally posted by babydoll_
errr havent heard of heidegger, but fukuyama is a jap professor or something who accepts globalisation.
did anyone watch "Dancer in the Dark" the other day? does it seem RFTG to you?
I haven't read any of his works, but Heidigger was a 20th century phenomenological (Philosophy of experience) thinker..
As for Fukuyama, he's most famous for 'The End Of History And The Last Man', a text in which he attempts to 'prove' that through capitalist, liberal democracies, history in the sense of societal transformation has reached it's final stage. It's actually a synthesis of Hegelian dialectics (A logical progression within which a governing system or principle is discarded when a fatal internal contradiction is revealed, progressing until a system without any contradiction is created..) and concepts such as the
logos [I believe Fukuyama uses a Platonic division of the soul to explain 'progress'..). Has been about eight months since I've read it though...
He loses points with me for being quite the ardent 'expansionist'. (Was heavily in favour of war in Iraq, and I believe he's associated with right-wing think tanks such as 'Project For A New American Century'..). Not sure how he relates to Retreat From The Global though, unless it's because he believes that the only political 'progress' that will be made is in those countries which aren't capitalist, liberal democracies towards that system [I believe it's quite close-minded to think that all progress is at an end.. To make a glib comparison, many people under Feudalism would have seen no better system imaginable), and that as such, 'history' will become without grand events, thus resulting in humanity attempting to define themselves in existence, thereby retreating from the 'global' concept [I like the definition of 'Global' as a Modernist conception] into the personal...
Not sure if that's of use (I do Crime Fiction), but you never know..