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- Title
Original Science: Nature Deconstructing Itself.
- Authors
Kirby, Vicki
- Abstract
This article explores Derrida's suggestion in Of Grammatology that deconstruction might be considered a positive science. The implication here is that 'no outside of text' does not evoke an enclosure whose limits can't be breached, an enclosure that discovers human exceptionalism in linguistic and technological capacities. Instead, this sense of a system and its involvements ( différance) is already entangled in any 'atom' of its expression, whereby 'no outside of text' can be read as 'no outside of Nature'. The logic that informs and justifies the conventional separations between nature and culture, ideation and matter, and human and non-human, are thereby confounded; the dimensions of efficacy, as well as the vexed question of intention appear as non-local (systemic); and the very notion of language - what it is and how it works - is distributed in ways that give rise to the same quandaries that surround the quantum problematic. Indeed, at the end of this meditation the difference between the humanities and the sciences, especially in its current configuration as the impasse of 'the two cultures', can no longer be sustained.
- Publication
Derrida Today, 2010, Vol 3, Issue 2, p201
- ISSN
1754-8500
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.3366/drt.2010.0204