Its “critics argue that postmodernism promotes obscurantism, abandons Enlightenment rationalism and scientific rigor, and contributes little to analytical or empirical knowledge.”
Along with religion, Postmodernism is one of Richard Dawkins’ bêtes noires. And he’s not alone.
“The end result of four decades of postmodernism permeating the art world”, according to Camillie Paglia (2015), is that “there is very little interesting or important work being done right now in the fine arts. Irony was a bold and creative posture when Duchamp did it, but now an utterly banal, exhausted, and tedious strategy. Young artists have been taught to be “cool” and “hip” and thus painfully self-conscious. They are not encouraged to be enthusiastic, emotional, and visionary. They have been cut off from artistic tradition by the crippled skepticism about history that they have been taught by ignorant and solipsistic postmodernists. In short, the art world will never revive until postmodernism fades away. Postmodernism is a plague upon the mind and the heart.”
Well, Paglia is nothing if not forthright.
Daniel Dennet, too, is no fan of postmodernism. He says, Postmodernism, the school of "thought" that proclaimed "There are no truths, only interpretations" has largely played itself out in absurdity, but it has left behind a generation of academics in the humanities disabled by their distrust of the very idea of truth and their disrespect for evidence, settling for "conversations" in which nobody is wrong and nothing can be confirmed, only asserted with whatever style you can muster.
Many other notable intellectuals such as Noam Chomsky and Roger Scruton are similarly unimpressed with postmodernism. It seems to have had a profound impact on discourse and we see it in philosophy.
So, I’m wondering what folks here think of postmodernism. Is it as bad as they say?
I came to my own conclusions about it on reading what Richard Dawkins had to say about the Sokal Affair. I recommend reading the article which prompted the controversy, Transgressing the Boundaries: Towards a Transformative Hermeneutics of Quantum Gravity which was published in the journal Social Text in 1996. It is freely available on the web. It’s a hoot.