My man in Istanbul has been thinking about why Darwin is not as popular in France and why Foucault is misinterpreted by both the Left and the Right in the Anglosphere:
Anglos, in  contrast to the French, have managed to create globe-spanning empires and  commonwealths. This put their [natural, as it is for all tribes] chauvinism to  test: how do I get the Bantu to do my bidding in the British way?
The French very quickly gave up on their imperial ambitions. And even today,  when they discuss "humanity" or "history", their main  reference is at most the West continental Europe, but more often than not solely  France - i.e. Netherlands of Belgium. That is, for them, humanity = the French.
Now, when an Anglo studies "humanity", he, more often than not,  includes the Bantu, the Maya, the Afghani, the Eskimo, etc. under that heading.  In that case, the biology of differences is relevant.
However, when we're studying, as Foucault, the punitive systems and  incarceration between the 16th and 20th centuries, mostly in France, Germany,  and Holland, what part of biology shall we include? They're all white, more or  less from the same genetic/tribal ancestry, and of the same I.Q. points. This  leaves only "nurture".
Residents of Anglosphere - I'm afraid yourself included - tend to misinterpret  this. For example, I know Foucault quite well, and in none of his works has he  ever claimed that he had set on a journey to explain "human behavior".  He made it very specific: what has changed from a system in which a monarchical  rule reigned to one which involved the modern nation-state, with an anonymous  and dispersed power network, in which we saw the emergence of institutions like  the military, the school, the hospital, etc.
If you believe one day you'll be able to explain the development of the  Napoleonic army in genetic terms, well, good luck and be my guest, because you  have a very, VERY long way to go - to developl a whole paradigm of genetic  reductionism in which every human endevaour is foreordained in the genetic code;  a type of biological fatalism. I humbly believe that explaining the differences  in civilization between the Afghanis and the Netherlanders is a more realistic  goal for that perspective.
But this fails to deal with one problem.
The underlying model for many social sciences - including bio-sociology - is  still historicistic and uses, unknowingly, some Hegelian notions of organic  development, the primary one being that of a human baby or a flower: the idea  that a seed contains all the information for growth, and its development is only  the realization of that blueprint. We can call this the "organic  determinism" model.
(Marxist "historical determinism" uses the same model.)
If we accept that, given the same genetic profile, people will achieve not only  more or less similar "levels of complexity" in civilization building,  but they should all fatalistically follow the same paths. According to this, we  should have not only a German Beethoven but also French, Dutch, Spanish,  Belgian, etc. Beethovens. Or, similarly, by now we should have had not only a  British America, but a French, Spanish, Dutch, etc. one.
I'm sure there is at least one fool - probably more - out there trying to prove  this absurdity, but I'll beg to differ. I believe biological regularities govern  how we are formed in our mothers' wombs, or how our brains uses glucose, but it  cannot possibly shape the process through which one composes a piano concerto  (other than only providing the genetical infrastructure for the talents required  for that).
This means the work of historians - such as Foucault, who was a historian of  systems of thought - is still valid. (Remember: Darwinian biology is also  historicistic; it explains how change takes places and causes evolution among  species.)
History - or sociology -, too, has to work ceteris paribus. If we're studying  Bantu and Scotts for historical insight, there's a methodological problem. The  only way to do that is to study groups with the same genetic profile (i.e.  "fix" that "other" factor), to see which processes are  specifically historical - i.e. what the nature of "temporally bound"  developments are.
This is also what underlies the confusion in America regarding people like  Foucault. He doesn't claim, or even try, to explain anything other than a  historical process that is peculiar to France, and part of continental Europe.  But almost everyone in America, including both progressive doofuses and  conservatives, lumps him with irrelevant fools like Derrida - even Lacan - under  the label "deconstructionist" (just to give you an idea, this is like  grouping Adam Smith, Charles Darwin, and George Frazier together, calling them  "Brits", and then labelling their works under a heading like  "pro-analyzers") and claims that "Foucault and Derrida claimed  that all reality is a passing idea on society's mind" or some other  sophomoric crap.
(Note: Almost all of Foucault work is EMPIRICAL, based on actual historical  records and data. None - repeat none - of it is speculative nonsense. He has  actually demonstrated everything he claimed factually. FYI.)
Every discipline has to define a proper object of study for itself. If you say,  like Derb did in a recent article, "dump sociology, pick biology" (I  just don't know what kind of an adrenaline rush this gives to him), with all due  respect, I cannot take you seriously.
To understand what biology does, we must isolate those phenomena that remain  constant regardless of species, societal structure, received education, etc.
To understand whether there are specifically sociological parameters that shape  our lives, we must observe only those with the exact same biological profiles,  but cross-historically - that is, ignoring historical specificities so that we  can generalize that the social network will produce certian effects regardless  of temporal change. This may require a solid knowledge of biology of humans - to  separate what is biologically governed - and psychology (the evolutionary school  to understand how that psychology is shaped, and the cognitive school to see how  the mind works regardless of social and historical setting.)
To understand how history operates and whether being temporally-bound has any  impact on the social (I'd be very surprised if it didn't), we must study a given  society from a given racial pool, and contrast at least three different periods  in their social entities and relations throughout. A "multivariate"  study may strengthen our observations if we pick another society from the same  racial stock and observe, again, at least three peroids of it. Mixing it with  biology will only confound our observational design, make it needlessly  complicated, and may even distort the picture.
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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