THE ISSUES: AN OVERVIEW ISSUE ONE: What Comes after Postmodernism? The term "postmodernism" has come to refer to the facile and even nihilistic historicism and relativism that many have embraced after losing their Enlightenment faith in Reason. Postmodernism, thus understood, represents a merely reactive and transitional stage of post-Enlightenment Western culture. To move beyond this stage, it is necessary to rethink Enlightenment conceptions of reason and knowledge so that they are not merely rejected and negated, but transformed in such a way as to open new possibilities for development that are continuous ISSUE with the past. ONE This site proposes such a rethinking of the Enlightenment. The thesis: Enlightenment conceptions of reason and knowledge can be affirmed in the post-Enlightenment period, provided we understand them properly in terms of the political and cultural function they have served for three hundred years -- namely, as primary components of an emerging liberal democratic civic culture in the West. Thus, the project of rethinking Enlightenment conceptions of reason and knowledge becomes the project of rethinking the cultural foundations of Western liberal democracy. What comes after postmodernism, then? The answer offered here: the postmodern reconstruction of liberal democratic . civic culture and civil society. [Image] Back to top. ISSUE TWO: Western Culture * See Samuel and the Clash of P. Huntington, Civilizations The Clash of Civilizations Assume for a moment and the that the global order Remaking of emerging in the post-Cold War World Order era will eventually look (New York: something more like Simon & Huntington's* picture of it Schuster, than not. What sort of 1996) cultural tasks would such a global political and economic order impose on the West? In a world order shaped by the clash of civilizations, one thing is certain. The universalism of Western Enlightenment culture will be obsolete and irrelevant. During the period of the West's virtually unchallenged ascendancy in the world, it seemed that mastery of the vocabulary of modernist Western rationalism and naturalism was one of the necessary conditions for economic and technological progress. But that is no longer the case. East Asian and Islamic nations have proven that thoroughly modern strategies of economic and technological progress can be ISSUE adapted to and supported by TWO non-Western cultural traditions. The question is, can the West adapt to, come to terms with, the full realization of the cultural particularism of the values underlying its own social, economic and political institutions after centuries of representing those values to the world at large as universally valid, as grounded in the nature of things? The universalism and essentialism of Enlightenment culture systematically discouraged reflection about and active nuturance of civic culture -- i.e., the particularistic form of culture required for the support of liberal democracy. This negligence is becoming increasingly costly to and dangerous for the West in the post-Cold War world. The cultural task imposed on the West in the era of the clash of civilizations, then, is to rethink liberal moral ideals as specifically particularistic cultural ideals, with the aim of discovering new resources for . their renewal. [Image] Back to top. ISSUE THREE: The Postmodern Reconstruction of Personal Life Full cultural citizenship, full participation in a liberal democratic civil society, requires citizens to undergo a certain difficult and often painful process of individualization. Citizens must learn to see both self and other as free and equal individuals, as individuals who stand apart from, or who are not exhaustively described by, the attributes they possess as members of particularistic ethnic, religious or class-based communities. To persuade citizens to undergo this process of individualization, special cultural resources are needed. Among them are moral ideals that define as praiseworthy the participation in this individualizing process. Two such moral ideals proper to modernist liberal civic culture are the ideals of authenticity and autonomy. Authenticity -- roughly, the mandate to become "who one really is," and autonomy -- roughly, the ISSUE mandate to "be one's own person," THREE have shaped personal life in the West for over three hundred years. To the extent that these moral ideals have been effective, they have produced citizens whose individualized identities have made them capable of full participation in civil society. However, the credibility of these moral ideals is entirely dependent upon notions of human identity -- notions like "real self" and "free will" influenced by Enlightenment culture. To the extent that Enlightenment conceptions of reason and knowledge are called into question, the moral ideals of authenticity and autonomy lose their persuasive power. A civil society cannot exist without the cultural means necessary to reproduce its members. If the ideals of authenticity and autonomy are no longer effective in producing the kind of individualized identities required for full cultural citizenship, new ideals must replace them. But what form will these new moral ideals take? How will personal life in the post-Enlightenment West . be transformed by these new ideals? by Thomas Bridges