Zarathustra on Post-Truth: Wisdom and the Brass Bell

E. Johanna Hartelius The University of Texas at Austin ; John Poulakos University of Pittsburgh

Abstract

ABSTRACT Notwithstanding recent controversies involving echo chambers and social media, “post-truth” has always been central to philosophical investigations of what is knowable and good. The internal tension of the term offers a choice: to gasp in feigned astonishment at the hell-in-a-handbasket state of public discourse, or to reflect critically on what is beyond, after, or other than the truth. In this essay, we approach post-truth via elements of narrative, biography, and myth, portraying Friedrich Nietzsche's polytropic figure, Zarathustra, as he might have spoken to the contemporary moment. We demonstrate how Zarathustra affords access to the idea that truth (in all its deceptiveness) and life (or possibly, aliveness) are inextricable in the human condition. To temper this tension, we depict a character whose disposition toward post-truth spans from certainty and doubt to exuberance and despair. Our hope is to indicate how, for the humans of Motley Cow, post-truth is ubiquitous, institutional, and infrastructural.

Journal
Philosophy & Rhetoric
Published
2019-11-21
DOI
10.5325/philrhet.52.4.0384
Open Access
Closed
Topics

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  1. Philosophy & Rhetoric
  2. Philosophy & Rhetoric
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  1. Doxtader, Erik. 2018. “Editor's Note.” Philosophy & Rhetoric 51 (4): v–vii.
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