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Paradigmatic transition is the idea that ours is a time of transition between the paradigm of modernity, which seems to have exhausted its regenerating capacities, and another, emergent time, of which so far we have seen only signs. Modernity as an ambitious and revolutionary sociocultural paradigm based on a dynamic tension between social regulation and social emancipation, the prevalent dynamic in the sixteenth century, has by the twenty-first century tilted in favour of regulation, to the determent of emancipation. The collapse of emancipation into regulation, and hence the impossibility of thinking about social emancipation consistently, symbolizes the exhaustion of the paradigm of modernity. At the same time, it signals the emergence of a new paradigm or new paradigms. This updated 2020 edition is written for students taking law and globalization courses, and political science, philosophy and sociology students doing optional subjects.
We find ourselves in a paradigmatic transition which we may designate as a postmodern transition, and to account for its emancipatory potential adequately we need an appropriate postmodern theory that I call theory of oppositional postmodernism. According to this theory, it is possible and necessary to think of social regulation and emancipation beyond the limits imposed by the paradigm of modernity. To accomplish it, an oppositional postmodern theory of science and an oppositional postmodern theory of law are called for. This stance takes the promises of modernity very seriously, be they liberty, equality and fraternity. It submits them to a radical critique that allows us to understand the perversities concerning the fulfillment of some of the promises and the impossibility of fulfilling others and it allows us to identify the emancipatory potential that the promises keep intact but that can only be realized within postmodern social, cultural, political, epistemological, and theoretical boundaries. The promises of modernity have become problems for which there seems to be no solution at all. In the meantime, the conditions that brought about the crisis of modernity have not yet become the conditions to overcome the crisis beyond modernity. Hence the complexity of our transitional period: we are facing modern problems for which there are no modern solutions. The search for a postmodern solution is what I call oppositional postmodernism.
In this chapter, I argue that the conversion of modern law into scientific state-centered law went hand in hand with the conversion of modern science into a hegemonic rationality and a central productive force. I concentrate in the gradual process whereby modern law came to be dominated by science and the state. I claim that in this process law lost sight of the tension between social regulation and social emancipation that was imprinted in its roots in the paradigm of modernity. The loss was so thorough and irreversible that the recovery of the emancipatory energies called for in this book must involve a radical unthinking of modern law. The first section analyzes the original imprint of the tension between regulation and emancipation in modern law, selecting three of its major moments: the reception of the Roman law, the rationalist natural law, and the theories of the social contract. In the second section, I analyze the historical process by which this tension was eliminated by the collapse of emancipation into regulation, distinguishing among three periods of capitalist development: liberal capitalism, organized capitalism, and disorganized capitalism. Finally, I state the major topics for the unthinking of law in the transition between social paradigms.
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