I just finished the writing and editorial parts of my Language Insufficiency Hypothesis. It still needs cover art and some administrative odds and ends, but I’m taking a day for a breather to share something about myself and my worldview. For this, I share my philosophical influences and how they support my core insights. For dramatic effect, I’ll even try to weight them to 100 per cent, leaving an ‘others’ bucket for the unaccounted ones.
Obviously, this highly scientific accounting is about as useful as a Facebook survey or a fortune cookie, but it should reveal something. I have influences outside of philosophy, but I’ll limit this list at the start. The numbers don’t exactly add to 100% because there is a bit of cross-pollination, say, between Foucault and Nietzsche or Ĺ˝iĹžek and Hegel â or perhaps I’m just not good at maths. You decide.
Nietzsche (â18)
Nietzsche is likely the uranium core. Haters and detractors like to diminish his contribution â and he didn’t play by the old rules â but they are wrong. He contributes value-creation, anti-moralism, perspectivism, the critique of ressentiment, the demolition of universals.
Nietzsche sits at the centre of the blast radius. Everything else is shrapnel. If thereâs a thinker who detonated the Enlightenmentâs pretensions more elegantly, Iâve not met them. He showed us that values are forged, not found; that morality is a genealogy of grievances; that certainty is the last refuge of the timid. In other words, he cleared the ground so the rest of us could get to work without tripping over Kantian furniture. But after Nietzscheâs uranium core, the next concentric ring becomes murkier.
Foucault (â20%)
Foucault supplies the schematics. Where Nietzsche swung a hammer at the idols, Foucault identified the building codes. He mapped power as a set of subtle, everyday enchantments. He showed how ‘knowledge’ is simply what a society rewards with credibility. He is the patron saint of anyone who suspects normality is an instrument, not a neutral state of affairs. The world looks different once you see the disciplinary fingerprints on everything.
Derrida (â10%)
Derrida gives me language as mischief. Meaning wobbles, slides, cracks; binaries betray themselves; every conceptual edifice contains its own trapdoor. Derrida isnât a system; heâs an escape artist. And frankly, you canât write anything about the insufficiency of language without genuflecting in his general direction.
Late Wittgenstein (â15%)
The quiet structural pillar. If Derrida is the saboteur, Wittgenstein is the carpenter who informs you that the house was never stable anyway. Meaning-as-use, language-games, the dissolution of philosophical pseudo-problems: his later work underwrites virtually every modern suspicion about fixed categories and timeless essences. He doesnât shout; he shrugs â and everything collapses neatly.
Rorty (â5%)
Rorty replaces metaphysical longing with cultural pragmatism. He teaches you to stop hunting for capital-T Truth and instead track the vocabularies we actually live in. Heâs the friendly voice whispering, ‘You donât need foundations. You need better conversations’. His influence is felt mostly in the tone of my epistemic cynicism: relaxed rather than tragic. Besides, we disagree on the better conversations bit.
Geuss (â4%)
If Rorty makes you light-footed, Geuss reminds you not to float off into abstraction entirely. He is the critic of moralism par excellence, the man who drags philosophy kicking and screaming back into politics. Geuss is the voice that asks, ‘Yes, but who benefits?’ A worldview without him would be a soufflĂŠ.
Heidegger (â6%)
Selective extraction only. Being-in-the-world, thrownness, worldhood â the existential scaffolding. His political judgment was catastrophic, of course, but the ontological move away from detached subjectivity remains invaluable. He gives the metaphysics a certain grain.
Existentialists: Beauvoir, Sartre, Camus (â6%)
They provide the atmospheric weather: choice, finitude, absurdity, revolt, the sheer mess of human freedom. They donât define the system; they give it blood pressure. Besides, I met them before I switched to Team Nietzsche-Foucault.
Ĺ˝iĹžek, Latour, Baudrillard (â2% combined)
These three are my licensed provocateurs.
- ŽiŞek exposes how ideology infiltrates desire.
- Latour dismantles the Nature/Society binary with glee.
- Baudrillard whispers that representation ate reality while we were looking at our phones.
Theyâre trickster figures, not architects.
Hume, Putnam, Dennett, and the Ancillaries (â1% combined)
These are the seasonings.
- Hume is the Scottish acid bath under every epistemic claim.
- Putnam gives internal realism its analytic passport.
- Dennett offers mechanistic metaphors you can steal even when you disagree.
- Kant and Hegel hover like compulsory ghosts.
- Rawls remains decorative parsley: included for completeness, consumed by none.
The Others Bucket (â5%)
The unallocated mass: writers, anthropologists, theorists, stray thinkers you absorb without noticing. The ‘residuals’ category for the philosophical inventory â the bit fortune cookies never warn you about.
Enfin
Obviously, these ratios are more for humour than substance, but these are the thinkers I return to â the ones whose fingerprints I keep discovering on my own pages, no matter how many years or detours intervene.
Perhaps more revealing are those who didnât make the guest list. Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle remain outside, smoking in the cold. The Stoics, Marcus Aurelius and his well-meaning self-help descendants, also failed to RSVP. In truth, I admire the posture but have little patience for the consolations â especially when they become the emotional training wheels of neoliberalism.
And then, of course, the Enlightenment patriarchs: Hobbes, Locke, Montesquieu and the rest of the constitutional furniture. I acknowledge their historical necessity the way one acknowledges plumbing â grateful it exists, uninterested in climbing inside the pipes. Rousseau, admittedly, I tolerate with something approaching affection, but only because he never pretended to be tidy.
I forgot Descartes, Voltaire, and Pascal, but itâs too late to scroll back and adjust the ledger. Consider them rounding errors â casualties of the margins, lost to the tyranny of percentages.
If anyone mentions another one â Spinoza comes to mind â I’ll try to figure out where they fit in my pantheon. Were I to render this tomorrow, the results may vary.
