Central Problem

The central problem addressed in this chapter is how philosophy should understand and evaluate the phenomenon of globalization—its nature, causes, consequences, and normative implications. Globalization represents a complex, multidimensional process involving the intensification of economic exchanges, the decline of state sovereignty, the planetary diffusion of communication technologies, and the spread of homogenized cultural models across the world. The philosophical challenge is to determine whether globalization represents an opportunity for human flourishing and democratic expansion, or whether it constitutes a new form of Western imperialism that threatens cultural diversity and exacerbates inequality.

The problem has several interconnected dimensions: How do mass media and communication technologies shape human consciousness and social relations? Can Western criteria of judgment adequately recognize and respect non-Western cultures, or does the very act of recognition impose Western categories? Is globalization merely an extension of capitalism and Western hegemony, or does it create genuine opportunities for previously marginalized peoples? How should philosophy respond to the collapse of Eurocentrism and the need for what some call an “anthropological decentering” of Western rationality?

Main Thesis

The chapter presents a spectrum of philosophical positions on globalization, ranging from critical rejection to cautious optimism, ultimately pointing toward the need for a “Copernican revolution” in Western rationality that acknowledges the limits of Eurocentrism while seeking genuine dialogue among civilizations.

Media and Communication: McLuhan argues that modern communication technologies create a “global village” where physical distance is overcome by instantaneous electronic connection. His thesis that “the medium is the message” emphasizes that technologies shape consciousness independently of their content, producing mechanization and homogenization of thought.

The Problem of Recognition: Taylor identifies a fundamental paradox in Western attempts to recognize other cultures: the very criteria we use for evaluation are products of “North Atlantic civilization,” so our judgments inevitably force others into our categories. This constitutes a subtle but pervasive form of cultural imperialism. Taylor calls for “anthropological and ethical modesty” based on recognizing the limits of our perspective in the totality of human history.

Empire as New Form of Power: Negri and Hardt argue that globalization represents a completely new form of imperialism that cannot be reduced to “Americanization” or extension of any particular state’s power. The “Empire” is deterritorialized, decentered, and pervasive—it administers hybrid identities through flexible hierarchies and network commands. This Empire exercises “biopower” over human nature itself, while human rights discourse serves as an ideological tool of domination.

Globalization as Opportunity: Giddens rejects the equation of globalization with Americanization, arguing that it provides genuine opportunities for developing countries to enter the global economic circuit. He points to “reverse colonialism” where non-Western countries influence the West (e.g., Hispanicization of Los Angeles, Brazilian TV programs sold to Portugal). While acknowledging risks, he maintains that protectionism would be the wrong response.

Globalization Requiring Regulation: Sen takes a balanced position: globalization has brought benefits but has also increased inequality between and within nations. The solution is neither to promote nor to obstruct globalization, but to regulate it through common global choices. Each culture must safeguard its specificity while cooperating for mutual advantage—democratizing the economy without requiring all countries to adopt the same political model.

Anthropological Decentering: The chapter concludes by calling for a definitive epistemological and practical-moral decentering of the Western worldview. This “Copernican revolution” requires abandoning Eurocentric historiography and value systems, recognizing that different civilizations have autonomous logics and temporalities that cannot be measured against Western standards.

Historical Context

The chapter traces the emergence of globalization discourse from the mid-20th century to the present. Packard’s The Hidden Persuaders (1957) drew attention to advertising’s manipulation of the subconscious, highlighting how mass media create consensus and homogenize opinion across distances and social classes. McLuhan’s The Gutenberg Galaxy (1962) and Understanding Media (1964) analyzed how communication technologies—from print to television—transform consciousness independently of content.

The 1970s saw the planetary diffusion of media and the advent of personal computers (Intel 4004 microprocessor). In 1990, the US military-scientific computer network was opened to civilians, and in 1991 the World Wide Web was born, symbolizing the new communicative interconnection. The term “globalization” first appeared in the 1960s in The Economist, while French culture adopted “mondialisation.”

The historical context also includes the collapse of Eurocentrism as a self-evident framework. Spengler’s Decline of the West questioned whether Western historical categories applied universally. Toynbee emphasized the plurality and incommunicability of civilizations. Lévi-Strauss accused the West of intellectual and practical “cannibalism.” Ricoeur declared Eurocentrism dead in the 20th century. This deconstructive trend has intensified with attention to Asian and African history, which has disrupted traditional periodizations (ancient-medieval-modern) that assumed Western development as the norm.

Philosophical Lineage

flowchart TD
    Spengler --> Anti-Eurocentrism
    Husserl --> Phenomenology-of-Crisis
    Toynbee --> Civilizational-Pluralism
    Levi-Strauss --> Critique-of-West
    Ricoeur --> Post-Eurocentrism
    Frankfurt-School --> Critical-Theory
    Frankfurt-School --> Habermas
    Habermas --> Taylor
    Marx --> Negri
    Marx --> Hardt
    Foucault --> Negri
    Foucault --> Hardt
    McLuhan --> Media-Theory
    Sen --> Development-Economics
    Giddens --> Third-Way

    class Anti-Eurocentrism,Civilizational-Pluralism,Critical-Theory,Critique-of-West,Development-Economics,Foucault,Frankfurt-School,Giddens,Habermas,Hardt,Husserl,Levi-Strauss,Marx,McLuhan,Media-Theory,Negri,Phenomenology-of-Crisis,Post-Eurocentrism,Ricoeur,Sen,Spengler,Taylor,Third-Way,Toynbee internal-link;

Key Thinkers

ThinkerDatesMovementMain WorkCore Concept
Packard1914-1996Media CriticismThe Hidden Persuaders (1957)Subconscious manipulation by advertising
McLuhan1911-1980Media TheoryUnderstanding Media (1964)Global village, medium is the message
Taylor1931-CommunitarianismMulticulturalism (1994)Recognition, cultural imperialism problem
Negri1933-Post-MarxismEmpire (2000)Deterritorialized Empire, biopower
Hardt1960-Post-MarxismEmpire (2000)New form of imperialism
Giddens1938-Third WayRunaway World (1999)Globalization as opportunity
Sen1933-Development EconomicsGlobalization and Its DiscontentsRegulated globalization, democratization

Key Concepts

ConceptDefinitionRelated to
Global VillageWorld unified by electronic media where physical distance is overcome by instant communication, making messages universally accessibleMcLuhan, Mass media
Medium is the MessageCommunication technologies shape consciousness independently of content, producing mechanization and homogenizationMcLuhan, Media theory
GlobalizationComplex process involving economic intensification, decline of state sovereignty, technological diffusion, and cultural homogenizationContemporary philosophy
Cultural ImperialismSubtle domination through imposing Western categories of judgment even when attempting to recognize other culturesTaylor, Multiculturalism
EmpireNew deterritorialized form of power that transcends states, administering hybrid identities through network commandsNegri, Hardt
BiopowerPower over human nature itself, controlling cultural manifestations and social interactions in service of capitalNegri, Hardt, Foucault
Anthropological DecenteringEpistemological and moral displacement of Western worldview, enabling genuine dialogue among civilizationsPost-Eurocentrism
Reverse ColonialismInfluence of non-Western countries on Western development (e.g., Hispanicization of US)Giddens, Globalization

Authors Comparison

ThemeTaylorNegri/HardtGiddensSen
Globalization assessmentProblematicNegative (new Empire)Positive opportunityMixed, requires regulation
Main concernCultural imperialismBiopower, capitalOpportunity for developmentInequality distribution
Western roleSubtle dominatorEmpire’s instrumentTransforming alongside othersMust cooperate
Solution proposedAnthropological modestyMultitude resistanceEmbrace transformationDemocratic regulation
View of capitalismCulturally imperialistStructural dominationTransformableNeeds democratic control
Optimism levelCautiously pessimisticCritical-revolutionaryOptimisticCautiously optimistic

Influences & Connections

  • Predecessors: McLuhan ← influenced by ← Innis, Negri ← influenced by ← Marx, Foucault, Deleuze
  • Contemporaries: Taylor ↔ dialogue with ↔ Habermas, Sen ↔ debate with ↔ development economists
  • Followers: Negri → influenced → alter-globalization movement, McLuhan → influenced → digital humanities
  • Opposing views: Giddens ← criticized by ← anti-globalization movements, Negri ← criticized by ← liberal economists

Summary Formulas

  • McLuhan: Electronic media create a global village where the medium itself—not its content—shapes consciousness, producing pervasive homogenization.
  • Taylor: Western attempts to recognize other cultures paradoxically impose Western categories, requiring anthropological modesty to avoid subtle cultural imperialism.
  • Negri/Hardt: Globalization constitutes a new deterritorialized Empire exercising biopower over human nature itself, using human rights discourse as ideological cover.
  • Giddens: Globalization offers opportunities for developing countries and “reverse colonialism,” requiring institutional adaptation rather than protectionist resistance.
  • Sen: Globalization is irreversible and brings both benefits and increased inequality; it must be regulated through common global choices respecting cultural specificity.

Timeline

YearEvent
1957Packard publishes The Hidden Persuaders
1962McLuhan publishes The Gutenberg Galaxy
1964McLuhan publishes Understanding Media, coins “global village”
1971Intel 4004 microprocessor enables personal computers
1990US computer network opened to public
1991World Wide Web created
1994Taylor publishes Multiculturalism and the Politics of Recognition
1998Sen receives Nobel Prize in Economics
1999Giddens publishes Runaway World
2000Negri and Hardt publish Empire

Notable Quotes

“The medium is the message.” — McLuhan

“Our politics of difference, by implicitly invoking our criteria as the measure of all civilizations and cultures, can end up making everyone the same.” — Taylor

“Empire emerges at the twilight of European sovereignty. Unlike imperialism, Empire establishes no center of power and does not rely on fixed borders or barriers. It is a decentered and deterritorializing apparatus of rule.” — Negri


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