Rorty also introduces the term
ironist theory to describe a particular kind of theoretical writing that contrasts with philosophical writing. According to Rorty:The goal of ironist theory is to understand the metaphysical urge, the urge to theorize, so well that one becomes entirely free of it. Ironist theory is thus a ladder to be thrown away as soon as one has figured out what drove one's predecessors to theorize. The last thing the ironist theorist wants or needs, is a theory of ironism. He is not in the business of supplying himself and his fellow ironists with a method, a platform, or a rationale. He is just doing the same thing that all ironists do—attempting autonomy. He is trying to get out from under inherited contingencies and make his own contingencies, get out from under an old final vocabulary and fashion one which will be all his own.He classifies the works of (young) Hegel, Nietzsche, Heidegger, and
Derrida as forms of ironist theory because they aim not to explain the world but to make readers aware of the contingency of their own vocabularies. Ironist theory thus has no constructive or foundational program; its purpose is therapeutic, loosening the hold of necessity and encouraging creative self-recreation. The point of ironist theory, especially that of Rorty's theorizing itself, is not to establish a philosophy of ironism; it is only to inspire readers to become ironists by embracing the stance of ironism and thereby ceasing to philosophize in the traditional sense. == Philosophical context ==