Jacques Derrida (1930–2004) was a French philosopher best known for developing a form of philosophical and literary analysis known as "deconstruction." His work challenged the traditional assumptions of Western philosophy, particularly the ideas about language, meaning, and textual interpretation. Derrida argued that language is inherently unstable and that meaning is not fixed but contingent and subject to reinterpretation. This perspective led him to deconstruct texts to reveal the complexities and contradictions embedded within them.
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