'I'm 79 years old. So why on earth should I concern myself with speaking
about youth?' This is the question with which renowned French
philosopher Alain Badiou begins his passionate plea to the young.
Today young people, at least in the West, are on the brink of a new
world. With the decline of old traditions, they now face more choices
than ever before. Yet powerful forces are pushing them in dangerous
directions, into the vortex of consumerism or into reactive forms of
traditionalism. This is a time when young people must be particularly
attentive to the signs of the new and have the courage to venture forth
and find out what they're capable of, without being constrained by the
old prejudices and hierarchical ideas of the past. And if the aim of
philosophy is to corrupt youth, as Socrates was accused of doing, this
can mean only one thing: to help young people see that they don't have
to go down the paths already mapped out for them, that they are not just
condemned to obey social customs, that they can create something new and
propose a different direction as regards the true life.