Um...no. Modernism is not the antithesis of Enlightenment. In fact, it's almost the same thing. Modernism is the age of Enlightenment. Post-modernism is not a philosophy, it is a period in history. Philosophies of this time don't have to agree with capitalism, and I never said that, sometimes they do. For example, neoliberalism.Modernism (especially post-modernism, from what I've read) is the antithesis of the Enlightenment and of reason.
I have often compared this age to greek Helenism or the times of Barroque in Europe. The difference, however, is that this period has a very wide extension, and it seems harder to bring down. Upon the fall of the Berlin wall, Frencis Fukuyama proclaimed that was "the end of history". That, I don't agree with, and after 9/11 Fukuyama admited "he might have been wrong".So, we yap about the failure of this or that. But the truth is, we're in what will be viewed one day as a cultural rebirth. Lots of pain, but ultimately a good ending.
Yet, my question here is where will this new values come from. Or from whom.