Results for 'Anti-Freud'

973 found
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  1.  11
    Anti-Freud: Karl Kraus's Criticism of Psycho-analysis and Psychiatry.Thomas Szasz - 1990 - Syracuse University Press.
  2.  42
    Rudolf Allers ou l’anti-Freud[REVIEW]John V. Quaranta - 1952 - New Scholasticism 26 (2):245-247.
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  3. Rudolf Allers ou l'anti-Freud[REVIEW]Louis Jugnet - 1951 - Sapientia 6 (22):309.
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  4. Louis Jugnet, Rudolf Allers ou l'anti-Freud[REVIEW]Vincent Edward Smith - 1952 - The Thomist 15:162.
     
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  5. Anti-thetic ideas-, Freud's early construct 35-, as opposite of intention 36 Being-, as identity other than body 32.Causation Cause - 1976 - In Joseph F. Rychlak (ed.), Dialectic: humanistic rationale for behavior and development. New York: S. Karger. pp. 2--152.
     
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  6.  23
    1. Oedipus Against Freud: The Origins of D.H. Lawrence’s Anti-Humanism.Bradley W. Buchanan - 2010 - In Oedipus Against Freud: Myth and the End(s) of Humanism in 20th Century British Lit. University of Toronto Press. pp. 21-48.
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  7.  52
    The Image of the People: Freud and Schmitt's Political Anti-Progressivism.Emily Zakin - 2011 - Telos: Critical Theory of the Contemporary 2011 (157):84-107.
    ExcerptIn “Thoughts for the Times on War and Death,” Freud defines nations as “the collective individuals of mankind” and suggests that their development recapitulates individual development.1 Like individuals, nations provide a structure for the internal organization of the passions, and, also like individuals, each nation has ideals that exhort, order, and orient its constitution and forces, imparting an image of unity that establishes borders, delimits hostilities, and guards equilibrium. In this essay, I read Freud and Schmitt through the (...)
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  8.  28
    Teaching Freud.Diane Jonte-Pace (ed.) - 2003 - New York: Oxford University Press.
    One of the central questions of the field of Religious Studies is "What is religion and how might we best understand it?". Sigmund Freud was surely a paradigmatic cartographer of this terrain. Among the first theorists to explore the unconscious fantasies, fears, and desires underlying religious ideas and practices, Freud can be considered a grandfather of the field. Yet Freud's legacy is deeply contested. His reputation is perhaps at its lowest point since he came to public attention (...)
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  9. Freud's religion: Oedipus and Moses.R. Z. Friedman - 1998 - Religious Studies 34 (2):135-149.
    "Moses and Monotheism" is Freud's last book on religion. It was published in its entirety only after his flight from Nazi-occupied Vienna. Moses is perhaps Freud's most controversial book on religion. It is both an apology and a curse. It is a critique of traditional Judaism (by way of an Oedipal analysis of a deified Moses), a defence of a modern humanistic Judaism (a Judaism of moral and intellectual values), and a bitter critique of Christianity (a religion not (...)
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  10.  92
    Freud, Foucault and 'the dialogue with unreason'.Joel Whitebook - 1999 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 25 (6):29-66.
    The standard interpretations of Foucault's intellectual biography usually present Sartre as his major adversary. Though it would be difficult to underestimate the importance of Sartre for Foucault's development, this paper argues that Foucault was involved in an even more intense and deeper contest with Freud. Indeed, Freud was Foucault's principal adversary and, throughout his career, Foucault was trying to formulate a counter-project to psychoanalysis. The author attempts to demonstrate this claim by examining Foucault's early psychological writings, Madness and (...)
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  11.  12
    Freud, Alder, and Jung: Discovering the Mind.Walter Kaufmann - 1992 - Routledge.
    Walter Kaufmann completed this, the third and final volume of his landmark trilogy, shortly before his death in 1980. The trilogy is the crowning achievement of a lifetime of study, writing, and teaching. This final volume contains Kaufmann's tribute to Sigmund Freud, the man he thought had done as much as anyone to discover and illuminate the human mind. Kaufmann's own analytical brilliance seems a fitting reflection of Freud's, and his acute commentary affords fitting company to Freud's (...)
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  12. The Dissolution of the Ego in Freud's Resolution of the Uncanny.Donovan Miyasaki - manuscript
    Freud’s discussion of uncanny [unheimlich] experiences focuses on their peculiar ambivalence. On his view, the uncanny is a paradoxical feeling of both familiarity and alienation. While Freud’s analysis of this paradoxical feeling does succeed in explaining it away, it does little to explain it. One might expect a psychoanalytical demystification of the real experience that is hidden behind the superstitious overtones of uncanny experiences. Instead, the uncanny is attributed rather anti- climactically to the combination of a previous (...)
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  13.  11
    Christian anti-Judaism and early object relations theory.Marsha Aileen Hewitt - 2018 - Critical Research on Religion 6 (3):226-242.
    The central ideas of early object relations theory are heavily inflected with Christian anti-Judaism, particularly as found in the work of Ian Dishart Suttie, now credited as the founder of this tradition. The critique of Freud launched by Suttie repudiates Freudian theory as a “disease” inextricably connected to Freud being a Jew. Suttie’s portrayal of Judaism both conforms to and replicates those theological commitments that privilege a triumphalist, supersessionist Christianity that breaks with Judaism, understood as devoid of (...)
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  14.  28
    Psychoanalysis and anti-racism in mid-20th-century America: An alternative angle of vision.Tom Fielder - 2022 - History of the Human Sciences 35 (3-4):193-217.
    The conventional historiography of psychoanalysis in America offers few opportunities for the elaboration of anti-racist themes, and instead American ‘ego psychology’ has often been regarded as the most acute exemplar of ‘racist’ psychoanalysis. In this article, consistent with the historiographical turn Burnham first identified under the heading of ‘the New Freud Studies’, I distinguish between histories of psychoanalytic practitioners and histories of psychoanalytic ideas in order to open out an alternative angle of vision on the historiography. For psychoanalytic (...)
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  15.  35
    L'anti-masoch.Régis Michel - 2006 - Multitudes 2 (2):69-85.
    Masochism brings Freud up against the accursed share of analysis, which was always the female. Masoch undermines the epistemological apparatus of the Freudian unconscious, which could reinvent sex, but not the world : it gives way to the old demons of metaphysics, where the death drive triumphs. The return of the repressed.
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  16.  79
    German Idealism and the Jew: The Inner Anti-Semitism of Philosophy and German Jewish Responses.Michael Mack - 2003 - Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
    In _German Idealism and the Jew_, Michael Mack uncovers the deep roots of anti-Semitism in the German philosophical tradition. While many have read German anti-Semitism as a reaction against Enlightenment philosophy, Mack instead contends that the redefinition of the Jews as irrational, oriental Others forms the very cornerstone of German idealism, including Kant's conception of universal reason. Offering the first analytical account of the connection between anti-Semitism and philosophy, Mack begins his exploration by showing how the fundamental (...)
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  17.  29
    L'Anti-Électre totémisme et schizogamie.Elisabeth von Samsonow - 2007 - Multitudes 31 (4):211.
    For about a hundred years since the invention of the Oedipus complex, Electra stands for its feminine counterpart even though Freud would not have it thus established because he granted the female sex no claim to its own sexuality-marking complex. Electra is the mannequin on which Oedipus hangs like a coat on a coatrack.
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  18.  14
    Anti-humanism and the Deconstruction of the Liberal Subject.James Heartfield - 2019 - In Angus Kennedy & James Panton (eds.), From Self to Selfie: A Critique of Contemporary Forms of Alienation. Springer Verlag. pp. 147-165.
    France saw a great intellectual upsurge in a variety of different academic fields in the 1970s, principally in philosophy, but also in the social sciences, linguistics, anthropology, history, and psychiatry. Different strands of thinking, from the linguistic school of structuralists, Lévi-Strauss’ structuralist anthropology, Louis Althusser’s reconsiderations of the basis of Marxism, Derrida’s philosophical critique of phenomenology and structuralism, Lacan’s of Freud and the unconscious, and Michel Foucault’s historical genealogy, all seemed to be coalescing in a reconsideration of the centrality (...)
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  19.  58
    A Secular Alchemy of Social Science: The Denial of Jewish Messianism in Freud and Durkheim.Philip Wexler - 2008 - Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory 55 (116):1-21.
    This essay presents a reading of the work of two central figures of modern social theory that locates their work within not simply mainstream Jewish thought, but a particular Hasidic tradition. Further, I argue that lying behind this, in a repressed form, is an even older tradition of Jewish alchemy. I make no claim to have evidence that either Freud or Durkheim were directly influenced by Hasidism or alchemy, but I examine the parallels between the structure of their thoughts (...)
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  20.  90
    Conceptualizaciones sobre el estado en el anti-edipo: Capitalismo Y esquizofrenia.María Pagotto - 2014 - Eidos: Revista de Filosofía de la Universidad Del Norte 21:85-103.
    Este artículo analiza los aspectos centrales de la concepción del Estado en El Anti-Edipo. Capitalismo y esquizofrenia, en particular los desarrollos ofrecidos en el capítulo tercero: "Salvajes, Bárbaros, Civilizados". La innovadora figura del Estado surge de un juego polifónico, abigarrado, discontinuo y elíptico con Karl Marx a partir de la noción de Modo de producción asiático; con Friedrich Nietzsche considerando la noción de origen y domesticación; y con Sigmund Freud siguiendo la noción de latencia. Los rasgos centrales para (...)
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  21.  15
    2. Anti-Humanists at Colonus: The Oedipus Myth in Wyndham Lewis and T.S. Eliot.Bradley W. Buchanan - 2010 - In Oedipus Against Freud: Myth and the End(s) of Humanism in 20th Century British Lit. University of Toronto Press. pp. 49-70.
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  22.  37
    Body, Mimesis and Childhood in Adorno, Kafka and Freud.Matt F. Connell - 1998 - Body and Society 4 (4):67-90.
    The viscerally Freudian elements of Adorno's use of the concept of mimesis interweave with readings of Kafka in which certain thoughts about childhood play an important role. The first section of this article links biological mimicry with critical theory and art: both mimic what they criticize, while also conserving a repressed and childlike mimetic relationship with otherness and sexual difference. Adorno criticizes both the civilized repression of the mimetic impulse and its subsequently distorted return, a dialectic neglected by direct appeals (...)
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  23. “'Naturalism or anti-naturalism? No, thanks — both are worse!ʼ: Science, Materialism, and Slavoj Žižek”.Adrian Johnston - 2012 - Revue Internationale de Philosophie 261 (3):321-346.
    In this essay, I respond to Žižek's charges that my turns to biology risk naturalizing away key features of non-natural subjectivity à la German idealism and Lacanianism. The crux of this dispute between him and me concerns how close to or far from a life-science-based naturalism a materialist theory of the subject with allegiances to Kant, Hegel, Freud, and Lacan should be. I contend that materialism must be closer to naturalism than Žižek allows— while insisting simultaneously that the spontaneous (...)
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  24. “A schizophrenic out for a walk‘.Andrea Hurst - 2015 - Tijdschrift Voor Filosofie 77 (1):109-131.
    For addressing the problem of negotiating social orders in a way that protects one’s humanity, I have considered Deleuze and Guattari’s intriguing claim in Anti-Oedipus that “a schizophrenic out for a walk is a better model than a neurotic lying on the analyst’s couch‘. I outlined the associated principles of schizoid living developed in Anti-Oedipus via a critique that reverses the value of two Freudian concepts, namely, ”neurosis’ and ”psychosis’. I then cited some of the book’s eulogising ”praise (...)
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  25.  11
    The Two Bodies of the King of the Jews.Luca Di Blasi - 2024 - Angelaki 29 (3):60-72.
    Starting from Santner’s essay “Freud’s ‘Moses’ and the Ethics of Nomotropic Desire,” the article explores a remarkably intriguing and simultaneously debatable statement made by Sigmund Freud regarding the accusation of the murder of God as a central Christian source of anti-Semitism. This investigation leads into the differentiation between two bodies of the King of the Jews: Jesus Christ and Jesus Barabbas, through which early Christians not only distanced themselves from political messianism (“Barabbas”), but also assumed a political (...)
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  26. Beyond satisfaction: Desire, consumption, and the future of socialism.Robert Meister - 1996 - Topoi 15 (2):189-210.
    Anti-capitalist thinkers in the West have long argued that the expansion of markets creates new wants faster than it can satisfy them, and that consumption under capitalism is a form of addictive behavior. Recently, however, the relentless expansion of desire has come to be seen as a strength rather than a weakness of capitalist regimes. To understand this change socialists must consider whether there is a point to consumer spending that goes beyond satisfaction with what one gets. Freud's (...)
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  27.  20
    The Nonthinkable, the Nonhuman, the Nonphilosophical: On the Function of Negation in Posthumanism.Nigina R. Sharopova - 2022 - Russian Studies in Philosophy 60 (3):186-204.
    The philosophical manifestos of the past few decades involving attempts to go beyond constructs, discourses, and structures to the things themselves and a return to ontology and materialism often address the problems of the Anthropocene. Criticism of anthropocentrism and the introduction of the nonhuman into the focus of philosophy opened up new perspectives in solving the problems of idealism. This escape from the discursive aspect and the human factor, which is intended to break out philosophical projects to the outside, to (...)
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  28. Review of Manifesting Inherent Perfection. [REVIEW]Subhasis Chattopadhyay - 2015 - Vedanta Kesari:442-3.
    This review makes a case for holistic education and calls for revamping Indian education, using the pedagogical methods available in this book.
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  29.  6
    The tragedy of European civilization: towards an intellectual history of the twentieth century.Harry Redner - 2015 - New Brunswick (U.S.A): Transaction Publishers.
    The tragedy of European civilization is a protracted historical event spanning the twentieth century and in many ways is ongoing. During this time some of the greatest modern thinkers were active, producing works that both refl ected what was happening in history and contributed towards shaping it. This work is a critique of their ideas. Harry Redner establishes where and how they went wrong, in some cases with apocalyptic consequences for Europe and the world. The great intellectuals of the age, (...)
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  30.  12
    Jokes, Life After Death, and God.Joseph Bobik - 2014 - St. Augustine's Press.
    _Jokes, Life after Death, and God _has two main tasks: to try to understand exactly what a joke is, and to see whether there are any connections between jokes, on the one hand, and life after death and God, on the other hand. But it pursues other tasks as well, tasks of an ancillary sort. This book devises a general and comprehensive, but brief, theory of jokes. The author begins with critiques of other writers’ views on the subject. 1) Ted (...)
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  31.  4
    The Annual of Psychoanalysis, V. 31: Psychoanalysis and History.Jerome A. Winer & James W. Anderson (eds.) - 2003 - Routledge.
    In 1958 William L. Langer, in a well-known presidential address to the American Historical Association, declared the informed use of psychoanalytic depth psychology as "the next assignment" for professional historians. _Psychoanalysis and History_, volume 31 of _The Annual of Psychoanalysis_, examines the degree to which Langer's directive has been realized in the intervening 45 years. Section I makes the case for psychobiography in the lives of historical figures and exemplifies this perspective with analytically informed studies of the art of Wassily (...)
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  32.  14
    The Tragedy of the Self: Individual and Social Disintegration Viewed Through the Self Psychology of Heinz Kohut.Gary F. Greif - 2000 - Upa.
    In The Tragedy of the Self, Gary F. Greif attributes social violence and individual isolation to a contemporary neglect of a fundamental human need for support that only human culture and interaction can promote and reinforce. Greif bases this interpretation on the works of Heinz Kohut, a psychoanalyst who by degrees transformed Freud's theory of the instincts into a theory of the self. Kohut maintains that every individual fundamentally requires continual human support in order to live with confidence and (...)
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  33. Interpellation, Populism, and Perversion: Althusser, Laclau and Lacan.Henry Krips - 2004 - Filozofski Vestnik 25 (2).
    By conceiving interpellation as a general mechanism for the social constitution of human subjects, authors such as Judith Butler, Ernesto Laclau and Slavoj Žižek have emancipated interpellation from its conservative roots as an ideological dispositif. I examine this conceptual shift through the work of Ernesto Laclau, who, using interpellation as a model for the Gramscian process of articulation, shifts it from the conservative to the radical side of the political ledger. But, we will see, Laclau’s theory runs into various difficulties. (...)
     
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  34.  75
    Doping as a Manifestation of a Narcissistic Civilization.Konstantinos Dedousis - 2021 - Sport, Ethics and Philosophy 15 (1):88-102.
    Over every and each sport event, a dark veil spreads and obfuscates the celebration: doping. Although anti-doping policies have been widely applied, controlling and diminishing this phenomenon has not been achieved yet and the use of doping is commonplace. In this article, I propose the concept of narcissistic civilization as a tool to interpret this phenomenon. I seek for a parallel reading between the Freudian idea of narcissism and its extension to social narcissism by Fromm, together with Heidegger’s analysis (...)
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  35.  9
    Pour Bataille.Jacques Nassif - 2019 - Paris: Éditions des Crépuscules. Edited by Jean Daive.
    Beaucoup de surprises attendent le lecteur de ce livre. D'abord celle de l'existence d'une alliance objective entre les deux géants du siècle passé, ayant pu aller jusqu'au pacte tacite, mais constamment renouvelé entre la psychanalyse et la philosophie, anti-hegélienne, bien sûr. Ensuite, celle de la connaissance approfondie des textes de Freud, dès les années 20-30, que pouvait avoir Bataille, et bien avant que Lacan ne s'en empreigne, si l'on veut bien prendre enfin en compte ses écrits du tome (...)
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  36.  68
    Ley, deseo y libertad. Notas sobre Lacan y la Crítica de la Razón práctica.María José Callejo Hernanz - 2010 - Logos. Anales Del Seminario de Metafísica [Universidad Complutense de Madrid, España] 43:163-199.
    The subversion of tradition of ethics carried out by Kant in his Critique of Practical Reason is, according to Lacan, the intelligibility background on which it is possible a science of the subject as developed by Freud. This would be shown up in a particularly effective way if comparing Kant’s moral theory with Sade’s antimoral one. It is not difficult to show the formal-structural identity of the state of affairs established by inconditionality of law in both theoretical systems, and (...)
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  37.  30
    D. H. Lawrence: Aesthetics and Ideology.Anne Fernihough - 1993 - Clarendon Press.
    The vast body of Lawrence scholarship has veered between the extremes of uncritical celebration and violent denigration. This first extended study of Lawrence's aesthetics draws on a number of modern critical approaches to present an original and balanced analysis of Lawrence's literary and art criticism, and of the complex cultural context from which it emerged. -/- Emphasising the influence on this most`English' of writers of a German intellectual and cultural heritage, Anne Fernihough focuses on Lawrence's connections with the völkisch ideologies (...)
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  38. Following Atheism: on a Debate in Contemporary Psychoanalytic Theory.Thomas Brockelman - 2012 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 6 (1).
    Setting out from a debate between two contemporary Lacanians about the religious significance of psychoanalysis, this paper argues that what such analysis really has to offer to a discussion of religion is purloined by the current round of academic polemics about its "revival." This argument is built in three steps: in the first, I demonstrate that the "site" of a meeting of psychoanalysis and religion is the "fundamental fantasy," tracing that concept's history from its Freudian pre-history through Lacan and showing (...)
     
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  39.  43
    The Machinic Unconscious: Essays in Schizoanalysis.Felix Guattari - 2010 - Semiotext(E).
    An early work that lays the foundation for establishing a “polemical” dimension to psychoanalysis. We certainly have the unconscious that we deserve, an unconscious for specialists, ready-made for an institutionalized discourse. I would rather see it as something that wraps itself around us in everyday objects, something that is involved with day-to-day problems, with the world outside. It would be the possible itself, open to the socius, to the cosmos...—from The Machinic Unconscious: Essays in Schizoanalysis In his seminal solo-authored work (...)
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  40.  40
    The Strangest Cult: Material Forms of the Political Book through Deleuze and Guattari.Nicholas Thoburn - 2013 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 7 (1):53-82.
    This article investigates the complex object of the political book. Mobilising Deleuze and Guattari's typology of the book, the article assesses the material properties of four specific books (or sets of books): Mao Zedong's ‘Little Red Book’, Russian Futurist books, Antonin Artaud's paper ‘spells’, and Guy Debord and Asger Jorn's ‘anti-book’ Mémoires. Highly critical of the dominant mode of the political book, what they call the ‘root-book’, Deleuze and Guattari draw attention to the troubling religious structures and passions that (...)
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  41.  30
    The Lives of Erich Fromm: Love's Prophet.Lawrence Friedman - 2013 - Columbia University Press.
    Erich Fromm was a political activist, psychologist, psychoanalyst, philosopher, and one of the most important intellectuals of the twentieth century. Known for his theories of personality and political insight, Fromm dissected the sadomasochistic appeal of brutal dictators while also eloquently championing love--which, he insisted, was nothing if it did not involve joyful contact with others and humanity at large. Admired all over the world, Fromm continues to inspire with his message of universal brotherhood and quest for lasting peace. The first (...)
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  42.  7
    A post-foundational ontology for a democratic instrumentality of education.Abdellatif Atif & Noel Fitzpatrick - forthcoming - Educational Philosophy and Theory.
    Education theory has been exhibiting a renewed rejection of education’s instrumentality to political and economic influences against a policy trend that implicitly considers education a mere pragmatic tool. This paper suggests an ontological investigation that goes beyond normatively supporting or rejecting the instrumentality of education. It looks at instrumental relationships as a form of prosthesis supplementing the ontological incompleteness of its involved subjects. This incompleteness is argued for through Laclau and Mouffe’s understanding of antagonism and Bernard Stiegler’s philosophy of technics. (...)
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  43.  27
    Flux qua gap: The Hegelian Deleuze.Xuelian He - 2020 - International Journal of Žižek Studies 14 (1).
    This essay aims to answer the question: how does Žižek reconcile Hegel’s immanence of gap with Deleuze’s immanence of flux? The contrast between the Deleuzian flux and the Hegelian gap is positivity versus negativity, externality versus internality, and virtuality versus actuality. Via Lacanian not-all, Žižek inserts Hegelian negativity into the absolute positivity of the Deleuzian univocity. In keeping up with Hegelian immanence without externality, Žižek encloses Deleuzian externality by regarding anti-Oedipus as the inner transgression of desire via the shift (...)
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  44.  22
    Le mythe de la charge maximale.Michelle Ty & Frédéric Neyrat - 2021 - Multitudes 82 (1):142-153.
    Cet article propose la critique d’un concept relativement nouveau en jeu dans la détention et l’exclusion des migrants « irréguliers », à savoir que l’État-nation a une « capacité d’accueil » limitée et objective quant à l’accueil des étrangers – une capacité qui, lorsqu’elle est dépassée, justifie une défense militarisée. Distincte des rationalités gouvernementales plus explicitement racistes qui ont sous-tendu les premiers quotas d’immigration aux États-Unis, la notion de « capacité d’accueil » nationale a une logique propre dans laquelle écologie (...)
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  45.  6
    Posthumanistische Pädagogik: Unterwegs zu einer poststrukturalistischen Erziehungswissenschaft.Michael Wimmer - 2019 - Paderborn: Ferdinand Schöningh.
    The era of humanism has come to an end. Its concept has been criticised heavily, most prominentely from Marx, Nietzsche and Freud. What will follow is still an open question and one that is especially crucial for pedagogical thinking. What we do know is that humans won't stop to reinvent themselves and it becomes obvious that our tightening symbiosis with technology is a mayor evolutionary step that deserves close scutiny. This book looks from different angles onto the new field (...)
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  46.  6
    Selected Writings.Thomas Albrecht (ed.) - 2007 - Stanford University Press.
    Sarah Kofman, Professor of Philosophy at the Sorbonne in Paris and the author of over twenty books, was one of the most significant postwar thinkers in France. Kofman's scholarship was wide-ranging and included work on Freud and psychoanalysis, Nietzsche, feminism and the role of women in Western philosophy, visual art, and literature. The child of Polish Jewish immigrants who lost her father in the Holocaust, she also was interested in Judaism and anti-Semitism, especially as reflected in works of (...)
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  47.  54
    Jesus and Monotheism.Gil Anidjar - 2013 - Southern Journal of Philosophy 51 (S1):158-183.
    From Oedipus to Moses and beyond, Freud's last book has been read with singular obstinacy as addressing a Jewish (or anti-Semitic) question, or as renewing a religious (or antireligious) agenda. Between Athens and Jerusalem, from Judaism to a more general “monotheistic religion,” and from Oedipus (the son) to Moses (the father), scholars have explored or refuted numerous traces the primal murder left and many among the founding fathers, the substitutes to which it gave rise. Yet it is easy (...)
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  48.  28
    The Machinic Unconscious: Essays in Schizoanalysis.Taylor Adkins (ed.) - 2010 - Semiotext(E).
    We certainly have the unconscious that we deserve, an unconscious for specialists, ready-made for an institutionalized discourse. I would rather see it as something that wraps itself around us in everyday objects, something that is involved with day-to-day problems, with the world outside. It would be the possible itself, open to the socius, to the cosmos...--from The Machinic Unconscious: Essays in SchizoanalysisIn his seminal solo-authored work The Machinic Unconscious, Félix Guattari lays the groundwork for a general pragmatics capable of resisting (...)
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  49.  81
    Sex before God.Dennis O’Brien - 2000 - Philosophy and Theology 12 (1):187-211.
    In a comment on concupscentia, Rahner says that while we may properly draw a distinction between “the spiritual and the sensitive as between two really distinct powers of man,” we must recognize that no human power can be conceived as a “thing.” Given that caution, what would Rahner think of the Freudian “Id”—a word which Freud chose to characterize the nonhuman “it” (thing) at the base of human motivation? Not surprisingly, Rahner says that with the strength of faith we (...)
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  50.  51
    Exception in Žižek's Thought.Erik Vogt - 2007 - Diacritics 37 (2/3):61-77.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Exception in Žižek’s ThoughtErik Vogt (bio)One cannot fail to be struck by the repeated occurrences and invocations of some logic of exception as well as by the proliferation of examples or stand-ins for exceptional positions (“Jew”; “woman”; “class struggle”) or exceptional collectives (“proletariat”; “slum dwellers”) in many of Slavoj Žižek’s writings. The significance of thinking exception is evident not only in Žižek’s powerful reconceptualization of (a supposedly outdated) ideology (...)
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