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  • ...pact on [[critical theory]], [[literary theory]], twentieth-century French philosophy, [[sociology]], [[feminist]] theory and [[clinical]] psychoanalysis. ...upérieure. His audience is made up of [[analysts]] and young students in philosophy at the ENS, notably [[Jacques-Alain Miller]].
    13 KB (1,795 words) - 17:56, 3 June 2019
  • * Lacan is taught [[philosophy]] by Jean Baruzi, a remarkable Catholic thinker who wrote a dissertation on ...eudians” (a clear majority), the French second generation, following the philosophy of Marie Bonaparte, tries to occupy a different [[space]]. Dissident lumin
    82 KB (12,528 words) - 20:43, 25 May 2019
  • ...eligious belief to critical light, Zizek draws on psychoanalysis, film and philosophy to reveal in startling fashion that nothing could be worse for believers th
    1 KB (216 words) - 22:11, 14 June 2007
  • ...ive merits of post-structumalism and [[Lacanian]] [[psychoanalysis]] for a critical [[social]] theory.
    2 KB (228 words) - 04:38, 24 May 2019
  • ...e: The Crime of the Papin Sisters]]</b></a>, transl. by Jon Anderson in <i>Critical [[Texts]]</i>, vol.5, 3, 1988. <b>The [[Family]] [[Complexes]]</b>, transl. by Carolyn Asp in <i>Critical Texts</i>, vol.5, issue 3, 1988. Also transl. by Andrea Kahn in <i>Semiotex
    19 KB (2,949 words) - 21:03, 25 May 2019
  • The term often attaches to conceptual uses of analysis in [[critical theory]], [[literary criticism|literary]], [[film criticism|film]], or [[ot ...f [[Psychological trauma|trauma]] through [[literary]] studies informed by philosophy, [[psychology]], [[neurology]], and [[Freudian]] and [[Lacanian]] theory).
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  • ...l, while semiotics is deeply concerned about non-linguistic signification. Philosophy of language also bears a stronger connection to linguistics, while semiotic ...lastic]] philosophy. More recently, [[Umberto Eco]], in his "Semiotics and philosophy of language" has argued that semiotic theories are implicit in the [[work]]
    60 KB (8,683 words) - 22:58, 20 May 2019
  • ..., [[Marxism|Marxist]] and [[feminist]] theories, [[literary criticism]], [[philosophy]], and [[psychology]]. However, his theories remain controversial and widel ...r Schopenhauer and [[Friedrich Nietzsche]]. Schopenhauer's [[pessimistic]] philosophy, expounded in ''The World as Will and [[Representation]]'', describes a [[r
    78 KB (11,491 words) - 23:08, 20 May 2019
  • ...s there has been some overlap between these disciplines. This has led to "critical theory" becoming an umbrella term for an array of theories within the acade ==Critical theory (social theory)==
    15 KB (2,047 words) - 04:48, 24 May 2019
  • ...whose [[complete]] works he edited in Italian [[translation]]. Agamben's [[philosophy]] draws from [[Michel Foucault]] as well as from Italian neo-[[marxist]] th Giorgio Agamben is particularly critical of the [[United States]]' response to [[September 11, 2001 attacks|Septembe
    17 KB (2,688 words) - 08:36, 24 May 2019
  • ...thes produced what many consider to be his most prodigious work, the dense critical [[reading]] of [[Balzac]]’s ''[[Sarrasine]]'' entitled ''[[S/Z]]''. Thro ...arliest work was very much a reaction to the trend of [[existentialist]] [[philosophy]] that was prominent during the [[1940s]], specifically towards the figureh
    29 KB (4,425 words) - 22:23, 20 May 2019
  • ...is used in contemporary [[humanities]] and [[social sciences]] to denote a philosophy of meaning that deals with the ''ways'' that [[meaning]] is constructed and The term ''deconstruction'' in the context of Western philosophy is highly resistant to [[formal]] definition. [[Martin Heidegger]] was perh
    50 KB (7,273 words) - 21:41, 27 May 2019
  • '''[[German]] [[Idealism]]''' was a [[philosophy|philosophical]] movement in [[Germany]] in the late [[eighteenth century|ei ...known indirectly. This is the meaning that should be associated with the [[philosophy]] of German Idealism.
    12 KB (1,708 words) - 08:32, 24 May 2019
  • ...], [[political]] [[scientist]] and [[sociologist]] in the [[tradition]] of critical [[theory]]. ...talist]] industrial [[society]] and of [[democracy]], the rule of law in a critical social-evolutionary context, and contemporary (especially German) [[politic
    1 KB (181 words) - 02:09, 25 May 2019
  • ...ecially as the founder and guiding thinker of the Frankfurt [[School]] of [critical [[theory]]. [[Category:Philosophy|Horkheimer, Max]]
    900 bytes (116 words) - 19:19, 20 May 2019
  • ...the [[ideas]] of [[reification]] and [[class consciousness]] to [[Marxist philosophy]] and [[Marxist theory|theory]], and his [[literary]] criticism was influen ...ncerning [[Marxism]] and its relation to [[sociology]], [[politics]] and [[philosophy]], and for reconstructing [[Marx's theory of alienation]] before many of th
    8 KB (1,081 words) - 08:29, 24 May 2019
  • ...atural world. There is no subject independent of language. Lacan is highly critical of those encountertherapy groups that tend to deny the [[role]] of [[verbal
    68 KB (11,086 words) - 00:02, 26 May 2019
  • ...eedom]] of thought… however, one should treat Lenin in an "[[objective]] critical and [[scientific]] way," not in an attitude of nostalgic idolatry, and, fur ...minant political consensus. So everything is allowed, solicited even, as a critical topic: the prospects of a [[global]] ecological catastrophe, violations of
    164 KB (26,048 words) - 22:09, 20 May 2019
  • ...Marx himself uses the term "objectively-necessary appearance". So, when a critical Marxist encounters a bourgeois subject immersed in commodity fetishism, the ...l]] observation apropos of this paradox, of course, would be that modern [[philosophy]] long ago elaborated such a notion of "objectively subjective." Therein re
    54 KB (8,829 words) - 00:46, 21 May 2019
  • Crucial here is Ranciere's critical distance towards Marxist meta-politics. The key feature of meta-politics is ...al social body, fixing the rules of political competition, etc. `Political philosophy' is thus, in all its different shapes, a kind of `[[defence]]-[[formation]]
    51 KB (7,820 words) - 07:36, 24 May 2019
  • ...s freedom of [[thought]]. However, one should treat Lenin in an objective, critical, and [[scientific]] way, not in an attitude of nostalgic idolatry, and, fur ...minant political consensus. So everything is allowed, solicited even, as a critical topic: the prospects of a [[global]] ecological catastrophy, violations of
    75 KB (11,848 words) - 17:15, 27 May 2019
  • ...er, Cheney) [[doctrine]]," now publicly declared as the [[official]] US "[[philosophy]]" of international [[politics]] (in the 31 pages paper entitled "The Natio ...[[trauma]] for the hegemonic ideology — it had to defend itself against critical doubts, the gnawing worms was continuously at work and couldn't be simply s
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  • ...<a name="7"></a><a href="#7x">7</a> Kojin Karatani endeavors to assert the critical potential of such a "parallax view": when confronted with an antinomic stan ...post-Kantian speculative-historical approach is the highest achievement of philosophy):<br><br>
    214 KB (35,802 words) - 14:38, 12 November 2006
  • ...tion]]" of a certain ethico-political [[struggle]] and decision - what a [[critical analysis]] should do is to discern the hidden political process that sustai ...e by citizenship and not citizenship by man."<ref>Etienne Balibar, "Is a [[Philosophy]] Of. Human Rights Possible," in <i>South Atlantic Quaterly</i> 2/3, Spring
    25 KB (3,745 words) - 01:55, 21 May 2019
  • ...es means, a doctrine now publicly declared as the [[official]] American "[[philosophy]]" of international [[politics]] (in the thirty-one page paper entitled "Th ...orea, the underlying logic was clear: once a "rogue" [[state]] crosses the critical [[limit]] and already acquires substantial nuclear weapons, one cannot simp
    52 KB (8,632 words) - 00:48, 21 May 2019
  • ...trikes means, a doctrine now publicly declared as the official American "[[philosophy]]" of international [[politics]] (in the thirty-one page paper entitled "Th ...th Korea, the underlying logic was clear: once a "rogue" state crosses the critical [[limit]] and already acquires substantial nuclear weapons, one cannot simp
    9 KB (1,549 words) - 00:47, 21 May 2019
  • ...the lines." The true, hidden message contained in the "Great Tradition" of philosophy from [[Plato]] to [[Hobbes]] and Locke is that there are no gods, that [[mo ...the power system? Say, in Real Socialism, there is a difference between a critical [[intellectual]] who, in order to get through his message, has to cide it i
    55 KB (8,847 words) - 23:21, 24 May 2019
  • ...its terrorist [[dimension]]? However, much more pertinent is [[another]] critical point which concerns Negri and Hardt's neglect of the FORM in the strict [[ ...determination of this rupture, what we get is again [[withdrawal]] into [[philosophy]]: "A philosophical book like this, however, is not the [[place]] for us to
    28 KB (4,350 words) - 20:13, 20 May 2019
  • ...combined with his crucial failure to [[understand]] the origins of his own critical impulse, has pushed him towards New Ageism. Although the Communist regimes
    35 KB (5,668 words) - 18:54, 27 May 2019
  • | <small>Insinuations: Philosophy, Psychoanalysis, Literature</small><br />Eros and Ethics: Reading Jacques L | <small>Suny Series Insinuations: Philosophy, Psychoanalysis, Literature</small><br />Eros and Ethics: Reading Jacques L
    24 KB (3,720 words) - 16:19, 30 June 2019
  • ...''' is the [[philosophy|philosophical]] [[concept]] central to the [[moral philosophy]] of [[Immanuel Kant]] and to modern [[deontological ethics]]. He introduce He expressed extreme [[dissatisfaction]] with the [[moral]] [[philosophy]] of his day because he believed it could never surpass the level of hypoth
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  • ...xism|neo-Marxist]] [[Sociology|social theory]], [[social research]], and [[philosophy]]. The grouping emerged at the [[Institute for Social Research]] (''Institu ...rman]] [[idealism]], principally [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel|Hegel]]'s philosophy, with its emphasis on [[negation]] and [[contradiction]] as inherent proper
    20 KB (2,888 words) - 07:54, 24 May 2019
  • ...opher]]. He was at [[times]] associated with the [[Frankfurt School]] of [[critical theory]], and was also greatly inspired by the [[Marxism]] of [[Bertolt Bre [[Category:Philosophy|Benjamin, Walter]]
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  • ...life's [[work]] was spent exploring [[other]] realms: Eastern vs. Western philosophy, [[alchemy]], [[astrology]], [[sociology]], as well as [[literature]] and t ...[[maturation]] (which he called the process of [[individuation]]) to be of critical importance to the human being, and ultimately to modern society.
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  • ...ge (Ma): MIT Press 2003.</ref> [[Kojin Karatani]] endeavors to assert the critical potential of such a "parallax view": when confronted with an antinomic stan ...e excessive core of philosophy itself, for what is in philosophy more than philosophy (which is why his main references are philosophical - in the index of <i>É
    36 KB (5,976 words) - 07:29, 12 October 2006
  • ...critique suspicious: distrust of intellectuals is ultimately distrust of [[philosophy]] itself. ...nfronted with arguments like this, one cannot but recall the old lesson of critical [[theory]]: when we try to preserve the authentic intimate sphere of privac
    9 KB (1,339 words) - 00:38, 21 May 2019
  • ...ižek: 'On Divine Self-Limitation and Revolutionary Love]]". ''Journal of Philosophy and Scripture''. Volume 1, Issue 2. Spring 2004. Joshua Delpech-Ramey. <h ...ly four truth procedures:&nbsp; science, art, politics, and love (and then philosophy is just the study of these genetic procedures ...).&nbsp; The point is that
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  • .... And I think that the [[limit]] is here - I admit it here, we are in deep critical waters - very refined, between... engaging in redemptive violence and what ...e then act today". You then suggest that [[Adorno]] and [[Horkheimer]]'s [[critical theory]] provides a "a supreme case of the reversal of positive into [[nega
    64 KB (10,850 words) - 00:53, 26 May 2019
  • ...es means, a doctrine now publicly declared as the [[official]] American "[[philosophy]]" of international [[politics]] (in the thirty-one page paper entitled "Th ...orea, the underlying logic was clear: once a "rogue" [[state]] crosses the critical [[limit]] and already acquires substantial nuclear weapons, one cannot simp
    50 KB (8,234 words) - 00:48, 21 May 2019
  • Anarchism is an [[enlightenment]]-based radical political [[philosophy]], at the heart of which is a [[dialectical]] relationship between freedom ...cal fantasy. We have seen that classical anarchism, as a radical political philosophy, is sustained not only by the idea of a rational social "object" that deter
    53 KB (8,167 words) - 18:19, 27 May 2019
  • ...] in [[English]] and it remains one of his most accessible books. Mixing [[philosophy]], [[politics]] and [[psychoanalysis]] with examples from high and low [[cu ...a [[whole]], Zizek also produces his most sustained explanation of Hegel's philosophy here, as well as dissecting the [[cogito]]. As this synopsis suggests, [[Ta
    13 KB (2,068 words) - 03:38, 21 May 2019
  • * [[Slavoj Žižek: A Critical Introduction]]. Ian Parker, London: Pluto Press. <http://www.lacan.com/zizc * [[The Last Analysis of Slavoj Žižek]]. Edward O'Neill, [[Film]]-[[Philosophy]], 5, June.
    2 KB (345 words) - 03:37, 21 May 2019
  • * [[Zizek, Slavoj]]. '''''[[Philosophy in the Present]]'''''. ...in Cultural Theory|Jacques Lacan: Critical Evaluations in Cultural Theory (Critical Evaluationsin Cultural Theory)]]'''''. SZ editor. London: Routledge. Decemb
    34 KB (4,735 words) - 17:13, 12 August 2019
  • ...ns of Lacan's influence--[[psychoanalytic]] [[theory]] and [[practice]], [[philosophy]], [[social]] [[sciences]], and [[cultural]] studies, this set includes a n ...in Cultural Theory|Jacques Lacan: Critical Evaluations in Cultural Theory (Critical Evaluationsin Cultural Theory)]]'''''. SZ editor. [[London]]: Routledge. De
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  • * [[Slavoj Žižek: A Critical Introduction]]. Ian Parker, [[London]]: Pluto Press. <http://www.lacan.com/ * [[Toward a Notion of Critical Self-Creation]]. Denise Gigante, New [[literary]] [[History]], 29
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  • ...of an [[intellectual]]? As Zizek himself suggests in the interview here, [[philosophy]] helps us, not by "purifying" our [[thought]], but by making it more [[com ...reviews" of the [[tragedy]] in American movies, Zizek refused to blunt his critical edge: "In a way, America got what it fantasized about."</p>
    31 KB (5,130 words) - 23:54, 24 May 2019
  • say, there was a clear Frankfurt [[School]] or Critical Theory orientation, longer the [[State]] [[philosophy]]. It was some kind of vague [[humanist]] marxism,
    63 KB (10,146 words) - 21:35, 20 May 2019
  • ...e or supersede it. Two examples are informative here. In deconstructionist philosophy, Derrida has tended to reject the idea of the subject in favor of a concept The central issue is one of proximity; of maintaining a critical distance by keeping the Thing in focus (like the image on a screen) but wit
    40 KB (6,585 words) - 21:18, 31 July 2012
  • <tt>SLAVOJ ZIZEK: A CRITICAL INTRODUCTION</tt></b></font><br><br> ...tp://www.plutobooks.com/" target="_new"><img src="zizcritintro.gif" alt="A CRITICAL INTRODUCTION image" align="left" border="0" height="315" width="200"></a>
    95 KB (15,989 words) - 07:54, 12 September 2015
  • Kay, S. (2003), <i>Zizek: A Critical Introduction</i>, Cambridge: Politiy Press.<br> Rorty, R. (1991), "Habermas, Derrida and the Functions of Philosophy", paper presented at the University of Essex; reproduced in Rorty, R. (19
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  • ...e us see it in its terms? And, along these lines, how are we to obtain any critical distance on to the master-signifier? How are we to speak of its failure whe ...subject in that sense we spoke of in Chapter 1 as the only true topic of [[philosophy]]. Class as split between the master-signifier and object a is exactly like
    105 KB (18,216 words) - 20:53, 23 May 2019
  • <b>The subject of philosophy</b><br><br> ...od blockbuster, from now-forgotten figures of 18th and 19th century German philosophy to the notoriously obscure writings of the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lac
    87 KB (14,944 words) - 13:51, 12 September 2015
  • The term '[[phenomenology]]' has been used in [[philosophy]] since the late eighteenth century and in [[psychiatry]] since the beginni In [[philosophy]], the [[word]] was introduced by the [[German]] Johann Heinrich Lambert as
    10 KB (1,446 words) - 21:00, 20 May 2019
  • ...cense'' in [[1933]] from the [[University of Rennes]] and began studying [[philosophy]] at the [[University of Paris|Sorbonne]] in 1934, where he was influenced ...d ''The [[Symbolism]] of [[Evil]]'' published in 1960, and ''[[Freud]] and Philosophy: Essays on Interpretation'' published in 1965. These works cemented his re
    9 KB (1,276 words) - 20:51, 20 May 2019
  • ...]]. He is associated with what became known as the [[Frankfurt School]] of critical thinkers. ...[Karl Jaspers]], and [[Heinrich Rickert]]. Fromm received his [[Doctor of Philosophy|Ph.D.]] in sociology from Heidelberg in [[1922]], and completed his [[psych
    12 KB (1,673 words) - 06:42, 24 May 2019
  • ...he]], [[Heidegger]], and Derrida all conceive their own age as that of the critical turning point of metaphysics. In their (our) [[time]], metaphysics has exha ...n cinema resolves the inherent deadlock of the documentary cinema. (Or, in philosophy, the point is not to conceive eternity as opposed to temporality, but etern
    82 KB (13,178 words) - 17:18, 27 May 2019
  • ...hy, 1975; OA, philosophy, 1981) and at the Université [[Paris]]-VIII (DA, philosophy, 1985). Zizek ran as pro-reform candidate for the presidency of Slovenia in ...ed to Zizek: Tony Myers' Slavoj Zizek (Routledge) and Sarah Kay's Zizek: A Critical Introduction (Blackwell). [[The Zizek Reader]] (Blackwell) was published in
    46 KB (7,621 words) - 00:50, 21 May 2019
  • [[[Philosophy]] and [[science]] have their versions of religious belief. Here Lacan is s ...ich means with no motive that appeals to the subject's interest. This is a critical exercise that will bring us back to the very center of the problem we are a
    40 KB (7,339 words) - 01:20, 26 May 2019
  • ...be said, therefore, that Freud's views on [[religion]] and especially on [[philosophy]] were rather narrow—judging, as he did, that they were totally closed to ...lusion" (1933a [1932], p. 160), and philosophy, [[about]] which he wrote: "Philosophy is not opposed to science, it behaves like a science and works in part by t
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  • ...0) attended theÉcole Normale Supérieure, received his accreditation in [[philosophy]], and was a resident at the Institut Français in Berlin during 1933-34. H The uses of philosophy 37
    11 KB (1,617 words) - 21:09, 25 May 2019
  • ...ined a fundamental ambiguity with [[regard]] to its use, in contemporary [[philosophy]] we can distinguish between a [[negative]] and a positive application of t
    14 KB (2,055 words) - 02:51, 24 May 2019
  • ...atin]] American literature and [[culture]], and on contemporary European [[philosophy]] and [[political]] [[theory]]. ...t the turn between the 19th and 20th centuries; [[cultural]] studies and [[critical theory]]; and the reception of [[Marx]] and [[Freud]] in Latin America.
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  • ...rnment must be fought out, gained through polemos... This why [[Laclau]]'s critical remark about [[Lefort]] misses the point: "For Lefort, the <i>place</i> of ...Taxes, Smaller Government, Family Values." He proposes a similar ten-word philosophy for liberals: "Stronger America, Broad Prosperity, Better [[Future]], Effec
    72 KB (11,294 words) - 17:41, 27 May 2019
  • ...sche, [[Heidegger]], and Derrida all conceive their own age as that of the critical turning point of metaphysics. In their (our) time, metaphysics has exhauste ...cinema resolves the inherent deadlock of the documentary cinema. (Or, in [[philosophy]], the point is not to conceive [[eternity]] as opposed to [[temporality]],
    67 KB (10,603 words) - 17:16, 27 May 2019
  • <blockquote>And the [[duty]] of the critical intellectual -- if, in today's"[[postmodern]]" [[universe]], this syntagm h [[Category:Philosophy]]
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  • ...aratory chapters, on [[Freudian]] [[psychoanalysis]], [[surrealism]] and [[philosophy]], I have often alluded to language. In this chapter I [[want]] to focus on ...amining his wide-ranging interests in Freudian psychoanalysis, surrealism, philosophy and language, I now want to [[outline]] the [[development]] of his thought.
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  • ...or students and scholars of psychoanalysis, [[philosophy]], [[sociology]], critical and [[literary]] [[theory]]. ** The Work of Critical Sacrilege
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  • ...iatry and psychopathology, and the various discourses of recognition (from philosophy to psychology and the law) that shape our current politics of identity, but ...taphysics: From Mimesis to Metaphor'' (2012), and ''Immanence: Deleuze and Philosophy'' (2010).
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  • ...atician and soldier who is often referred to as the [[Father]] of Modern [[Philosophy]]. Descartes' starting point for the cogito was a cold winter's day. It was ...d that I could accept it without scruple as the first [[principle]] of the philosophy I was seeking.
    73 KB (12,478 words) - 23:06, 24 May 2019
  • ...ough the joint [[writing]] of a philosopher and a psychoanalyst engaged in critical [[reflection]] designed to challenge the bourgeois [[ideology]] of their er * [[Philosophy and psychoanalysis]]
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  • ...ion of a [[society]] to [[help]] develop the [[awareness]] of positivist [[philosophy]]. This belief in the ideals of science can be found throughout his [[work] Freud's need to preserve psychoanalysis from the grip of religion and philosophy did not result in his abandoning it to physicians and scientists. As early
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  • .... Elsewhere, in the same work, Lacan makes a couple of references to Hindu philosophy. They are equally brief and enigmatic.(1) Why does Lacan look Eastwards at ...s of unspoilt nature, green belts and national parks, which was reaching a critical phase in the interwar years.(13)
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  • [[[Philosophy]] and [[science]] have their versions of religious belief. Here Lacan is s ...ich means with no motive that appeals to the subject's interest. This is a critical exercise that will bring us back to the very center of the problem we are a
    40 KB (7,304 words) - 01:21, 26 May 2019
  • ...a [[film]] studies, [[literary]] criticism, [[feminist]] [[theory]] and [[philosophy]]. Lacan's writings are [[notorious]] for their complexity and idiosyncrati ...direction, an attempt to open Lacanian discourse up top wider scrutiny and critical engagement.
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  • [[Baudrillard]] has moved from a [[Marx]]ist-inflected critical commentary on the affluent [[consumer society]] to an ambiguous [[position] ...ety]] are influenced by a variety of tendencies within [[sociology]] and [[philosophy]], ranging from [[Marx]]'s [[theory]] of [[commodity fetishism]] to [[Barth
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  • ...llowed in Žižek’s path, combining psychoanalytic theory and [[social]] philosophy by [[interpreting]] Kant through Lacan, and vice versa, in [[Ethics]] of th ...ure, 1991)and La [[Philosophie]] critique de Kant (1963, Kant’s Critical Philosophy: The [[Doctrine]] of the Faculties, 1984). Guattari began his work as a [[p
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  • ...the auteur theory was later imported to North America in the 1960s via the critical writings of Andrew Sarris and his reappraisal of Hollywood [[cinema]]. Almo ...and vitality of this field, which has coincided with the proliferation and critical [[recognition]] of gay/lesbian/queer film and video over the last ten years
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  • ...agmatics and [[discourse]] [[analysis]], studies (inspired by linguistic [[philosophy]]) of [[speech]] [[acts]], speech genres, and [[text]] structure; socioling ...erary terms and models derive from varieties of linguistics and linguistic philosophy.
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  • ...] complex. Freud sees the child's [[relationship]] with its [[parents]] as critical for the [[achievement]] of its proper [[sexual identity]]. [[Love]] of the ...wledge]], has made use of (and criticised) [[ethology]], [[psychology]], [[philosophy]], [[linguistics]], [[logic]] and [[mathematics]]. He has put psychoanalysi
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  • ...he [[form]] is also used, by extension, to designate a twentieth-century [[philosophy]] for which interpretation is either a condition for accessing [[meaning]] Understood as philosophy, hermeneutics rejects the fact that [[logical]] [[concepts]], in the [[Hege
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  • ...ecame interested in the theater while still quite young. He studied law, [[philosophy]], and [[German]], and worked as a critic for several magazines; he publish ...] the marriage six months later to join Kraus. In 1933 he wrote a [[text]] critical of [[Hitler]] that was published only after his [[death]], but a [[poem]] o
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  • | class="s3" dir="ltr" | Routledge Critical Thinkers - Jacques [[Lacan]] [1 ed.], | class="s3" dir="ltr" | Suny Series in Contemporary Continental [[Philosophy]] - The Title of the [[Letter]]: A [[Reading]] of Lacan
    449 KB (71,997 words) - 20:32, 9 June 2019
  • ...mulation: “It is only when there is [[class struggle]] that there can be philosophy.” The [[ruling class]] (whose [[ideas]] are the ruling ideas) is represen ...Badiou, Adrian Johnston (unpublished paper)discerned a further ideologico-critical potential of the Badiouian topic of evental breaks: when the [[balance]] of
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  • ...s of the primacy of the [[signifier]] and of [[structure]]. Is this text a critical [[reading]] of Merleau-Ponty? Is its [[violence]] poorly veiled by the mask To assert an opposition between psychoanalysis and [[philosophy]] would be simplistic. To assert an opposition between a quest for the "pur
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  • In both [[Socrates]] and [[Lacan]], there are two critical dimensions of their position, the fundamental For Socrates, we learn of his “labors” with Diotima that taught him the philosophy of love in the [[Symposium]].<ref>201d; see also Lacan, 1975/1999, p. 67</r
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  • ...retical]] work in integral [[medicine]], [[psychiatry]], psychoanalysis, [[philosophy]], and related fields of the [[arts]] and [[sciences]]. ...n to a broader [[understanding]] of [[texts]], art, drama, [[literature]], philosophy, and [[aesthetics]]. In its regular two-hour forums, the group will create
    65 KB (9,479 words) - 15:34, 13 March 2023
  • ...rance|A Plea for a Return to Différance (with a Minor Pro Domo Sua)]]. ''Critical Inquiry''. Chicago: Winter 2006.Vol. 32, Iss. 2; pg. 226, 24 pgs. * [[Somewhere Over the Rainbow]]. ''Melbourne [[School]] of Continental [[Philosophy]]''. September 17, 2005. <http://mscp.org.au/>. Also listed at ''[[Lacan.co
    58 KB (7,265 words) - 00:09, 22 July 2019
  • ...g guilty in front of our liberal or Rightist critics is: we have to do the critical job better than our opponents. This, however, is not the entire story: one ..., ''mutatis mutandis'', apropos divine violence: "Well and good, gentlemen critical theorists, do you want to know what this divine violence looks like? Look a
    87 KB (14,415 words) - 18:46, 14 June 2007
  • ...and the twentieth century were Westernizers." (Lesley Chamberlain, <i>The Philosophy Steamer</i>, London: Atlantic Books 2006, p. 270) ...em to the dynamics of modernization - in clear contrast to Mao who, in his critical notes on Stalin's <i>Economic Problems of Socialism in the USSR</i> (from 1
    81 KB (13,226 words) - 20:04, 14 June 2007
  • ...[[Nietzsche]], and [[Freud]], and have sought to incorporate the specific critical and historical [[analyses]] of [[modernity]] into my approach political the ...est in developing an approach to political theory informed by the specific critical and historical analytical tools
    5 KB (678 words) - 21:47, 20 May 2019
  • Responses To Students Of [[Philosophy]] Concerning The [[Object]] Of Psychoanalysis Warwick studies in European philosophy.
    110 KB (16,811 words) - 00:26, 21 May 2019
  • ...cial moment, a moment at which there is not any world' /.../ As a result: 'Philosophy has no other legitimate aim except to help find the new names that will bri ...sume the task of running the state machinery, enabling us to engage in the critical distance towards the state? Furthermore, if the space of emancipatory polit
    68 KB (10,987 words) - 16:54, 12 January 2008
  • ..., "Philosophical Investigations into the Essence of Human Freedom," in <em>Philosophy of German Idealism</em>, ed. by Ernst Behler, New York: Continuum 1987, p. Recall the second of Benjamin’s "Theses on the Philosophy of History": "The past carries with it a temporal index by which it is refe
    71 KB (12,109 words) - 17:48, 12 January 2008
  • ...rsality (the universal capitalist order) without its symptoms, without its critical points in which its "repressed truth" articulates itself?<br><br> Years ago, Habermas made a perspicuous critical observation about those who see as the predominant feature of our era a dri
    28 KB (4,625 words) - 19:31, 12 January 2008
  • ...a consequence, Hegel’s absolute [[idealism]] has become the bogeyman of philosophy, obscuring the fact that he is the defining [[philosopher]] of the historic ...Žižek to [[diagnose]] our [[present]] condition, but also to engage in a critical dialogue with the key strands of contemporary thought—[[Heidegger]], [[Ba
    1 KB (178 words) - 00:45, 26 May 2019
  • ...t will be of great interest to anyone interested in critical [[theory]], [[philosophy]] and contemporary [[social]] thought.
    2 KB (236 words) - 00:57, 21 May 2019
  • * 1999, ''[[Manifesto for Philosophy]]'' * 2001, ''[[Alain Badiou: A Critical Introduction]]''
    4 KB (566 words) - 15:30, 11 April 2019
  • ...e him one of the most widely read thinkers of his generation. This compact critical volume is not only a powerful reappraisal of Deleuze’s [[thought]], but a ...own [[right]] one of the most original [[figures]] in postwar [[French]] [[philosophy]].
    2 KB (301 words) - 05:18, 24 May 2019
  • [[File:Alain Badiou- A Critical Introduction.jpg|thumb]] ...y and thus sets himself against both [[analytic]] and continental modes of philosophy.
    696 bytes (91 words) - 01:18, 24 May 2019

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