
Intersecting Philosophical Planes : Philosophical Essays.
Title:
Intersecting Philosophical Planes : Philosophical Essays.
Author:
Olivier, Bert.
ISBN:
9783035303223
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (384 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- Acknowledgements xi -- Preface xiii -- Part 1 Philosophy, the individual, and society 1 -- Chapter 1 - Nature, capitalism, and the future of humankind 3 -- Chapter 2 - Nietzsche, immortality, singularity, and eternal recurrence 25 -- Chapter 3 - Lacan on the discourse of capitalism: Critical prospects 47 -- Chapter 4 - The 'quasi-universality' of the humanities 69 -- Chapter 5 - The humanities, technology, and universities 81 -- Chapter 6 - That strange thing called 'identifying' 101 -- Chapter 7 - Foucault and individual autonomy 125 -- Chapter 8 - 'Terror(ism)' in the context of cosmopolitanism 155 -- Chapter 9 - The subversion of Plato's quasi-phenomenology and mytho-poetics in the Symposium 183 -- Part 2 The arts and society 203 -- Chapter 10 - Women's 'nature' and architectural design 205 -- Chapter 11 - Music and architecture: Time and/or space? 219 -- Chapter 12 - Images and mediation 235 -- Chapter 13 - Communication and real confusion: Babel 255 -- Chapter 14 - Extra-ordinary cinema 277 -- Chapter 15 - Cinema and communication: 'Cinelogic' and 'cineaesthesis' 299 -- Chapter 16 - Avatar: Ecopolitics, technology, science, art, and myth 319 -- Chapter 17 - 'Sustainable' architecture and the 'law' of the fourfold 345 -- Index 361.
Abstract:
The philosophical essays collected here are predicated on the conviction that we live in a time when all-encompassing philosophical systems can no longer be seriously entertained as a true reflection of extant reality. Instead, an indefinite number of perspectives on - or discursive appropriations of - what is thought of as 'reality' are possible. Sometimes they diverge and sometimes they intersect in surprising ways, as these essays show. While the belief in an all-inclusive philosophical system is rejected, the author shows that every perspective displays a coherence and illuminating power of its own. The collection is divided into two parts. The first considers philosophy, the individual and society, covering themes including the deleterious effects of capitalism on natural ecosystems, the modern conception of 'immortality' in Nietzsche's thought, Lacan's provocative interpretation of capitalist discourse, the current status of the humanities in universities, individual autonomy, the meaning of 'identification', global 'terrorism', and Plato's philosophical self-subversion. The second part gathers together perspectives on the arts and society, with the author arguing that reflections on cinema, architecture and music never isolate these arts from social concerns, but demonstrate their interconnectedness.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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