Cover image for The History of the Devil.
The History of the Devil.
Title:
The History of the Devil.
Author:
Flusser, Vilém.
ISBN:
9781937561574
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (239 pages)
Series:
Univocal
Contents:
Cover -- Copyright Page -- Table of Contents -- Translator's Introduction -- 1. Introduction -- 2. The Devil's Childhood -- 2.1. His Birth -- 2.2. Playing with a Spintop -- 2.3. Playing with Cubes -- 2.4. Playing of Composing Elements -- 3. Lust -- 3.1. Life -- 3.2. The Cell -- 3.3. The Organism -- 3.4. Man -- 3.5. Sex -- 3.6. Nationalism -- 3.7. Love for the Mother Tongue -- 3.8. Love for Reading and Writing -- 4. Wrath -- 4.1. Freedom -- 4.2. The Law -- 4.3. Chance -- 4.4. Wrath Revisited -- 5. Gluttony -- 5.1. The Mechanism -- 5.2. The Program -- 5.3. Raw Material -- 5.4. The Product -- 5.5. The Instrument -- 5.6. The Feast -- 6. Envy and Greed -- 6.1. Society -- 6.2. Retribution -- 6.3. Justice -- 6.4. Conversation -- 7. Pride -- 7.1. Language -- 7.1.1. Poetry -- 7.1.2. Music and Concrete Poetry -- 7.1.3. Painting -- 7.1.4. Science -- 7.2. Pincers of the Will -- 7.2.1. Science as Yoga -- 7.2.2. Yoga as Science -- 7.3. Contrition -- 8. Sloth and the Sadness of the Heart -- 8.1. The Voice's Aura -- 8.1.1. Structure -- 8.1.2. Reencounter -- 8.2. The Ivory Tower -- 8.2.1. Honesty -- 8.2.2. The Purification Bath -- 8.2.3. Let Us Not Speak About That -- 8.3. Inversion -- 8.4. The Bronze Gong -- 8.5. Lust Once Again -- 9. Post Scriptum -- 9.1. They Abound.
Abstract:
In 1939, a young Vilém Flusser faced the Nazi invasion of his hometown of Prague. He escaped with his wife to Brazil, taking with him only two books: a small Jewish prayer book and Goethe's Faust. Twenty-six years later, in 1965, Flusser would publish The History of the Devil, and it is the essence of those two books that haunts his own. From that time his life as a philosopher was born. While Flusser would later garner attention in Europe and elsewhere as a thinker of media culture, The History of the Devil is considered by many to be his first significant work, containing nascent forms of the main themes that would come to preoccupy him over the following decades. In The History of the Devil, Flusser frames the human situation from a pseudo-religious point of view. The phenomenal world, or "reality" in a general sense, is identified as the "Devil," and that which transcends phenomena, or the philosophers' and theologians' "reality," is identified as "God." Referencing Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus in its structure, Flusser provocatively leads the reader through an existential exploration of nothingness as the bedrock of reality, where "phenomenon" and "transcendence," "Devil" and "God" become fused and confused. So radically confused, in fact, that Flusser suggests we abandon the quotation marks from the terms "Devil" and "God." At this moment of abysmal confusion, we must make the existential decisions that give direction to our lives.
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.
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