Tag Archives: philosophy

Mythology, Madness, and Laughter: Subjectivity in German Idealism

As we are approaching the times, where, according to some bright contemporary minds (Adrian Johnston, Catherine Malabou) to name a couple the debt of biology which according to Freud should explain psychoanalysis, is either being paid or close to it, the question of subjectivity: what is it, really, is re-surging with full force. Adrian Johnston bases his transcendental materialism on a presentation of this very problem and its solution in a couple of must-read books (1 2). There, he engages with modern thinkers on this issue (among other things).

 Mythology, Madness, and Laughter: Subjectivity in German Idealism is a joint effort by Markus Gabriel and Slavoj Žižek, where the issues are tackled from a slightly different angle. Unlike Johnston, for whom, in the crudest of terms, the rise of subjectivity occurs in the register of the Lacanian Real, Gabriel would question the very “real” status of this Real to begin with. In that sense, he is much closer to Žižek, who, in The Parallax View states that the radical materialism must start with the Hegelian concept of Notion (“a truly radical materialist approach … to put it in Hegelese, there is the Particular because the Universal is not fully itself; there is the opaque material reality because the Notion is not fully itself…” Parallax View, The Comedy of Incarnation). On a personal note: I find this anti-Leninist turn most gratifying.

A great feature of this book is Žižek’s chapter on Fichte. I am not going to try and do it justice in a blog entry. Suffice it to say, that importance of Fichte’s thought is only matched by the thoroughness of misunderstanding of it. Žižek boldly battles the dragons of Fichte’s perceived solipsism. It is not that he presents a “new” understanding of Fichte’s philosophy. He presents a “real” understanding of it, reminding us once again about the platonic difference between “philosophia” and “doxophilia”. The “doxa” in this case being the basic adoption of a false reduction of Fichte’s system by Mme de Stael to a story of baron Munchausen, who pulled himself across the river by his sleeve.

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A la guerre….

A brilliant end of the chapter L’infini in Le siècle of Alain Badiou! Speaking about the war of the century, a war for “the univocation of the Real, against the equivocations of the imaginary”. An idea of universal thinking against temptations of interpreting…

C’est qu’il y a, de cette guerre, bien d’autres noms moins ésotériques: l’Idée contre la réalité. La liberté contre la nature. L’événement contre l’état des choses. La vérité contre les opinions. L’intensité de la vie contre l’insignifiance de la survie. L’égalité contre l’équité. Le soulèvement contre l’acceptation. L’éternité contre l’Histoire. La science contre la technique. L’art contre la culture. La politique contre la gestion des affaires. L’amour contre la famille.

Oui, toutes ces guerres à gagner, comme le prononce le Tchouvache, “parmi les soubresauts du souffle du non-dit”.

Translation:

This war has many names, less esoteric. Idea against actuality. Freedom against Nature. The Event against the order of things. Truth against opinions. The intensity of living against the insignificance of surviving.  Equality against equity. Rebellion against acceptance. Eternity against History. Science against technology. Art against culture. Politics against management. Love against family.

Yes, all these wars to win! As the Chuvash puts it: “among the somersaults of a breath of unsaid”.

(Chuvash is a reference to the Chuvash/Russian poet Gennadiy Aygi).

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” Žižek proceeds to connect this to a certain Lacanian version of the death drive…: insofar as the denaturalization of nature brought about by the sociocultural overwriting of vital being involves the colonization of the living (i.e., organic body) by the dead (i.e., the symbolic order), one could say, following Hegel and Lacan, that human life is lived under the dominance of lifeless set of cadaverizing signifiers (for instance, memes as mental parasites). Infection by virulent strains of virus-like signifiers is contracted by the individual in the process of struggling to gentrify and mask the abyssal darkness of the void of $ subsisting within substance.”

Adrian Johnston, Žižek’s Ontology p. 188

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November 2, 2013 · 3:06 PM

Emotional Life in a Neurobiological Age: On Wonder

http://www.cornell.edu/video/emotional-life-in-a-neurobiological-age-on-wonder

Catherine Malabou discusses the connection between the biological and the symbolic: the brain and the mind.

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August 13, 2013 · 9:47 PM