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Books > Philosophy > General
The Communist Temptation: Rolland, Gide, Malraux, and Their Times
traces the evolution of the committed left-wing public intellectual
in the interwar period, specifically in the 1930s, and focuses on
leading left-wing intellectuals, such as Romain Rolland, Andre
Gide, and Andre Malraux, and their relationships with communism and
the broader anti-fascist movement. In that turbulent decade, Paris
also welcomed a growing number of Russian, Austrian, Italian,
Dutch, Belgian, German, and German-speaking Central European
refugees-activists, writers, and agents, among them Willi
Munzenberg, Mikhail Koltsov, Eugen Fried, Ilya Ehrenburg, Manes
Sperber, and Arthur Koestler-and Paris once again became a hotbed
of international political activism. Events, however, signaled a
decline in the high ethical standards set by Emile Zola and the
Dreyfusards earlier in the twentieth century, as many pro-communist
intellectuals acted in bad faith to support an ideology that they
in all likelihood knew to be morally bankrupt. Among them, only
Gide rebelled against Moscow, which caused ideological lines to
harden to the point where there was little room for critical reason
to assert itself.
This collection vigorously addresses the religious implications of
extreme human enhancement technology. Topics covered include
cutting edge themes, such as moral enhancement, common ground to
both transhumanism and religion, the meaning of death, desire and
transcendence, and virtue ethics. Radical enhancement programs,
advocated by transhumanists, could arguably have a more profound
impact than any other development in human history. Reflecting a
range of opinion about the desirability of extreme enhancement,
leading scholars in the field join with emerging scholars to foster
enhanced conversation on these topics.
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Wealth of Persons
(Hardcover)
John McNerney; Foreword by David Walsh
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R1,739
R1,401
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The dramatic power of the dialogues of Plato appears to diminish as
the metaphysical interest of them increases (compare Introd. to the
Philebus). There are no descriptions of time, place or persons, in
the Sophist and Statesman, but we are plunged at once into
philosophical discussions; the poetical charm has disappeared, and
those who have no taste for abstruse metaphysics will greatly
prefer the earlier dialogues to the later ones. Plato is conscious
of the change, and in the Statesman expressly accuses himself of a
tediousness in the two dialogues, which he ascribes to his desire
of developing the dialectical method. On the other hand, the
kindred spirit of Hegel seemed to find in the Sophist the crown and
summit of the Platonic philosophy-here is the place at which Plato
most nearly approaches to the Hegelian identity of Being and
Not-being. Nor will the great importance of the two dialogues be
doubted by any one who forms a conception of the state of mind and
opinion which they are intended to meet. The sophisms of the day
were undermining philosophy; the denial of the existence of
Not-being, and of the connexion of ideas, was making truth and
falsehood equally impossible.
In Poetics of Deconstruction, Lynn Turner develops an intimate
attention to independent films, art and the psychoanalyses by which
they might make sense other than under continued license of the
subject that calls himself man. Drawing extensively from Jacques
Derrida's philosophy in precise dialogue with feminist thought,
animal studies and posthumanism, this book explores the
vulnerability of the living as rooted in non-oppositional
differences. From abjection to mourning, to the speculative and the
performative, it reposes concepts and buzzwords seemingly at home
in feminist theory, visual culture and the humanities more broadly.
Stepping away from the carno-phallogocentric legacies of the
signifier and the dialectic, Poetics of Deconstruction asks you to
welcome nonpower into politics, always sexual but no longer
anchored in sacrifice.
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