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Time-Fetishes - The Secret History of Eternal Recurrence (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R547
Discovery Miles 5 470
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Time-Fetishes - The Secret History of Eternal Recurrence (Paperback, New)
Series: Post-Contemporary Interventions
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List price R617
Loot Price R547
Discovery Miles 5 470
You Save R70 (11%)
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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For over two and a half millennia human beings have attempted to
invent strategies to "discover" the truth of time, to determine
whether time is infinite, whether eternity is the infinite duration
of a continuous present, or whether it too rises and falls with the
cycles of universal creation and destruction. Time-Fetishes
recounts the history of a tradition that runs counter to the
dominant tradition in Western metaphysics, which has sought to
purify eternity of its temporal character. From the pre-Socratics
to Ovid and Plotinus, and from Shakespeare to Hegel, Schelling,
Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Derrida, Time-Fetishes traces the secret
tradition of the idea of eternal recurrence and situates it as the
grounding thought of Western philosophy and literature. The
thinkers in this counter-history of the eternal return lingered
long enough on the question of time to learn how to resist
separating eternity from time, and how to reflect on the possible
identity of time and eternity as a way of resisting all prior
metaphysical determinations. Drawing out the implications of
Nietzsche's reinvention of the doctrine of return, Lukacher ranges
across a broad spectrum of ancient and modern thinkers.
Shakespeare's role in this history as the "poet of time" is
particularly significant, for not only does Shakespeare reactivate
the pre-Christian arguments of eternal return, he regards them, and
all arguments and images concerning the essence of time and Being,
from an inimitably ironic perspective. As he makes transitions from
literature to philosophy and psychoanalysis, Lukacher displays a
theoretical imagination and historical vision that bring to the
forefront a host of pre- and post-Christian texts in order to
decipher in them an encounter with the thought of eternal
recurrence that has been too long buried under layers of rigid
metaphysical interpretation.
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