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Selected as one of The Tablet’s Books of the Year 2021 Throughout
history, different civilisations have given rise to many
alternative worlds. Each of them was the enactment of a unique
story about the structure of reality, the rhythm of time and the
range of what it is possible to think and to do in the course of a
life. Cosmological stories, however, are fragile things. As soon as
they lose their ring of truth and their significance for living,
the worlds that they brought into existence disintegrate. New and
alien worlds emerge from their ruins. Federico Campagna explores
the twilight of our contemporary notion of reality, and the fading
of the cosmological story that belonged to the civilisation of
Westernised Modernity. How are we to face the challenge of leaving
a fertile cultural legacy to those who will come after the end of
our future? How can we help the creation of new worlds out of the
ruins of our own?
We take for granted that only certain kind of things exist -
electrons but not angels, passports but not nymphs. This is what we
understand as 'reality'. But in fact, 'reality' varies with each
era of the world, in turn shaping the field of what is possible to
do, think and imagine. Our contemporary age has embraced a
troubling and painful form of reality: Technic. Under Technic, the
foundations of reality begin to crumble, shrinking the field of the
possible and freezing our lives in an anguished state of paralysis.
Technic and Magic shows that the way out of the present deadlock
lies much deeper than debates on politics or economics. By drawing
from an array of Northern and Southern sources - spanning from
Heidegger, Junger and Stirner's philosophies, through Pessoa's
poetry, to Advaita Vedanta, Bhartrhari, Ibn Arabi, Suhrawardi and
Mulla Sadra's theosophies - Magic is presented as an alternative
system of reality to Technic. While Technic attempts to capture the
world through an 'absolute language', Magic centres its
reconstruction of the world around the notion of the 'ineffable'
that lies at the heart of existence. Technic and Magic is an
original philosophical work, and a timely cultural intervention. It
disturbs our understanding of the structure of reality, while
restoring it in a new form. This is possibly the most radical act:
if we wish to change our world, first we have to change the idea of
'reality' that defines it.
Selected as one of The Tablet’s Books of the Year 2021 Throughout
history, different civilisations have given rise to many
alternative worlds. Each of them was the enactment of a unique
story about the structure of reality, the rhythm of time and the
range of what it is possible to think and to do in the course of a
life. Cosmological stories, however, are fragile things. As soon as
they lose their ring of truth and their significance for living,
the worlds that they brought into existence disintegrate. New and
alien worlds emerge from their ruins. Federico Campagna explores
the twilight of our contemporary notion of reality, and the fading
of the cosmological story that belonged to the civilisation of
Westernised Modernity. How are we to face the challenge of leaving
a fertile cultural legacy to those who will come after the end of
our future? How can we help the creation of new worlds out of the
ruins of our own?
We take for granted that only certain kind of things exist -
electrons but not angels, passports but not nymphs. This is what we
understand as 'reality'. But in fact, 'reality' varies with each
era of the world, in turn shaping the field of what is possible to
do, think and imagine. Our contemporary age has embraced a
troubling and painful form of reality: Technic. Under Technic, the
foundations of reality begin to crumble, shrinking the field of the
possible and freezing our lives in an anguished state of paralysis.
Technic and Magic shows that the way out of the present deadlock
lies much deeper than debates on politics or economics. By drawing
from an array of Northern and Southern sources - spanning from
Heidegger, Junger and Stirner's philosophies, through Pessoa's
poetry, to Advaita Vedanta, Bhartrhari, Ibn Arabi, Suhrawardi and
Mulla Sadra's theosophies - Magic is presented as an alternative
system of reality to Technic. While Technic attempts to capture the
world through an 'absolute language', Magic centres its
reconstruction of the world around the notion of the 'ineffable'
that lies at the heart of existence. Technic and Magic is an
original philosophical work, and a timely cultural intervention. It
disturbs our understanding of the structure of reality, while
restoring it in a new form. This is possibly the most radical act:
if we wish to change our world, first we have to change the idea of
'reality' that defines it.
Our secular society seems to have finally found its new God: Work.
As technological progress makes human labor superfluous, and
over-production destroys both the economy and the planet, Work
remains stronger than ever as a mantra of universal submission.
This book develops a fully-fledged theory of radical atheism,
advocating a disrespectful, opportunist squandering of obedience.
By replacing hope and faith with adventure, The Last Night of our
lives might finally become the first morning of an autonomous
future.
The age of austerity has brought a new generation of protesters on
to the streets across the world. As the economic crisis meets the
environmental crisis, millions fear what the future will bring but
also dare to dream of a different society. What We Are Fighting For
tries to answer the question that the mainstream media loves to ask
the protesters. The first radical, collective manifesto of the new
decade, it brings together some of the key theorists and activists
from the new networked and creative social movements. Contributors
include Owen Jones, David Graeber, John Holloway, Nina Power, Mark
Fisher, Franco Berardi Bifo and Marina Sitrin. Chapters outline the
alternative vision that animates the new global movement - from
'new economics' and 'new governance' to 'new public' and 'new
social imagination'. The book concludes by exploring 'new tactics
of struggle'.
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