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Senses of Upheaval: Philosophical Snapshots of a Decade [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 168 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 216x140x26 mm, weight: 454 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Nov-2021
  • Leidėjas: Anthem Press
  • ISBN-10: 1839982268
  • ISBN-13: 9781839982262
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 168 pages, aukštis x plotis x storis: 216x140x26 mm, weight: 454 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 16-Nov-2021
  • Leidėjas: Anthem Press
  • ISBN-10: 1839982268
  • ISBN-13: 9781839982262
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:

Spanning a decade of Michael Marder’s contributions as a public intellectual, Senses of Upheaval documents a period of exceptional global turmoil in intellectual, cultural, technological and political spheres.



Spanning a decade of Michael Marder’s contributions as a public intellectual, Senses of Upheavals documents a period of exceptional global turmoil. Thrown into mayhem by right-wing populisms and a pandemic, combined with skyrocketing economic inequalities and worsening environmental crises, the world is on the verge of collapse. Could revolutionary practical-intellectual proposals to learn how to coexist from plants or to rethink the very meaning of energy chart the way to a better, more livable, and, perhaps, calmer world? Nonetheless, such proposals themselves constitute nothing short of an upheaval in philosophy, plant sciences, and environmental studies. We are doomed to upheavals, it seems; the point is not to deflect, but to choose judiciously among them.



This new edition of Wittgenstein’s book, strictly following the author’s recommendations, allows a more immediate comprehension of the text and dissolves several false problems that had deceived readers and scholars for a century. The faithful interpretation of decimal numbers (which alone, according to Wittgenstein, “give perspicuity and clarity to the book”) shows that the Tractatus stems from a home-page containing seven cardinal propositions and develops level by level, by perfectly coherent reading units. Indeed, “the Tractatus must be read in accordance with the numbering system, and that demands that the reader follow the text after the manner of a logical tree, which is the way in which the book was composed and in which Wittgenstein arranged his philosophical remarks” (Peter Hacker, The Philosophical Quarterly). Thence, the Tractatus is no longer an obstacle course, where critics and students were strenuously committed to decipher anacolutes, semantic jumps and bizarre combinations. On the contrary, it reveals to be, at long last, a book that every reader, from her own point of view, can enjoy. The actual form of Wittgenstein’s work discloses the harmony and the aesthetic value of a philosophical text that is contemporary and is one of the most amazing masterpieces of world literature.

Spanning a decade of Michael Marder’s contributions as a public intellectual, Senses of Upheaval documents a period of exceptional global turmoil in intellectual, cultural, technological and political spheres.

Recenzijos

This is required reading for anyone who wants to catch our global, national, local vanishing present and to make sense of the alarming future. Politics, culture, the intellect, technology Marders risk-taking interventions have embraced our struggles in these areas over the years. Senses of Upheaval allows us to see the principles holding them together.

Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, University Professor, Columbia University, US and educational/ecological activist Very few philosophers are capacious enough in their thinking and erudite enough in their analysis to make meaningful interventions all the way from the microbial to the global. Michael Marder is one of these rare thinkers, and this collection of short essays confirms his status as a major public intellectualpart poet, part precision bomb. This book is essential for understanding the seismic upheavals that characterise our times.

Anthony Morgan, editor of The Philosopher The razor-sharp gems in Senses of Upheaval reflect contemporary anxieties over the porosity of borders through the rare prism of philosophy, politics, environment, culture, and personal experience. These provocative tidbits from one of the most incisive intellectuals of our time are a must-read for anyone trying to understand the contradictory forces pulling our worlds apart. From Twitter to trees, from Trump to taking a knee, from Covid to clean air, from Europe to Chernobyl, in these short essays, Michael Marder travels to the ends of the earth and back again.

Kelly Oliver, W. Alton Jones Professor of Philosophy, Vanderbilt University Michael Marders Senses of Upheaval provides something unique: a philosophical snapshot of the last decade we have lived together as a human collective, a decade whose multiple and diverse crises are united by a sense that the world is losing its character of being habitable. Nourished by an uncommon combination of acute critical sensibility and broad-ranging philosophical and cultural references, Marders book challenges us to grapple with our responsibilities, our possibilities, and our abilities in the face of an existence and on the surface of a planet that no longer promise us the kind of stability we have always assumed they would."

William Egginton, Decker Professor in the Humanities and Director of Alexander Grass Humanities Institute, Johns Hopkins University "Get ready for a thrilling philosophical ride through today's convulsed world--the ride equipped solely with the relaxed lucidity of reflection."

Daniel Innerarity, Professor of Philosophy and Director of Globernance Institute, San Sebastian

Daugiau informacijos

Documents a period of exceptional global turmoil in intellectual, cultural, technological, and political spheres
A Sense of Upheaval 1(6)
PART I POLITICAL UPHEAVAL
1 Rating Sovereignty
7(4)
2 The Unfinished Collapse of the Soviet Union
11(4)
3 We, the Orphans of October
15(4)
4 Incendiary Words and the Volcano of Occupation
19(4)
5 Can There Be Poetry after Netanyahu?
23(2)
6 Marginalizing Europe
25(4)
7 The European Union and the Rhetoric of Immaturity
29(4)
8 Trump Metaphysics
33(4)
9 The Con Artistry of the Deal: Trump, the Reality TV President
37(4)
10 Covid-19: This Is Not a War
41(4)
11 Going Viral, or The Coronavirus Is Us
45(4)
12 Can Democracy Save the Planet?
49(6)
PART II CULTURAL UPHEAVAL
1 On Knees and Elbows
55(4)
2 Being in Exile from Oneself
59(2)
3 The Muslim "No"
61(4)
4 Don't Keep Calm! And Don't Carry On!
65(4)
5 Uncultured Austerity
69(2)
6 A Genealogy of Enjoyment
71(4)
7 The Two Suns of Europe
75(4)
8 For the Love of a City
79(2)
9 What Horse Meat Tells Us about Ourselves
81(2)
10 Contagion: Before and after Covid-19
83(6)
PART III INTELLECTUAL UPHEAVAL
1 A Fight for the Right to Read Heidegger
89(4)
2 Heidegger's Thinking Today Is, Perhaps, die Possibility of the World
93(4)
3 Plus de restes: Rememberingjacques Derrida
97(4)
4 The Philosopher's Beard
101(4)
5 Naturalize This! Analytic Philosophy and the Logic of Reactive Neutralization
105(6)
6 Jokes and Their Relation to Crisis
111(4)
7 Position as a Political Category: Phenomenology and the Eroticism of Power
115(6)
8 The Powerlessness of Philosophy
121(6)
PART IV TECHNOLOGICAL UPHEAVAL
1 Chernobyl as an Event
127(4)
2 Nuclear Mourning
131(2)
3 The Meaning of "Clean Energy"
133(4)
4 Without Clean Air, We Have Nothing (with Luce Jrigaraj)
137(4)
5 Poland's Bialowieza: Losing die Forest and the Trees
141(4)
6 Just Randomness?
145(6)
7 The Idea of Following in the Age of Twitter
151(4)
The Upheavals Yet to Come 155(2)
Notes 157
Michael Marder is Ikerbasque Research Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of the Basque Country (UPV-EHU), Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain.