Results for 'Deconstruction History.'

988 found
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  1. Deconstructing History. By Alun Munslow.J. T. Pekacz - 2000 - The European Legacy 5 (4):599-599.
     
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  2.  47
    Essential history: Jacques Derrida and the development of deconstruction.Joshua Kates - 2005 - Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University Press.
    However widely--and differently--Jacques Derrida may be viewed as a "foundational" French thinker, the most basic questions concerning his work still remain unanswered: Is Derrida a friend of reason, or philosophy, or rather the most radical of skeptics? Are language-related themes--writing, semiosis--his central concern, or does he really write about something else? And does his thought form a system of its own, or does it primarily consist of commentaries on individual texts? This book seeks to address these questions by returning to (...)
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  3.  15
    Post-Deconstructive Subjectivity and History: Phenomenology, Critical Theory, and Postcolonial Thought.Aniruddha Chowdhury - 2013 - Boston: Brill.
    Aniruddha Chowdhury offers an illuminating account of the post-deconstructive conception of subjectivity and history in the tradition of Continental thought, and Postcolonial theory.
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  4.  8
    Haunting history: for a deconstructive approach to the past.Ethan Kleinberg - 2017 - Stanford, California: Stanford University Press.
    Haunting history -- Presence in absentia -- Chladenius, Droysen, Dilthey : back to where we've never been -- The analog ceiling -- The past that is.
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  5. Yielding Gender: Feminism, Deconstruction and the History of Philosophy.Penelope Deutscher - 1997 - New York: Routledge.
    Traditional accounts of the feminist history of philosophy have viewed reason as associated with masculinity and subsequent debates have been framed by this assumption. Yet recent debates in deconstruction have shown that gender has never been a stable matter. In the history of philosophy 'female' and 'woman' are full of ambiguity. What does deconstruction have to offer feminist criticism of the history of philosophy? _Yielding Gender_ explores this question by examining three crucial areas; the issue of gender as (...)
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  6.  98
    History and Memory: Construction, Deconstruction and Reconstruction.Maurice Aymard - 2004 - Diogenes 51 (1):7-16.
    Memory is currently an important concern for our societies, as well as for the social and human sciences. This article discusses aspects of memory and history. Never have memory’s tools been more powerful or more efficient, yet never has the relationship between history and memory seemed more uncertain. History has lost its monopoly over the production and conservation of memory; memory has developed independently and is inspiring new partners, for example in science and literature.
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  7.  59
    A History of Reason in the Age of Insanity: The Deconstruction of Foucault in Hegel’s Phenomenology.Andrew Cutrofello - 1993 - The Owl of Minerva 25 (1):15-21.
    The struggle for self-consciousness in the Phenomenology of Spirit is fraught with false achievements. In sense-certainty, consciousness is aware of itself as consciousness of an object, but this awareness of self is thoroughly mediated by the object, which remains the essential element in the relation until this view collapses with the untenability of the theory of force. As self-certainty, consciousness then becomes immediately aware of itself, and so seems to have achieved real self-consciousness. But such is not the case, since (...)
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  8.  19
    Deconstructing the bomb: recent perspectives on nuclear history.J. Hughes - 2004 - British Journal for the History of Science 37 (4):455-464.
    John Canaday, The Nuclear Muse: Literature, Physics, and the First Atomic Bombs. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 2000. Pp. xviii+310. ISBN 0-299-16854-9. £19.50.Septimus H. Paul, Nuclear Rivals: Anglo-American Atomic Relations 1941–1952. Columbus: Ohio State University Press, 2000. Pp. ix+266. ISBN 0-8142-0852-5. £31.95.Peter Bacon Hales, Atomic Spaces: Living on the Manhattan Project. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1997. Pp. 448. ISBN 0-252-02296-3. £22.00.A decade after the end of the Cold War, the culture and technology of nuclear weapons had lost (...)
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  9.  17
    Nietzsche, Deconstruction, and the Truth of History.Kevin Newmark - 1991 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 15 (2):161-189.
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  10. Deconstructing the law : Original ethics and the history of being.Jacob Rogozinsky - 1995 - In Philippe van Haute & Peg Birmingham (eds.), Dissensus Communis: Between Ethics and Politics. Kok Pharos.
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  11.  17
    Literary History and the Politics of Deconstruction: Rousseau in Weimar.Russell A. Berman - 1991 - Theory, Culture and Society 8 (4):29-47.
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  12.  30
    Experimental Systems: Historiality, Narration, and Deconstruction.Hans-Jörg Reinberger - 1994 - Science in Context 7 (1):65-81.
    The ArgumentIn the first part of this paper, issues concerning an “epistemology of time” are raised. The Derridean theme of the historial movement of a trace is connected to Prigogine's notion of an operator-time. It is suggested that both conceptions can be used to characterize the dynamics of experimental systems in contemporary science. It is argued that such systems have, to speak with Hacking, “a life of their own” and that this is precisely the reason for their inherent unpredictability.In the (...)
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  13. Platonism, Spinoza and the History of Deconstruction.Gordon Hull - 2009 - In Kailash C. Baral & R. Radhakrishnan (eds.), Theory after Derrida: essays in critical praxis. New York: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group. pp. 74.
    This paper revisits Derrida’s and Deleuze’s early discussions of “Platonism” in order to challenge the common claim that there is a fundamental divergence in their thought and to challenge one standard narrative about the history of deconstruction. According to that narrative, deconstruction should be understood as the successor to phenomenology. To complicate this story, I read Derrida’s “Plato’s Pharmacy” alongside Deleuze’s discussion of Platonism and simulacra at the end of Logic of Sense. Both discussions present Platonism as the (...)
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  14.  26
    Poststructuralism and Deconstruction: A Mathematical History.Vladimir Tasic - 2012 - Cosmos and History 8 (1):177-198.
    Explaining his love of philosophy, Slavoj Žižek notes that he ‘secretly thinks reality exists so that we can speculate about it’. This article takes the view that links between mathematics and continental philosophy are part of reality, the reality of philosophy and its history, and hence require speculation. Examples from the work of Jacques Derrida and Henri Poincaré are discussed.
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  15. The deconstructive effects of combining discourses. A case study: Marxism and psychoanalysis.Adrià Porta Caballé - 2023 - Psychoanalysis, Culture and Society 28:411–429.
    Can deconstruction be accomplished not through the close reading of just one discourse, but through its combination with another? This paper aims at exploring this second way of performing deconstruction through a particular case study: Marxism and psychoanalysis. In the body of the essay, the history of Freudo-Marxism is divided into two parts, depending on which psychoanalyst stands as point of reference: Freud or Lacan. We proceed by studying the four main strategies by virtue of which a genuine (...)
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  16.  21
    Catatonia in the History of Psychiatry: Construction and Deconstruction of a Disease Concept.Victor Mark Tang & Jacalyn Duffin - 2014 - Perspectives in Biology and Medicine 57 (4):524-537.
    Catatonia is a psychomotor disorder that has gone through numerous descriptions since 1874, reflecting the many changes in psychiatric disease conceptualization that have occurred within that time frame. Catatonia has been variously described as a distinct disease entity, as a part of schizophrenia, and as a nonspecific manifestation of many disorders. Because of its association with schizophrenia, the description of catatonia was particularly affected by the psychopharmacological era, beginning in the 1950s, and by the development of the Diagnostic and Statistical (...)
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  17.  93
    Construction, reconstruction, deconstruction: The fall of the Soviet Union from the point of view of conceptual history.Kristian Petrov - 2008 - Studies in East European Thought 60 (3):179-205.
    The fall of the Soviet Union is analysed in conceptual terms, drawing on Reinhart Koselleck’s Begriffsgeschichte. The author seeks to interpret the instrumental role of the concepts perestrojka, glasnost´, reform, revolution, socialist pluralism, and acceleration in the Soviet collapse. The semantics and pragmatics are related to a wider intellectual and political context, and the conceptual perspective is used to help explain the progress of events. The author argues that the common notion of the reform policy concepts as clichés is not (...)
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  18.  30
    Derrida and history: a failed approach Haunting history: for a deconstructive approach to the past, by Ethan Kleinberg, Stanford University Press, Stanford, 2017, 208 pp., $26.00 (Paperback), Hardcover ISBN: 9781503602373. [REVIEW]Mihail Evans - 2023 - History of European Ideas 49 (7):1183-1194.
    The subtitle of Kleinberg’s Haunting History proposes a ‘deconstructive approach’ to Derrida and history. This review essay poses two questions which seek to establish what this could be. First, wh...
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  19. The Deconstructive Angel.M. H. Abrams - 1977 - Critical Inquiry 3 (3):425-438.
    That brings me to the crux of my disagreement with Hillis Miller. The central contention is not simply that I am sometimes, or always, wrong in my interpretation, but instead that I—like other traditional historians—can never be right in my interpretation. For Miller assents to Nietzsche's challenge of "the concept of 'rightness' in interpretation," and to Nietzsche's assertion that "the same text authorizes innumerable interpretations : there is no 'correct' interpretation."1 Nietzsche's views of interpretation, as Miller says, are relevant to (...)
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  20.  4
    Play and Messianicity: The Question of Time and History in Derrida's Deconstruction.Françoise Dastur - 2014 - In Zeynep Direk & Leonard Lawlor (eds.), A Companion to Derrida. Oxford, UK: Wiley. pp. 179–193.
    The questions of time and history, which were explicitly at the center of Heidegger's thought since its beginning, have constituted in a more latent and implicit way the kernel of Derrida's deconstruction. Derrida himself considered this chapter, which is an “Introduction to the Problem of the Sign in Husserl's Phenomenology” as the subtitle states, as coming first since it deals with a decisive point: the question of the privilege given to self‐presence is called living speech. It was quite important (...)
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  21. The social history of art in the Age of Deconstruction.K. Moxey - 1992 - History of the Human Sciences 5 (1):37-46.
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  22. Deconstruction, Liminology and Pragmatics of Language in the Zhuangzi and in Chan Buddhism.Youru Wang - 1999 - Dissertation, Temple University
    This dissertation investigates three related issues---deconstructive strategy, liminology of language, and pragmatics of indirect communication---in two great traditions of Chinese philosophy and religious thought. These three issues have drawn contemporary Western thinkers' close attentions and have entailed a variety of discussions. The dissertation attempts to bring the traditions of the Zhuangzi and Chan Buddhism into a postmodern focus concerning these three areas. It borrows insights, ideas and terms from contemporary and/or postmodern discourse to rediscover or reinterpret these two traditions. In (...)
     
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  23.  48
    The deconstruction of time.David Wood - 1989 - Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press.
    Originally published in 1989, The Deconstruction of Time was the first to examine what has become the fundamental, even defining, project in continental ...
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  24.  41
    Derrida and deconstruction.Hugh J. Silverman (ed.) - 1989 - London: Routledge.
    The effects of Derrida's writings have been widespread in literary circles, where they have transformed current work in literary theory. By contrast Derrida's philosophical writings--which deal with the whole range of western thought from Plato to Foucault--have not received adequate attention by philosophers. Organized around Derrida's readings of major figures in the history of philosophy, Derrida and Deconstruction focuses on and assesses his specifically philosophical contribution. Contemporary continental philosophers assess Derrida's account of philosophical tradition, with each contributor providing a (...)
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  25.  15
    Education and the task of deconstructing the history of ontology.Paulo Eduardo Lopes da Silva - 2021 - Filosofia E Educação 13 (1):2082-2093.
    Throughout the history of Ontology, the comprehension of Being has often deviated from its original path and taken different directions. What are the consequences of this detour when it comes to the current conception about the phenomenon we call Education? From the Fundamental Ontology of Martin Heidegger until the considerations of other contemporary thinkers, this article proposes an involvement and commitment regarding the task of deconstructing the history of Ontology in order to enable an approach that unveils the most original (...)
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  26.  56
    Fielding Derrida: philosophy, literary criticism, history, and the work of deconstruction.Joshua Kates - 2008 - New York: Fordham University Press.
    Introduction: Fielding Derrida -- Jacques Derrida's early writings : alongside skepticism, phenomenology -- Analytic philosophy, and literary criticism -- Deconstruction as skepticism -- Derrida, Husserl, and the commentators : a developmental approach -- A transcendental sense of death : Derrida and the philosophy of language -- Literary theory's languages : the deconstruction of sense vs. the deconstruction of reference -- Jacques Derrida and the problem of philosophical and political modernity -- Jacob Klein and Jacques Derrida : the (...)
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  27. Derrida and Deconstruction.Hugh J. Silverman (ed.) - 1989 - London: Routledge.
    The effects of Derrida's writings have been widespread in literary circles, where they have transformed current work in literary theory. By contrast Derrida's philosophical writings--which deal with the whole range of western thought from Plato to Foucault--have not received adequate attention by philosophers. Organized around Derrida's readings of major figures in the history of philosophy, ____Derrida and Deconstruction __ focuses on and assesses his specifically philosophical contribution. Contemporary continental philosophers assess Derrida's account of philosophical tradition, with each contributor providing (...)
     
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  28.  44
    Deconstructing the Talmud: The Absolute Book.Federico Dal Bo - 2019 - London-New York: Routledge.
    This monograph uses deconstruction—a philosophical movement originated by Jacques Derrida—to read the most authoritative book in Judaism: the Talmud. Examining deconstruction in comparison with Kant’s and Hegel’s philosophies, the volume argues that the movement opens an innovative debate on Jewish Law. -/- First, the monograph interprets deconstruction within the major streams of continental philosophy; then, it criticizes many aspects of Foucault’s and Agamben’s philosophy, rejecting their notion of law. On these premises, the research delivers a close examination (...)
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  29. Deconstruction and the visual arts: art, media, architecture.Peter Brunette & David Wills (eds.) - 1994 - New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press.
    Deconstruction and the Visual Arts brings together a series of new essays by scholars of aesthetics, art history and criticism, film, television and architecture. Working with the ideas of French philosopher Jacques Derrida, the essays explore the full range of his analyses. They are modelled on the variety of critical approaches that he has encouraged, from critiques of the foundations of our thinking and disciplinary demarcation, to creative and experimental readings of visual 'texts'. Representing some of the most innovative (...)
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  30.  51
    Deconstructive Turn in Transcendental Thinking.Ilyina Anna - 2015 - Sententiae 33 (2):125-148.
    The paper addresses the problem of the place of deconstruction in the history of transcendental philosophy. J. Derrida’s project is considered as one of the most representative and consistent realizations of theoretical foundations of transcendentalism along with prominent conceptions such as Kant’s critique and Husserl’s phenomenology. The author suggests a number of attributes of transcendental thinking that allow historical reconstruction of the transcendental paradigm. Derridian approach is considered as a turn towards this tradition, conceived as a transcendental tradition par (...)
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  31.  60
    Deconstructing deconstruction: Zhuang zi as butterfly, Nietzsche as gadfly.Sandra A. Wawrytko - 2008 - Philosophy East and West 58 (4):pp. 524-551.
    Deconstruction and destruction tend to be viewed as a continuum, on the assumption that to deconstruct is to destroy. Deconstruction certainly seems intent on the death of definitive meaning, absolute truth, theoretical flights, and universal values. Versions of the deconstructive task have been addressed and applied by philosophers throughout history and across cultures. By examining such approaches we may learn whether deconstruction must bring destruction in its wake, or whether another outcome might be possible. To test this (...)
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  32. Joshua Kates, Essential History: Jacques Derrida and the Development of Deconstruction Reviewed by. [REVIEW]Robert Piercey - 2006 - Philosophy in Review 26 (4):265-267.
     
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  33. Between construction and deconstruction. Report on the September 21-22, 2001 Verona conference on the general history of philosophy. [REVIEW]M. Longo & P. Giuspoli - 2002 - Rivista di Storia Della Filosofia 57 (2):275-278.
     
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  34.  40
    Deconstruction and the remainders of phenomenology: Sartre, Derrida, Foucault, Baudrillard.Tilottama Rajan - 2002 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    This book disentangles two terms that were conflated in the initial Anglo-American appropriation of French theory: deconstruction and poststructuralism. Focusing on Sartre, Derrida, Foucault, and Baudrillard (but also considering Levinas, Blanchot, de Man, and others), it traces the turn from a deconstruction inflected by phenomenology to a poststructuralism formed by the rejection of models based on consciousness in favor of ones based on language and structure. The book provides a wide-ranging and complex genealogy of French theory from the (...)
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  35.  6
    Deconstructing the feminine: subjectivities in transition.Leticia Glocer Fiorini - 2024 - New York, NY: Routledge.
    Deconstructing the Feminine looks beyond impasses of binary thought and essentialist conceptions of women and the feminine from a contemporary perspective. With a multicentred and complex approach, and an ongoing dialogue with Freud, Leticia Glocer Fiorini addresses questions relating to love, sexual desire, maternity, beauty, and the passing of time by reconsidering the gender binary and underlying power relations. Glocer Fiorini's work highlights current debates concerning women, the feminine, and sexual difference, as well as discussing topics which have caused controversy (...)
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  36.  87
    Deconstructing Anthropos: A Critical Legal Reflection on ‘Anthropocentric’ Law and Anthropocene ‘Humanity’.Anna Grear - 2015 - Law and Critique 26 (3):225-249.
    The present reflection draws upon a tradition of energetic, world-facing critical legal scholarship to interrogate the anthropos assumed by the terminology of ‘anthropocentrism’ and of the ‘Anthropocene’. The article concludes that any ethically responsible future engagement with ‘anthropocentrism’ and/or with the ‘Anthropocene’ must explicitly engage with the oppressive hierarchical structure of the anthropos itself—and should directly address its apotheosis in the corporate juridical subject that dominates the entire globalised order of the Anthropocene age.
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  37.  18
    Robert con Davis is associate professor of English and graduate director at the university of oklahoma. His research interests include history of 20th century criticism, deconstruction, Jacques lacan, and.Jean-Paul Dumont - 1985 - American Journal of Semiotics 3 (3):155-156.
  38.  24
    Deconstruction's legal career.Jack M. Balkin - manuscript
    This article describes law's encounter with deconstruction, and how it changed deconstruction. In the hands of lawyers, deconstruction became a set of rhetorical strategies for critiquing legal distinctions and showing their ideological character. Legal scholars used deconstructive arguments to offer normative prescriptions in ways quite different from literary critics or philosophers. Although in theory all texts and distinctions are deconstructable, legal scholars assumed that some interpretations were better than others. Legal deconstruction thus became a set of (...)
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  39.  55
    Deconstruction, Anti–Realism and Philosophy of Science—an interview with Christopher Norris.Christopher Norris & Marianna Papastephanou - 2002 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 36 (2):265-289.
    In this interview, Christopher Norris discusses a wide range of issues having to do with postmodernism, deconstruction and other controversial topics of debate within present–day philosophy and critical theory. More specifically he challenges the view of deconstruction as just another offshoot of the broader postmodernist trend in cultural studies and the social sciences. Norris puts the case for deconstruction as continuing the ‘unfinished project of modernity’ and—in particular—for Derrida’s work as sustaining the values of enlightened critical reason (...)
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  40.  15
    Teaching Deconstruction: Giving, Taking, Leaving, Belonging, and the Remains of the University.Simon Wortham - 2001 - Diacritics 31 (3):89-107.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Diacritics 31.3 (2001) 89-107 [Access article in PDF] Teaching DeconstructionGiving, Taking, Leaving, Belonging, and the Remains of the University Simon Morgan Wortham The Remains of the University and the Study of Culture In his recent essay "Literary Study in the Transnational University," J. Hillis Miller tries to account for the hostility shown by some practitioners of a certain kind of cultural studies toward what is perceived as "high" theory—in (...)
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  41. Deconstructing the substantialist conception of God: recasting Heidegger's critique of Augustine.Nythamar de Oliveira - 2017 - Veritas – Revista de Filosofia da Pucrs 62 (2):330-353.
    In this paper, I argue that Augustine's conception of God as substance (substantia) has misleadingly been evoked by Martin Heidegger's deconstruction of onto-theological and substantialist variants of metaphysics as they mistook entities (Seienden, entia, beings) f r their very Being (Sein, ens, esse) which cannot be conceptualized or objectified by human thinking, but makes both their thought and reality possible. Even though Augustine sought somehow to reconcile a Neoplatonic, essentialist cosmology with a Judeo-Christian worldview of historical redemption, Heidegger not (...)
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  42.  41
    Joshua Kates, Essential History: Jacques Derrida and the Development of Deconstruction , 352pp, $29.95 , ISBN 10: 0810123274, ISBN-13: 978-0810123274. [REVIEW]Gary Banham - 2008 - Derrida Today 1 (1):131-133.
    This book promises a ‘radical reappraisal’ of Derrida, concentrating particularly on the relationship of Derrida to philosophy, one of the most vexed questions in the reception of his work. The aim of the book is to provide the grounds for this reappraisal through a reinterpretation in particular of two of the major works Derrida published in 1967: Speech and Phenomena and Of Grammatology. However the study of the development of Derrida's work is the real achievement of the book as Kates (...)
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  43.  67
    Deconstructing innate illusions: Reflections on nature-nurture-niche from an unlikely source.Meredith J. West & Andrew P. King - 2008 - Philosophical Psychology 21 (3):383 – 395.
    Despite great advances in understanding genetic mechanisms, there still exists a bias toward equating genes with innate modules that determine important developmental events. But genes are equally relevant to understanding developmental plasticity shaped by ecological events. In other words, the term 'genetic inheritance' does not specify ontogenetic mechanisms. Here we present a case history of a species assumed to be under the control of prespecified genetic wiring to direct critical behavioral events such as communication and mating. We show, however, that (...)
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  44.  22
    Deconstruction as Darstellung.J. Murray Murdoch - 2007 - Idealistic Studies 37 (1):29-42.
    Derrida is typically taken to be the thinker most antithetical to Hegel, and deconstruction to be the philosophical antithesis to Hegel’s systematic rationality. While I do not dispute the accuracy of this perception, I argue in this paper that it does not offer an adequate or a complete picture. Specifically, much about Derrida and about deconstruction is more similar to Hegel than is typically realized. I argue that Derrida’s deconstruction shares a great affinity to the method of (...)
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  45.  33
    Deconstructing international politics.Michael Dillon - 2013 - New York: Routledge.
    This book is the first full length manuscript to draw on the the insights and techniques of deconstruction to analyse international relations. Influenced primarily by Derrida, it critiques the cornerstones of international relations such as modernity, the state, the subject, security and ethics and justice.
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  46.  14
    Deconstruction is Not Enough: On Gianni Vattimo's Call for “Weak Thinking”.Gianni Vattimo - 1984 - Graduate Faculty Philosophy Journal 10 (1):165-177.
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  47.  38
    Fiction Knows No Noumenon: Fictive Theories: Towards a Deconstructive and Utopian Political Imagination, by Susan McManus. New York and Houndsmills: Palgrave MacMillan, 2005. 234 pp. $65.00 . Lyrical and Ethical Subjects: Essays on the Periphery of the Word, Freedom and History, by Dennis J. Schmidt. Albany, NY: SUNY Press, 2005. 215 pp. $29.95.Tracy B. Strong - 2007 - Political Theory 35 (2):223-230.
  48.  11
    Post-non-classical philosophy: postmodern “deconstruction” and rational reconstruction of the history of science.L. B. Sultanova - 2020 - Liberal Arts in Russia 9 (1):16.
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  49.  4
    Deconstructing Derrida (1930–2004).Martin Cohen - 2008 - In Martin Cohen & Raul Gonzalez (eds.), Philosophical Tales: Being an Alternative History Revealing the Characters, the Plots, and the Hidden Scenes That Make Up the True Story of Philosophy. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 245–250.
    This chapter contains sections titled: The Philosophical Tale.
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  50. Penelope Deutscher. Yielding Gender: Feminism, Deconstruction and the History of Philosophy.G. Jagger - 1999 - Journal of Applied Philosophy 16:199-199.
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