Switch to: References

Citations of:

A thousand plateaus: capitalism and schizophrenia

London: Athlone Press. Edited by Félix Guattari (1987)

Add citations

You must login to add citations.
  1. Disability, Connectivity and Transgressing the Autonomous Body.Barbara E. Gibson - 2006 - Journal of Medical Humanities 27 (3):187-196.
    This paper explores the interconnectedness of persons with disabilities, technologies and the environment by problematizing Western notions of the independent, autonomous subject. Drawing from Deleuze and Guattari’s reconfiguration of the static subject as active becoming, prevailing discourses valorizing independence are critiqued as contributing to the marginalization of bodies marked as disabled. Three examples of disability “dependencies”—man-dog, man-machine, and woman-woman connectivities—are used to illustrate that subjectivity is partial and transitory. Disability connectivity thus serves a signpost for an expanded understanding of subjectivity (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   10 citations  
  • Painting as Hysteria: Deleuze on Bacon.Tomas Geyskens - 2008 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 2 (2):140-154.
    Deleuze's work on Francis Bacon is an aesthetic clinic of hysteria and an implicit critique of the psychoanalytic conception of hysteria. Bacon's paintings reveal what is at stake in hysteria: not the symbolic expression of unconscious representations, but the pure presence of the body, the experience of the body under the organism. Inspired by the work of the phenomenologist Henri Maldiney, Deleuze argues that Bacon's paintings become non-figurative without being abstract. In this way, painting shows the hysterical struggle of the (...)
    Direct download (7 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Introduction: Félix Guattari in the Age of Semiocapitalism.Gary Genosko - 2012 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 6 (2):149-169.
  • Introduction to Félix Guattari's 'Project for a Film by Kafka'.Gary Genosko - 2009 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 3 (2):145-149.
  • Guattari TV, By Kafka.Gary Genosko - 2012 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 6 (2):210-223.
    Guattari looked for crossovers between film and television in a posthumously published ‘Project for a Film By Kafka’. His critical comments on television and the mixed reception of television within the Deleuzo-Guattarian literature provide the occasion for an investigation of what Guattari thought television could do for his project. The auteur model best suits his needs in this regard, with the proviso that it is animated by a modernist aesthetic oriented towards the conjuring of a people to come who would (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Ethico-onto-epistemology.Evelien Geerts & Delphi Carstens - 2019 - Philosophy Today 63 (4):915-925.
    This essay argues for a transversal posthumanities-based pedagogy, rooted in an attentive ethico-onto-epistemology, by reading the schizoanalytical praxes of Deleuzoguattarian theory alongside the work of various feminist new materialist scholars.
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   7 citations  
  • Chaos: Our Own ‘Gun on The Table’.Akis Gavriilidis & Sofia Lalopoulou - 2012 - Law and Critique 23 (3):299-311.
    In October 2011, George Papandreou, the then Greek Prime Minister, announced he was planning to hold a referendum in order for the Greek people to decide whether to agree to the bailout plan prepared by the International Monetary Fund, the Central European Bank and the European Commission. This intention was aborted due to intense pressure by Papandreou’s European partners, especially Germany and France. This interference clearly shows the problematic relationship between the so-called ‘markets’ and national-popular sovereignty. This article raises the (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Stuttering in Beckett as Liminal Expression within the Deleuzian Critical-Clinical Hypothesis.Erika Gaudlitz - 2010 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 4 (2):183-205.
    This paper inquires into the nexus between the Deleuzian critical-clinical hypothesis and its literary instantiation in Beckett, with a focus on How It Is (1964) and Worstward Ho (1983b). I propose to read the interruptions in style symptomatically, and stuttering language in Beckett as liminal expression, thus tracing the flows and breaks of desire which Deleuze theorises in the sense of a symptomatological unconscious. The schizoid style as liminal expression exemplified in Beckett's work will be read as marking transit stages (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Libidinal Symptomatology in Deleuze's Masochism – Coldness and Cruelty.Erika Gaudlitz - 2015 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 9 (1):1-24.
    In taking up Deleuze's differential diagnosis by observing Masoch's literary practice and extracting his libidinal principles of imperatives, contracts, fetishism and rituals, I demonstrate Deleuzian libidinal symptomatology as a specific semiotics in the service of schizoanalysis. I shall argue that in Masoch the schizoanalytic curettage of the unconscious is executed as schizoid waiting where the fleeting outer symptoms of pain–pleasure reveal the masochist's desired inner splitting of the senses.Several critical-clinical inroads to the schizoanalytic project can be envisaged. Initially, Masoch's visionary (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Feminism as “Password”: Re-thinking the “Possible” with Spinoza and Deleuze.Moira Gatens - 2000 - Hypatia 15 (2):59-75.
    This paper reads Deleuze through a Spinozist lens to conceive of the human being as a dynamic and complex whole in constant interchange with its environment. The author thus moves beyond philosophical dualisms, and challenges the assumption that a hierarchical normative organization is the only possible world. Using the example of rape, she argues that micropolitical strategies might disrupt and “pass” the juridical order and open up alternative, more equitable, forms of sociability.
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Feminism as “Password”: Re-thinking the “Possible” with Spinoza and Deleuze.Moira Gatens - 2000 - Hypatia 15 (2):59-75.
    This paper reads Deleuze through a Spinozist lens to conceive of the human being as a dynamic and complex whole in constant interchange with its environment. The author thus moves beyond philosophical dualisms, and challenges the assumption that a hierarchical normative organization is the only possible world. Using the example of rape, she argues that micropolitical strategies might disrupt and “pass” the juridical order and open up alternative, more equitable, forms of sociability.
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  • Feminism as "password": Rethinking the "possible" with Spinoza and Deleuze.Moira Gatens - 2000 - Hypatia 15 (2):59-75.
    : This paper reads Deleuze through a Spinozist lens to conceive of the human being as a dynamic and complex whole in constant interchange with its environment. The author thus moves beyond philosophical dualisms, and challenges the assumption that a hierarchical normative organization is the only possible world. Using the example of rape, she argues that micropolitical strategies might disrupt and "pass" the juridical order and open up alternative, more equitable, forms of sociability.
    Direct download (7 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Beauty and the beastly cause: Aesthetic value, anarchy, and the theater of representation in james'sthe princess casamassima. [REVIEW]Bruce M. Gatenby - 1994 - Journal of Value Inquiry 28 (2):313-325.
  • Ways of knowing: realism, non‐realism, nominalism and a typology revisited with a counter perspective for nursing science.Bernard M. Garrett & Roger L. Cutting - 2015 - Nursing Inquiry 22 (2):95-105.
    In this paper, we reconsider the context of Barbara Carper's alternative ways of knowing, a prominent discourse in modern nursing theory in North America. We explore this relative to the concepts of realism, non‐realism and nominalism, and investigate the philosophical divisions behind the original typology, particularly in relationship to modern scientific enquiry. We examine forms of knowledge relative to realist and nominalist positions and make an argument ad absurdum against relativistic interpretations of knowledge using the example of Borge's Chinese Emporium (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  • Nadine Boljkovac (2013) Untimely Affects: Gilles Deleuze and an Ethics of Cinema, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Colin Gardner - 2015 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 9 (2):264-272.
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Craig Lundy (2012) History and Becoming: Deleuze's Philosophy of Creativity, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Colin Gardner - 2014 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 8 (4):569-578.
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Barnett Newman's Zip as Figure.Colin Gardner - 2012 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 6 (1):42-54.
    Challenging the formalist critical legacy of Clement Greenberg and Michael Fried, this essay advocates an alternative philosophical lineage for Modernist painting through a specific focus on Barnett Newman's vertical stripe or ‘zip’. This genealogy is rooted in Newman's own self-confessed interest in painting as a disclosure of the sensation of time and Deleuze's overt break with Kant. In light of the latter, the zip takes on the function of Deleuze's Figure: the material support that generates, sustains and also disperses a (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Deleuze's Conception of Desire.Jihai Gao - 2013 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 7 (3):406-420.
    Desire is a key concept in Deleuzian philosophy. Deleuze's desire is quite different from that of other thinkers. Both in the West and in China, in the past as well in the present, desire is usually understood as something abnormal, avaricious and excessive, the opposite of rationality, to be controlled and suppressed in man. Deleuze's desire is much wider, referring not only to man, but also to animals, objects and social institutions. In Deleuze's view, desire is not a psychic existence, (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Collective self-organization in general biology: Gilles Deleuze, Charles S. Peirce, and Stuart Kauffman.Rocco Gangle - 2007 - Zygon 42 (1):223-240.
    Abstract.Stuart Kauffman's proposal in Investigations to ground a “general biology” in the laws of self‐organization governing systems of autonomous agents runs up against the methodological problem of how to integrate formal mathematical with semantic and semiotic approaches to the study of evolutionary development. Gilles Deleuze's concept of the virtual and C. S. Peirce's system of existential graphs provide a theoretical framework and practical art for answering this problem of method by modeling the creative event of collective self‐organization as both represented (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Down and Dirty in the Field of Play: Startup Societies, Cryptostatecraft, and Critical Complicity.Daniela Gandorfer - 2022 - Law and Critique 33 (3):355-377.
    Climate change and fourth industrial revolution (4IR) technologies are massively shifting the material and social conditions of existence on Earth and contribute to a state of indeterminacy and increased political experimentation. While various models for what might become the ‘next iteration of governance’ are currently emerging, this essay turns to specific contemporary political experiments which claim to democratize power, distribute and/or share sovereignty, function as peer-to-peer or actor-to-actor, and move beyond criticism—be it to the moon or to soil. More precisely, (...)
    No categories
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Concepts and the `New' Empiricism.Nicholas Gane - 2009 - European Journal of Social Theory 12 (1):83-97.
    This article examines the role of concepts in the so-called 'new' empiricism that is currently emerging from the writings of Gilles Deleuze. It asks what concepts are, and how they might be put to work to present the 'pure difference' of the empirical world. In addressing these questions, a number of parallels and contrasts are drawn between the writings of Deleuze and Max Weber. It is shown that many of Deleuze's key arguments about concepts- in particular, that they are pedagogical, (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Bentham, Deleuze and Beyond: An Overview of Surveillance Theories from the Panopticon to Participation.Maša Galič, Tjerk Timan & Bert-Jaap Koops - 2017 - Philosophy and Technology 30 (1):9-37.
    This paper aims to provide an overview of surveillance theories and concepts that can help to understand and debate surveillance in its many forms. As scholars from an increasingly wide range of disciplines are discussing surveillance, this literature review can offer much-needed common ground for the debate. We structure surveillance theory in three roughly chronological/thematic phases. The first two conceptualise surveillance through comprehensive theoretical frameworks which are elaborated in the third phase. The first phase, featuring Bentham and Foucault, offers architectural (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   18 citations  
  • Body–drug assemblages: theorizing the experience of side effects in the context of HIV treatment.Marilou Gagnon & Dave Holmes - 2016 - Nursing Philosophy 17 (4):250-261.
    Each of the antiretroviral drugs that are currently used to stop the progression of HIV infection causes its own specific side effects. Despite the expansion, multiplication, and simplification of treatment options over the past decade, side effects continue to affect people living with HIV. Yet, we see a clear disconnect between the way side effects are normalized, routinized, and framed in clinical practice and the way they are experienced by people living with HIV. This paper builds on the premise that (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   6 citations  
  • Growing up beside you.Norman Gabriel - 2014 - History of the Human Sciences 27 (3):116-135.
    This article will begin by outlining influential attempts by historians and sociologists to develop a more adequate theoretical understanding of past and contemporary childhoods, focusing on the major problems that stem from the pivotal role that ‘developmentalism’ plays in their arguments. I will argue that sociologists can overcome some of their deepest fears about the role of developmental psychology by developing a relational approach that integrates the biological and social aspects of children’s development. In the development of a relational sociology (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Building Rhizomatic Social Movements? Movement-Building Relays during the Current Epoch of Contention.Peter Nikolaus Funke - 2014 - Studies in Social Justice 8 (1):27-44.
    This article investigates the movement building dynamics of contemporary social movement milieus . It develops the concept of the “relay” to introduce four ideal-type movement building relays understood as distinct movement milieus: clustering relay, networking relay, organizing relay, and transforming relay. Each ideal-type captures different points on a continuum of increasing movement building and thus for generating commonalities, shared understandings and identities, mobilizations and strategies. Focusing on what I call the current “rhizomatic movement epoch,” which ranges from roughly the Zapatistas (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • In the garage: Assemblage, opportunity and techno-aesthetics.Glen Fuller - 2015 - Angelaki 20 (1):125-136.
    :How can a properly relational and anti-substantialist conception of masculinity be understood as belonging to the territorialising assemblage of the garage? Focusing on the relation between the suburban garage and masculinity, this article develops the concept of “opportunity” as part of a gendered passage of action. Two examples of the garage-assemblage are examined through their popular cultural myths. The first involves the example of disaffected working-class male youth working on cars as represented in the Australian film Metal Skin. The second (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Desiring nature: Identity and becoming in narratives of travel.Simone Fullagar - 2000 - Cultural Values 4 (1):58-76.
    This paper explores the cultural value of desiring nature through reading the travel narratives of Val Plumwood and Alphonso Lingis with the writings of Deleuze and Guattari. As Game suggests this textual practice produces different ways of writing the social that undoes the nature/culture opposition informing popular discourses and much cultural theory. Rethinking the value of nature/culture relations has tended to be the domain of environmental philosophy. Yet a cultural analysis also has much to contribute to current debates around value (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Philosophy in the Age of Neoliberalism.Robert Frodeman, Adam Briggle & J. Britt Holbrook - 2012 - Social Epistemology 26 (3-4):311-330.
    This essay argues that political, economic, and cultural developments have made the twentieth century disciplinary approach to philosophy unsustainable. It (a) discusses the reasons behind this unsustainability, which also affect the academy at large, (b) describes applied philosophy as an inadequate theoretical reaction to contemporary societal pressures, and (c) proposes a dedisciplined and interstitial approach??field philosophy??as a better response to the challenges facing the twenty-first century philosophy.
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   11 citations  
  • Matthew Barney's cremaster cycle revisited: Towards post-human becomings of man.Hélène Frichot - 2015 - Angelaki 20 (1):55-67.
    :It is now well over a decade since the artist Matthew Barney's epic work the Cremaster Cycle was completed. This essay returns to the post-human becomings of man that populate Barney's elaborately cross-referenced, aesthetic pluriverse, in particular addressing how the man-form labours amidst and on his environment-worlds, inclusive of the architectural augmentations that assist in the production of such worlds. Revisiting Barney's Cremaster Cycle now offers the opportunity to ask what becomes of the exclusionary and exhaustive world-making performances of the (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • The Mathematical Event: Mapping the Axiomatic and the Problematic in School Mathematics. [REVIEW]Elizabeth de Freitas - 2013 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 32 (6):581-599.
    Traditional philosophy of mathematics has been concerned with the nature of mathematical objects rather than events. This traditional focus on reified objects is reflected in dominant theories of learning mathematics whereby the learner is meant to acquire familiarity with ideal mathematical objects, such as number, polygon, or tangent. I argue that the concept of event—rather than object—better captures the vitality of mathematics, and offers new ways of thinking about mathematics education. In this paper I draw on two different but related (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Visceral futures: Bodies of feminist criticism.Mariam Fraser - 2001 - Social Epistemology 15 (2):91 – 111.
    This paper is situated in the context of feminist poststructuralist debates around identity. In it, I argue that anti-essentialist accounts of identity, while they may displace, or at least call into question, the foundations of subjectivity, are no less likely to invoke a series of presuppositions with respect to the self than those who seek to maintain them in some form. In particular, these presuppositions often cohere around the materiality of the body. And yet, paradoxically, this accent on materiality refers (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Queer Black adolescence, the impasse, and the pedagogy of cinema.Asilia Franklin-Phipps & Laura Smithers - 2021 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 53 (7):728-739.
    This paper considers the potential of impasses within cinematic assemblages and the pedagogy of cinema to expand the possible horizons of Black queer youth. Black queerness in film provides pedagogical tools for exploring the limits of the category of queer. Both Barry Jenkins’s Moonlight and Dee Rees’s Pariah counter uncritical narratives of pathology, and are research data in their explorations of affective dimensions of gender, sexuality, race, poverty, and love through moving-images and sound. After situating the context of Moonlight, Pariah, (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Psychoanalytic Underpinnings of Socially-Shared Normativity.Michael Forrester - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
    Alongside social anthropology and discursive psychology, conversation analysis has highlighted ways in which cultural forms of perceiving and acting in the world are primarily rooted in socially shared normativity. However, when consideration turns to the origins and purposes of human affect and emotion, conversation analysis appears to face particular difficulties that arise from the over-arching focus on sense-making practices. This paper considers the proposal that psychoanalytic thinking might inform our understanding of how socially shared normativity emerges during infancy and early (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • A Feminist Menagerie.Isla Forsyth, Tracey Potts, Greg Hollin & Eva Giraud - 2018 - Feminist Review 118 (1):61-79.
    This paper appraises the role of critical-feminist figurations within the environmental humanities, focusing on the capacity of figures to produce situated environmental knowledges and pose site-specific ethical obligations. We turn to four environments—the home, the skies, the seas and the microscopic—to examine the work that various figures do in these contexts. We elucidate how diverse figures—ranging from companion animals to birds, undersea creatures and bugs—reflect productive traffic between longstanding concerns in feminist theory and the environmental humanities, and generate new insights (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Air-appropriation: The imperial origins and legacies of the Anthropocene.Andreas Folkers - 2020 - European Journal of Social Theory 23 (4):611-630.
    This article elucidates the spatial order that underpins the politics of the Anthropocene – the ecological nomos of the earth – and criticizes its imperial origins and legacies. It provides a critical reading of Carl Schmitt’s spatial thought to not only illuminate the spatio-political ontology but also the violence and usurpations that characterize the Anthropocene condition. The article first shows how with the emergence of the ecological nomos seemingly ‘natural’ spaces like the biosphere and the atmosphere became politically charged. This (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Dis/Assembling Schizophrenia on YouTube: Theorizing an Analog Body in a Virtual Sphere.Erica Hua Fletcher - 2016 - Journal of Medical Humanities 37 (3):257-274.
    As visual technologies become increasingly networked online, websites like YouTube provide a space to share vlogs online, suggest related content for viewers, and help in/form virtual communities, including those of mental illness. Within this space, vlogs of schizophrenia and comments generated about them by other users can represent transitional, dialogical states of illness that speak back to the analog body and affect a body’s way of being in the world. Moreover, as vlogs create resistance against static definitions of schizophrenia, they (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Deterritorialisation and Schizoanalysis in David Fincher's Fight Club.David H. Fleming & William Brown - 2011 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 5 (2):275-299.
    Taking a schizoanalytic approach to audio-visual images, this article explores some of the radical potentia for deterritorialisation found within David Fincher's Fight Club (1999). The film's potential for deterritorialisation is initially located in an exploration of the film's form and content, which appear designed to interrogate and transcend a series of false binaries between mind and body, inside and outside, male and female. Paying attention to the construction of photorealistic digital spaces and composited images, we examine the actual (and possible) (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Affective Teaching for Effective Learning: A Deleuzian pedagogy for the (corporate era and) Chinese context.David H. Fleming - 2014 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 46 (10):1160-1173.
    In this article I explore the pedagogical value of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari’s philosophical concepts for helping make an ‘event’ of thought, with a view towards fostering deep learning in Chinese students' learning theory and criticism in a second language. Paying attention to the qualitative role of bodies, humour and creativity alongside an expanded trans-personal concept of ‘educational life forms’ that stretches out to include an affective assemblage of inhuman elements (such as art and technology), I explore how Deleuze (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Consumers as stakeholders: prospects for democracy in marketing theory.James A. Fitchett - 2005 - Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 14 (1):14-27.
  • An assemblage of desire, drugs and techno.John I. Fitzgerald - 1998 - Angelaki 3 (2):41 – 57.
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • The Nature of Biomimicry: Toward a Novel Technological Culture.Michael Fisch - 2017 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 42 (5):795-821.
    Biomimicry is a rising popular ecology movement and method that urges the derivation of innovative and environmentally sound design from organic systems. This essay explores the notion of nature in biomimicry as articulated by the movement’s founder, Janine Benyus, and the nature of biomimicry as practiced by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology media ecologist Neri Oxman. Benyus’s approach, I show, promotes biomimicry as a science of nature in which nature is treated as a source for innovative design that can be (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Reconsidering the ethics of cosmopolitan memory: In the name of difference and memories to-come.Zlatan Filipovic - 2023 - Philosophy and Social Criticism.
    Departing from what Levey and Sznaider (2002) in their seminal work ‘Memory Unbound’ refer to as ‘cosmopolitan memory’ that emerges as one of the fundamental forms ‘collective memories take in the age of globalization’, this article will consider the underlying ethical implications of global memory formation that have yet to be adequately theorized. Since global disseminations of local memory cultures and the implicit canonization of its traumas are intimately related to the concept of archive, I will first focus on what (...)
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Participation, metaphysics, and enlightenment: reflections on Ken Wilber’s recent work.Jorge Ferrer - 2015 - Approaching Religion 5 (2):42-66.
    This article critically examines Ken Wilber’s recent work from a participatory perspective of human spirituality. After a brief introduction to the participatory approach, I limit my discussion to the following four key issues: a. the participatory critique of Wilber’s work, b. the cultural versus universal nature of Wilber’s Kosmic habits, c. the question of metaphysics in spiritual discourse, and d. the nature of enlightenment. The article concludes with some concrete directions in which to move the dialogue forward.
    No categories
    Direct download (4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Responsibility, Complexity Science and Education: Dilemmas and Uncertain Responses.Tara Fenwick - 2008 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 28 (2):101-118.
    While complexity science is gaining interest among educational theorists, its constructs do not speak to educational responsibility or related core issues in education of power and ethics. Yet certain themes of complexity, as taken up in educational theory, can help unsettle the more controlling and problematic discourses of educational responsibility such as the potential to limit learning and subjectivity or to prescribe social justice. The purpose of this article is to critically examine complexity science against notions of responsibility in terms (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   4 citations  
  • McDeleuze: What's More Rhizomal than the Big Mac?Kane X. Faucher - 2010 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 4 (1):42-59.
    The popularity of Deleuze and Guattari is an undeniable precedent in current theoretical exchanges, and it could be stated without much contention that one's theoretical positioning must at some point deal with the salient conceptual offerings of Deleuze and Guattari, especially their double-opus, Anti-Oedipus and A Thousand Plateaus wherein a wealth of critique abounds. However, the significant trends concerning Deleuze and Guattari ‘scholarship’ may be jeopardised by the use of certain conceptual themes and methods in their work that are distorted (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • Critical Forces: True Critique or Mere Criticism of Deleuze contra Hegel?Kane X. Faucher - 2010 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 4 (3):329-355.
    The principal concern of this paper is to track the first wave of criticism directed against Deleuze's relation to Hegelianism as it has appeared in the English-speaking world. To this end, we assess the criticisms offered by Stephen Houlgate, Judith Butler, and Catherine Malabou, each of whom, in their respective ways, accuse Deleuze of misreading Hegel, claiming that his rejection of Hegelianism merely reinforces a secret or unacknowledged Hegelianism inherent in his own critique. Despite the brisk treatment Houlgate grants Deleuze, (...)
    Direct download (5 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Virtual attractors, actual assemblages: How Luhmann’s theory of communication complements actor-network theory.Ignacio Farías - 2014 - European Journal of Social Theory 17 (1):24-41.
    This article proposes complementing actor-network theory (ANT) with Niklas Luhmann’s communication theory, in order to overcome one of ANT’s major shortcomings, namely, the lack of a conceptual repertoire to describe virtual processes such as sense-making. A highly problematic consequence of ANT’s actualism is that it cannot explain the differentiation of economic, legal, scientific, touristic, religious, medical, artistic, political and other qualities of actual entities, assemblages and relationships. By recasting Luhmann’s theory of functionally differentiated communication forms and sense-making as dealing with (...)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Deleuze's Notion of Institution: In the Direction of a Different Distance.Ubaldo Fadini - 2019 - Deleuze and Guattari Studies 13 (4):528-540.
    The article focuses on Deleuze's analysis of the institution, which the French philosopher carries out starting from a close confrontation with that modern anti-contractualism of which David Hume is a very significant exponent. On this basis, using also the analytical of power outlined by Elias Canetti, Deleuze attempts to provide a less obvious image of the institution. In fact, he proposes it as an indication of a need for distance, however elastic, temporary, revocable, that is, connected to those that turn (...)
    Direct download (2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Personalized Medicine in Practice: Postgenomics from Multiplicity to Immutability.Nadav Even Chorev - 2020 - Body and Society 26 (1):26-54.
    This article explores the ways in which predictive information technologies are used in the field of personalized medicine and the relations between this use and how patients and disease are perceived. This is examined in a qualitative case study of a personalized cancer clinical trial, where oncologists made clinical decisions for each patient based on drug matchings and efficacy predictions produced by bioinformatic technologies and algorithms. I focus on personalized practice itself, as a postgenomic phenomenon, rather than on epistemic, ethical (...)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Deleuze's Political Ethics: A Fascism of the New?Fred Evans - 2016 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 10 (1):85-99.
    The cosmology of Deleuze and Guattari emphasises the new. I raise the question of whether this emphasis cancels out two other political virtues, solidarity and heterogeneity, and thereby amounts to a fascism of the new. I reply that what Deleuze and Guattari say about cosmological unity and difference suggests that they can avoid this negative designation. I support this conclusion by considering their statements on ethics and politics and by translating their cosmological philosophy into the more immediate ethico-political context of (...)
    Direct download (3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark