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Ben Woodard
University of Western Ontario (PhD)
  1.  8
    Schelling's Naturalism: Motion, Space and the Volition of Thought.Ben Woodard - 2018 - Edinburgh University Press.
    Using Schelling's philosophy, Ben Woodard examines how an expanded form of naturalism changes how we conceive of the division between thought and world, mathematics and motion, sense and dynamics, experiment and materiality, as well as speculation and pragmatism. Nature, in Schelling's eyes, is not the great outdoors or some authentic pastoral realm, but the various powers, processes and tendencies which run through biology, chemistry, physics and the very possibility of thought itself.
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  2. Mad Speculation and Absolute Inhumanism: Lovecraft, Ligotti, and the Weirding of Philosophy.Ben Woodard - 2011 - Continent 1 (1):3-13.
    continent. 1.1 : 3-13. / 0/ – Introduction I want to propose, as a trajectory into the philosophically weird, an absurd theoretical claim and pursue it, or perhaps more accurately, construct it as I point to it, collecting the ground work behind me like the Perpetual Train from China Mieville's Iron Council which puts down track as it moves reclaiming it along the way. The strange trajectory is the following: Kant's critical philosophy and much of continental philosophy which has followed, (...)
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  3.  5
    Line, Vine, and Grace: Ravaisson’s Spiral and Schelling’s Vortex.Ben Woodard - 2023 - In Kirill Chepurin, Adi Efal-Lautenschläger, Daniel Whistler & Ayşe Yuva (eds.), Hegel and Schelling in Early Nineteenth-Century France: Volume 2 - Studies. Cham: Springer. pp. 59-73.
    This study addresses the conceptual affinities between F. W. J. Schelling and Félix RavaissonRavaisson-Mollien, Félix by focusing on the genesis of the link between nature and thought in their respective philosophies. To achieve this, it considers the role of diagrammatic representation in depicting this link—particularly in the figure of the spiral. I argue that, for Schelling, the spiral is a real pattern that suggests the polarity of the mental and the physical whereas, for RavaissonRavaisson-Mollien, Félix, it is a memory of (...)
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  4.  5
    A Fly in the Appointment: Posthuman-Insectoid-Cyberfeminist-Materiality.Ben Woodard - 2018 - In Svitlana Matviyenko & Judith Roof (eds.), Lacan and the Posthuman. Springer Verlag. pp. 89-111.
    Theorists such as Jussi Parikka, Jakob von Uexküll, Eugene Thacker, Sadie Plant, and others have utilized the figure of the insect as a particularly salient way of reading the materialization of information. Certain affinities of insect anatomy and behavior with technology aesthetically collude with technologies of communication. But is such use of the insect figure merely metaphorical, or does it drag with it other aspects of the insect body and its bearing on the physicality of information? In either case, the (...)
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  5. Casting Speculation: Response to Jeffrey Jerome Cohen.Ben Woodard - 2013 - In Eileen A. Joy, Anna Klosowska, Nicola Masciandro & Michael O'Rourke (eds.), Speculative Medievalisms: Discography. punctum books.
  6.  82
    Iain Hamilton Grant. Philosophies of Nature After Schelling.Ben Woodard - 2010 - Analecta Hermeneutica 2.
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  7.  22
    Lamps, rainbows and horizons: Spatializing knowledge in naturphilosophical epistemology.Ben Woodard - 2016 - Angelaki 21 (4):23-41.
    In the present essay I address the apparently problematic status of epistemology in F.W.J. Schelling’s work. Given the overblown emphasis on Schelling’s anti-Kantianism, there would seem to be little hope in articulating anything like a theory of knowledge in Schelling’s thought. For the sake of brevity I emphasize knowledge’s spatial and navigational functions in Schelling’s texts. For Schelling, the navigational is that which locates, and constructively constrains, the capacity of the subject to synthesize. This is accomplished, I argue, via a (...)
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  8.  1
    On an Ungrounded Earth: towards a new geophilosophy.Ben Woodard - 2013 - Brooklyn, NY.: Punctum Books.
    For too long, the Earth has been used to ground thought instead of bending it; such grounding leaves the planet as nothing but a stage for phenomenology, deconstruction, or other forms of anthropocentric philosophy. In far too much continental philosophy, the Earth is a cold, dead place enlivened only by human thought--either as a thing to be exploited, or as an object of nostalgia. Geophilosophy seeks instead to question the ground of thinking itself, the relation of the inorganic to the (...)
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  9.  4
    Parameter Breach: Ch'telet and the Ground of the Diagram.Ben Woodard - unknown
    The following investigates the work of the still too neglected thinker Gilles Châtelet with a particular emphasis on how his understanding of intuition functions across philosophy, science, and mathematics. The question is whether intuition (as Châtelet understands in a generally Schellingian formulation) trivializes the processes of scientific and mathematical thought subjecting them to an experimental errancy of chance. While it is common to dismiss Schelling’s notion of intellectual intuition as god-like knowledge following Kant, even a cursory examination of how Schelling (...)
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  10. Speculations I.Ben Woodard - 2009 - In David Papineau (ed.), Philosophy. Oxford University Press. pp. 5--2.
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