The Poverty of Philosophy: Readings in Non and Other Philosophies or Arts of Immanence
English
By (author): Philip Beitchman
The Poverty of Philosophy: Readings in Non and Other Philosophies and Arts of Imminence kicks off with an 8,000 word overture, Poverty of Philosophy introducing non-philosophy and its progenitor, François Laruelle, his inspirations by, rapports and connections with other philosophers of immanence (Nietzsche, Henry, Deleuze, Derrida...) as well as exploring, and also drawing some conclusions as to the possibilities of its present, and/or feasible impact on culture, politics and the arts, there follows the Anthology of NON, and other Philosophies and Arts of Immanence, comprised of some 300 excerpts from some 140 published sources, many signed by Laruelle, and many of the others by French, Anglophone, as well as Eastern European writers, artists, philosophers, scholars, critics and thinkers who extend his insights in the various domains of human endeavor. Very often translated from the French, and frequently commented, these excerpts are arranged alphabetically under 88 topics, from Actor to World, the complete list of them following my introduction, in a table of contents keyed to page #s for each of them. Following are close readings in Beitchmans five review essays, two of works of Laruelle, and of three by scholars here very much in his wake: The Machinery of Control (Sophie Lesueur, Pensée machine et ordre politique); Universe, World, Philo-Fiction and Non-Action in Non-philosophy (François Laruelle, Tétralogos:); Ecology, Sacred and Profane (François Laruelle, En dernière humanité: la nouvelle science écologique); The Philo-Fictions of Katerina Kolozova (Cut of the Real and 5 other works); A Leap through Language: Non-Philosophy, Science and the Arts (Sergueï Khoruzhiy, La non-philosophie de François Laruelle entre le Charybde de la transraison et le Scylla du scientisme). These essays provide a synoptic overview of non-philosophy from its inception to its latest non-standard philosophy avatar. Generally Beitchmans focus is on language and vocabulary, and their associated arts, principally literary and performingand on the way terms like World, Universe, Superposition and Philo-fiction are deployed, defined, re-defined or refused definition; also how modern science, once fractals, now more Quantum and Wave theory, in concert with these imponderables, expands the horizon of the thinkable, conceivable and above all the feasible.
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