The philosophy of science fiction : Henri Bergson and the fabulations of Philip K. Dick /
The Philosophy of Science Fiction: Henri Bergson and the Fabulations of Philip K. Dick explores the deep affinity between two seemingly quite different thinkers, in their attempts to address the need for salvation in (and from) an era of accelerated mechanization, in which humans' capacity for...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
London :
Bloomsbury,
2015.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Half title
- FC
- Also available from Bloomsbury
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- Philosophy and science fiction
- Bergson and Dick at the edge of the known
- The ethics of balking
- Philip K. Dick studies
- Note on terminology
- 1 Fabulation: Counteracting Reality
- Mechanization and the war-instinct
- The biological origins of society
- Countering the intellect
- The morality of violence
- Open morality and the misdirection of mechanism
- True mysticism: Immanent salvation
- An incomplete soteriology
- Fabulation for the open
- Conclusion
- 2 Fabulating Salvation in Four Early Novels
- Solar Lottery (1972 [1955])
- The World Jones Made (1993b [1956])
- Vulcan's Hammer (1976c [1960])
- Time Out of Joint (2003c [1959])
- Conclusion: Super-everyman to solar shoe salesman
- 3 The Empire that Never Ended
- A matter of life or (life under the sign of) death
- The open and the universal
- The life-death chiasmus
- The fictitious event
- The messianic tension
- The remnant and messianic time
- The magic of language
- Sci-fi: The genre of 'as not'
- Conclusion: Gnostic politics
- 4 Objects of Salvation: The Man in the High Castle
- The fabulation of history
- Mechanization and paralysis
- Worldly remains
- Openings between worlds
- The tyranny of the concrete
- Objects of salvation
- Conclusion: Reality fields
- 5 How We Became Post-Android
- The mechanization of pot-healing
- The alien god
- The saviour in need
- Robot theology
- Humans: The cosmic bourgeoisie
- Android and theoid
- Creative destruction
- Conclusion
- 6 The Reality of Valis
- Salvator salvandus
- The believer and the sceptic
- The pharmakonic god
- Reduplicative paramnesia (time becomes space)
- The fabulative cure.
- Recursion: Valis as limitlessly iterative soteriology
- Befriending god
- Conclusion
- Epilogue: Soter-ecologies
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index.