Spinoza and the politics of renaturalization /
There have been many Spinozas over the centuries: atheist, romantic pantheist, great thinker of the multitude, advocate of the liberated individual, and rigorous rationalist. The common thread connecting all of these clashing perspectives is Spinoza's naturalism, the idea that humanity is part...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Chicago :
University of Chicago Press,
2011.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Reconfiguring the human
- Lines, planes, and bodies: redefining human action
- Action as affect
- The transindividuality of affect
- The tongue
- Renaturalizing ideology: Spinoza's ecosystem of ideas
- The matrix
- Ideology critique today?
- The fly in the coach
- "I am in ideology," or the attribute of thought
- What is to be done?
- Man's utility to man: reason and its place in nature
- The politics of human nature
- Reason and the human essence
- Man's utility to man
- Nonhuman utility
- Beyond the image of man
- Desire for recognition? Butler, Hegel, and Spinoza
- Spinoza in Hegel
- Desire in Hegel
- Conatus and cupiditas in Spinoza
- From interpersonal recognition to impersonal glory
- Judith Butler's post-Hegelian politics of recognition
- The impersonal is political: Spinoza and a feminist politics of imperceptibility
- The politics of recognition
- Elizabeth Grosz's critique of the politics of recognition
- Thinking beyond the (hu)man
- A politics of imperceptibility
- Nature, norms, and beasts
- The beast within
- Animal affects (and) the first man
- Ethics as ethology?