From Christopher Long's Digital Dialogue series:
Description: John Protevi, Phyllis M. Taylor Professor of French Studies and Professor of Philosophy at Louisiana State University, joins me for episode 56 of the Digital Dialogue, God and the Organism. John's work focuses on Continental phenomenology and, more specifically, on contemporary French philosophy. In addition to his many publications on embodied cognition and French philosophy, his book, Political Affect: Connecting the Social and the Somatic, came out with University of Minnesota Press in 2009, and he has another book, Life, Earth, War: Deleuzean Interventions, forthcoming with Minnesota Press.h/t dmf
4 comments:
this is a good talk (in a good series of talks, especially Claire Colebrook and John Lysaker) and while my own interests obviously parallel these lines of inquiry I think that these fine profs overestimate both the level/degree of organization/communion in human affairs and our powers related powers to know/systematize.
That said their taking note of the unlikelihood that we are in vast relations of commands/programs seems vital to me and raises serious questions about so called ideologies which function like theo-logoi, for me terms of collective/mass minds/mind-sets like "ideology" or zeitgeist/epochs are better left behind along with Nature and Ideas.
-dmf
Simon Critchley on mystical anarchism:
http://vimeo.com/42338101
http://www.brainsciencepodcast.com/bsp/mind-in-life-with-evan-thompson-bsp-89.html
Bergson:a machine for the making of gods.
http://www2.lse.ac.uk/newsAndMedia/videoAndAudio/channels/publicLecturesAndEvents/player.aspx?id=1590
Post a Comment