Polity
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Printed at: 03/09/2010  –  07:41:27


Philosophy in the Present

By: Alain Badiou (European Graduate School, Saas-Fee, Switzerland) and Slavoj Zizek (European Graduate School, Saas-Fee, Switzerland)


Description

Two controversial thinkers discuss a timeless but nonetheless urgent question: should philosophy interfere in the world?

Nothing less than philosophy is at stake because, according to Badiou, philosophy is nothing but interference and commitment and will not be restrained by academic discipline. Philosophy is strange and new, and yet speaks in the name of all - as Badiou shows with his theory of universality.

Similarly, Zizek believes that the philosopher must intervene, contrary to all expectations, in the key issues of the time. He can offer no direction, but this only shows that the question has been posed incorrectly: it is valid to change the terms of the debate and settle on philosophy as abnormality and excess.

At once an invitation to philosophy and an introduction to the thinking of two of the most topical and controversial philosophers writing today, this concise volume will be of great interest to students and general readers alike.

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Hardback
Status
Available
Edition
First Edition
ISBN
9780745640969
ISBN10
0745640966
Publication Dates ROW:
Nov 2009
Publication Dates US:
Jan 2010
Publication Dates Aus & NZ:
Jan 2010


Format
229 x 152 mm , 6 x 9 in
Pages
80 pages
Paperback
Status
Available
Edition
First Edition
ISBN
9780745640976
ISBN10
0745640974
Publication Dates ROW:
Nov 2009
Publication Dates US:
Jan 2010
Publication Dates Aus & NZ:
Jan 2010



Format
229 x 152 mm , 6 x 9 in
Pages
80 pages

* Exam copies only available to lecturers for whom the book may be suitable as a course text.
Please note: Sales representation and distribution for Polity titles is provided by John Wiley and Sons Ltd.

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Reviews

How can philosophy be restored to its true vocation as a form of ethical and political intervention? In this lively, accessible debate two of Europe's most challenging thinkers present their answers to this question - and discover how much agreement as well as discord there is between them.
Peter Dews, University of Essex

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Table of Contents

Editor's Preface
Alain Badiou
Thinking the Event
Thesis 1: Thought is the proper medium of the universal.
Thesis 2: Every universal is singular, or is a singularity.
Thesis 3: Every universal originates in an event, and the event is intransitive to the particularity of the situation.
Thesis 4: A universal initially presents itself as a decision about an undecidable.
Thesis 5: The universal has an implicative form.
Thesis 6: The universal is univocal.
Thesis 7: Every universal singularity remains incompletable or open.
Thesis 8: Universality is nothing other than the faithful construction of an infinite generic multiple.
Slavoj ?i?ek
‘Philosophy is not a dialogue'
Discussion

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Author Information

Alain Badiou, L'École normale superieure, Paris and Slavoj Zizek, Institute of Sociology, Ljubljana in Slovenia

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