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proyectos:tfg:metafisica-de-la-diferencia:realismo-especulativo [2017/10/27 12:24] Joaquín Herrero Pintado [Metafísica] |
proyectos:tfg:metafisica-de-la-diferencia:realismo-especulativo [2017/11/08 02:03] (actual) Joaquín Herrero Pintado proyectos:tfg:realismo_especulativo:start renombrar a proyectos:tfg:metafisica-de-la-diferencia:realismo-especulativo (nuevo ns) |
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====== Realismo Especulativo ====== | ====== Realismo Especulativo ====== | ||
- | ===== The Speculative Turn. Continental Materialism and realism ===== | + | ===== The Speculative Turn. Continental Materialism and Realism ===== |
**Ray Brassier’s** work combines a militant enthusiasm for the Enlightenment with a | **Ray Brassier’s** work combines a militant enthusiasm for the Enlightenment with a | ||
Línea 79: | Línea 79: | ||
* In her essay ‘Wondering about Materialism’, **Isabelle Stengers** takes issue with the eliminativist understanding of nature, in which all knowledge except that of physics must ultimately be eliminated. This eliminativist materialism acts to lay the groundwork not just for an understanding of human reality, but for a transformation of it. It is a question of power and control. Against this reductive naturalism, Stengers proposes a messier and more complex materialism, one based on struggle among multiple entities and levels and not upon reducing the diversity of the world to a single plane. | * In her essay ‘Wondering about Materialism’, **Isabelle Stengers** takes issue with the eliminativist understanding of nature, in which all knowledge except that of physics must ultimately be eliminated. This eliminativist materialism acts to lay the groundwork not just for an understanding of human reality, but for a transformation of it. It is a question of power and control. Against this reductive naturalism, Stengers proposes a messier and more complex materialism, one based on struggle among multiple entities and levels and not upon reducing the diversity of the world to a single plane. | ||
* In ;;;‘Emergence, Causality, and Realism’;;;, **Manuel DeLanda** wades into debates surrounding emergence, proposing a non-mystical account of emergent systems based on singularities, attractors, and the virtual. Contesting the classical causal thesis that ‘one cause implies one effect, always’, DeLanda shows how sensitivity to initial conditions, coupled with interrelations between singularities, generate a host of non-linear phenomena and emergent properties. | * In ;;;‘Emergence, Causality, and Realism’;;;, **Manuel DeLanda** wades into debates surrounding emergence, proposing a non-mystical account of emergent systems based on singularities, attractors, and the virtual. Contesting the classical causal thesis that ‘one cause implies one effect, always’, DeLanda shows how sensitivity to initial conditions, coupled with interrelations between singularities, generate a host of non-linear phenomena and emergent properties. | ||
+ | * The collection concludes with **Ben Woodard’s interview with Slavoj Žižek**, in which | ||
+ | Žižek articulates his own materialist position by contrasting it with a series of other | ||
+ | materialisms—naturalist, democratic, discursive, and speculative. For Žižek, contrary | ||
+ | to all these positions, only the assertion of the nature of reality as ‘non-All’ can sustain | ||
+ | a truly materialist position. Responding to various criticisms of his materialism, ;;;Žižek | ||
+ | tries to show how Hegel’s dialectical movement can resolve some of the paradoxes involved | ||
+ | in causal determinism;;;, evolutionary reformism and Meillassoux’s hyperchaos. |