Date: Thu, 21 Jan 1999 04:35:49 -0800 (PST) From: Paul Bryant <levi_bryant-AT-yahoo.com> Subject: Re: On other Hand <quivering and oozing with delight> Clifford, this was a wonderful series of posts... I'd love to see more stuff like this. Paul ---yaya <cw_duff-AT-alcor.concordia.ca> wrote: > > > > > yet again and wonderfully so and in no relation of contradiction > there are some interesting points and pages in What is Philosophy with > reference to Hegel [and Heidegger] on 94-5. part of that discussion > entails a consideration of the problem in Hegel and Heidegger of the > concept and its relation to interiority as history. "Hegel and Heidegger > remain historicists inasmuch as they posit hisotry as a form of > interiority in which the concept necessarily develops or unveils its > destiny.The necessity rests on the abstraction of the historical element > rendered circular. The unforeseeable creation of concepts is thus poorly > understood." (Whatis Philosophy Trans.) Now that is juicy stuff to me. > Because it opens up a movement of deterritorialization at the > "origins" of western thought ie. among the Greeks. But how does it happen? > Whereas with Hegel (according to D&G) it gets > shut down, and the same thing happens with Heidegger. THis closing down > can be seen as the mental conceptual parallel to what the > German State was doing on the political and civic sphere. > > > _________________________________________________________ DO YOU YAHOO!? Get your free -AT-yahoo.com address at http://mail.yahoo.com
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