Valery Podoroga: Philosophy as a Life Form

2021 ◽  
Vol 32 (5) ◽  
pp. 11
Author(s):  
Helen Petrovsky

The article is dedicated to the memory of the outstanding Russian philosopher Valery Podoroga (1946–2020). Although his rich legacy is still awaiting to be read in a careful and thoughtful manner, even now it is possible to discern those nodal points that allow us to conduct an ongoing dialogue with Podoroga. Among them is a philosophical approach that has been named “analytical anthropology”. One of its key elements is a kind of vindication of the sensible dimension in philosophy, which in Podoroga takes the form of his marked interest in the inner logic of a work defined by the play of psychomimetic forces. What is at stake is an encounter with the work on the corporeal level, when the reader is gripped by its energy, and it is the task of the analytical anthropologist to reconstruct the latter’s unique pattern in the work. However, this position seems to carry an inherent tension: although observation is defined as non-participant (a version of phenomenological reduction), the observer, in one way or another, brings to a close that which is still in a state of becoming (the work as a “living” form). This is the grounds for singling out two lines of thinking in Podoroga himself, namely, the line of Eisenstein and that of Mamardashvili. Being the philosopher’s intellectual mentors, they become the two poles defining the development of Podoroga’s own thought. If S.M. Eisenstein stands for experimentation pure and simple, M.K. Mamardashvili expresses the value of individual effort and of reflection as a philosophical procedure. On the one hand, we see Podoroga’s interest in the play of forces, energies and impulses, which points to the movement of matter itself, while on the other, he keeps searching for form and those ultimate grounds that clearly bear on metaphysics. The two mentioned poles are reflected in the following pair: (preconceptual) image vs. concept. Although Podoroga himself attempts to draw a line between the internal and the external — and the work is located precisely on this borderline — the contemporary world demands that we address the work as one of nature’s forms among so many others.

2006 ◽  
Vol 71 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-116 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael Kober

It will be shown that Wittgenstein's philosophical approach to religion is substantially shaped by William James' . For neither during the period nor later does Wittgenstein thematise religious doctrines, but rather struggles to determine what it means for a sincere person to have a specific religious (James called these attitudes "experiences"). Wittgenstein's almost exclusive focus on attitudes explains, (i) why he is able to strictly discriminate between scientific and empirical claims on the one hand and religious utterances on the other, (ii) why religious and mythical narrations should not be understood as promoting (pre-scientific) theories, (iii) why Wittgenstein non-cognitively interprets religious utterances such as "This is God's will" as avowals, and (iv) why he seems to promote fideism. Wittgenstein's one-sided way of reflecting on religious matters, however, should not be understood as adumbrating or even promoting any more specific account of religion, especially bearing in mind that many of his remarks concerning religion are connected to or motivated by reflections on his own life. This thesis is meant to imply that Wittgenstein does not, as the usual understanding holds, offer a theology for atheists.


REFLEXE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (60) ◽  
pp. 29-63
Author(s):  
Martin Rabas

The present article has two objectives. One is to elucidate the philosophical approach presented in the so-called Strahov Systematic Manuscripts of Jan Patočka in terms of consciousness and nature. The other is to compare this philosophical approach with Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s theses on nature, as elaborated in 1956–1961, and to point out some advantages and limitations of both approaches. In our opinion, Patočka’s philosophical approach consists, on the one hand, in a descriptive analysis of human experience, which he understands as a pre-reflective self-relationship pointing towards the consciousness of the world. On the other hand, on the basis of this descriptive analysis Patočka consequently explicates all non-human life, inorganic matter, and finally the whole of nature as life in its own right, the essence of which is also a certain self-relation with a tendency towards consciousness. The article then briefly presents Merleau-Ponty’s theses on nature, and finally compares them with Patočka’s overall theses on nature. The advantage of Patočka’s notion of nature as against Merleau-Ponty’s is that, in Patočka’s view, nature encompasses both the principle of unity and individuality. On the other hand, the advantage of Merleau-Ponty’s understanding of nature as against Patočka’s lies in the consistent interconnectedness of the infinite life of nature and the finite life of individual beings.


2014 ◽  
Vol 69 (02) ◽  
pp. 179-185
Author(s):  
Nicolas Barreyre ◽  
Geneviève Verdo

Over the course of the last twenty years, two historiographical movements have challenged the notion of sovereignty, particularly that of the “natural” anchoring of an absolute, statal form of sovereignty in a uniform territory as its perfected model. On the one hand, the experience of globalization that followed the fall of the Berlin Wall—and which fed talk of the “end of nation-states”—led to a new examination of the political organization of the contemporary world, which in part “deterritorialized” the issue of political control. On the other hand, the extraordinary rise in studies of colonial empires has established that sovereignty, far from being the homogeneous block of the jurist’s refined concept, could be exercised in varying degrees and even be conceived as multiple and “layered.”


Author(s):  
Filippo Del Lucchese

This chapter argues that Aristotle’s enquiry on the nature and meaning of monstrosity is rooted in his positive attitude toward the knowledge of lower nature, which enjoy the same status of the science of higher beings. Heavens and earth are thus connected through the divine principle that is active throughout the whole nature. Gods thus become author of, but also responsible for, what happens in nature, and Aristotle’s argument provides the ground for every future theodicy. Monstrosity plays a major role in this philosophical approach. Aristotle develops the opposition between the normal and the abnormal development, through the concept of accidental necessity, namely the necessity that is at stake in natural processes that not always happen in the same way. Monsters are of pivotal importance in this ontological picture, because of their paradoxical ambiguity. On the one hand, they are the sign and symptom or a resistant nature, which opposes itself to Aristotle’s major ontological invention, namely the form and the final cause. On the other hand, without this hyatus between formal perfection and actual reality, nature would not exist in the way we experience it: there would be no diversity, no better and worse, no normal and monstrous. Monstrosity is necessary for Aristotle to explain nature and its ontological structure based on the substitition of dynamic forms and ends to both the static ideas of Plato and the exclusively material reality of atomists.


2020 ◽  
Vol 13 ◽  
pp. 111-119
Author(s):  
Simona Șimon

Advertising is an undisputed reality of the contemporary world, being a form of communication present both in and beyond mass media. With the evolution of the society, new means of expression have emerged and determined an expansion of the range of advertising products offered for information, persuasion and, why not, for enjoyment. However, as advertising expanded its scope, the meanings attributed to the concept began to change and broaden at the same time. In the Romanian cultural space, this evolution of the concept, as well as the increasing presence of English in all instances of communication have led to a dynamisation of the process of defining advertising, especially due to the new meanings revealed by the definition of the concept in English. In this context, the present article aims to highlight the existence of some discrepancies between the definition of the concept and the terminology already established in Romanian, on the one hand, and to offer solutions that smooth the way to a better equivalence of the meanings assigned to the concept in the process of translating it from Romanian into English, on the other hand. Considering the problem statement, our own observations and the data collected from the online survey carried out among the students pursuing a bachelor’s degree at the Faculty of Communication Sciences, two definitions of the Romanian concepts of publicitate and reclamă are put forth in order to bridge the conceptual gap existing in the Romanian cultural space.


2013 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-60
Author(s):  
Eiko Hanaoka

In the contemporary world all kinds of culture, thought modes, philosophies and religions are complicatedly active. Social conditions of our contemporary world wear a nihilistic look which Nietzsche (1844-1900) prophesied as a fact, 200 years after his time. In this nihilistic ambience, the whole world seems to be overrun by various crimes neglecting morality and ethics. In such a world we are urged to consider how morals and ethics can be realized. In this meaning the „bounds of ethics‟ are considered in regard to the paradigms of different historical epochs as the framework and basis of life, culture and thinking. One of these paradigms, common to East and West, is the one based on being and nothingness: relative being, relative nothingness, absolute being, nihil, and absolute nothingness, which last-mentioned paradigm subsumes the other four. In essence, this paper will discuss how morality and ethics in the paradigm of absolute nothingness can finally act in oneness with religion and overcome nihilism in the contemporary world, even if it acts very slowly.


Arta ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 115-121
Author(s):  
Elena Prus ◽  
◽  
Ludmila Braniste ◽  

This article discusses current issues in the evolution of museums worldwide, influenced by global phenomena. The globalization of culture, on the one hand, and the musealization of the world, on the other hand, become the plays of a spectacle of the contemporary world. The museum cultural model becomes dominant in today’s society, influencing all spheres and finding representation in the world’s literatures. Among the various approached theories, the concepts of musealization of the modelled world as a cultural spectacle, “the world as a museum”, imaginary museum, the literaturization of the museum and the musealization of literature. From this perspective, the theses of the Nobel laureates in literature Mario Vargas Llosa and Orhan Pamuk are analysed. In Pamuk’s novel The Museum of Innocence, the museum is the structuring narratological axis of the novel, its theme and compositional nucleus.


2020 ◽  
Vol 23 (1-2) ◽  
pp. 143-154
Author(s):  
Van Quang Pham

The contemporary world is characterized by the phenomena of displacement and human migration in different forms. The migrant subject enters into the paradoxical interiorization of identity: on the one hand, he has left what he was, and on the other, he must update what is shaping him in the present. Literary writing thus becomes a specific space for the expression and articulation of these existential states by bringing us to reflection on the experience of this existence ‘outside the world’ of writers. Pham Van Ky and Linda Lê are among the authors who allow us to question their condition of exile as a possibility of existence.


2021 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
Author(s):  
Rodrigo Marques Leistner

Os Rabelados configuram comunidades rurais originárias da resistência ao poder colonial em Cabo Verde, as quais se desenvolveram parcialmente isoladas do Estado desde os anos 1940. Recentemente, no entanto, iniciativas empreendidas por mediadores culturais objetivam a inserção desses coletivos junto à sociedade envolvente, e nesses propósitos, as políticas de patrimonialização e o turismo cultural se apresentam como principais instrumentos. Partindo-se dessas realidades, o artigo aborda as complexidades que envolvem os agenciamentos referidos. Por um lado, busca-se caracterizar as formas pelas quais os agenciamentos em torno da cultura se tornaram centrais na contemporaneidade; por outra via, avalia-se os resultados mais aparentes desses empreendimentos para o caso dos Rabelados, com especial atenção em relação às problemáticas das negociações identitárias e da autenticidade.Negotiated Identities, Redefined Authenticities: Heritage Policies and Cultural Tourism Among the Rabelados of Cape Verde Abstract: The Rabelados consist of rural communities originating in the resistance to colonial power in Cape Verde, which have developed partially isolated from the state since the 1940s. Recently, however, initiatives undertaken by cultural mediators aim at the inclusion of these collectives into the surrounding society and, in these purposes, patrimonialization policies and cultural tourism are presented as main instruments. Coming from these realities, this article discusses the complexities surrounding these agencies. On the one hand, it seeks to characterize the ways in which the agencies around culture have become central in the contemporary world; on the other hand, it evaluates the most apparent results of these initiatives in the case of Rabelados, with special attention to the issues of identity negotiations and authenticity.Keywords: patrimonialization policies; cultural tourism; identities; authenticities.


2017 ◽  
Vol 20 (6) ◽  
pp. 147-156
Author(s):  
Adam Płachciak

On the one hand, the contemporary world is a place of sheer abundance; on the other, it is a place where the poverty is widespread, people’s needs are unsatisfied, and the natural and socioeconomic systems remain unstable. The negligence/absence of human rights and basic political needs pose a direct threat to development. One of the most effective answers to such a threat is the idea of sustainable development, which works towards the goal of satisfying the needs of present generations without depriving the future generations of their options and basic needs. Amartya Sen’s concept of development, understood as a process of extending basic civil rights and freedoms as well as improving the effectiveness of social security networks is crucial for intellectual reflection on the idea of sustainable development.


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