<p>Raffoul's new book is a major contribution toward understanding post-Kantian Continental philosophy's effort to think about the causality of being beyond the principle of sufficient reason, to consider whether human encounter with the world might not entail something unassimilable to conceptual reason, something secret, traumatic, disruptive, haunting, and yet fundamental to the existence of consciousness.</p>

- N. Lukacher, emeritus, University of Illinois at Chicago, Choice

What happens when something happens? In Thinking the Event, senior continental philosophy scholar François Raffoul undertakes a philosophical inquiry into what constitutes an event as event, its very eventfulness: not what happens or why it happens, but that it happens, and what "happening" means. If, as Leibniz posited, it is true that nothing happens without a reason, does this principle of reason have a reason? For Raffoul, the event always breaks the demands of rational thought. Bringing together philosophical insights from Heidegger, Derrida, Nancy, and Marion, Raffoul shows how the event, in its disruptive unpredictability, always exceeds causality, subjectivity, and reason. It is that "pure event," each time happening outside or without reason, which remains to be thought, and which is the focus of this work. In the final movement of the book, Raffoul takes on questions about the inappropriability of the event and the implications this carries for ethical and political considerations when thinking the event. In the wake of the exhaustion of traditional metaphysics, the notion of the event comes to the fore in an unprecedented way, with key implications for philosophy, ontology, ethics, and theories of selfhood.
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What happens when something happens? If, as Leibniz posited, it is true that nothing happens without a reason, does this principle of reason have a reason? In Thinking the Event, senior continental philosophy scholar François Raffoul deconstructs what happens when something happens, the very happening.
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Table of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. The Event Outside of Thought2. The Event without Ground3. Event and Phenomenology4. Things as Events5. Historical Happening and the Motion of Life6. The Event of Being7. Event, World, Democracy8. The Secret of the EventConclusion: The Ethics of the EventBibliography
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Raffoul's new book is a major contribution toward understanding post-Kantian Continental philosophy's effort to think about the causality of being beyond the principle of sufficient reason, to consider whether human encounter with the world might not entail something unassimilable to conceptual reason, something secret, traumatic, disruptive, haunting, and yet fundamental to the existence of consciousness.
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Timely, provocative, carefully reasoned and argued, and astonishing in its scope. It is a hugely ambitious book that sets out to show how the notion of event in contemporary continental philosophy has utterly transformed not only our thinking of the "event" but also our thinking of "thinking," that is to say, philosophy, ontology, ethics, and theories of human subjectivity.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780253045133
Publisert
2020-05-05
Utgiver
Vendor
Indiana University Press
Vekt
726 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
378

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

François Raffoul is Professor of Philosophy and French Studies at Louisiana State University. He is author of The Origins of Responsibility and translator (with David Pettigrew) of Dominique Janicaud's Heidegger in France.