Evil Spirits: Nihilism and the Fate of ModernityGary Banham, Charlie Blake Manchester University Press, 2000 - Počet stran: 228 Incorporating a diversity of approaches from a variety of disciplines, this book provides a major reassessment of the question of nihilism in modernity and interrogates this through the growing interest in angels and demons in contemporary philosophy. The collection examines the uncanny return of angelic and demonic principles in current cultural production and thinking and aims to show that the repression of thought about spiritual entities at the onset of modernity is linked to the appearance of a new form of evil that manifests itself through nihilism. |
Obsah
epistemotopology of the demon | 22 |
The God of Evil Alphonso Lingis | 52 |
Nietzsches demonic nihilism Jill Marsden | 94 |
learning to live with death | 124 |
the primitive ontology of Heideggers | 165 |
Hegel Blake and the advent | 195 |
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actual things Adorno advent affirmation age of spirit angelology angels animal antinomian attempt Bartleby Bataille becoming Benjamin Blake body Cassiel Christian concept death deity Deleuze and Guattari Deleuze's demonic nihilism Derrida desire diabolical difference divine eschatology essay eternal return ethical event evil existence fate figure film Freud future Georges Bataille ghosts Gilles Deleuze gnostic gods haunting hauntology Hegel Heidegger Heidegger's human humankind Ibid ideal ideas identity Irigaray Jacques Derrida Kierkegaard Kierkegaard's writings late modernity living London meaning metaphysical moral mourning nature Nietzsche Nietzsche's Nightwood nihilism nihilistic notion ontology organism philosophy Pleasure Principle pleroma poet-philosophers political possible present primitive ontology principle psychoanalysis question reading reason redemption relation religion repetition response Satan sense Serres Serres's sexual Soren Kierkegaard Spiegel interview suggests technics teleology thinking thought tion tradition trans transsexual uncanny unconscious understanding University Press violence Walter Benjamin Wenders Wim Wenders