Posts Tagged ‘ Anti-Humanism ’
The observant reader will have noticed that “Leibniz, Raised by Wolves” was categorized under “Anti-Humanism”, amongst other things. This anti-humanism is not explicit in the post, but I think it follows quite naturally—especially in light of the fledgling comments on logos and telos at the post’s tail end. The distinction between logos and telos is [ READ MORE ]
In my last post, I began to theorize a model of the object as “a Leibnizism of forces.” Leibniz, as we know, uses the language of dominance to describe the hierarchy of monads responsible for the organization of the assemblage-object. However, as I headed to bed last night, I remembered the following video, in which [ READ MORE ]
In an entry to l’infini et le néant entitled “Inkblots and Infinity“, I presented two aphoristic vignettes developing intuitions that, when the journal entry was written in February, seemed to suggest an anti-realist position. Though “The Rorschach Test” admits that there is raw material being dealt with—the interplay of ink and paper, the “differance between [ READ MORE ]