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Annotation
Language and logic are inextricably commingled in our everyday speech. What we say, particularly in the form of statements, tends not only to mirror our world, but mold it into our own image. This book looks at how much of our verbal communication can be considered ""valid"" from the point of view of the rules of logic. Are we saying what we mean to say? Is what we hear from the media, our peers, our leaders, and those who determine the narrative ""story"" of our lives meaningful, rational, and logical? Even more important than the answers to these questions is the answer to whether we are the.
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Table of Contents
- Contents
- Preface
- Part One: Preliminary: The Categorical Exclusion
- Chapter One
- 1.1 Coming-into-being (le devenir)
- 1.2 Iteration and recursion
- 1.3 Effect of quantization on progression
- 1.4 When there is nothing left to prove
- 1.5 Manufacturing discursive worlds (simulacra)
- 1.6 Beyond the synthetic world of the artifice
- 1.7 Lifting the veil of the linear equation
- 1.8 The set of all sets and its significance
- 1.9 Personal sovereignty and exclusion
- Chapter Two
- 2.1 The language of the sovereign
- 2.2 The dictator of language
- 2.3 Lacan and the psycholinguistics of jouissance
- 2.4 Psycholinguistics of the “Social I”
- 2.5 Ethical aesthetics of the Categorical Exclusion
- 2.6 Recursion of the reset of a posteriori positions
- 2.7 The topology of language as thought
- Chapter One
- Part Two: The Apparatus of Language
- Chapter Three
- 3.1 Ethical aesthetics of abdication
- 3.2 Extrinsic and intrinsic argument
- 3.3 Extrinsic and intrinsic strat
- 3.4 Equality of all binary positions
- 3.5 What “no one” does for someone
- 3.6 Fallacy of the subject-object dichotomy
- 3.7 Being-as-subject and the eccentric position
- 3.8 Morality, ethics, and “no one”
- 3.9 Ethics of the automaton
- 3.10 Apparatus tests the subject
- 3.11 Universal Grammar and the a priori
- Chapter Four
- 4.1 Discourse at the position of a posteriori
- 4.2 Taxonomy of simultaneous parallel o
- 4.3 Language, thought, and ontic threads
- Chapter Three
- Part Three: The Discourse of Space and Time
- Chapter Five
- 5.1 Dialectics as parallel ontologies
- 5.2 Transcendental self-consciousness
- 5.3 Space and time as synthetic propositions
- 5.4 Subject-predicate as analog of the a priori
- 5.6 Ready-to-hand, present-at-hand …
- 5.7 Discourse as language and thought
- 5.8 “Making-known” as propaganda
- 5.9 Assigning semantic significance
- 5.10 A place in the world
- Chapter Six
- 6.1 A doctrine of Us and Them
- 6.2 Valid synthetic propositions
- Chapter Five
- Part Four: The Psychology of Discourse
- Chapter Seven
- 7.1 Politics of time and space
- 7.2 Being-for-self as objective freed
- 7.3 Intellectual consequences of the speech-act
- 7.4 Father as signifier
- 7.5 Dialectical historicity of discourse
- 7.6 Testing Forces the Progressive Fallacy
- 7.7 Developmental ontology and morphology
- 7.8 Differentiation + Body-Image Development
- 7.9 Practicing and rapprochement
- Chapter Eight
- 8.1 Object Constancy + Individuation
- 8.2 Etiology of abdication pathology
- 8.3 Abdication in the social order
- Chapter Seven
- Part Five: Conclusion: Possession, Abdication, and the Apophantic
- Chapter Nine
- 9.1 Being possessed by a possession
- 9.2 Verifiable verifiability and the apophantic
- 9.3 “21st Century Schizoid Man”
- Chapter Nine
- Bibliography
- Index
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