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Title Approaching Hegel's logic, obliquely: Melville, Moliere, Beckett
Creators Nuzzo Angelica
Collection Электронные книги зарубежных издательств ; Общая коллекция
Subjects Logic. ; Literature — History and criticism. ; Literature. ; PHILOSOPHY / History & Surveys / Modern ; EBSCO eBooks
Document type Other
File type PDF
Language English
Rights Доступ по паролю из сети Интернет (чтение, печать, копирование)
Record key on1076876798
Record create date 12/3/2018

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  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction: Thinking Transformation
  • Part I. Hegel’s Logic of Transformation
    • Chapter 1 Thinking in Times of Crisis: Hegel’s Logic of Transformation
      • Prelude: After the Crisis, Telling the Story
      • 1. From Today’s Present to Hegel’s Logic as a Logic of Transformative Processes
      • 2. Another Crisis: Times of Change and Hegel’s Dialectic
      • 3. The “Need” for a Logic of Change
      • 4. Dialectic Is Movement: Zeno’s Arrow and Heraclitus’s Flux
      • 5. Dialectic-Speculative Logic: Understanding and the Power of Reason
      • 6. Hegel’s Dialectic-Speculative Logic: The Path for a Reconstruction
    • Chapter 2 From the Beginning to the End: What Is Method?
      • 1. The Nature of the Process: Determinate Negation and Immanence
      • 2. Logical Movement and Logical Action
      • 3. Method as the Enactment of Truth: Method Is Mythos
      • 4. Method: Beginning, Advancing, and Ending the Logical Action
      • 5. In the End Is the (Beginning of the) Story
    • Chapter 3 Forms and Figures
      • 1. Logical Action and Logical Agents
      • 2. Phenomenological and Logical Gestaltung: Logical Forms as “Figures”
      • 3. Logical Figures: Reality in the “Realm of Shadows”
  • Part II. Structures of Action: Logic and Literature
    • Chapter 4 Beginnings
      • Some Preliminary Remarks: The Synchronic Perspective, or Reading the Logic All Over Again
      • 1. Logical Beginnings: The Two Perspectives
        • 1.1. Enacting the Absolute Beginning: The Figure of Beginning in Being
        • 1.2. The Memory of the Beginning or Beginning-Again: The Figure of Beginning in Essence
        • 1.3. The Beginning of Freedom: The Figure of Beginning in the Concept
      • 2. Violence in the Beginning: Melville’s Billy Budd
        • 2.1. The Logic of Violence: The Violence of Pure Immediacy—Being
        • 2.2. The Logic of Violence: Violence Reflected
        • 2.3. The Logic of Violence: The Violence of Power and the Power of Love
      • 3. Transforming the Beginning
    • Chapter 5 Advancing: Transformations
      • Advancing—the Question
      • 1. Logical Advancements: The Two Perspectives
        • 1.1. Advancing Being: Acting in Search of Determination, or Dasein
        • 1.2. Advancing Essence: Acting in/as the Middle by Returning Back to Oneself, or Gesetztsein
        • 1.3. Advancing the Concept, by Judging: Crisis and Stasis
      • 2. Advancing Beyond Fanaticism: Molière’s Tartuffe
        • 2.1. The Logic of Fanaticism: Advancing Despite Oneself—The Absolutism of Being or Moral Conscience
        • 2.2. The Logic of Fanaticism: Advancing Despite Oneself—The Hypocrisy of Essence
        • 2.3. The Logic of Fanaticism: Advancing Through the Crisis—Judging
      • 3. Transforming the Advancement
      • Appendix: “Living in the Interregnum”
    • Chapter 6 Endings
      • 1. Logical Endings: The Two Perspectives
        • 1.1. Ending Being, an Infinite Postponement: Going Back by Becoming Essence
        • 1.2. Ending Essence: Reclaiming One’s Own End (Before and Against the Concept)
        • 1.3. The Idea, Ending: Knowing When to Stop
      • 2. Part I. Playing the Endgame: Indifference and the Impossible Ending—Beckett’s Endgame
      • 2. Part II. Indifference, Repetition, and Liberation: Leopardi and Bishop
        • 2.1. The Logic of Indifference: Being Indifferent to the End
        • 2.2. The Logic of Indifference: The Absolute of Essence and the End of All Things
        • 2.3. The Logic of Creativity: Ending Beyond the End (of the Idea)
      • 3. Transforming the End
  • Ending—As in Concluding
  • General Appendix
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index of Names and Works
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