The first critical work to attempt the mammoth undertaking of reading Badiou's Being and Event as part of a sequence has often surprising, occasionally controversial results.
Looking back on its publication Badiou declared: "I had inscribed my name in the history of philosophy". Later he was brave enough to admit that this inscription needed correction. The central elements of Badiou's philosophy only make sense when Being and Event is read through the corrective prism of its sequel, Logics of Worlds, published nearly twenty years later.
At the same time as presenting the only complete overview of Badiou's philosophical project, this book is also the first to draw out the central component of Badiou's ontology: indifference. Concentrating on its use across the core elements Being and Event-the void, the multiple, the set and the event-Watkin demonstrates that no account of Badiou's ontology is complete unless it accepts that Badiou's philosophy is primarily a presentation of indifferent being.
Badiou and Indifferent Being provides a detailed and lively section by section reading of Badiou's foundational work. It is a seminal source text for all Badiou readers.
Rezensionen / Stimmen
A remarkable achievement and a distinctive contribution to our knowledge of Badiou's thought. For all the skill, and sometimes brilliance, of previous explications, no-one had quite captured the tenor, the character or (a heretical word, perhaps) the feel of Badiou's ontology; not, at least, in language. * Journal of Badiou Studies * Watkin's is a very important book. Much of the commentary on Badiou has tended to move his politics to the centre of his thought. With meticulousness, clarity and rigour, Watkin works rather through Badiou's philosophization of mathematics, liberating the philosopher qua philosopher, the thinker whose awesome achievement has been to recast and transform our understanding of a major set of traditional philosophical terms. This book returns us to what is most gripping about Badiou, his stark, courageous and deeply uncontemporary asceticism. -- Andrew Gibson, former Research Professor of Modern Literature and Theory, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK
Sprache
Verlagsort
Verlagsgruppe
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Zielgruppe
Für höhere Schule und Studium
Maße
Höhe: 232 mm
Breite: 156 mm
Dicke: 24 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-350-01567-8 (9781350015678)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
William Watkin is Professor of Contemporary Literature and Philosophy at Brunel University, UK.
Autor*in
Brunel University London, UK
preface
acknowledgements
Introduction:
Subtractive Being; Nonrelationality; Indifference; Set Theory; Retroactive Axiomatic Reasoning; Transmissibility, Intelligibility and Communicability; Theory of the Subject
Chapter One: Being: The One and the Multiple
How to Prove that the One Is-Not (Meditation One); The One as Operational Counts-as-One; The Ancient Problem of Classes; Situations and Structures; The Multiple; Presentation of Presentation; Reasoning on Being by Means of Axioms; How to Accept that Being Is-Not
Chapter Two: Being: Separation, Void, Mark
Meditation Two; Set Theory and Aggregation as Collection (Meditation Three); Axiom of Separation; Notation and Self-Predication; The Pure Multiple is Real; The Void: Proper Name of Being (Meditation Four); The Void and Nothing; Void as Nomination; ZF+C: The Nine Axioms of Contemporary Set Theory (Meditation 5); Axiom of Extensionality; Axiom of Replacement or Substitution; The Void Set and In-Difference; Meditation Six: Aristotle; Conclusion: Pure Multiple and the Void
Chapter Three: Being and Excess
Powerset Axiom (Meditation Seven); Point of Excess; Void as Name; Four Kinds of One-ness: One, Count-as-one, Unicity, forming-into-one; The State (Meditation Eight); Threat of the Void; Belonging, Inclusion and Parts; Typologies of Being; States and Indifference (Meditation Nine)
Chapter Four: Nature and Infinity
Nature is Normal (Meditation Eleven); Transitive Sets: Cardinal and Ordinal (Meditation Twelve); Nature and Minimality; Nature and Intrication; The Inexistence of Nature; Potential and Actual Infinity; Proving the Actual Infinite; Doubling and Dedekind Infinites; Frege and Equinumerosity
Chapter Five: Infinity, Limit and Succession
The Limit; Succession and Limit; The Upper or Maximal Limit; Succession; Infinite Thought: Problems of Procedure (Meditation Thirteen); In-Different Other: The Second Existential Seal; There is some infinity in natural multiples (Meditation Fourteen); Conclusion on Being
Chapter Six: The Event: History and Ultra-One
Historical Singularities (Meditation Sixteen); Historical Singularities, and Evental Sites: Examples; Primal Ones and the Edge of the Void; Singularity vs. Normality; Self-Predication: The Matheme of the Event (Meditation Seventeen); The Problem of Naming; Axiom of Foundation (Meditation Eighteen); Implications of Foundation; Coda: Un-Relation
Chapter Seven: The Event, Intervention and Fidelity
The Wager: yes or no (Meditation Twenty); Intervention; Seven Consequences of the Event; Axiom of Choice (Meditation Twenty Two); Choice is Indifferent; Due to Choice, Singularities Exist and they are Indifferent; Fidelity, Connection (Meditation Twenty Three)
Chapter Eight: The Generic
Continuum Hypothesis: (Meditation Twenty-Seven); The Thought of the Generic (Meditation Thirty-One); Truth and Knowledge: The Indifference of Avoidance; Generic Procedure; The Matheme of the Indiscernible (Meditation Thirty-Three); Easton's Theorem (Meditation Twenty-Six); Conditioning the Indiscernible; Indiscernible or Generic Subsets; The Existence of the Indiscernible (Meditation Thirty-Four); Extension; Is there a name for the discernible such that it can be said to exist?
Chapter Nine: Forcing: Truth and Subject
Theory of the Subject (Meditation Thirty-Five); Subjectivization; Chance; Faith; Names; Forcing (Mediation Thirty-Six); Leibniz's Identity of Indiscernibles (Meditation Thirty); The Proof of Forcing (Meditation Thirty-Six); From the Indiscernible to the Undecidable; Conclusion (Meditation Thirty-Seven);
bibliography
index