Reopening Possibilities
A Guide to Decoincidence
Francois Jullien(Author)
Bloomsbury Academic (Publisher)
Will be published approx. on 10. December 2026
Book
Paperback/Softback
192 pages
978-1-350-64743-5 (ISBN)
Description
How can collective action, based on clear-set ideals and goals, respond to our contemporary reality in which uncertainty and precarity reign? In this bold new interpretation of the politics of the collective, Francois Jullien plots a way through the challenges brought about by AI, digital communication and individualisation. He reimagines the political event - not as a causal link or premeditated action, but as a moment that opens fissures and cracks within the current situation, leading, in turn, to a new set of possibilities.
The history of Western thought has been largely characterised by an insistence on models and ends; eidos and telos, which have caused us to fixate on the future as a knowable, finite entity. But in our global, interconnected world, where the future remains uncertain, models idealism and empiricism have become obsolete. Julien proposes a third, alternative path: decoincidence. This turns away from the tired normativity of coinciding ideas, from imposed structures or teleology, and asks what happens when we look again at reality on its own terms. Can we rediscover the immanent possibility hidden within the present? The notion of decoincidence is not, then, intended to be explanatory nor offer a model for the future, but rather a reconceptualization of the event itself.
As the world seems bound to repeat itself, Decoincidence diverts us from mere agreement and disagreement, and instead offers a way out of stagnation, into something wholly new and unexpected.
The history of Western thought has been largely characterised by an insistence on models and ends; eidos and telos, which have caused us to fixate on the future as a knowable, finite entity. But in our global, interconnected world, where the future remains uncertain, models idealism and empiricism have become obsolete. Julien proposes a third, alternative path: decoincidence. This turns away from the tired normativity of coinciding ideas, from imposed structures or teleology, and asks what happens when we look again at reality on its own terms. Can we rediscover the immanent possibility hidden within the present? The notion of decoincidence is not, then, intended to be explanatory nor offer a model for the future, but rather a reconceptualization of the event itself.
As the world seems bound to repeat itself, Decoincidence diverts us from mere agreement and disagreement, and instead offers a way out of stagnation, into something wholly new and unexpected.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 138 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-350-64743-5 (9781350647435)
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Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Francois Jullien is Professor at the Universite Paris VII-Denis Diderot and director at the Institut de la Pensee Contemporaine, France. He is the author of Living Off Landscape (2018), Detour and Access: Strategies of Meaning in China and Greece (2004), The Propensity of Things: Toward a History of Efficacy in China (1999), and In Praise of Blandness: Proceeding from Chinese Thought and Aesthetics (2004).
Pedro Rodriguez is a translator based in Paris, France
Pedro Rodriguez is a translator based in Paris, France
Content
Series Editor Introduction
Introduction, On World Philosophy, Andrew Sackin-Poll (Cambridge University, UK)
1. Les lendemains ne chantent plus
2. Coincidence is Dead
3. Decoincidence at Work
4. The Ethics of Decoincidence
5. Coincidence is Ideological
6. A Short Contemporary French Lexis of Coincidence
7.. Political Resources of Decoincidence
8. How Decoincidence Operates
9. The Destiny of Decoincidence
10. Decoincidence and Philosophy
11. Revolution, Innovation, and Re-Possibilisation
12. What Engagement?
Notes on Difference and Decoincidence
Notes
Introduction, On World Philosophy, Andrew Sackin-Poll (Cambridge University, UK)
1. Les lendemains ne chantent plus
2. Coincidence is Dead
3. Decoincidence at Work
4. The Ethics of Decoincidence
5. Coincidence is Ideological
6. A Short Contemporary French Lexis of Coincidence
7.. Political Resources of Decoincidence
8. How Decoincidence Operates
9. The Destiny of Decoincidence
10. Decoincidence and Philosophy
11. Revolution, Innovation, and Re-Possibilisation
12. What Engagement?
Notes on Difference and Decoincidence
Notes