
Joshua Soffer
I am an independent writer in philosophy and psychology. My research focuses on the radically temporal thinking of Derrida, Heidegger and Eugene Gendlin, and their critical relationship to embodied, enactive approaches influenced by Merleau-Ponty, particularly regarding the nature of temporality, affectivity and intersubjectivity.
I’d love to hear you thoughts at [email protected]
Phone: 7733340515
I’d love to hear you thoughts at [email protected]
Phone: 7733340515
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Drafts by Joshua Soffer
While Nietzsche and Deleuze agree with Heidegger on the nihilism of countable units of extension, they retain the idea of instantaneous intrinsic presence. They put into question most aspects of traditional notions of subjectivity, objectivity and causation, except instantaneous presence. Deleuze's notion of intrinsicality as a differential “produced in a time smaller than the minimum continuous time thinkable'.” remains a notion of temporality as ‘in-timeness', as the occupying of a moment of time by a present-at-hand being.
Comments welcome at [email protected]
I challenge the reader to recognize that every time you experience any of the blameful attitudes, emotions and assessments I mentioned above, you are displaying your own failure of understanding. I challenge you to do away with your need for concepts of blame, anger and punitive justice in any of their philosophical guises, and with them the equally unctuous discourses of forgiveness.
Anger is neither inherently immoral nor irrational and destructive, but represents a limited understanding of human behavior. To the extent that concepts of ethico-political justice imply appraisal of blameful, guilty intent, they also represent a failure of understanding and a form of violence and an impetus of conformity. There’s no such thing as adaptive, moral or righteous blame or anger. Modern legal concepts of justice, to the extent they imply blame, depend on an inadequate grasp of motivation and intent.
Comments welcome at [email protected]
Comments welcome at [email protected]
Comments welcome at [email protected]
Comments welcome at [email protected]
Comments welcome at [email protected]
I argue that these authors’ accounts of intersubjectivity and empathy, and their integration of affect, motivation, intentionality and will, remain burdened by traditional presuppositions that the radically temporal philosophies of Heidegger et al put into question.
Comments welcome at [email protected]
[email protected]
Heidegger and Derrida argue instead that In their essence, Beings don’t HAVE structure or constitution. There is no such THING as a form, a structure, a state. There is no trans-formation but rather a trans-differentiation, (transformation without form, articulation as dislocation) What is being transcended is not form but difference.
[email protected]
[email protected]
While Nietzsche and Deleuze agree with Heidegger on the nihilism of countable units of extension, they retain the idea of instantaneous intrinsic presence. They put into question most aspects of traditional notions of subjectivity, objectivity and causation, except instantaneous presence. Deleuze's notion of intrinsicality as a differential “produced in a time smaller than the minimum continuous time thinkable'.” remains a notion of temporality as ‘in-timeness', as the occupying of a moment of time by a present-at-hand being.
Comments welcome at [email protected]
I challenge the reader to recognize that every time you experience any of the blameful attitudes, emotions and assessments I mentioned above, you are displaying your own failure of understanding. I challenge you to do away with your need for concepts of blame, anger and punitive justice in any of their philosophical guises, and with them the equally unctuous discourses of forgiveness.
Anger is neither inherently immoral nor irrational and destructive, but represents a limited understanding of human behavior. To the extent that concepts of ethico-political justice imply appraisal of blameful, guilty intent, they also represent a failure of understanding and a form of violence and an impetus of conformity. There’s no such thing as adaptive, moral or righteous blame or anger. Modern legal concepts of justice, to the extent they imply blame, depend on an inadequate grasp of motivation and intent.
Comments welcome at [email protected]
Comments welcome at [email protected]
Comments welcome at [email protected]
Comments welcome at [email protected]
Comments welcome at [email protected]
I argue that these authors’ accounts of intersubjectivity and empathy, and their integration of affect, motivation, intentionality and will, remain burdened by traditional presuppositions that the radically temporal philosophies of Heidegger et al put into question.
Comments welcome at [email protected]
[email protected]
Heidegger and Derrida argue instead that In their essence, Beings don’t HAVE structure or constitution. There is no such THING as a form, a structure, a state. There is no trans-formation but rather a trans-differentiation, (transformation without form, articulation as dislocation) What is being transcended is not form but difference.
[email protected]
[email protected]
Note; Although this paper pertains to social constructionist positions, my central criticism of these approaches applies as well to Deleuze's bio-political notion of sociality. While constructionists restrict their focus to inter-personal communication, Deleuze broadens the notion of language to include the living and material world, which includes the body. This places the site of otherness and sociality
within intentionality itself via its entanglement with affect. Nevertheless, Deleuze's treatment of affective-intentional dynamics, rather than dismantling social constructionism's between-person abstractions, manages to import them into bodily process.
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[email protected]
calculation, whose in-principle infinite enumerability is supposedly meaningless, empty
of content, and therefore not in itself subject to alteration through contextual change, and idealities such as spoken or written language which are directly animated by a meaning-to-say and are thus immediately affected by context. Derrida associates the dangers of cultural stagnation, paralysis and irresponsibility with the emptiness of programmatic, mechanical, formulaic thinking. This paper endeavors to show that enumerative calculation is not context-independent in itself but is instead
immediately infused with alteration, thereby making incoherent Derrida's claim to distinguish between a free and bound ideality. Along with the presumed formal basis of numeric infinitization,
Derrida's non-dialectical distinction between forms of mechanical or programmatic thinking (the Same) and truly inventive experience (the absolute Other) loses its justification. In the place of a distinction between bound and free idealities is proposed a distinction between two poles of novelty; the first form of novel experience would be characterized by affectivites of unintelligibility ,
confusion and vacuity, and the second by affectivities of anticipatory continuity and intimacy.
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[email protected]