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2The Joyful Passions In Spinoza’S Theory Of RelationsIn Spinoza Now, Univ of Minnesota Press. pp. 51-64. 2011.
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Power And Ontology Between Heidegger And SpinozaIn Spinoza Now, Univ of Minnesota Press. pp. 307-319. 2011.
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4Spinoza And The Conflict Of InterpretationsIn Spinoza Now, Univ of Minnesota Press. pp. 3-37. 2011.
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A Thought Beyond Dualisms, Creationist And Evolutionist AlikeIn Spinoza Now, Univ of Minnesota Press. pp. 321-350. 2011.
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16The Hermarchus–Spinoza Complex: Epicurean Politics and the “Naturalism vs. Constructivism” OppositionPolitical Theory 54 (2): 292-315. 2026.The Epicurean theory of social formation has been preserved in Hermarchus’s account, a major figure of the early period of the School. The “Hermarchus-Spinoza complex” refers to the Epicurean articulation of a politics that is inherently incompatible with the contrast between naturalism and constructivism. The Epicurean approach manages to overcome this binary because of its conception of phronesis as performative. The Hermarchus-Spinoza complex both provides a historical depth to the undoing of…Read more
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5Matthew Calarco, Zoographies: The Question of the Animal from Heidegger to Derrida (New York: Columbia University Press, 2008), 169 pp. ISBN: 978-0231140225 (review)Oxford Literary Review 32 (1): 163-165. 2010.
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1049Spinoza Now (edited book)Univ Of Minnesota Press. 2011.What does it mean to think about, and with, Spinoza today? This collection, the first broadly interdisciplinary volume dealing with Spinozan thought, asserts the importance of Spinoza’s philosophy of immanence for contemporary cultural and philosophical debates. Engaging with Spinoza’s insistence on the centrality of the passions as the site of the creative and productive forces shaping society, this collection critiques the impulse to transcendence and regimes of mastery, exposing universal val…Read more
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6IndexIn Andrew Benjamin & Dimitris Vardoulakis (eds.), Sparks Will Fly: Benjamin and Heidegger, State University of New York Press. pp. 287-291. 2015.
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12Biographical NotesIn Andrew Benjamin & Dimitris Vardoulakis (eds.), Sparks Will Fly: Benjamin and Heidegger, State University of New York Press. pp. 283-285. 2015.
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16The Agonistic Condition: Materialism and DemocracyEdinburgh University Press. 2025.Examines the philosophical background to theories of conflict in political theory and their sources in philosophy.
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1125Hobbes or Spinoza? Two Epicurean Versions of the Social ContractInCircolo - Rivista di Filosofia E Culture 9 186-210. 2020.I argue that both Hobbes and Spinoza rely on a pivot epicurean idea to form their conceptions of the social contract, namely, the idea that the human acts by calculating their utility. However, Hobbes and Spinoza employ this starting principle in different ways. For Hobbes, this only makes sense if the calculation of utility is regulated by fear as the primary political emotion. For Spinoza, there is no primary emotion and the entire construction of the social contract relies on how the calculat…Read more
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1077It is often put forward that the entire political project of epicureanism consists in the overcoming of fear, whereby its scope is deemed to be very narrow. I argue that the overcoming of the fear of death should actually be linked to a conception of freedom in epicureanism. This idea is further developed by Spinoza, who defines the free man as one who thinks of death least of all in the Ethics, and who develops this idea more in the Theological Political Treatise.
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11Sovereignty and Its Other: Toward the Dejustification of ViolenceFordham University Press. 2020.
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8The Politics of Nothing: On Sovereignty (edited book)Routledge. 2015.This book questions what sovereignty looks like when it is de-ontologised; when the nothingness at the heart of claims to sovereignty is unmasked and laid bare. Drawing on critical thinkers in political theology, such as Schmitt, Agamben, Nancy, Blanchot, Paulhan, _The Politics of Nothing _asks what happens to the political when considered in the frame of the productive potential of the nothing? The answers are framed in terms of the deep intellectual histories at our disposal for considering th…Read more
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58Susan James, Spinoza on Learning to Live Together; and Mogens Laerke, Spinoza and the Freedom of PhilosophizingPhilosophy Today 69 (1): 195-200. 2025.
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121The "Poor Thing": The Cosmopolitan in Alasdair Gray's Poor ThingsSubstance 37 (3): 137-151. 2008.
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2986The Doppelgänger: literature's philosophyFordham University Press. 2010.The Doppelgänger or Double presents literature as the “double” of philosophy. There are historical reasons for this. The genesis of the Doppelgänger is literature’s response to the philosophical focus on subjectivity. The Doppelgänger was coined by the German author Jean Paul in 1796 as a critique of Idealism’s assertion of subjective autonomy, individuality and human agency. This critique prefigures post-War extrapolations of the subject as decentred. From this perspective, the Doppelgänger has…Read more
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1660Freedom from the Free Will: On Kafka’s LaughterSUNY. 2016.Vardoulakis examines the history of the free will, arguing that there is no necessary connection with the concept of freedom. To illustrate this point, Vardoulakis turns to the stories of Franz Kafka, an author obsessed with narratives that show characters in confinement. However, these situations of confinement are only produced by the comical attempts of the characters to assert their free will.
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107Between logos and icons: Notes towards a transfigurative cultureEmpedocles: European Journal for the Philosophy of Communication 1 (2): 175-186. 2010.This article will investigate the paradoxical relation between iconic logos, such as the Nike logo, and architectural icons, such as the Sydney Opera House. Both logos and icons are immediately recognizable worldwide. Yet they function in seemingly radically different ways logos as signifiers of a single company: icons as signifiers that always represent something different from exactly what they are. How can these two different ways of signification produce the same result of instant recognitio…Read more
Dimitris Vardoulakis
University of Western Sydney, Hawkesbury
Western Sydney University
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Western Sydney UniversityAssociate Professor
Areas of Specialization
1 more
| Baruch Spinoza |
| Sovereignty |
| Democracy |
| Freedom and Liberty |
| Equality |
| Epicureans |