Marko Vučković is a PhD Student at the York University Department of Humanities in Toronto, Canada. His research interests are in intersection of ontology, psychoanalysis, and postsecular theology cutting across the Analytic and Continental literary styles. Marko's research activities include papers published in Eastern Europe on historical and philosophical theology: one detailing the ontology of the body in Christian-pagan apologetic literature of the second century and one placing in dialogical parallel Byzantine ontological aesthetics and the so-called post-postmodern aesthetic school. More recently, Marko has published a paper in Western…
Marko Vučković is a PhD Student at the York University Department of Humanities in Toronto, Canada. His research interests are in intersection of ontology, psychoanalysis, and postsecular theology cutting across the Analytic and Continental literary styles. Marko's research activities include papers published in Eastern Europe on historical and philosophical theology: one detailing the ontology of the body in Christian-pagan apologetic literature of the second century and one placing in dialogical parallel Byzantine ontological aesthetics and the so-called post-postmodern aesthetic school. More recently, Marko has published a paper in Western Europe detailing competing views on Christological ontology given in the famous Milbank-Žižek debate where he seeks to split the difference between them. His current research is moving in the direction of the ontology of the theological, philosophical, and political subject. In this vein, Marko has most recently published a paper in Canada on the "transcendence" of the subject vis-a-vis signifier networks (using a category of a form of reified "ego ideal") to argue against the nonbinary logic used in object-oriented and speculative realist ontologies.
Marko Vučković has completed two Masters degrees in analytical philosophy and philosophical theology. Marko is a secondary school teacher in Toronto, where he teaches philosophy, history, and law.
https://orcid.org/0009-0003-7274-5669