Thorsten Botz-Bornstein

Gulf University For Science And Technology
  •  10
    Introduction
    Culture and Dialogue 14 (1): 1-5. 2026.
  •  15
    Introduction
    Culture and Dialogue 13 (2): 187-191. 2025.
  •  11
    Three Times Emptiness: Śūnyatā, Kenosis, Fanā’
    Springer Nature Switzerland. 2025.
    This book offers a triangular comparative analysis by evaluating three different religious approaches to emptiness. It reveals what emptiness or nothingness mean in different cultural and religious contexts. Further, it assesses each tradition’s emptiness concerning the emptiness of the believer, the emptiness of the world, and perhaps even the (temporary or permanent) emptiness of God. Chapters include perspectives on different religions and though being manifest in different ways within their …Read more
  •  14
    This essay reflects on Chinese and American hyperrealism and its effect on the self-perceptions and cultural identities of both countries. Hyperreality is a condition whereby it is impossible to distinguish reality from fantasy. Such a condition is common in technologically advanced cultures where virtual reality has made possible the endless reproductions of fundamentally empty appearances. It is however also possible to speak of hyperreality in terms of “culture” or “civilization.” As a first …Read more
  •  28
    “Film Thinks!” What about Dreams?
    Film and Philosophy 17 192-203. 2013.
  •  19
    Tracking Global Wokeism (edited book)
    BRILL. 2025.
    In this volume, nineteen authors ask: does wokeness exist in the non-Western world? And if yes, is it imported from America or can also it have its own vernacular roots? This book shifts the debate on wokeness to a global level.
  •  28
    I criticize the virtual line by establishing two kinds of virtual reality: the technical and the existential-aesthetic one. What is normally referred to as virtual reality is an interactive reality that offers an immersive artificial space that can be taken for real. This reality has no existential value. Existential-aesthetic virtual reality is not simply an imaginary, auto-simulating universe, but it is dependent on a complex ontology through which the real does not get lost but will rather be…Read more
  •  28
    Charles Baudelaire saw life as a “broken line.” This chapter explains the aesthetic of four aestheticians, all of whom are born in the 1860s: Heinrich Wölfflin, Broder Christiansen, Alain, and Adolf Loos. According to Wölfflin, between the sixteenth and the seventeenth centuries, European painting underwent a shift from “draughtsmanly painting” to “painterly painting.” The German aesthetics specialist Broder Christiansen challenged Wölfflin’s binary scheme by elaborating on what Bergson was abou…Read more
  •  17
    Kandinsky’s thoughts on the principle of the “innermost necessity” of lines converge with calligraphy. The lines of calligraphy concur with the principle of li (理). The Chinese vision of nature is always organic, which has far-reaching consequences for the nature of the line. Li is reminiscent of the rhizome. Closely related to li is the line of wen (文). Like li, wen is a manifestation of the internal order. In the Chinese tradition, wen is related to the invention of writing. In Zen Buddhism an…Read more
  •  41
    Four-dimensional theories match Virtual Reality because here time and space are configured through mutable lines. Since the discovery of non-Euclidean geometry, linearity has been submitted to a profound crisis. Mathematicians showed that there are not one but several geometries. This new, relativist conception of space perturbed a commonsensical idea of linearity. Henri Poincaré showed that geometrical axioms are (1) not self-evident truths, (2) cannot be empirically established, and (3) are no…Read more
  •  27
    I concentrate on the most peculiar characteristic of the line, which is its ambiguous ontological status. Euclid suggests that “a line is a length without breadth.” However, are we able to observe anything that has no breadth? The differentiation between the visible and the intelligible, and the potential bridging of both, goes back to Plato. The process of the negation or the self-negation of lines culminates in the phenomenon of the virtual line. Virtual lines have no physical existence becaus…Read more
  •  26
    Japanese architect Tadao Ando designs houses with labyrinthine structures in which “walls become abstract and negated.” Like in Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology, the perception of these lines is linked to movement. They are virtual “non-lines:” absolute (and not blurred) but constantly negating their own status of being. The Japanese conception of ma (間) has been said to be topologically identical to virtual reality. Ma is an invisible line represented by the “in between” of objects. It is linked t…Read more
  •  17
    For Maurice Merleau-Ponty, the lines formed by tiles on the floor of a swimming pool are not material entities but dynamic phenomena. Paul Klee identifies lines as basic elements of drawing when explaining that a drawing is simply a “line going for a walk.” For Wassily Kandinsky, the point, which is the starting point of all human-made pictures, is immaterial, even as it can “speak,” which is a paradox. Henri Michaux attempts to overcome the alphabet by using expressive pictograms and what he ca…Read more
  •  10
    Curved lines are better than straight lines, but still better than the curved line is the fractured line. The fractured line is a line that partially negates itself all while continuing to be a line. The uninterrupted, static, straight line needs to be avoided at all cost. Another way of expressing this is to say that the fractured line is “cooler” than the non-fractured line. Marshall McLuhan developed this original hot/cool approach to lines. I look at such hot/cool approaches in various areas…Read more
  •  20
    Different branches of modern art, but also traditional East Asian art and calligraphy, have handled the self-negating process of the line in various ways. In Computer Assisted Design (CAD), lines are the result of geometrically configured, instantaneous computation. Can architecture deconstruct lines, and do modern tools favor such a deconstruction? Modern architecture did not overcome Euclidean geometry, but it rather used geometry to produce something that looks non-geometrical. Still some arc…Read more
  •  14
    The line most opposed to the technical virtual line is the line drawn in calligraphy. Chinese characters are not merely images but gestures linked to the movements of the body. Lines are “divested” (a word used by Michaux) because: (1) they are recognized as not being objects; (2) they are linked to vision (the image and I are linked through vision within a space we share), which undermines the object character of the line; (3) we are always moving while looking. The line is never here nor there…Read more
  •  22
    In 2007, the artist collective “Tracey” published Drawing Now, suggesting that “drawing thinks/talks in a particular way.” “Drawing as thinking” transcends categories like subjectivity or imagination. Thinking, and not copying or imagining, decides what lines will land on the paper. In the Drawing Now project the idea is pushed to an extreme: it is not the “drawer” who thinks, but the drawing itself that is doing the thinking, which asks for a new conceptual description of the drawing process. N…Read more
  •  24
    Merleau-Ponty mentions Bergson, who, in La Pensée et le mouvant, states that the undulated line, though invisible and “not more here than there,” is nevertheless able to “provide the key to everything.” Still, Merleau-Ponty believes that neither Bergson nor his mentor Félix Ravaisson got to the core of the riddle of the line. In his Essai sur les données immédiates, Bergson describes the line as something that is created through our vision and perceived through succession. Bergson speaks not (in…Read more
  •  19
    Lines can represent realities, not only through affirmation, but also through negation. Several Western philosophers and artists developed this concept, and it is also common in East Asian philosophy and art. I summarize the problem of the “negativity of the line” that is the main topic of the following chapters. I briefly outline how the present reflections on lines can also be linked to dream theories reaching from the Platonic khora to neuroscience.
  •  22
    The aesthetics of contingency
    Studi di Estetica 30. 2024.
    This article is divided into two parts. The first part demonstrates the importance of contingency in art. There is a strong link between contingency and creativity, and it is possible to say that in art this contingency-dependent creativity makes art more “real”. In this first part the “creative contingency” or art model will also transferred to the idea of the “art of life” as a mixture of ethics and aesthetics. The second part analyzes the capacity of algorithms to produce aesthetic expression…Read more
  •  66
    The Changing Meaning of Kitsch: From Rejection to Acceptance
    Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 82 (4): 467-469. 2024.
  •  38
    _Parasite_ presents the ethico-biological problem of parasitism in a metaphorical and artistic fashion. In this book, philosophers explore the film using sources such as the ancient satirist Lucian’s _De Parasito_, Nietzsche’s “the vengeance of the weak,” Dostoyevsky’s “Underground,” or Marxism, among others.
  •  41
    Daoism, dandyism, and political correctness
    State University of New York Press. 2023.
    Argues that Daoism and dandyism, linked by likeminded philosophies of "carefree wandering," deconstruct the puritanism and political correctness sought by Confucianism, Victorianism, and contemporary neoliberal culture.
  •  74
    This chapter contains sections titled: A New Tattoo Space The Savage and Civilization Nothing Ladylike About Being Tattooed? Ornaments, Crimes, and the Creation of a Feminine Tattoo Space From Tattoos to Graffiti Skinscape Recuperating the Political Body.
  •  20
    The cool-kawaii: Afro-Japanese aesthetics and new world modernity
    Lexington Books, a division of Rowman & Littlefield Publishers. 2011.
    The Cool-Kawaii: Afro-Japanese Aesthetics and New World Modernity, by Thorsten Botz-Bornstein, analyzes and compares African American cool culture and the Japanese aesthetics of kawaii or cute and characterizes them as expressions set against oppressive homogenizations of a technocratic world. The Cool-Kawaii sheds light on the history and development of both cultures in three main ways: First, both emerge from similar historical conditions; second, both are in search of human dignity and libera…Read more
  •  77
    Over thirty years ago, Richard Rorty’s Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature declared the demise of epistemology and the arrival of a new post-Philosophical era. Rorty envisaged the intellectual activity of this predominantly literary culture as an unconstrained large-scale conversation that would flourish in an “ecstasy of spiritual freedom.” Having abandoned all systematic pretensions, edifying philosophers would add their voice to the conversation of mankind, fully aware of the radical incommen…Read more
  •  33
    Zhuangzi, Language and Gender
    Philosophy Now 150 36-39. 2022.
  •  53
    This book shifts the focus from Critical Regionalism towards a broader concept of 'Transcultural Architecture' and defines Critical Regionalism as a subgroup of the latter. One of the benefits that this change of perspective brings about is that a large part of the political agenda of Critical Regionalism, which consists of resisting attitudes forged by typically Western experiences, is 'softened' and negotiated according to premises provided by local circumstances. At the book’s centre is an an…Read more
  •  101
    I compare the Japanese philosopher Nishida Kitaro with the Egyptian philosopher and reformer Muhammad ‘Abduh. Both philosophies emerged within similar cultural contexts. Bot...
  •  60
    This book offers a philosophical exploration of lines in art and culture, and traces their history from Antiquity onwards. Lines can be physical phenomena, cognitive responses to observed processes, or both at the same time. Based on this assumption, the book describes the “philosophy of lines” in art, architecture, and science. The book compares Western and Eastern traditions. It examines lines in the works of Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky, and Henri Michaux, as well as in Chinese and Japanese a…Read more