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Virgil W. Brower

Charles University, PragueLoyola University, Chicago
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 More details
  • Charles University, Prague
    Faculty of Protestant Theology
    Post-doctoral fellow
  • Loyola University, Chicago
    Department of Philosophy
    Lecturer (Part-time)
  • Loyola University, Chicago
    Department of Theology
    Lecturer (Part-time)
Northwestern University
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2015
Email (login required)
Homepage
Chicago, Illinois, United States of America
0000-0001-5316-3565
Areas of Specialization
Continental Philosophy
European Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Religion
Social and Political Philosophy
Logic and Philosophy of Logic
Continental Philosophy
European Philosophy
  • All publications (22)
  •  735
    The Rhyme That Remains: Populist Poetics
    Everyday Genius 6 (21): 61-81. 2012.
    Literary ValuesTemporal LogicTemporal Experience, MiscGilles DeleuzeGiorgio AgambenJacques LacanJacq…Read more
    Literary ValuesTemporal LogicTemporal Experience, MiscGilles DeleuzeGiorgio AgambenJacques LacanJacques DerridaPoetryCollective ActionPolitical Theory
  •  21
    Jacques Derrida
    In Adam Kotsko & Carlo Salzani (eds.), Agamben's Philosophical Lineage, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 230-241. 2017.
    Jacques Derrida
  •  22
    Sigmund Freud
    In Adam Kotsko & Carlo Salzani (eds.), Agamben's Philosophical Lineage, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 242-251. 2017.
    Sigmund Freud
  •  19
    Biopolitics and Probability: Modifications on Life’s Way
    In Marcos Norris & Colby Dickinson (eds.), Agamben and the Existentialists, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 46-64. 2021.
  •  782
    Preface to Forenames of God: Enumerations of Ernesto Laclau toward a Political Theology of Algorithms
    Internationales Jahrbuch Für Medienphilosophie 7 (1): 243-251. 2021.
    Perhaps nowhere better than, "On the Names of God," can readers discern Laclau's appreciation of theology, specifically, negative theology, and the radical potencies of political theology. // It is Laclau's close attention to Eckhart and Dionysius in this essay that reveals a core theological strategy to be learned by populist reasons or social logics and applied in politics or democracies to come. // This mode of algorithmically informed negative political theology is not mathematically inert. …Read more
    Perhaps nowhere better than, "On the Names of God," can readers discern Laclau's appreciation of theology, specifically, negative theology, and the radical potencies of political theology. // It is Laclau's close attention to Eckhart and Dionysius in this essay that reveals a core theological strategy to be learned by populist reasons or social logics and applied in politics or democracies to come. // This mode of algorithmically informed negative political theology is not mathematically inert. It aspires to relate a fraction or ratio to a series... It strains to reduce the decided determinateness of such seriality ever condemned to the naive metaphysics of bad infinity. // It is worth considering that it is the specific 'number' of Dionysius in differential identification with an ineffable god (and, as such, a singular becoming between theology and numbers) that is floating in at least two dimensions [of signification] (be it political Demand on the horizontal dimension or theological Desire on [a] floating dimension) that cannot but *perform the link that relinks* names of god with any political life, populist reason, social justice, or radical democracy straining toward peace.
    Social and Political PhilosophyLinguistic Analysis in Philosophy20th Century Latin American Philosop…Read more
    Social and Political PhilosophyLinguistic Analysis in Philosophy20th Century Latin American PhilosophyNumbers
  •  53
    Mediality/theology/religion: Aspects of a Singular Encounter
    with Johannes Bennke
    Internationales Jahrbuch Für Medienphilosophie 7 (1): 5-20. 2021.
    How can the medium be addressed when it is always already saturated in religious over-determinations and ever marked by theological concerns (such as revelation and incarnation) while, at the same time, religion would not be practiced and theology not be done without using some such medium? We encourage methodological and conceptual shifts, first, from medium to mediality; second, from religion to its partial negation (or, perhaps, partial permeation); third, from theology to doing the theologic…Read more
    How can the medium be addressed when it is always already saturated in religious over-determinations and ever marked by theological concerns (such as revelation and incarnation) while, at the same time, religion would not be practiced and theology not be done without using some such medium? We encourage methodological and conceptual shifts, first, from medium to mediality; second, from religion to its partial negation (or, perhaps, partial permeation); third, from theology to doing the theological differently. With these shifts we desire to initiate, continue, and intensify debates, specifically between theologians and scholars of religious studies and media theory.
    Martin HeideggerJacques DerridaWalter BenjaminGiorgio Agamben
  •  1353
    Machine-Believers Learning Faiths & Knowledges: The Gospel According to Chat GPT
    Internationales Jahrbuch Für Medienphilosophie 7 (1): 97-121. 2021.
    One is occasionally reminded of Foucault's proclamation in a 1970 interview that "perhaps, one day this century will be known as Deleuzian." Less often is one compelled to update and restart with a supplementary counter-proclamation of the mathematician, David Lindley: "the twenty-first century would be a Bayesian era..." The verb tenses of both are conspicuous. // To critically attend to what is today often feared and demonized, but also revered, deployed, and commonly referred to as algorithm(…Read more
    One is occasionally reminded of Foucault's proclamation in a 1970 interview that "perhaps, one day this century will be known as Deleuzian." Less often is one compelled to update and restart with a supplementary counter-proclamation of the mathematician, David Lindley: "the twenty-first century would be a Bayesian era..." The verb tenses of both are conspicuous. // To critically attend to what is today often feared and demonized, but also revered, deployed, and commonly referred to as algorithm(s), one cannot avoid the mathematical and philosophical legacies of probability. // But attending to these probabilistic or Bayesian legacies must include an undeniable theological legacy in which they remain entangled. // We are not, today, discovering quirky theological metaphors in contemporary technics. It's the other way around. The technologies are mere metaphors of past theologies.
    Probability and AIMahatma GandhiNietzsche: Twilight of the IdolsQuantum ComputationNietzsche: Thus S…Read more
    Probability and AIMahatma GandhiNietzsche: Twilight of the IdolsQuantum ComputationNietzsche: Thus Spoke ZarathustraBayesian ReasoningMusicReligious StudiesHegel: Science of Logic20th Century Philosophy of MathematicsThe Secular Problem of EvilProcess PhilosophyKant: Rational TheologyPhilosophy of Artificial IntelligenceDegrees of BeliefMartin HeideggerEmmanuel Levinas
  •  1413
    Biopolitics & Probability: Agamben & Kierkegaard
    In Antonio Marcos Marcos & Colby Dickinson (eds.), Agamben and the Existentialists, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 46-64. 2021.
    This project retraces activations of Kierkegaard in the development of polit­ical theology. It suggests alternative modes of states of exception than those attributed to him by Schmitt, Taubes and Agamben. Several Kierkegaardian themes open themselves to 'something like pure potential' in Agamben, namely: living death, animality, criminality, auto-constitution, modification, liturgy, love and certain articulations of improbabilities. Attention is drawn to a modal ontology and auto-constitution a…Read more
    This project retraces activations of Kierkegaard in the development of polit­ical theology. It suggests alternative modes of states of exception than those attributed to him by Schmitt, Taubes and Agamben. Several Kierkegaardian themes open themselves to 'something like pure potential' in Agamben, namely: living death, animality, criminality, auto-constitution, modification, liturgy, love and certain articulations of improbabilities. Attention is drawn to a modal ontology and auto-constitution at work in Kierkegaard's writings, as well as a complicated and indissociable operation between killing and letting-live in legalist exceptionalism, comparable to similar functions found in Foucault regarding the biopowers and necropolitics of territorial and governmental apparatuses. It closes in consideration of Kierkegaard's critique of enumeration, large numbers, and statistical probability alongside contemporary tele-technoscientific social controls via the online datafication of people by surveillance or platform capitalisms. After Kierkegaard, such apparatuses are perhaps suspect as calculated to tranquilize humanity into more docile subhumans as it fools folk into becoming part of its numbers. (*Accompanying file includes only front matter, abstract, and endnotes*)
    ExistentialismPsychology of DecisionGiorgio AgambenPhilosophy of Religion, General WorksMichel Fouca…Read more
    ExistentialismPsychology of DecisionGiorgio AgambenPhilosophy of Religion, General WorksMichel FoucaultHegel: MathematicsReligion and SocietyReligious Experience20th Century Analytic PhilosophyPolitical TheorySovereigntyDerrida: GiftContinental EthicsHegel: LogicSøren KierkegaardGilles DeleuzePolitical PowerContinental Political PhilosophyNietzsche: Thus Spoke ZarathustraSocial Ontology, MiscProbability in the Philosophy of Religion, Misc
  •  1619
    Techno-Telepathy & Silent Subvocal Speech-Recognition Robotics
    HORIZON. Studies in Phenomenology 10 (1): 232-257. 2021.
    The primary focus of this project is the silent and subvocal speech-recognition interface unveiled in 2018 as an ambulatory device wearable on the neck that detects a myoelectrical signature by electrodes worn on the surface of the face, throat, and neck. These emerge from an alleged “intending to speak” by the wearer silently-saying-something-to-oneself. This inner voice is believed to occur while one reads in silence or mentally talks to oneself. The artifice does not require spoken sounds, op…Read more
    The primary focus of this project is the silent and subvocal speech-recognition interface unveiled in 2018 as an ambulatory device wearable on the neck that detects a myoelectrical signature by electrodes worn on the surface of the face, throat, and neck. These emerge from an alleged “intending to speak” by the wearer silently-saying-something-to-oneself. This inner voice is believed to occur while one reads in silence or mentally talks to oneself. The artifice does not require spoken sounds, opening the mouth, or any explicit or external movement of the lips. The essay then considers such subvocal “speech” as a mode of writing or saying and the interior of the mouth or oral cavity as its writing surface. It briefly revisits discussions of telepathy to recontextualize Heidegger’s warning against enframing language exclusively within calculative technics and physiology, which he suggests is detrimental to Mundarten (mouth-modes of regional dialects). It closes in reconsideration of Husserl’s phenomenology of language and meaning in Ideas as it might apply to subvocal speech-recognition interfaces. It suggests ways by which the electrophysiology that the device detects and deciphers (as an alleged intention of a presumed natural language unspoken vocally or aloud) might supplement Husserl’s insinuation of the Leiblichkeit of language through a self-stamping extraction of an extension of meaning.
    Derrida: PhenomenologyEmmanuel LevinasPhilosophy of Computation, MiscellaneousRoman IngardenHegel: L…Read more
    Derrida: PhenomenologyEmmanuel LevinasPhilosophy of Computation, MiscellaneousRoman IngardenHegel: Logic and MetaphysicsDerrida: PsychoanalysisGilles DeleuzeLogic and InformationPhilosophy of Artificial IntelligencePhilosophy of TechnologyBiological InformationMartin HeideggerHusserl: Science, Logic, and MathematicsMichel HenryHusserl: PhenomenologyHusserl and Heidegger
  •  1350
    Genealogy of Algorithms: Datafication as Transvaluation
    le Foucaldien 6 (1): 1-43. 2020.
    This article investigates religious ideals persistent in the datafication of information society. Its nodal point is Thomas Bayes, after whom Laplace names the primal probability algorithm. It reconsiders their mathematical innovations with Laplace's providential deism and Bayes' singular theological treatise. Conceptions of divine justice one finds among probability theorists play no small part in the algorithmic data-mining and microtargeting of Cambridge Analytica. Theological traces within m…Read more
    This article investigates religious ideals persistent in the datafication of information society. Its nodal point is Thomas Bayes, after whom Laplace names the primal probability algorithm. It reconsiders their mathematical innovations with Laplace's providential deism and Bayes' singular theological treatise. Conceptions of divine justice one finds among probability theorists play no small part in the algorithmic data-mining and microtargeting of Cambridge Analytica. Theological traces within mathematical computation are emphasized as the vantage over large numbers shifts to weights beyond enumeration in probability theory. Collateral secularizations of predestination and theodicy emerge as probability optimizes into Bayesian prediction and machine learning. The paper revisits the semiotics and theism of Peirce and a given beyond the probable in Whitehead to recontextualize the critiques of providence by Agamben and Foucault. It reconsiders datafication problems alongside Nietzschean valuations. Religiosity likely remains encoded within the very algorithms presumed purified by technoscientific secularity or mathematical dispassion.
    Process PhilosophyMachine LearningGilles DeleuzeNietzsche: Value TheoryCharles Sanders PeirceMedieva…Read more
    Process PhilosophyMachine LearningGilles DeleuzeNietzsche: Value TheoryCharles Sanders PeirceMedieval Arabic and Islamic PhilosophyInternet EthicsMichel FoucaultAlgebraImplementing ComputationsCybernetics
  •  824
    Innards of Ingarden: Physiology of Time
    In Dominika Czakon, Natalia Anna Michna & Leszek Sosnowski (eds.), Roman Ingarden and His Times, . pp. 25-42. 2019.
    This project begins with the selective sensory experience suggested by lngarden followed by an insensitivity he insinuates to digestive processes. This is juxtaposed with an oenological explanation of phenomenal sedimentation offered by Jean-Luc Marion. It compares the dynamics of time in the former with the those of wine in the latter. Emphasis is given to lngarden's insinuation of time as fluid, liquid, or aquatic. It revisits Ingarden's physiological explanations of partially-open systems by …Read more
    This project begins with the selective sensory experience suggested by lngarden followed by an insensitivity he insinuates to digestive processes. This is juxtaposed with an oenological explanation of phenomenal sedimentation offered by Jean-Luc Marion. It compares the dynamics of time in the former with the those of wine in the latter. Emphasis is given to lngarden's insinuation of time as fluid, liquid, or aquatic. It revisits Ingarden's physiological explanations of partially-open systems by way of the bilateral excretion and absorption of semi-permeable cellular membranes. The importance he eventually grants to inner secretion is considered alongside perspiration and salivation collateral to skin and membranes. It suggests that Ingarden's interest in thermoregulation, partial permeation, and secretion invites alternative conceptions of temporal consciousness in physiological experiences, beyond sequential and linear clock-time and/or Kantian intuition. Temporality experienced as temperance becomes discernible at a permeable point in which the sedimentation of Husserl, the maturation of Marion, and the fluidity and secretion of Ingarden mix and mingle into the taste of time.
    Roman IngardenValueHomologyTaste ExperienceWineDerrida: PhenomenologyMartin HeideggerSigmund FreudOn…Read more
    Roman IngardenValueHomologyTaste ExperienceWineDerrida: PhenomenologyMartin HeideggerSigmund FreudOntology of LiteratureHusserl: Phenomenology
  •  1795
    Hyde within the Boundaries of Mere Jekyll: Evil in Kant & Stevenson
    Polish Journal of Aesthetics 56 (1/2020): 63-84. 2020.
    This essay experiments with Kant’s writings on rational religion distilled through the Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde as canonical confrontations with primal problems of evil. It suggests boundaries between Stevenson’s characters and their occupations comparable to the those conflicted in the Kantian university, namely, law, medicine, theology, and philosophy (which makes a short anticipatory appearance in his earlier text on rational religion). With various faculties it investigates diff…Read more
    This essay experiments with Kant’s writings on rational religion distilled through the Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde as canonical confrontations with primal problems of evil. It suggests boundaries between Stevenson’s characters and their occupations comparable to the those conflicted in the Kantian university, namely, law, medicine, theology, and philosophy (which makes a short anticipatory appearance in his earlier text on rational religion). With various faculties it investigates diffuse comprehensions—respectively, legal crime, biogenetic transmission, and original sin—of key ethical modes: will, inheritance, incorporation, freedom, duty, obligation, love, living, and killing to conclude on the possible logic of evil (or evils of logic) collateral and possibly innate to Kant’s comprehension of radical evil.
    Giorgio AgambenThe Concept of MiracleContractsMedicine and LawThe Good Will and Moral WorthGeorg Luk…Read more
    Giorgio AgambenThe Concept of MiracleContractsMedicine and LawThe Good Will and Moral WorthGeorg LukacsLiteratureMurderPhilosophy of LiteratureSigmund FreudSinJacques DerridaKant: Biblical Interpretation
  •  1271
    Advent of Auto-Affection: Givenness & Reception in Jean-Luc Marion
    Acta Universitas Carolinae Theologica 9 (1): 31-44. 2019.
    Marion obliquely suggests that we return to religion when we think through and struggle with those topics that philosophy excludes or subjugates. This paper investigates a selection of such subjugated motifs. Marion’s recent claim (perhaps even ‘principle’): “auto-affection alone makes possible hetero-affection,” will be examined through piecemeal influences made upon its development through Marion’s return to religious thinking beyond the delimited jurisdiction of philosophy. Although still pro…Read more
    Marion obliquely suggests that we return to religion when we think through and struggle with those topics that philosophy excludes or subjugates. This paper investigates a selection of such subjugated motifs. Marion’s recent claim (perhaps even ‘principle’): “auto-affection alone makes possible hetero-affection,” will be examined through piecemeal influences made upon its development through Marion’s return to religious thinking beyond the delimited jurisdiction of philosophy. Although still proper to the philosophies of Descartes, Kant, and Husserl, Marion finds new insights by tracing their legacy back further to the Christian gospels, Augustine, Aquinas, and, importantly, Nicholas of Cusa. Philosophy, proper, (if there is such a thing) may well adumbrate human understanding of data, phenomena, and possibility by discouraging any further thinking of them in terms of love, givenness, or revelation. It is by preferentially opting for these themes that philosophy excludes or subjugates that makes possible the entanglement of truth with love, suggested by Marion: “truths that one knows only if one loves them first.”
    Husserl: PhenomenologyMedieval Philosophy of ReligionContinental Philosophy of ReligionMedieval Theo…Read more
    Husserl: PhenomenologyMedieval Philosophy of ReligionContinental Philosophy of ReligionMedieval TheologyDivine NecessityHegel: Concept of GodThe Possibility of Miracles
  •  780
    The Spiritual & Sensuous: Aesthetics of Adorno & Scruton
    Wassard Elea Rivista 6 (3): 127-139. 2018.
    Taste ExperiencePhysics of TimeWinePhilosophy of Time, MiscTemporal Expressions
  •  1161
    Speech & Oral Phenomena: Memory, Mouth, Writing, Life-Death
    French Literature Series 38 209-230. 2011.
    Following one of Jacques Derrida’s early questions — namely, How is writing involved in speech? — this essay reconsiders the role of the tongue and the sense of taste in the oral phenomena of speaking and saying. The contact the tongue makes with the mouth or teeth is just as much a materialization of language as what is commonly called “writing.” The tongue acts as a pen and the mouth, as a blank page (or palimpsest). Mouthed writing is accompanied by sense experiences. There are various selfta…Read more
    Following one of Jacques Derrida’s early questions — namely, How is writing involved in speech? — this essay reconsiders the role of the tongue and the sense of taste in the oral phenomena of speaking and saying. The contact the tongue makes with the mouth or teeth is just as much a materialization of language as what is commonly called “writing.” The tongue acts as a pen and the mouth, as a blank page (or palimpsest). Mouthed writing is accompanied by sense experiences. There are various selftastes to the tastes of speaking, the tastes of words, or, even, the tastes of thoughts. Freud’s notes on speaking in one’s sleep, telepathy, the mystic writing-pad, and memory are revisited and supplemented with the writings of Hélène Cixous on the taste of words, telephoning, saying-to-oneself, and forgetting. The auto-affection of tasting-oneself-speakwriting is offered as an alternative to the metaphysical presumptions Derrida implicates in Husserl’s understanding of speech based on the auto-affection of hearing-oneself-speak. As such, writing (haunted by the trace of death) and speech (invested with living presence) is now confronted with the selftastes of speakwriting with one’s stylangue in and on the mouth as the scene of writing (ever accompanied by tastes of life-death).
    Derrida: PsychoanalysisDerrida: Philosophy of LanguageHusserl: Embodiment and ActionHusserl: Philoso…Read more
    Derrida: PsychoanalysisDerrida: Philosophy of LanguageHusserl: Embodiment and ActionHusserl: Philosophy of LanguageHusserl and DerridaNonfictionPhilosophy of Literature, Misc
  •  988
    The Taste to Come: The Lick of Faith
    Postscripts 3 (2-3): 238-262. 2007.
    This article exploits a core defect in the phenomenology of sensation and self. Although phenomenology has made great strides in redeeming the body from cognitive solipisisms that often follow short-sighted readings of Descartes and Kant, it has not grappled with the specific kind of self-reflexivity that emerges in the sense of taste with the thoroughness it deserves. This path is illuminated by the works of Martin Luther, Jean-Luc Marion, and Jacques Derrida as they attempt to think through th…Read more
    This article exploits a core defect in the phenomenology of sensation and self. Although phenomenology has made great strides in redeeming the body from cognitive solipisisms that often follow short-sighted readings of Descartes and Kant, it has not grappled with the specific kind of self-reflexivity that emerges in the sense of taste with the thoroughness it deserves. This path is illuminated by the works of Martin Luther, Jean-Luc Marion, and Jacques Derrida as they attempt to think through the specific phenomena accessible through the lips, tongue, and mouth. Their attempts are, in turn, supplemented with detours through Walter Benjamin, Hélène Cixous, and Friedrich Nietzsche. The paper draws attention to the German distinction between Geschmack and Kosten as well as the role taste may play in relation to faith, the call to love, justice, and messianism. The messiah of love and justice will have been that one who proclaims: taste the flesh.
    Derrida: PhenomenologyEdmund HusserlRené DescartesKant: Philosophy of ReligionNietzsche: Philosophy …Read more
    Derrida: PhenomenologyEdmund HusserlRené DescartesKant: Philosophy of ReligionNietzsche: Philosophy of ReligionReligious StudiesJusticeChristianity
  •  990
    Ethics is a Gustics: Phenomenology, Gender & Oral Sex
    Assuming Gender 2 (1): 18-45. 2011.
    The 'traditional philosophical prestige' of seeing and touching, as analyzed by Emmanuel Levinas, comes to dominate the qualities of the other three senses. An investigation of the roles of these prestigious senses, along with the resultant privileged sense-organs of the hand and the eye, within phenomenology, psychoanalysis, and gender- or queer-theory suggests that the part of the prestige of touch will have been related to its function in the phenomenality of feeling. Yet the sense of taste s…Read more
    The 'traditional philosophical prestige' of seeing and touching, as analyzed by Emmanuel Levinas, comes to dominate the qualities of the other three senses. An investigation of the roles of these prestigious senses, along with the resultant privileged sense-organs of the hand and the eye, within phenomenology, psychoanalysis, and gender- or queer-theory suggests that the part of the prestige of touch will have been related to its function in the phenomenality of feeling. Yet the sense of taste seems to be as applicable, if not more so, to the phenomenal experience of selfhood based on feeling as theorized by Edmund Husserl and Jean-Luc Marion. The tongue, rather than the hand, is reconsidered as a sense-organ of touch in order to salvage the all but lost tang of the tangible. As such, the tongue and taste not only illuminate the shortcomings of binary gender theories based on either inner feeling or outer surface anatomy (or, either interior orifices or exterior appendages), but further discover a remarkable phenomenology of the body to be found in the writings of Hélène Cixous and Monique Wittig that moves beyond certain masculine tendencies lurking about the hand and observation (as described by Freud and Butler). The phenomenal experience of the other that yields either empathy (for Husserl), love/eros (for Marion), or hearing and heeding 'Thou shall not kill' (for Levinas) has much to learn from the orality of women's writing. The third body, as written by Cixous, can experience the self as selftaste (as considered by Derrida) and experiences the other as the taste of the other. It is, thereby, opened to a love or a justice (or an erotic justice) beyond the proclamation of Levinas that 'ethics is an optics' as well as any ethics as a mere haptics to be found in Husserl or Marion, where feeling seems always determined by the hand.
    Continental Feminism, MiscContinental PsychoanalysisMaterialist FeminismEmmanuel LevinasJudith Butle…Read more
    Continental Feminism, MiscContinental PsychoanalysisMaterialist FeminismEmmanuel LevinasJudith ButlerEdmund Husserl
  •  59
    The Immersion Method II (Logic & Malcolm X)
    Inside Higher Ed, May 3. 2012.
    Virgil W. Brower writes that courses based on intense discussions of great works of literature need not be limited to elite institutions.
    Propositional LogicInformal LogicBlack SeparatismKant: Critique of the Power of JudgmentAristotle: P…Read more
    Propositional LogicInformal LogicBlack SeparatismKant: Critique of the Power of JudgmentAristotle: Parts of AnimalsTeaching Philosophy, MiscNonfictionLiterature and EthicsPhilosophy of Literature, Misc
  • Religion & Repugnance: Empiricism, Political Theology, Projective Disgust
    In Lars Aagaard-Mogensen & Jane Forsey (eds.), On Taste: Aesthetic Exchanges, Cambridge Scholars Press. pp. 53-68. 2018.
    "[O]ther contributors argue that taste has a clear epistemic function. Brower cites Agamben as claiming that taste is a priveleged locus for knowledge...A phenomenology of taste, then, is no mere trivial or personal matter, but one with wide-ranging consequences. And some of these conseqences are ethical...[D]oes the debasement of taste indeed breed xenophobic oppression, as Brower is sure that it does? [sic:)] These are contentious claims. Surely a person of exemplary aesthetics and gustatory t…Read more
    "[O]ther contributors argue that taste has a clear epistemic function. Brower cites Agamben as claiming that taste is a priveleged locus for knowledge...A phenomenology of taste, then, is no mere trivial or personal matter, but one with wide-ranging consequences. And some of these conseqences are ethical...[D]oes the debasement of taste indeed breed xenophobic oppression, as Brower is sure that it does? [sic:)] These are contentious claims. Surely a person of exemplary aesthetics and gustatory taste can still be a moral monster...aesthetic delicacy does not entail ethical virtue. It has been a long time since beauty was associated with moral good, yet the connection persists...It has been a long time since beauty was associated with truth, as well, and yet, again, the conection endures..." (Eds' Preface, ix-x)
    Mahatma GandhiDerrida: PhenomenologyConceptions of RaceGiorgio Agamben
  •  1179
    Beeing & Time: Kiss of Chemoreception & the Bug in Dasein's Mouth
    In Laurence Talairach-Vielmas & Marie Bouchet (eds.), Insects in Literature & the Arts, . pp. 197-217. 2014.
    "Brower explores the way philosophers were inspired by entomological social systems and communication to reflect on human psyche, social behavior, community organization, communication, and inter-individual relationships. His essay rehearses the swarms of insects embedded in contemporary philosophy and literary theory, not only showing how many of the major concepts (or philosophemes) in continental philosophy – sexuality, politics, thinking, time, interdependence, and language – draw lessons fr…Read more
    "Brower explores the way philosophers were inspired by entomological social systems and communication to reflect on human psyche, social behavior, community organization, communication, and inter-individual relationships. His essay rehearses the swarms of insects embedded in contemporary philosophy and literary theory, not only showing how many of the major concepts (or philosophemes) in continental philosophy – sexuality, politics, thinking, time, interdependence, and language – draw lessons from the world of insects, but also illustrating again how the insect world spurred human reflection."
    Martin HeideggerDevelopmental BiologyInterlevel Relations in BiologyGilles DeleuzeFriedrich Schellin…Read more
    Martin HeideggerDevelopmental BiologyInterlevel Relations in BiologyGilles DeleuzeFriedrich SchellingPhilosophy of Chemistry, MiscPhilosophy of Food and Drink, Miscellaneous
  •  1408
    Sigmund Freud in Agamben's Philosophy
    In Adam Kotsko & Carlo Salzani (eds.), Agamben's Philosophical Lineage, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 242-251. 2017.
    Political TheoryThe Nature of Law and Legal SystemsContinental PsychoanalysisHobbes: Philosophy of L…Read more
    Political TheoryThe Nature of Law and Legal SystemsContinental PsychoanalysisHobbes: Philosophy of LawParental VirtuesViolence
  •  1383
    Jacques Derrida in Agamben's Philosophy
    In Adam Kotsko & Carlo Salzani (eds.), Agamben's Philosophical Lineage, Edinburgh University Press. pp. 252-261. 2017.
    G. W. F. HegelHusserl and LevinasMartin HeideggerDerrida: Of GrammatologyLucretiusPolitical Theory
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