•  183
    In "Contributions to Philosophy", Heidegger approaches the Gigantic merely “being-historically”, but what if we could break with his narrative and reveal a real lesson about capitalism in our present from this conception? For the Gigantic presupposes a break with the limits of nature that we can only truly understand if we trace it back to a form of laboring activity, which by not "forging" anything "in its boundaries" anymore, breaks with any boundary, and in constantly one-upping its means can…Read more
  •  97
    Reaction, Progression and Vaccination, or
    Međunarodne Studije 22 (1). 2022.
    This article analyzes the condition of possibility for hitherto apolitical phenomena, such as vaccination, to be politicized and articulated as determinants of “belonging” to a worldview. It takes the polarization through symbols during COVID as a symptom of a competition to secure one’s own share of narrowing global resources, appearing as a symbolic clash of belonging to the middle class. Drawing on the popular show of the pandemic period, Squid Game, it shows that the strict logic of equivale…Read more
  •  187
    Thus posted Zarathustra. Übermensch and the Herd of the ‘Rare’
    Logoi Ph – Journal of Philosophy (22): 109-130. 2023.
    Once a “heroic” maxim of the distinguished few, Nietzsche’s motif of distinguishing oneself from the herd seems today to have produced its own “herd,” such that the waste form of Nietzsche’s radical authenticity has become the new mainstream. Whereas Nietzsche’s Zarathustra was the distinguished “one,” determined to teach humankind wisdom, today we encounter countless social-media Zarathustras, all unique and distinguished, incessantly dispersing wisdom. Yet precisely here a metaphysically decis…Read more
  • How can we think the link between Heidegger’s Ereignis and Badiou’s évenement, i.e., the link between event as "à-venir" and event as "er-äugen?" This paper suggests tracing this link back to a diagnosis of modernity shared by Heidegger and Badiou, namely, the indifference which is to be thought as the result of an all-encompassing equivalence of anything with anything else. Consequently, the event is revealed as a figure of “rupture with indifference.” This conception has crucial temporal impli…Read more
  •  135
    #MeOnlyForMyself: Un paradoxe de l’expérience de la solitude à l’ère des réseaux sociaux
    Journal of Psn. Psychiatry, Humanities, Neurosciences 20 (3): 55-67. 2022.
    This article takes as its starting point from a paradoxical phenomenon that can be observed since the rise of social media: sharing snapshot pictures of solitary activities and expressing the deep joy found in solitude. A paradox, as the publicity of joy in solitude annihilates the very possibility of solitude. The article analyzes this phenomenon using Arendt’s distinction between solitude and loneliness, linking it to Kierkegaard’s notion of despair. It suggests that the joy of solitude assert…Read more
  •  176
    Die Bilder der Welt im Erleben: Metropole und Provinz in der Spätmoderne
    Berliner Debatte Initial 2022 (3): 16-27. 2022.
    This article departs from a diagnosis formulated by the "Future Institute", according to which the differences between “city” and “countryside” are disappearing and lifestyle becomes decisive, so that dwelling is increasingly seen as becoming independent of the place such that the "place" is replaced by "life style". Against this background, the article asks what the condition of possibility for this "re-placement" can be that de-places the "place"? In other words, what constitues the "metropoli…Read more
  •  100
    Reaction, Progression and Vaccination, or: What can Squid Game tell us about pandemics?
    International Studies – Journal for International Relations and Humanities (1): 61-80. 2022.
    This article analyzes the condition of possibility for hitherto apolitical phenomena, such as vaccination, to be politicized and articulated as determinants of “belonging” to a worldview. It takes the polarization through symbols during COVID as a symptom of a competition to secure one’s own share of narrowing global resources, appearing as a symbolic clash of belonging to the middle class. Drawing on the popular show of the pandemic period, "Squid Game", it shows that the strict logic of equiva…Read more
  • Modern equality is not a flat sameness. Rather, it is based on the right to difference, even in economic terms: Both a CEO and a cleaner in a modern rule of law [Rechtsstaat], no matter how radically different they may be in all realms of life, have an equal legal validity and value as legal persons. This means that there is no hierarchy between them. Difference in the modern sense, however, cannot be conceived without modern equality: premodernity knew no differences, but only hierarchies. So, …Read more
  •  133
    Capital Matters: Middle Class between Welcome Culture and Ukrainian Refugee Crisis
    International Studies – Journal for Interantional Relations and Humanities (1). 2023.
    Confused between their insatiable hunger for ‘self-realization,’ their enjoyment of petit bonheurs of life and an aggressive will to preserve their welfare position, for not going downhill and joining the 50% of the world population who own nothing, today’s middle-class individual seems to choose one of two ‘fronts of worldviews,’ of which the attitude toward ‘refugees’ constitutes a new ‘battlefield.’ So, with the flow of Ukrainian refugees after the Russian aggression against Ukraine, one of t…Read more
  •  291
    This contribution departs from a latent social-ontological diagnosis in Heidegger’s "Contributions to Philosophy" concerning machination in modernity: Gleichgültigkeit, that is, the equivalence of beings turning into an indifference of Being. The paper argues that the notions of “the gigantic” (das Riesenhafte) and “lived experience” (Erlebnis), which Heidegger develops in this context, should be understood as unfolding phenomena of this diagnosis. The main claim is that both “the gigantic” and …Read more
  •  148
    What happens when worldly reality is no longer constituted by the durable presence of things, but by the projected impact of the self? This article takes the popular slogan of charitable entrepreneurship, “Make an impact!”, as a symptom of the privatization of what Arendt once called the 'worldly reality' in everyday social media interactions. It juxtaposes two caricatured social-media ideal types—the Poetry-Slam Personality and the Big-Picture Personality—and traces, in the identity of their ap…Read more
  •  208
    Can we think of different appearances of oneness in our existential experience of being one single person, such as when we are alone, or in the presence of our loved one, or of a friend? The present paper claims that oneness can appear and be experienced variously and tries to elaborate on this claim by analyzing the appearances of oneness in loneliness, solitude, love and friendship. It begins with Hannah Arendt’s distinction between solitude as “two in one” and loneliness as “deserted one” as …Read more
  •  184
    This article approaches a seemingly self-evident concept of our present: “creative labor,” which appears as the establishment of a previously unimaginable connection between technology, art, and “play.” The notion of creative labor promises meaning and the dissolution of wage labor into play, while at the same time attributing to one’s income-generating activity a heroic “mission to save the world.” In this way, a life in which (wage) labor unites meaning, enjoyment, uniqueness, and income becom…Read more
  •  127
    This paper reflects on the transformation of what Arendt calls the “in-between”, i.e. the world of things in the age of digitalization and its consequences for the distinction between public and private. Drawing on Arendt and Heidegger, it argues that digital everydayness challenges the traditional experience of a shared world mediated by things. The loss of such worldly mediation produces new forms of loneliness, distrust, and political disorientation. The article suggests that the crisis of r…Read more
  •  203
    The question of plurality and universal affirmation: A dialogue of thought between Arendt and Badiou
    Hannaharendt(Dot)Net Journal for Political Thinking 13 (1): 97-115. 2024.
    Both Hannah Arendt and Alain Badiou refer to a ‘disorientation of the world’ in different moments of their oeuvre. For Arendt, a disorientation emerges if the common sense dissolves; for Badiou, if there is an absolute primacy of negation and an inability to affirm anything universal. This paper takes current protest movements as a serious symptom of a disorientation in the sense of both thinkers. For it seems that today far from affirming any universal point, ‘protests’ seem to turn into ‘conte…Read more
  •  163
    The World is (Ge-)Mine: The Speculative Life of the sensus communis with Arendt and Hegel
    Hannah Arendt .Net- Journal of Politicalthought 14 (2): 94-116. 2025.
    By determining sensus communis as the “sensation of reality,” Hannah Arendt invites us to take its sense character literally. If it is a sense, like the other senses, sensus communis must be vulnerable to blockage, disturbance, and even loss. This article argues that this vulnerability cannot be captured within an epistemological framework of “objective knowledge”, because what is today at stake is the object itself, namely the world as an in-between. The question thus is whether there is a comm…Read more
  • This contribution presents an early stage of my research of "thinking trust with Hannah Arendt". It departs from the German term for credibility, "glaubwürdig", which literally means “worthy of belief” By highlihting a conceptual split between belief (Glauben) and what is considered worthy of belief (glaub-würdig) it aims to manifest the narrowness of debates on trust that reduces it to "credibility". The contribution develops the argument that judging something as credible(zum-Glauben-würdig)…Read more
  • This paper examines identitarianism through a reconstruction of Hegel’s concept of concrete universality. It basically argues that identity, in its social-philosophical sense, is a specifically modern phenomenon that emerges as a byproduct of the modern right to difference. This right dissolves hierarchical distinctions and grants equal validity to subjective particularities. Paradoxically, however, precisely the universalization of this 'right' creates the conditions under which identity become…Read more
  • In his essay "The Ethical Life", Axel Honneth distinguishes between two forms of social normativity: mere social validity (Geltung) and normative validity (Gültigkeit). According to Honneth, the objective validity of social norms must be distinguished from the mere validity of social conventions, insofar as validity designates the morally universal form of normativity, whereas mere validity emerges only through individual and communicative self-determination within a concrete social situation. A…Read more
  •  31
    Can we think of a principle that has historically made democracy possible but also caused its current crisis? The present book claims to find this principle in modern equality and calls it Gleich-Gültigkeit. This word has a double meaning in German, denoting both equal validity and indifference, and the principle of modern equality is grounded precisely in this room of tension between equal validity and indifference. Modern democracy abolishes all pre-modern hierarchies and aims for equality, no…Read more
  •  201
    A Communaristocratic Response to the Call of Gaia: Formation of a Noble Indifference Towards Religious Narratives of Nature. This paper takes its starting point from Badiou’s recent diagnosis of “religiosity” in the “dominant current of ecology.” Insofar that this dominant current shies away from considering the real cause of the catastrophic phenomena - which lies according to Badiou in globalized capitalism - its calls for taking necessary measures to save the planet not only end up in feeblen…Read more