Tags
Tag: "continental philosophy"
Deleuze & Guattari’s Friendly Concepts
Karen Parham explores the collection of curious concepts Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari use in their organic perception of reality.
[Issue 144: June/July 2021: Articles]
To Be Born: Genesis of a New Human Being by Luce Irigaray
Dharmender Dhillon muses on Luce Irigaray’s best way to make an individual.
[Issue 128: October/November 2018: Books]
Quotation Marks Needed
by Anja Steinbauer
[Issue 127: August/September 2018: Editorial]
The Concept of the Other from Kant to Lacan
Peter Benson looks at how continental minds see how we see other minds.
[Issue 127: August/September 2018: Continental Thoughts]
Anxiety by Jacques Lacan
Peter Caws critiques Jacques Lacan’s psychoanalytic obscurantism.
[Issue 113: April/May 2016: Books]
Analytic Philosophy, Continental Literature?
Marc Champagne argues that the supposedly ’professional’ style of the analytic tradition does not ensure professionalism, nor indeed, clear-mindedness.
[Issue 109: August/September 2015: Articles]
French Lessons
by Rick Lewis
[Issue 107: April/May 2015: Editorial]
A Refutation of Snails By Roast Beef
James Alexander finds Alain Badiou guilty of horrors but sometimes worth reading.
[Issue 107: April/May 2015: Modern French Philosophy]
Derrida’s Performance
Yonathan Listik puts in a linguistic performance to communicate Derrida’s linguistic performance.
[Issue 107: April/May 2015: Modern French Philosophy]
The Journey
Emery Cournand describes his own philosophical odyssey.
[Issue 92: September/October 2012: Philosophers on Philosophy]
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