What does it mean to take “one more step, a single step” … towards universality? What does it mean to be forced to think and what kind of thought would we need in order to make the logic of the world shift? For Badiou, philosophy must be reckless or it is simply nothing at all. Thought must force a shift in the laws of a world. This recklessness is the violence of thought; it is the unknown form of a discipline, opening a new terrain to make that 'one more step' possible. It is the moment when we are pushed to think beyond our own desires; it comes in the form of militant participation and brutal contingency. Above all, it comes down to a single choice; one must 'become', a subject to truth, and stay loyal to the event. The following essay...
 When people believe that social particularities raise plurality of views in the contemporary socie...
In this article, I consider the moment where speech becomes violent because it wants to name at any ...
For Badiou serves both as an introduction to the influential French philosopher Alain Badiou’s thoug...
What does it mean to take “one more step, a single step” … towards universality? What does it mean t...
Is it possible to speak of a militant philosophy or a form of philosophical militantism? This essay ...
Alain Badiou’s coming to the forefront of the academic debates on the ontological status of Being, p...
This research paper examines the work of philosopher Alain Badiou and his analysis of 20th-century v...
© 2011 Peter EadeThis thesis aims to explore whether and how theorists in the humanities today can t...
Our aim in this paper is to give reasons for thinking that Badioursquo;s philosophy is not prepared ...
This essay attempts to answer three types of question concerning the images of violence found in dec...
Since the publication of Being and Event in 1988, Alain Badiou has established himself as inarguably...
One of the more poignant claims Badiou makes is that the subject develops an understanding of itself...
In this article, I consider the moment where speech becomes violent because it wants to name at any ...
This thesis addresses two interrelated issues. The first is how we come to think and enact the poss...
This thesis begins with a brief discussion of a subjective problem that plagues political thought an...
 When people believe that social particularities raise plurality of views in the contemporary socie...
In this article, I consider the moment where speech becomes violent because it wants to name at any ...
For Badiou serves both as an introduction to the influential French philosopher Alain Badiou’s thoug...
What does it mean to take “one more step, a single step” … towards universality? What does it mean t...
Is it possible to speak of a militant philosophy or a form of philosophical militantism? This essay ...
Alain Badiou’s coming to the forefront of the academic debates on the ontological status of Being, p...
This research paper examines the work of philosopher Alain Badiou and his analysis of 20th-century v...
© 2011 Peter EadeThis thesis aims to explore whether and how theorists in the humanities today can t...
Our aim in this paper is to give reasons for thinking that Badioursquo;s philosophy is not prepared ...
This essay attempts to answer three types of question concerning the images of violence found in dec...
Since the publication of Being and Event in 1988, Alain Badiou has established himself as inarguably...
One of the more poignant claims Badiou makes is that the subject develops an understanding of itself...
In this article, I consider the moment where speech becomes violent because it wants to name at any ...
This thesis addresses two interrelated issues. The first is how we come to think and enact the poss...
This thesis begins with a brief discussion of a subjective problem that plagues political thought an...
 When people believe that social particularities raise plurality of views in the contemporary socie...
In this article, I consider the moment where speech becomes violent because it wants to name at any ...
For Badiou serves both as an introduction to the influential French philosopher Alain Badiou’s thoug...