"The Age of Non-Philosophy": Martin Heidegger and François Laruelle In his lessons at the College of France, Merleau-Ponty noticed that something ended with Hegel and that we perhaps entered in an age of non-philosophy. This poses the question if philosophy is coming to an end or if it can be rebuild from within by retaining its essence. While Merleau-Ponty is trying to restore philosophy from the inside, Heidegger and Laruelle open two different paths of a non-philosophical thinking from the outside. The purpose of the article is to compare these two paths more in detail in order to articulate their differences as to the problems of identity, of the "thing of thought" (Sache des Denkens), of the role of science etc., and to show the radica...
Research into the history of understanding Heidegger's ideas allows to reveal how different thinkers...
In the course of his discussions in the eighties, Foucault returns many times to the importance of p...
The phenomenology of Edmund Husserl, at least at the start, had not envisaged being able to serve th...
"The Age of Non-Philosophy": Martin Heidegger and François Laruelle In his lessons at the College...
In this first English translation of his work, Laruelle explores the major European thinkers from Ni...
Gilles Deleuze described Laruelle’s thought as ‘one of the most interesting undertakings of contempo...
This is the first collection of critical essays on the work of this most original thinker. Francois ...
The project of François Laruelle’s non-philosophy consists in creating a methodology that will enabl...
Laruelle\u27s first book Phenomenon and Difference: An Essay on Ravaisson\u27s Ontology (1971) is un...
The final lines of Deleuze and Guattari’s What is Philosophy? call for a non-philosophy to balance a...
This is the first substantial article in English on the work of the French philosopher François Laru...
Laruelle's first book Phenomenon and Difference: An Essay on Ravaisson's Ontology (1971) is unanimou...
This study brings the thoughts of Derrida into conversation with François Laruelle’s nonphilosophy ...
A singular figure among contemporary theorists whose work poses a direct challenge to many of the pr...
Non-philosophy is a discipline of thought that works to sustain a certain affect within thinking tha...
Research into the history of understanding Heidegger's ideas allows to reveal how different thinkers...
In the course of his discussions in the eighties, Foucault returns many times to the importance of p...
The phenomenology of Edmund Husserl, at least at the start, had not envisaged being able to serve th...
"The Age of Non-Philosophy": Martin Heidegger and François Laruelle In his lessons at the College...
In this first English translation of his work, Laruelle explores the major European thinkers from Ni...
Gilles Deleuze described Laruelle’s thought as ‘one of the most interesting undertakings of contempo...
This is the first collection of critical essays on the work of this most original thinker. Francois ...
The project of François Laruelle’s non-philosophy consists in creating a methodology that will enabl...
Laruelle\u27s first book Phenomenon and Difference: An Essay on Ravaisson\u27s Ontology (1971) is un...
The final lines of Deleuze and Guattari’s What is Philosophy? call for a non-philosophy to balance a...
This is the first substantial article in English on the work of the French philosopher François Laru...
Laruelle's first book Phenomenon and Difference: An Essay on Ravaisson's Ontology (1971) is unanimou...
This study brings the thoughts of Derrida into conversation with François Laruelle’s nonphilosophy ...
A singular figure among contemporary theorists whose work poses a direct challenge to many of the pr...
Non-philosophy is a discipline of thought that works to sustain a certain affect within thinking tha...
Research into the history of understanding Heidegger's ideas allows to reveal how different thinkers...
In the course of his discussions in the eighties, Foucault returns many times to the importance of p...
The phenomenology of Edmund Husserl, at least at the start, had not envisaged being able to serve th...