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Re: Jacques Derrida | Nicholas Royle

Posted: Sat Mar 25, 2017 10:02 am
by Socrates
Here is a pdf @"thetrizzard" shared via PM:

http://www.unm.edu/~ithomson/Thomson.pdf

Also, this was an interesting read-

http://www.academia.edu/1738235/Lectures_on_Derridas_Violence_and_Metaphysics_2016

Re: Jacques Derrida | Nicholas Royle

Posted: Fri Mar 31, 2017 4:31 pm
by atreestump
In regards to 'the secret' - the word 'secretion' has many similarities to Derrida's description of language.

Secret- means 'moved apart'. Other meanings are akin to emanation, leakage, ooze, production and leaching - after all, deconstruction is parasitic and like an earth quake.

Re: Jacques Derrida | Nicholas Royle

Posted: Sun Apr 02, 2017 11:32 pm
by thetrizzard
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=1BAMctIPO-w

I've decided not to end it there with the (Routledge Critical Thinkers) book on Derrida, I'm now reading 'A Companion to Derrida' edited by Zeynep Direk and Leonard Lawlor (2014), which is the most intellectually up-to-date book on Derrida's work available....in this book there is an excellent essay by John D. Caputo called 'Derrida and the Trace of Religion'....I have have been aware of Caputo's work for a while and I think this may help those members of the forum that want to deepen their introductory understanding of Derrida.

Re: Jacques Derrida | Nicholas Royle

Posted: Mon Apr 03, 2017 6:46 am
by Socrates
I have a copy of that too, I will read that one essay and get on Lacan.

Re: Jacques Derrida | Nicholas Royle

Posted: Mon Apr 03, 2017 1:33 pm
by thetrizzard
Also look at the Chapter entitled 'Play and Messianicity' before you move on to Lacan

Re: Jacques Derrida | Nicholas Royle

Posted: Mon Apr 03, 2017 1:37 pm
by atreestump

Also look at the Chapter entitled 'Play and Messianicity' before you move on to Lacan


Will do.

Re: Jacques Derrida | Nicholas Royle

Posted: Mon Apr 03, 2017 2:19 pm
by thetrizzard
I highly recommend the John D. Caputo lecture on YouTube

Re: Jacques Derrida | Nicholas Royle

Posted: Mon Apr 03, 2017 2:41 pm
by Socrates

I highly recommend the John D. Caputo lecture on YouTube

 Going to watch it when I get in.

Although this thread has not (as of yet) revealed anything mindblowing, it has been a great team effort of sharing links and resources, little pointers here and there.

I think we should keep to this kind of method, reading an assigned book per thread.

If you want to, you can open up a new thread for the companion book in the reading area section. I will definitely commit to it if I am reading it with someone else.

Re: Jacques Derrida | Nicholas Royle

Posted: Mon Apr 03, 2017 4:47 pm
by thetrizzard
I agree, nothing mind blowing as yet but to be fair, it takes a while to get a grasp of the terrain and the concepts employed that map out that terrain. However, reading prepares the ground from which insight flourishes, and although there are areas covered in the Routledge book that I am unfamiliar with, the Caputo essay and lecture (together) has for me build on previous knowledge and helped elucidated some of the unfamiliar concepts covered in the routledge book...Caputo (in the lecture) has a knack for putting post-structuralism into its intellectual context and why it disagrees with the claims of the structuralists ....Caputo's essay inparticular is good for fleshing out Derrida's importance in a number of fields / disciplines....his repeated reference of 'the impossible' is explained and it's good for understanding Derrida's reference to Deconstruction's in relation to that which is 'to-come'...also excellent for explaining Differance as a transcendental field (from which all forms are conditioned or constructed)...which when understood (if only partially) IS mind blowing....read the essay before listening to the lecture and let me know how you get on.[hr]It seems to me that this idea of Chaosmos from James Joyce referred to by Derrida, has Dialectical Monist overtones

Re: Jacques Derrida | Nicholas Royle

Posted: Mon Apr 03, 2017 10:32 pm
by atreestump

It seems to me that this idea of Chaosmos from James Joyce referred to by Derrida, has Dialectical Monist overtones



Is that in the essay in the Companion?

I have opened a dedeicated thread for that fyi: https://ontic-philosophy.com/Thread-Zeynep-Direk-Companion-to-Derrida