A video taken in the Union Square subway station of musical performers in New York City.
A troupe performs in the public concourse at 14th Street Union Square station.
Location:Union Square, New York, NY
Stones of Erasmus — Just plain good writing, teaching, thinking, doing, making, being, dreaming, seeing, feeling, building, creating, reading
“It is impossible completely to understand Marx’s Capital, and especially its first chapter, without having thoroughly studied and understood the whole of Hegel’s Logic. Consequently, half a century later none of the Marxists understood Marx!!” wrote Lenin in 1915. In 1969, Althusser responded, “A century and a half later no one has understood Hegel because it is impossible to understand Hegel without having thoroughly studied and understood Capital.” What are we to make of this challenge today? Are we now ready to understand Hegel through Marx, and Marx through Hegel?
It is high time for a reassessment of the core stakes of the Marx-Hegel debate. What would it mean to think the concepts of capital and spirit together? This conference is a place to explore the internal relations between Hegel and Marx’s philosophical projects. Some possible questions include: how does Hegel’s phenomenology, logic, philosophy of nature, history and right internally contain the elements that Marx will use to decipher the world of property, labor, commodities and capital? Is Capital a logical theory of forms or a theory of history? How does Marx negate and realize Hegel’s project? What is the role of labor in Hegel, and the role of spirit in Marx? Does the development of history show the unfolding of freedom or the unfolding of capital? This conference echoes the early Frankfurt school tradition, with its project for a critique of the social forms of the present.Themes
Themes
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Thinkers
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The Philosophy of Right
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I.I. Rubin
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Substance and Subject in Capital
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György Lukács
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Hegel’s Logic and Marx’s Grundrisse
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Karl Korsch
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Property, Alienation, and Class
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Ernst Bloch
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Form and Content in Hegel and Marx
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Walter Benjamin
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Concrete and Abstract Labor
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Alfred Sohn-Rethel
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Master and Slave
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Theodore Adorno
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Critique, Dialectic and Method
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Herbert Marcuse
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Time and History
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CLR James
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Freedom and Necessity
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Raya Dunayevskaya
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The Value-Form
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Guy Debord
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Critique of Labor
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Alexander Kojeve
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Revolution and Negation
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Jean Hyppolite
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Proletarian Self-Abolition
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Frantz Fanon
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Materialism and Idealism
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Helmut Reichelt
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Commodity, Money and Capital
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Hans-Georg Backhaus
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Capital and Spirit
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Gillian Rose
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image credit: "Plato and the Pure Forms" |
Noah Lyon, an artist in New York City, has showcased at the New York Art Book Expo his poster image of an amalgam between Hitler and Ronald McDonald. Strangely, the combination seems appropriate, don't you think?
image credit: Hedwig and the Angry Inch |
“‘The original human nature was not like the present, but different. In the first place, the sexes were originally three in number, not two as they are now; there was man, woman, and the union of the two.’ Everything about these primaeval men was double: they had four hands and four feet, two faces, two privy parts, and so on. Eventually Zeus decided to cut these men in two .... After the division had been made, ‘the two parts of man, each desiring his other half, came together, and threw their arms about one another eager to grow into one.’” (Freud Beyond the Pleasure Principle, 69-70).In the film Hedwig and the Angry Inch, Hedwig uses the same myth to inspire a song she calls “The Origin of Love.”
The Make-a-Wish Virgin |
A Table of Western Philosophers and Their Metaphysical Systems |
Philosopher | Buzzword |
Thales | Arche (Latin for "first principle") |
Heraclitus | Becoming |
Parmenides | The One |
Socrates | Dialectic |
Plato | The Forms |
Aristotle | being qua being |
Thomas Aquinas | God as Being |
Descartes | The Cogito (Latin for "I think") |
Spinoza | God as Causa Sui |
Leibniz | Monads |
Hume | Experience |
Kant | The Transcendental |
Hegel | Absolute Spirit |
Nietzsche | Will-to-Power |
Kierkegaard | Relation |
Marx | Capital |
Freud | Ego |
Heidegger | Dasein (Literally in Germain, "being-there") |
Sartre | Existence precedes essence |
Lacan | Symbolic |
Foucault | Power |
Derrida | Différance (with an “a”) |
Bataille | Eros |
Deleuze | Flow |
Baudrillard | Simulacrum |
Desmond | The Metaxu (The Between) |
Butler | Inscribed Body |
Žižek | Ideology |