“Secular criticism” is a term invented by Edward Said to
combat the desire of much of modern thinking to reach for the
transcendental, the very space philosophy wrested away from religion in
the name of modernity. Stathis Gourgouris reinvokes the term “secular
criticism” as a compass for addressing the necessity to reconceptualise
the political space against religious tendencies of all kinds.
Gourgouris will focus specifically on those parameters needed for
societies to create new forms of collective reflection, interrogation,
and action, which alter not only the current terrain of dominant
politics but the very self-conceptualisation of what it means to be
human. The most important dimension of the secular imagination is not
the battle against religion per se, but the creation of radical
conditions of social autonomy. Gourgouris will address these issues with
the following series of lectures.
Tuesday, 22 May 2012
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
The Nature of Time
The Persistence of Time, Salvador Dali (1931) |
When we normally talk about time, we can mean different things. There is, of course, the conventional time measured by physical clocks. When we ask someone “what time is it?” it is this physical time we typically mean. But there is also a more psychological kind of time, as when we say “time flew by” or “that seemed like forever”. Such expressions show us that the subjective passage of time is sometimes faster or slower than the objective passage of time that clocks measure. It seems, then, that these two types of time are distinct, at least as far as the rate of passage of time is concerned. Our inquiry into time does not presuppose that objective time is more real than subjective time, or vice versa. Rather, our approach is to acknowledge both these aspects of time, and then to see what inquiry reveals about them.
Friday, 11 May 2012
Scientism - Is science folly?
Most of us were raised with the idea that reality is the material cosmos. We were all taught that there is a real external world "out there" containing rocks, atoms, cells, animals, plants, etc., and that this material world is all there is. As Carl Sagan tells us in his opening lines of the popular Cosmos television series, "The cosmos is all there is, all there was, and all there ever will be."
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