tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1438289051411770399.post5828551218456251725..comments2024-03-28T09:51:55.365-06:00Comments on ECOLOGY WITHOUT NATURE: Mind JazzTimothy Mortonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05067377804366363020noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1438289051411770399.post-5884989417814060842010-12-06T20:44:03.949-06:002010-12-06T20:44:03.949-06:00Love that last sentence.
I actually believe that...Love that last sentence.<br /> I actually believe that Derrida has plenty of room for the claim that there are good readings and bad ones (he certainly accuses Searle of doing the latter, e.g.), but he does not give much purchase for grounding this intuition. <br />In any case, the style is indeed inseparable from the substance. I mean, even through Plato's obviously highly inflected portrait, we get a strong sense not just of Socrates' thinking but of <i>who Socrates is</i>. I defy anyone to tease these apart. The slogan "the personal is the political" is in danger of being hackneyed, but I'll go to the wall to claim that the personal is the philosophical-- even (especially?) when we're talking Plotinus or Nagarjuna.skholiasthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/05410057905377189336noreply@blogger.com