ABSTRACT

François Laruelle has been developing his project of non-philosophy since the 1970s. Throughout this time he has aimed at nothing less than the discovery and development of a new form of thinking that draws its material from philosophy and related disciplines, but uses them in inventive new ways that are seen as heretical by standard philosophical approaches. The contributions to this volume highlight Laruelle’s own distinctive approach to the history of thought and bring together researchers in the Anglophone and Francophone world who have taken up the project of non-philosophy in their own way, developing new heresies, sometimes even in relation to non-philosophy itself. The contributions here show the scope of non-philosophy with essays on gender, science, religion, politics, animals, and the history of philosophy. They are all brought together, not in a city of intellectuals bound together by law, but within a city of heretics bound together only by their status as stranger. This book was originally published as a special issue of Angelaki.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Laruelle does not exist

chapter |14 pages

The theoretical pragmatics of non-philosophy

Explicating laruelle’s suspension of the principle of sufficient philosophy with brandom’s meaning-use diagrams

chapter |12 pages

The Autism of Reason

chapter |14 pages

Violence

The indispensable condition of the law (and the political)

chapter |18 pages

The Animal Line

On the possibility of a “laruellean” non-human philosophy

chapter |16 pages

Against tradition to liberate tradition

Weaponized apophaticism and gnostic refusal