ABSTRACT

This book is a major reassessment of Michael Weinstein’s political philosophy. It situates his singular contribution, designated as "critical vitalism," in the context of both canonical American and contemporary continental theory. Weinstein is presented as a philosopher of life and as an American Nietzsche. Yet the contributors also persuasively argue for this form of thinking as a prescient prophecy addressing contemporary society’s concern over the management of life as well as the technological changes that both threaten and sustain intimacy. This is the first full scale study of Weinstein’s work which reveals surprising aspects of a philosophic journey that has encompassed most of the major American (pragmatic or vitalist) or Continental (phenomenological or existential) traditions. Weinstein is read as a comparative political theorist, a precursor to post-structuralism, and as a post-colonial border theorist. A different aspect of his oeuvre is highlighted in each of the book’s three sections. The opening essays comprising the "Action" diptych contrasts meditative versus extrapolative approaches; "Contemplation" stages a series of encounters between Weinstein and his philosophic interlocutors; "Vitalism" presents Weinstein as a teacher, media analyst, musician, and performance artist. The book contains an epilogue written by Weinstein in response to the contributors.

part I|40 pages

Action

chapter 2|12 pages

Nietzsche for Our Times

Three Meditations

chapter 3|26 pages

Strings

A Political Theory of Multidimensional Reality

part II|68 pages

Contemplation

chapter 4|22 pages

This Flesh Belongs to Me

Michael Weinstein and Max Stirner

chapter 5|13 pages

Weinstein's American Philosophy

Intimacy and the Construction of the Self

chapter 6|17 pages

Irreducible Ends

Michael Weinstein and the Value of Agony and Happy Pessimism

chapter 7|14 pages

Unpacking My Weinstein

Border Thinking and Classical American Philosophy

part III|70 pages

Vitalism

chapter 8|16 pages

“I Am the Radical Reality”

Weinstein's “Defensive Life” as a Political Response to Postcivilization

chapter 10|19 pages

“I Am the God of My Own Tribe”

Weinstein and Islam 1

chapter 11|8 pages

A Remarkable Teacher

chapter 12|16 pages

Michael Weinstein and Félix Guattari

A Militancy of “Vivacious Despair”

part |16 pages

Epilogue

chapter 13|14 pages

Performing Integral Consciousness

Simulation