An edition of Of Learned Ignorance (2013)

Of Learned Ignorance

Idea of a Treatise in Philosophy

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Of Learned Ignorance
Michael Munro
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Last edited by MARC Bot
November 17, 2020 | History
An edition of Of Learned Ignorance (2013)

Of Learned Ignorance

Idea of a Treatise in Philosophy

  • 0 Ratings
  • 0 Want to read
  • 0 Currently reading
  • 0 Have read

What is a problem? What’s asked in that question, and how does one even begin to take its measure? How else could one begin, except as one does with any other problem—by way of its impulsion. Of Learned Ignorance: Idea of a Treatise in Philosophy is about philosophy because philosophy is about problems: philosophy, in a word, is where problems become a problem. After Anti-Oedipus, in the Kafka book and in A Thousand Plateaus, what Deleuze and Guattari counsel, strikingly, is sobriety. Sobriety is what they praise in Kafka. And it is sobriety that seems above all else to be necessary here. (Steven Shaviro has pointed out the prominence of structure in Deleuze’s writing: “even when Deleuze’s prose, by himself or with Guattari, seems to be ranging anarchically all over the place, in fact it has a rigid and unvarying architecture, which is what keeps it from falling apart.”) Of Learned Ignorance is a dead letter because it names a problem. It’s a dead letter because it is, cautiously, a love letter. It’s a dead letter because it lovingly stages an experiment in whimsy, and perhaps above all, because it is problematic (in the Kantian sense): It is a (sober) attempt at exemplifying what it talks about — and what eludes it: A series of footnotes, with blank (transcriptive) pages above, effects something like the integration of a differential, the reciprocal determination where the sources enter into in relation to one another in order to produce a paper, essay, or (inexistent) (chap)book. Of Learned Ignorance, in facing down a problem, makes a wager; it courts failure; it puts it all on the line. All, yes, for love — a kind of love … (of wisdom?)

Publish Date
Publisher
punctum books
Pages
58

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: Of Learned Ignorance
Of Learned Ignorance: Idea of a Treatise in Philosophy
2013, punctum books
in English
Cover of: Of Learned Ignorance
Cover of: Of Learned Ignorance
Of Learned Ignorance: Idea of a Treatise in Philosophy
Publish date unknown, punctum books
in English

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Edition Notes

Open Access Unrestricted online access

Creative Commons https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/

English

Published in
Brooklyn, NY

The Physical Object

Pagination
1 electronic resource (58 p.)
Number of pages
58

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL31372091M
ISBN 10
30031100

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marc_oapen MARC record

Work Description

What is a problem? What?s asked in that question, and how does one even begin to take its measure? How else could one begin, except as one does with any other problem?by way of its impulsion. Of Learned Ignorance: Idea of a Treatise in Philosophy is about philosophy because philosophy is about problems: philosophy, in a word, is where problems become a problem. After Anti-Oedipus, in the Kafka book and in A Thousand Plateaus, what Deleuze and Guattari counsel, strikingly, is sobriety. Sobriety is what they praise in Kafka. And it is sobriety that seems above all else to be necessary here. (Steven Shaviro has pointed out the prominence of structure in Deleuze?s writing: ?even when Deleuze?s prose, by himself or with Guattari, seems to be ranging anarchically all over the place, in fact it has a rigid and unvarying architecture, which is what keeps it from falling apart.?) Of Learned Ignorance is a dead letter because it names a problem. It?s a dead letter because it is, cautiously, a love letter. It?s a dead letter because it lovingly stages an experiment in whimsy, and perhaps above all, because it is problematic (in the Kantian sense): It is a (sober) attempt at exemplifying what it talks about ? and what eludes it: A series of footnotes, with blank (transcriptive) pages above, effects something like the integration of a differential, the reciprocal determination where the sources enter into in relation to one another in order to produce a paper, essay, or (inexistent) (chap)book. Of Learned Ignorance, in facing down a problem, makes a wager; it courts failure; it puts it all on the line. All, yes, for love ? a kind of love ? (of wisdom?)

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November 17, 2020 Created by MARC Bot Imported from marc_oapen MARC record