Description
At the same time, philosophy is presented not as a system or doctrine but as movement and dialogue. The philosopher is not a solitary figure; he is inseparable from his pupils, his disciples and his adversaries. It is only at the end of the journey that he arrives at the written, stable forms of his work. So we are dealing more with a play than a treatise, more with dialogues than monologues, more with a course than a book. The obvious model is Plato's Socrates, who, in founding philosophy as a discipline, ensured that it could be established anywhere in the world. In praise, yes, of philosophy as the public creation of a thought that, inventing itself and transporting itself anywhere, speaking to anyone about anything, invents the theatricalization of being.
About the Author
Alain Badiou is a philosopher, mathematician and novelist who lives in Paris.
Book Information
ISBN 9781509565634
Author Alain Badiou
Format Hardback
Page Count 202
Imprint Polity Press
Publisher John Wiley and Sons Ltd