Giordano Bruno’s notorious public death in 1600, at the hands of the Inquisition in Rome, marked the transition from Renaissance philosophy to the Scientific Revolution ...
Continue Reading βPublished in 1494 in Basel, The Ship of Fools was soon translated into every major European language. It provoked a vast number of imitations and ...
Continue Reading βOriginally published in 1529, the “Declamation on the Preeminence and Nobility of the Female Sex” argues that women are more than equal to men in ...
Continue Reading βGiordano Bruno’s notorious public death in 1600, at the hands of the Inquisition in Rome, marked the transition from Renaissance philosophy to the Scientific Revolution ...
Continue Reading ββThere is nothing more enticing, disenchanting, and enslaving than the life at sea,β wrote Joseph Conrad. And there is certainly nothing more integral to the ...
Continue Reading βNei Gong has been a well-kept secret within the Daoist sects of China for centuries. Based upon the original teachings of the great sage Laozi, ...
Continue Reading βAtopias is a manifesto for a radical existentialism that restores the place of the outside that contemporary theory underestimates. Neyrat calls this outside “atopia”: not ...
Continue Reading βThis book is an original exploration of Deleuze’s dynamic philosophies of space, time and language, bringing Deleuze and futurism together for the first time. Helen ...
Continue Reading βOlives, bread, meat and wine: it is deceptively easy to evoke ancient Greece and Rome through a few items of food and drink. But how ...
Continue Reading βIn Aesthesis and Perceptronium, Alexander Wilson presents a theory of materialist and posthumanist aesthetics founded on an original speculative ontology that addresses the interconnections of ...
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