NOTES ON BEING AND EVENT (PART 4)

Similar documents
NOTES ON BEING AND EVENT (PART 5)

The Greatest Mistake: A Case for the Failure of Hegel s Idealism

An Interview with Alain Badiou Universal Truths and the Question of Religion Adam S. Miller Journal of Philosophy and Scripture

RE-THINKING INFINITY: ALAIN BADIOU S BEING & EVENT

1/6. The Resolution of the Antinomies

Chalmers, "Consciousness and Its Place in Nature"

Equality and Value-holism

Affirmative Dialectics: from Logic to Anthropology

DESCARTES/LAGAN alain badiou :::. Alain Badiou, Descartes/Lacan, trans. Sigi Jöttkandt and Daniel Collins in Umbr(a): One, No. 1 (1996):

Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy, vol. 2, no. 1-2, 2006 BOOK REVIEW. A. J. Bartlett

2.1 Review. 2.2 Inference and justifications

Understanding irrational numbers by means of their representation as non-repeating decimals

1/7. The Postulates of Empirical Thought

Gilles Deleuze, The Logic of Sense, trans. Mark Lester (New York: Columbia University Press, 1990 [Logique du sens, Minuit, 1969])

FIRST STUDY. The Existential Dialectical Basic Assumption of Kierkegaard s Analysis of Despair

WHAT IS TO BE DONE? ALAIN BADIOU AND THE PRE-EVENTAL 1

COMMENTS ON SIMON CRITCHLEY S Infinitely Demanding

Frank Ruda. Where is auprés de nous? On Our Comradeship with the Absolute

THE CONSISTENCY OF INCONSISTENCY: ALAIN BADIOU AND THE LIMITS OF MATHEMATICAL ONTOLOGY

The Question of Metaphysics

LEIBNITZ. Monadology

The Insubordinate Multiple: A Critique of Badiou s Deleuze by Jonathan Roffe

Sufficient Reason and Infinite Regress: Causal Consistency in Descartes and Spinoza. Ryan Steed

Rethinking Knowledge: The Heuristic View

Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy, vol. 2, no. 1-2, BOOK Review. Jon Roffe

These definitions are built around the idea that

Class #14: October 13 Gödel s Platonism

A Model of Decidable Introspective Reasoning with Quantifying-In

Reading Questions for Phil , Fall 2013 (Daniel)

Keywords: Knowledge Organization. Discourse Community. Dimension of Knowledge. 1 What is epistemology in knowledge organization?

Lecture 9. A summary of scientific methods Realism and Anti-realism

FIL 4600/10/20: KANT S CRITIQUE AND CRITICAL METAPHYSICS

An Attempt to Reconcile Three Theories of the Origin of Finite Things in De Summa Rerum

A Summary of Non-Philosophy

The Simplest Body in the Spinoza s Physics

Book review: Absolute Recoil. Towards A New Foundation of Dialectical Materialism Zizek, S. (2014). (London/New York: Verso)

PDF hosted at the Radboud Repository of the Radboud University Nijmegen

The Necessity of Philosophy

The Repetition of the Void and the Materialist Dialectic

Remarks on the philosophy of mathematics (1969) Paul Bernays

Absolute Totality, Causality, and Quantum: The Problem of Metaphysics in the Critique of Pure Reason

1/9. The First Analogy

Summary of Kant s Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals

Philosophy 125 Day 21: Overview

Chadwick Prize Winner: Christian Michel THE LIAR PARADOX OUTSIDE-IN

Cosmological Arguments

Deflationary Nominalism s Commitment to Meinongianism

FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES OF THE METAPHYSIC OF MORALS. by Immanuel Kant

Count-as-one, Forming-into-one, Unary

The basic form of a syllogism By Timo Schmitz, Philosopher

Iowa Journal of Cultural Studies

Kant s Transcendental Arguments: Disciplining Pure Reason Scott Stapleford New York: Continuum, 2008; 152 pages.

Epistemology. Theory of Knowledge

One of the many common questions that are asked is If God does exist what reasons

24.01 Classics of Western Philosophy

Philosophy 203 History of Modern Western Philosophy. Russell Marcus Hamilton College Spring 2015

Under contract with Oxford University Press Karen Bennett Cornell University

Absolute Totality, Causality, and Quantum: The Problem of Metaphysics in the Critique of Pure Reason. Kazuhiko Yamamoto, Kyushu University, Japan

ANALELE UNIVERSITĂȚII DIN CRAIOVA SERIA FILOSOFIE nr. 32 (2 2013) ABSTRACTS LE VECU CHEZ SARTRE

What is an Argument? Validity vs. Soundess of Arguments

Mister Minister and President of the Administrative Council, Íñigo Méndez de Vigo;

Potentialism about set theory

Structural realism and metametaphysics

KRIPKE ON WITTGENSTEIN. Pippa Schwarzkopf

TRANSLATOR S INTRODUCTION

THE GOD/MAN TRIANGLE OF JESUS CHRIST. THE IMAGE OF GOD (Part 1) > THE IMAGE OF GOD (Part 2) By Leo Tavares

Summary of Sensorama: A Phenomenalist Analysis of Spacetime and Its Contents

Class 11 - February 23 Leibniz, Monadology and Discourse on Metaphysics

Freedom as Morality. UWM Digital Commons. University of Wisconsin Milwaukee. Hao Liang University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Theses and Dissertations

CONTENTS A SYSTEM OF LOGIC

Philosophy 427 Intuitions and Philosophy. Russell Marcus Hamilton College Fall 2011

Conditions of Fundamental Metaphysics: A critique of Jorge Gracia's proposal

Copyright 2015 by KAD International All rights reserved. Published in the Ghana

1) Mot de bienvenue Caryl Green welcomes the members and says a few words about La Fab.

Phil 114, Wednesday, April 11, 2012 Hegel, The Philosophy of Right 1 7, 10 12, 14 16, 22 23, 27 33, 135, 141

Well-Being, Disability, and the Mere-Difference Thesis. Jennifer Hawkins Duke University

Alain Badiou, Philosophy and Psychoanalysis, trans. Raphael Comprone and Marcus Coelen in Umbr(a): One, No. 1 (1996):

Freedom and servitude: the master and slave dialectic in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit

BACCALAURÉAT GÉNÉRAL

Transport THE STANDING SENATE COMMITTEE ON TRANSPORT AND COMMUNICATIONS EVIDENCE UNREVISED-NON-RÉVISÉ

Class 4 - The Myth of the Given

CHAPTER ONE. Immanence: A Life

Argumentation and Positioning: Empirical insights and arguments for argumentation analysis

Vol 2 Bk 7 Outline p 486 BOOK VII. Substance, Essence and Definition CONTENTS. Book VII

COURSE : FINDING YOUR LIFE PURPOSE

CONTENTS III SYNTHETIC A PRIORI JUDGEMENTS. PREFACE CHAPTER INTRODUCTldN

PHILOSOPHY OF NATURE LET THOMAS AQUINAS TEACH IT. Joseph Kenny, O.P. St. Thomas Aquinas Priory Ibadan, Nigeria

3 Supplement. Robert Bernasconi

1. Lukasiewicz s Logic

How Do We Know Anything about Mathematics? - A Defence of Platonism

The Spirituality of the Leader and its influence on Visitor Experience Management at Sacred Sites in the Island of Ireland: Insights and Implications

Neo-Confucianism: Metaphysics, Mind, and Morality

Copyright 2000 Vk-Cic Vahe Karamian

Did Leibniz Really Reject the Spinozistic Monism in 1677?

1/10. The Fourth Paralogism and the Refutation of Idealism

Moral Objectivism. RUSSELL CORNETT University of Calgary

Heideggerian Mathematics: Badiou s Being and Event

Nagel, Naturalism and Theism. Todd Moody. (Saint Joseph s University, Philadelphia)

On Finitism and the Beginning of the Universe: A Reply to Stephen Puryear. Citation Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 2016, v. 94 n. 3, p.

The Supplement of Copula

Transcription:

Fall 2009 Badiou course / John Protevi / Department of French Studies / Louisiana State University www.protevi.com/john/badiou/be_part4.pdf / protevi@lsu.edu 28 October 2009 / Classroom use only / Not for citation in any publication NOTES ON BEING AND EVENT (PART 4) PART 4: THE EVENT: HISTORY AND ULTRA-ONE MEDITATION 16: EVENTAL SITES AND HISTORICAL SITUATIONS 1) Intro: Heidegger and the non-natural a) For H, mathematics / technology is non-poetic, non-natural, culminates in modern nihilism. b) B will agree that that which is not being is the non-natural (the evental, the historical) 2) The abnormal a) Singular multiplicities are presented but not represented (not a part, not a subset) b) Approximate image: a family w/ one member who is not recognized by state 3) Evental site a) Definition: i) An entirely abnormal multiple: no element is presented in the situation ii) The site is presented, but none of its elements are iii) Thus the site is not part of the situation iv) Such a multiple is on the edge of the void or foundational b) Example: i) A family with all singular members, which only appears as a family group ii) So none of its terms are counted-as-one; only the multiple of the terms forms a one c) Consequences: i) An evental site is on the edge of the void bcs (1) From perspective of situation the multiple is made up of non-presented multiples (2) Thus beneath the multiple there is nothing (3) So evental site is the minimal of structure (a) It belongs to the situation (b) But none of its elements belong to it (4) IOW, its consistency is composed of what is inconsistent (from perspective of situation) ii) An evental site is foundational bcs (1) It is minimal for the count of the situation (2) It is presented and hence it can help compose (it can belong to) larger multiples (3) But its elements are not presented so its composition cannot be presented (4) That is, it is undecomposable ; it blocks the infinite regress of composition (5) Thus these sites found the situation as absolutely primary terms 4) Evental site vs natural multiplicity a) Evental site i) Neither intrinsic nor absolute ii) A multiple can be singular in one situation and normal in another iii) Thus historicity is relative

iv) A historical singularity or evental site can always be normalized b) Natural multiplicity i) Conserves its normality and the normality of its elements ii) Nature is thus absolute iii) It is impossible to singularize natural normality c) Summary i) History can be naturalized, but nature cannot be historicized ii) There can be no unity between nature and history iii) Evental sites are local; natural situations are global 5) Relation to vulgar Marxism a) For theory of history i) We cannot think History with a capital H ii) We can only think the historicity of situated evental sites b) For theory ( topology ) of action i) The origin of overturning can never be the state of a totality ii) Rather, all radical transformations originate in a point (= situated evental site) 6) Opening to a typology of situations a) Historical situations (w/ an evental site) b) Natural situations (w/ only normal multiplicities, thus no evental sites) c) Neutral situations i) Neither life (nature) nor action (history) ii) Some combination of singular, normal and excrescent terms 7) Concluding contrast with Heidegger a) Heidegger: i) Thinking nature and being via the poem ii) Math exacerbates forgetting of being, leading to nihilism b) Badiou: i) Nature is not the way to being (1) By balancing presentation and representation it weaves the greatest oblivion (2) It buries inconsistency and turns away from the void (the proper name of being) ii) History s subtraction from math / ontology is the way to being (1) By subtraction from state / representation (2) Being (void) comes forth in presentation (3) At point of history (void / situation connection) being-multiple is revealed [s avérer] MEDITATION 17: THE MATHEME OF THE EVENT 1) Construction a) The event is not presented, though it can be localized w/in presentation b) Usual method i) Conceptual construction of method ii) Rejection of the event into pure empiricity c) Badiou s inversion i) Structure or count-as-one is pure evidence of presentation (empirical) ii) The event is conceptually constructed (1) Can only be thought by anticipating its abstract form (2) Can only be revealed [avérer] in retroaction of intervening practice 2) Localization of an event

a) No event immediately concerns totality of a situation b) It is always in a point; it always concerns *a* [un] presented multiple c) Events are attached to the point of historicity of a situation 3) Evental sites are necessary but not sufficient conditions for events 4) Matheme of the event a) e x = [x X, e x ] b) where X = evental site; e x = event of the site X ; x = element of the site X c) event of the site X is equal to all elements x belonging to X plus the event itself 5) Does this matheme correspond to the intuitive idea of an event? a) An image: take the words the French Revolution i) Historians can compile an infinite list of components (facts) / elements of the site ii) The halting point is the way in which Revolution is itself an element (1) That is, the way in which the consciousness [conscience] of the time (and our own retroactive intervention) unifies the event by the addition of the signifier of the event (i.e., Revolution ) (2) IOW, the French Revolution as event presents (a) An infinite multiplicity of facts (b) And itself as immanent résumé and one-mark of itself as multiple b) Conclusion: yes, the matheme corresponds with the intuitive idea of an event 6) Consequences of this definition for the relation of event and situation = (bedrock of B s edifice) a) The event s belonging to the situation of its site is undecidable from standpoint of situation b) [IOW, the state can neither confirm nor deny an event; only militant subjects can decide whether or not an event has taken place by committing themselves to a truth procedure] c) Let s look at the formula e x = [x X, e x ] i) You can t decide if the event belongs to the situation by examining the elements x of the site bcs by definition they are presented but not represented, that is, they are not presented in the situation ii) Thus you can only look at the signifier of the event, e x iii) But here you come upon an undecidable, bcs of the circularity of the question (1) To know whether an event is presented in a situation you have to know that it is presented as an element of itself (2) IOW, did Revolution play a role in the conscience of the Revolution? 7) Forecast: only an interpretive intervention can declare an event present in a situation 8) Right now, we can only examine two separate hypotheses a) The event belongs to the situation i) In this case, it s a singular multiple and the state cannot count any event ii) But if event belongs to situation (1) It is not itself on edge of void (2) Bcs it presents itself as signifier iii) So the event blocks its total singularization iv) An event does not coincide with an evental site (1) It mobilizes the elements of the site (2) But adds its own presentation of itself v) So from standpoint of the situation, a belonging event is ultra-one (1) The event pulls itself off the edge of the void by its own one-ness, its own selfpresentation in the situation (its being recognized as signifier of the event) (2) The self-belonging of the event is ultra-one (a) Its counts the same thing as one twice

(b) As presented multiple and as self-presented b) The event does not belong to the situation i) It doesn t present anything except its elements, which are by definition not presented ii) So from standpoint of situation, nothing is presented by the event iii) That is, the state can t recognize the French Revolution bcs it doesn t recognize Revolution as signifier of an event, but only as a pure word ; it only recognizes an infinity of facts 9) Consequences of this undecidable a) Summary: i) If the event belongs to the situation (1) It ruptures the site s being on the edge of the void (2) By putting itself between itself and the void ii) If it s not in the situation, it names only the void b) Double function i) The event is both name of the void and ultra-one of the presentative structure ii) So we have ultra-one-naming-the-void as a torsion of the historical situation, which deploys the being of non-being or existing iii) Et c est cet ultra-un-nommant-le-vide qui déploierait, à l intérieur-extérieur d une situation historique, en torsion de son ordre, l être du non-être, c est-a-dire, l exister [italics in original]. c) Necessity of interpretative intervention i) By declaring that the event belongs to the situation it bars the void s irruption ii) But it does that only in order to force the situation to confess its own void (1) Which lets forth [faire ansi surgir] the existence of a non-being (2) From inconsistent being and the interrupted count iii) [JP: rather crudely, I think this means that militant truth procedures let us see the artificiality of state categories. That is, declaring that an event has taken place means that history is built up out of nothing, that there is nothing natural in history despite the state s attempts at normalization / naturalization, and that we are therefore free to transform the situation in which we find ourselves] MEDITATION 18: BEING S PROHIBITION OF THE EVENT 1) Intro: 2 surprising results of investigating the ontological schema of the event a) Every pure multiple is historical if we allow the name of the void, Ǿ, to be a historical situation, which is possible only in ontology b) Ontology forbids the event; it does not admit historicity; event is a concept external to ontology 2) The ontological schema of historicity and instability d) Take A as a non-void multiple which cannot belong to itself ~(A A) e) And {A} as its singleton (i.e., set with only A as an element) f) Then A is on edge of void for situation {A} i) {A} has only A for an element and A does not belong to itself ii) Thus {A} does not present any other element of A g) Thus w/in situation {A} the multiple A is an evental site i) It is presented in {A} (in fact it is the only multiple presented) ii) But nothing which belongs to it is presented in {A} h) Thus the formalization of a historical situation (a situation which contains an evental site) i) {A} A = Ǿ ii) The intersection of an evental site A and its historical situation {A} is the void

i) There is at least one evental site B in any historical situation A i) A B = Ǿ ii) Here B founds A (1) Belonging to A finds its halting point in what B presents (2) IOW, B is undecomposable for A (a) B helps make up A (B is presented in A) (b) But the elements of B are invisible in A (nothing in B is presented in A) 3) The axiom of foundation a) The foundation on the edge of the void or site is a general law of ontology b) Axiom of foundation i) Any non-void set has at least one element whose intersection with initial set is void ii) a [(a Ǿ) ( b) [b a] & (b a = Ǿ)] ] iii) Any non-void multiple contains an Other iv) Such a halting point establishes original finitude v) [The axiom of foundation says a set must be founded on something that is undecomposable relative to the set. That means it contains a point of alterity, that is, something that has nothing in common with the set. In ontology, that means it must be founded on the null-set, a set that has nothing in common with any set. This means a set cannot be self-founding, that is, it cannot belong to itself. In that case, its allegedly founding element would have something in common with the set, that very element.] 4) The axiom of foundation is a meta-ontological thesis of ontology a) The axiom of foundation is not interesting to working mathematicians as they work b) It s rather a meta-theoretical concern about categories of situations (historical vs natural) 5) Nature and history a) Objection: doesn t the axiom of foundation make everything historical and eliminate naturality? b) We have to take into account the ontological difference btw being and beings, that is, btw i) Being = presentation of presentation, pure multiplicity ii) Beings = presentation of a multiple, so that we have a presented multiple c) IOW i) The ontological situation names the void as existent (null-set axiom) ii) Non-ontological situations consist only by ensuring void does not belong to the situation due to action of the state of the situation d) IOW i) Ordinals as ontological schema of natural situations are founded by the void ii) Historical situations are founded by non-void terms e) Gap btw ontology (thought of ontological situation) and thought of non-ontological situations i) In general (i.e., in non-ontological situations) (1) What is natural is stable / normal (2) What is historical contains multiples on the edge of the void ii) In ontology (1) What is natural is founded solely by the void (all normal sets start w/ null-set) (2) Non-natural sets schematize the historical 6) The event belongs to that-which-is-not-being-qua-being a) The signifier of the event belongs to the event; this would be formalized as self-belonging b) But the axiom of foundation forecloses self-belonging sets c) So there can be no ontology of the event; IOW, ontology declares that the event is not d) So ontology i) brings forth that-which-is-not-being

ii) At point of impossibility of ontology as discourse of being-qua-being iii) this exhibits its signifying emblem : (1) The multiple presenting itself (2) In the brilliance abolishing being of the mark-of-one e) Il fait donc advenir le ce-qui-n est-pas l être, comme point d impossible du discours sur l être-entant-qu être, et exhibe son emblème signifiant, qui est le multiple tel qu il se présente, dans l éclat, où l être s abolit, du trait-d un. f) [JP: So we have to do a symptomatic reading of ontology and look at what it makes illegal. In doing so, we see its de-limiting of being and can read the event as that which is not being, as that which being puts outside itself as unsayable.] Meditation 19: Mallarmé Due to time constraints this semester, I m not going to comment on this meditation. Maybe later.