Alain Badiou, Kojève, and the Return of the Human Exception

Authors

  • Ed Pluth

Abstract

The theory of life that Badiou proposes at the end of Logics of Worlds is considered in this paper as a retooling of the old idea that the human is an exception in the order of things. What distinguishes Badiou’s account of the human from others though is the fact that it posits the human not as an exception from other animals, nor as an exception to ordinary life, but an exception that is other to the individual as such. The way in which Alexandre Kojève framed the human in his reading of Hegel is used to establish the basic philosophical grammar for Badiou’s thinking about the human. What Badiou calls “democratic materialism” – his philosophical nemesis – is also considered from the perspective of that grammar.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Downloads

Published

2010-06-09

How to Cite

Pluth, E. (2010). Alain Badiou, Kojève, and the Return of the Human Exception. Filozofski Vestnik, 30(2). Retrieved from https://ojs.zrc-sazu.si/filozofski-vestnik/article/view/3215