Topologies of The Flesh A Multidimensional Exploration of The Lifeworld by Steven M Rosen
Topologies of The Flesh A Multidimensional Exploration of The Lifeworld by Steven M Rosen
Topologies of The Flesh A Multidimensional Exploration of The Lifeworld by Steven M Rosen
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greater space. But taken globally, this trichotomous division is seen to be grounded in
a deeper unity all three parts are in fact continuous.
Rosen begins the much longer Part II of the book, which takes up the remaining five
chapters, with an investigation of the order of bisection Klein bottle, Moebius strip
and the topological figures obtained by further bisecting these: the lemniscate and sublemniscate. These figures are linked to dimensionalities which Rosen takes as models
for stages of ontogenesis.
Rosen has a somewhat Hegelian understanding in which the ontogenetic
development of Being itself is seen in its ongoing unfolding. According to him, the
third and highest stage of ontogenetic individuation, which he calls variously Kleinian
being, cogito and rational thought, coincides with what Heidegger calls the end of
philosophy, i.e., the nineteenth-century endgame of philosophy in which it is
transformed into the natural sciences. But this is not, for Rosen, the end of the story.
Rosen conflates, interestingly but not terribly clearly, the movement of individuation
with the birthing and self-appropriation of higher-dimensional orders. So the zerodimensional mineral order gives birth to the first-dimensional vegetable and the
second-dimensional animal, culminating in the leap towards third-dimensional,
Kleinian being. This process of individuation leads to the atomised cogito of modern
philosophy, and the divorce of thought from matter. For Rosen, these dimensions must
be gathered together again in a (real and historical) movement of proprioception,
which reverses the appropriative movement as the cognitive third dimension
acknowledges its grounding in and birthing from the lower orders, and offers thanks
for receiving the gift of being from lower-order midwives and mothers, whose work
is the realisation of being itself.
In chapter five Rosen introduces two tables which he claims express the full course
of development of all orders of topogeny (121). Rosen refers to these matrices
regularly in the latter half of the book, and his argument appears to be structured around
them, but their meaning is not made sufficiently clear at their introduction or during the
subsequent discussion. The axes of these tables are unlabelled, and the relationship
between their plural parts go unexplained in any terms that would make clear sense. As
a consequence, while Rosens work is suggestive and picks out what seem to be
genuinely valuable possibilities for the explication of and development of MerleauPontys later thought, its undoubtedly significant philosophical contribution is not
brought to full expression.
Orion Edgar
The University of Nottingham
THE IDEA OF CONTINENTAL PHILOSOPHY, by Simon Glendinning,
Edinburgh, Edinburgh University Press, 2006, 160 pp., ISBN 0748624708 (hbk),
0748624716 (pbk).
Contrary to what Continental thinkers are used to say, philosophical progress is
possible, and the content of Simon Glendinnings book nicely supports this claim. The
only disappointment one might have after reading it is that now one is not really
allowed to make of Continental philosophers a unified school of obscure antirationalists. Indeed, the major thesis advanced by this clear book is that we cannot find
any genuinely philosophical difference between what is called Continental and analytic
philosophy. What we have here is the story of how it came about that Continental
philosophy became the tag for analytic philosophys hated Other (p. 32).
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