309 episodes

Two Desiring Machines

Machinic Unconscious Happy Hour Cooper Cherry Jr.

    • Society & Culture
    • 4.8 • 8 Ratings

Two Desiring Machines

    Jon Repetti - Lacan's Seminar 11

    Jon Repetti - Lacan's Seminar 11

    This week, Jon Repetti joined Coop and Taylor for a discussion on Lacan's Seminar 11.

    Jon is finishing a phd in American literature at Princeton, focusing on naturalism, radical empiricism, and psychoanalysis.

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    Twitter: @unconscioushh

    • 1 hr 43 min
    Jon Greenaway - An Introduction to the Work of Ernst Bloch

    Jon Greenaway - An Introduction to the Work of Ernst Bloch

    Coop and Taylor speak with Jon Greenaway, aka The LitCritGuy. Writer, podcaster, and content creator from the North of England. Host of the Horror Vanguard Podcast. He writes about horror, contemporary capitalism, and cultural theory. Today we’ll be discussing his book, A Primer on Utopian Philosophy; An Introduction to the Work of Ernst Bloch.

    Jon's Links:

    https://soundcloud.com/user-317910500

    https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/horror-vanguard/id1445594437

    https://twitter.com/horrorvanguard


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    • 1 hr 3 min
    Rocco Gangle - Autopoiesis and Eigenform

    Rocco Gangle - Autopoiesis and Eigenform

    Rocco Gangle joined Coop and Taylor to discuss a piece titled Autopoiesis and Eigenform by Louis H. Kauffman.

    Article Link:
    https://www.mdpi.com/2079-3197/11/12/247

    Rocco's first appearance:
    https://soundcloud.com/podcast-co-coopercherry/eric-schmid-rocco-gangle-on-mathematical-structuralism?si=26acc817ecf44e9d8f20a3b4c8330d06&utm_source=clipboard&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=social_sharing

    Jonathon "Rocco" Gangle is a philosopher whose current research focuses on metaphysics, semiotics, diagrammatic logic, and category theory. He is also one of the foremost translators and expositors of the work of contemporary French thinker Francois Laruelle. He has published several books, including Diagrammatic Immanence: Category Theory and Philosophy (2015) and, with Gianluca Caterina, Iconicity and Abduction (2016). He is co-director of the Center for Diagrammatic and Computational Philosophy. At Endicott, Gangle teaches a variety of courses in philosophy, intellectual history, and religious studies.

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    • 1 hr 26 min
    Freud's Totem and Taboo

    Freud's Totem and Taboo

    This week Coop and Taylor discuss Freud's Totem and Taboo. Ambivalence, Anti-Oedipus, repetition, sacrifice, cannibalism and more.

    Freud Playlist:
    https://soundcloud.com/podcast-co-coopercherry/sets/freud?si=7394d554bb4f4915ac9d731243e347f4&utm_source=clipboard&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=social_sharing

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    • 1 hr 23 min
    Charles Stivale & Dan Smith - Deleuze on Painting and the Question of Concepts

    Charles Stivale & Dan Smith - Deleuze on Painting and the Question of Concepts

    This week, Charles Stivale and Dan Smith returned to the podcast to discuss a series of lectures Deleuze delivered titled "Painting and the Question of Concepts". They also shared a bit about their experience with the Deleuze Seminars project hosted by Purdue University.

    Quick recap
    The team discussed the introduction of a new feature on Zoom that can summarize discussions. They also discussed the difference between a summary and a transcription, with Taylor noting that the summary feature was not as detailed as a transcription. The conversation then moved to a discussion about a future book based on revised transcripts of Deleuze's 1981 painting seminars. The team also discussed the content of the cinema books and their translations, as well as the author's view on modern art and philosophy. The discussion ended with Taylor bringing up the idea of practicing the act of deletion in pre-pictorial art.
    Summary

    Cooper introduced a new feature on Zoom that can summarize discussions, which Taylor and Daniel found interesting. The team discussed the difference between a summary and a transcription, with Taylor noting that the summary feature was not as detailed as a transcription. They also discussed the potential difficulty of creating transcripts and the possibility of using AI to generate auto captions. The conversation then moved to a discussion about a future book based on revised transcripts of Deleuze's 1981 painting seminars. The team also discussed the content of the cinema books and their translations. They then moved on to discuss the author's view on modern art and philosophy. The discussion ended with Taylor bringing up the idea of practicing the act of deletion in pre-pictorial art. The team also discussed the genesis of the Produce seminar program and the challenges faced in adding content and understanding the project's goals. They also discussed the collaborative nature of their project, emphasizing the importance of a team approach over individual efforts to ensure consistency and quality.

    Charles' research interests include 19th-century French novels, contemporary critical theory and cultural studies, and writings of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, as well as serving as co-director, with Prof. Daniel W. Smith, of the Purdue University Deleuze Seminars web site, developing transcriptions and translations of Deleuze's university seminars.

    Dan Smith is professor of philosophy at Purdue University. He is the author of Essays on Deleuze (Edinburgh 2012) and editor of the Cambridge Companion to Deleuze (2012, with Henry Somers Hall); Deleuze and Ethics (2011, with Nathan Jun); and Gilles Deleuze: Image and Text (2009, with Eugene W. Holland and Charles J. Stivale). He is also the translator, from the French, of books by Gilles Deleuze, Pierre Klossowski, Isabelle Stengers, and Michel Serres.

    The Deleuze Seminars Website Hosted by Purdue:

    https://deleuze.cla.purdue.edu/

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    Twitter: @unconscioushh

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    • 1 hr 54 min
    Brian Massumi - The Personality of Power

    Brian Massumi - The Personality of Power

    Brian Massumi joined Cooper and Taylor for a discussion on his forthcoming book: The Personality of Power: A Theory of Fascism for Anti-Fascist Life.

    Massumi was instrumental in introducing the work of French philosophers Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari to the English-speaking world through his translation of their key collaborative work A Thousand Plateaus (1987) and his book A User's Guide to Capitalism and Schizophrenia: Deviations from Deleuze and Guattari (1992).[2] His 1995 essay "The Autonomy of Affect",[3] later integrated into his most well-known work, Parables for the Virtual: Movement, Affect, Sensation (2002), is credited with playing a central role in the development of the interdisciplinary field of affect studies.[4]

    Massumi received his B.A. in Comparative Literature at Brown University (1979) and his Ph.D in French Literature from Yale University (1987). After a Mellon postdoctoral fellowship in the Stanford University Department of French and Italian (1987-1988), he settled in Montréal, Canada, where he taught first at McGill University (Comparative Literature Program) and later at the Université de Montréal (Communication Department), retiring in 2018. Massumi has lectured widely around the world, and his writings have been translated into more than fifteen languages.

    Since 2004, he has collaborated with the SenseLab,[5] founded by Erin Manning[6] as an experimental "laboratory for thought in motion" operating at the intersection of philosophy, art, and activism.

    Links:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brian_Massumi

    https://recherche.umontreal.ca/english/our-researchers/professors-directory/researcher/is/in14429/



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    Twitter: @unconscioushh

    Instagram: @unconscioushh

    • 1 hr 53 min

Customer Reviews

4.8 out of 5
8 Ratings

8 Ratings

kinee78 ,

Excellent discussions of difficult subjects

There’s a lot of philosophy podcasts out there, but in my experience many either don’t get deep enough or don’t explain things clearly enough. This manages to do both, focusing on some texts that are notorious for their complexity. Part of this is definitely down to the guests, who provide great insight into the subjects, but it’s also down to Taylor and Cooper, who ask the right questions (things I would ask), and also try to contextualise things with reference to media that we can relate to (e.g the ongoing discussion of how philosophy relates to the Dune novels). If you have an interest in continental philosophy in general, and Deleuze in particular, and are struggling, I would really recommend giving some of these episodes a listen. They’ve really helped me to clarify certain things, to make sense of difficult texts, and also just confirm that some of the things I thought are actually right.

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