2019-03-16
22 分钟Hello!
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So all throughout this series,
we've talked about different ways to lose and guaderie want to get us out of thinking about things in the traditional rigid ways we've approached things in the past.
They've asked us to think about ontology differently, politics differently.
They've questioned the individual humanistic perspective we typically view everything through.
They've even asked us to question things like the nature of time and the linear way that we typically view history
as though it's been this straightforward crescendo of progress that's all been leading to this moment right now.
So it'll probably come as no surprise that in the second volume of capitalism in schizophrenia titled A Thousand Plateaus,
Duluths and Guaderie are going to want to do the same thing in other areas.
They want to offer a completely different way to think about the questions surrounding social theory.
Or if you want to get all webster's dictionary on people, social theory,
meaning the analytical frameworks or paradigms that are used to study and interpret social phenomena.
Duluths and Guaderie want to offer a different way of thinking about all this.
And by different,
what I mean is different from the four or five ways philosophers have always approached these questions in the past.
I mean, just on this show, we've already seen tons of examples of philosophers trying their hands at social theory,
and almost every time they seem to fail miserably.