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The mad animal: on Castoriadis’ radical imagination and the social imaginary

Version 2 2024-06-13, 11:56
Version 1 2018-07-03, 10:52
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 11:56 authored by L Ross
The following article defines Castoriadis’ concepts of the radical imagination and the social imaginary as a platform for a discussion of some motifs important to Castoriadis: the nature of human subjectivity, the nature of ‘reality’, the role and scope of the human imagination, the importance of freedom, the question of whether or not we are free (i.e. how sick/diminished/vulnerable is the second epoch of autonomy that broke open in/as modernity), and the roles of science, politics and philosophy in human social life. The central work on the radical imagination and the social imaginary is of course more than an arbitrary jumping-off point: this paper argues that understanding these concepts is vital if one is to understand the core elements of Castoriadis’ writings and his broader emancipatory project.

History

Journal

Thesis eleven

Volume

146

Pagination

71-86

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

0725-5136

eISSN

1461-7455

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, The Author

Issue

1

Publisher

SAGE Publications

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