fbpx
Wikipedia

Cornelius Castoriadis

Cornelius Castoriadis[a] (Greek: Κορνήλιος Καστοριάδης;[b] 11 March 1922 – 26 December 1997) was a Greek-French[77] philosopher, social critic, economist, psychoanalyst, author of The Imaginary Institution of Society, and co-founder of the Socialisme ou Barbarie group.[84]

Cornelius Castoriadis
Born(1922-03-11)11 March 1922
Constantinople, Ottoman Empire (present-day Istanbul, Turkey)
Died26 December 1997(1997-12-26) (aged 75)
NationalityGreek, French[77]
Other namesCorneille Castoriadis,[78] "Pierre Chaulieu," "Paul Cardan," "Jean-Marc Coudray"
Education8th Gymnasium of Athens[79]
University of Athens
(1937–1942: B.A., 1942)[80]
University of Paris
(Dr. cand., 1946–1948)[81]
University of Nanterre
(DrE, 1980)[82]
Notable work
List
    • The Imaginary Institution of Society (1975)
    • Crossroads in the Labyrinth (1978–1999, 6 vols.)
Spouse
List
    • Catherine May[83]
      (m. unkn.–unkn.; divorced)
    • Piera Aulagnier
      (m. 1968–1984; divorced)
    • Zoe Christofidi
      (m. unkn.–1997; his death)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
School
InstitutionsÉcole des hautes études en sciences sociales
Main interests
Notable ideas
List

His writings on autonomy and social institutions have been influential in both academic and activist circles.[85]

Biography edit

Early life in Athens edit

Cornelius Castoriadis (named after Saint Cornelius the Centurion)[86] was born on 11 March 1922 in Constantinople,[86] the son of Kaisar ("Caesar") and Sophia Kastoriadis.[87] His family had to move in July 1922[86] to Athens due to the Greek–Turkish population exchange. He developed an interest in politics after he came into contact with Marxist thought and philosophy at the age of 13.[88] At the same time he began studying traditional philosophy after purchasing a copy of the book History of Philosophy (Ιστορία της Φιλοσοφίας, 1933, 2 vols.) by the historian of ideas Nikolaos Louvaris [el].[88]

Sometime between 1932 and 1935, Maximiani Portas (later known as "Savitri Devi") was the French tutor of Castoriadis.[89] During the same period, he attended the 8th Gymnasium of Athens in Kato Patisia,[79] from which he graduated in 1937.

His first active involvement in politics occurred during the Metaxas Regime (1937), when he joined the Athenian Communist Youth (Κομμουνιστική Νεολαία Αθήνας, Kommounistiki Neolaia Athinas), a section of the Young Communist League of Greece. In 1941 he joined the Communist Party of Greece (KKE), only to leave one year later in order to become an active Trotskyist.[90] The latter action resulted in his persecution by both the Germans and the Communist Party.

In 1944 he wrote his first essays on social science and Max Weber,[91] which he published in a magazine named Archive of Sociology and Ethics (Αρχείον Κοινωνιολογίας και Ηθικής, Archeion Koinoniologias kai Ithikis). Castoriadis heavily criticized the actions of the KKE during the December 1944 clashes between the communist-led ELAS on one side, and the Papandreou government aided by British troops on the other.

In December 1945, three years[80] after earning a bachelor's degree in law, economics and political science from the School of Law, Economics and Political Sciences of the University of Athens (where he met and collaborated with the Neo-Kantian intellectuals Konstantinos Despotopoulos, Panagiotis Kanellopoulos, Konstantinos Tsatsos),[92][93] he got aboard the RMS Mataroa,[94] a New Zealand ocean liner, to go to Paris (where he remained permanently) to continue his studies under a scholarship offered by the French Institute of Athens. The same voyage—organized by Octave Merlier—also brought from Greece to France a number of other Greek writers, artists and intellectuals, including Constantine Andreou, Kostas Axelos, Georges Candilis, Costa Coulentianos, Emmanuel Kriaras, Adonis A. Kyrou, Kostas Papaïoannou, and Virgile Solomonidis.[95][96][97]

Paris and the Chaulieu–Montal Tendency edit

Once in Paris, Castoriadis joined the Trotskyist Parti Communiste Internationaliste (PCI). He and Claude Lefort constituted a Chaulieu–Montal Tendency in the French PCI in 1946. In 1948, they experienced their "final disenchantment with Trotskyism",[98] leading them to break away to found the libertarian socialist and councilist group and journal Socialisme ou Barbarie (S. ou B., 1949–1966), which included Jean-François Lyotard[99] and Guy Debord as members for a while, and profoundly influenced the French intellectual left. Castoriadis had links with the group known as the Johnson–Forest Tendency until 1958. Also strongly influenced by Castoriadis and Socialisme ou Barbarie were the British group and journal Solidarity and Maurice Brinton.

Early philosophical research edit

In the late 1940s, Castoriadis started attending philosophical and sociological courses at the Faculty of Letters at the University of Paris (faculté des lettres de Paris), where among his teachers were Gaston Bachelard,[93][100][101] the epistemologist René Poirier, the historian of philosophy Henri Bréhier (not to be confused with Émile Bréhier), Henri Gouhier, Jean Wahl, Gustave Guillaume, Albert Bayet, and Georges Davy.[100] He submitted a proposal for a doctoral dissertation on mathematical logic to Poirier, but he eventually abandoned the project.[102][93] The working title of his thesis was Introduction à la logique axiomatique (Introduction to Axiomatic logic).[81][102]

Career as economist and distancing from Marxism edit

At the same time (starting in November 1948), he worked as an economist at the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) until 1970, which was also the year when he obtained French citizenship. Consequently, his writings prior to that date were published pseudonymously, as "Pierre Chaulieu," "Paul Cardan," "Jean-Marc Coudray" etc.

In his 1949 essay "The Relations of Production in Russia",[103] Castoriadis developed a critique of the supposed socialist character of the government of the Soviet Union. According to Castoriadis, the central claim of the Stalinist regime at the time was that the mode of production in Russia was socialist, but the mode of distribution was not yet a socialist one since the socialist edification in the country had not yet been completed. However, according to Castoriadis' analysis, since the mode of distribution of the social product is inseparable from the mode of production,[104] the claim that one can have control over distribution while not having control over production is meaningless.[105]

Castoriadis was particularly influential in the turn of the intellectual left during the 1950s against the Soviet Union, because he argued that the Soviet Union was not a communist but rather a bureaucratic capitalist state, which contrasted with Western powers mostly by virtue of its centralized power apparatus.[106] His work in the OECD substantially helped his analyses.

In the latter years of Socialisme ou Barbarie, Castoriadis came to reject the Marxist theories of economics and of history, especially in an essay on "Modern Capitalism and Revolution", first published in Socialisme ou Barbarie in 1960–61 (first English translation in 1963 by Solidarity). Castoriadis' final Socialisme ou Barbarie essay was "Marxism and Revolutionary Theory", published in April 1964 – June 1965. There he concluded that a revolutionary Marxist must choose either to remain Marxist or to remain revolutionary.[107][6]

Psychoanalyst edit

When Jacques Lacan's disputes with the International Psychoanalytical Association led to a split and the formation of the École Freudienne de Paris (EFP) in 1964, Castoriadis became a member (as a non-practitioner).[108] In 1968 Castoriadis married Piera Aulagnier, a French psychoanalyst who had undergone psychoanalytic treatment under Jacques Lacan from 1955 until 1961.[109]

In 1969 Castoriadis and Aulagnier split from the EFP to join the Organisation psychanalytique de langue française (OPLF), the so-called "Quatrième Groupe",[110] a psychoanalytic group that claims to follow principles and methods that have opened up a third way between Lacanianism and the standards of the International Psychoanalytical Association.[111] Castoriadis began to practice analysis in 1973 after he had undergone analysis in the 1960s first with Irène Roubleff and then later with Michel Renard.[110][112]

Philosopher of history and ontologist edit

In 1967, Castoriadis submitted a proposal for a doctoral dissertation on the philosophy of history to Paul Ricœur (then at the University of Nanterre).[113] An epistolary dialogue began between them but Ricœur's obligations to the University of Chicago in the 1970s were such that their collaboration was not feasible at the time.[114] The subject of his thesis would be Le fondement imaginaire du social-historique (The Imaginary Foundations of the Social-Historical)[114] (see below).

In his 1975 work, L'Institution imaginaire de la société (Imaginary Institution of Society), and in Les carrefours du labyrinthe (Crossroads in the Labyrinth), published in 1978, Castoriadis began to develop his distinctive understanding of historical change as the emergence of irrecoverable otherness that must always be socially instituted and named in order to be recognized. Otherness emerges in part from the activity of the psyche itself. Creating external social institutions that give stable form to what Castoriadis terms the (ontological) "magma[115][31][116] of social significations"[15][117] allows the psyche to create stable figures for the self, and to ignore the constant emergence of mental indeterminacy and alterity.

For Castoriadis, self-examination, as in the ancient Greek tradition, could draw upon the resources of modern psychoanalysis. Autonomous individuals—the essence of an autonomous society—must continuously examine themselves and engage in critical reflection. He writes:

... psychoanalysis can and should make a basic contribution to a politics of autonomy. For, each person's self-understanding is a necessary condition for autonomy. One cannot have an autonomous society that would fail to turn back upon itself, that would not interrogate itself about its motives, its reasons for acting, its deep-seated [profondes] tendencies. Considered in concrete terms, however, society doesn't exist outside the individuals making it up. The self-reflective activity of an autonomous society depends essentially upon the self-reflective activity of the humans who form that society.[118]

Castoriadis was not calling for every individual to undergo psychoanalysis, per se. Rather, by reforming education and political systems, individuals would be increasingly capable of critical self- and social reflexion. He offers: "if psychoanalytic practice has a political meaning, it is solely to the extent that it tries, as far as it possibly can, to render the individual autonomous, that is to say, lucid concerning her desire and concerning reality, and responsible for her acts: holding herself accountable for what she does."[119]

Sovietologist edit

In his 1980 Facing the War text, he took the view that Russia had become the primary world military power. To sustain this, in the context of the visible economic inferiority of the Soviet Union in the civilian sector, he proposed that the society may no longer be dominated by the one-party state bureaucracy but by a "stratocracy"[120]—a separate and dominant military sector with expansionist designs on the world. He further argued that this meant there was no internal class dynamic which could lead to social revolution within Russian society and that change could only occur through foreign intervention.

Later life edit

In 1980, he joined the faculty of the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS) as Directeur d'études (Director of Studies).[121] He had been elected Directeur de recherche (Director of Research) in EHESS at the end of 1979[82] after submitting his previously published material in conjunction with a defense of his intellectual project of connecting the disciplines of history, sociology and economy through the concept of the social imaginary[122][123] (see below). His teaching career at the EHESS lasted sixteen years.[124]

In 1980, he was also awarded his State doctorate from the University of Nanterre; the final title of his thesis under Ricœur (see above) was L'Élément imaginaire de l'histoire[82] (The Imaginary Element in History).

In 1984, Castoriadis and Aulagnier divorced.[109]

In 1989, he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate in Social Sciences by Panteion University and in 1993 another one in Education Sciences by the Democritus University of Thrace.[125]

In 1992, he joined the libertarian socialist journal Society and Nature (established by Takis Fotopoulos) as a writer; the magazine also featured such writers as Murray Bookchin and Noam Chomsky.[126]

He died on 26 December 1997 from complications following heart surgery. He was survived by Zoe Christofidi (his wife at the time of his death), his daughter Sparta (by an earlier relationship with Jeanine "Rilka" Walter,[127] "Comrade Victorine" in the Fourth International),[128] and Kyveli, a younger daughter from his marriage with Zoe.[129][130]

Philosophy edit

Edgar Morin proposed that Castoriadis' work will be remembered for its remarkable continuity and coherence as well as for its extraordinary breadth which was "encyclopaedic" in the original Greek sense, for it offered a paideia, or education, that brought full circle the cycle of otherwise compartmentalized knowledge in the arts and sciences.[131] Castoriadis wrote essays on mathematics, physics, biology, anthropology, psychoanalysis, linguistics, society, economics, politics, philosophy, and art.

One of Castoriadis' many important contributions to social theory was the idea that social change involves radical discontinuities that cannot be understood in terms of any determinate causes or presented as a sequence of events. Change emerges through the social imaginary without strict determinations,[14] but in order to be socially recognized it must be instituted as revolution. Any knowledge of society and social change can exist only by referring to (or by positing) social imaginary significations.[15] Thus, Castoriadis developed a conceptual framework where the sociological and philosophical category of the social imaginary has a central place and he offered an interpretation of modernity centered on the principal categories of social institutions and social imaginary significations;[12] in his analysis, these categories are the product of the human faculties of the radical imagination and the social imaginary, the latter faculty being the collective dimension of the former.[132] (According to Castoriadis, the sociological and philosophical category of the radical imaginary[11] can be manifested only through the individual radical imagination and the social imaginary.)[13][133][134] However, the social imaginary cannot be reduced or attributed to subjective imagination, since the individual is informed through an internalisation of social significations.[135][136]

He used traditional terms as much as possible, though consistently redefining them. Further, some of his terminology changed throughout the later part of his career, with the terms gaining greater consistency but breaking from their traditional meaning (thus creating neologisms). When reading Castoriadis, it is helpful to understand what he means by the terms he uses, since he does not redefine the terms in every piece where he employs them.

Autonomy and heteronomy edit

The concept of autonomy was central to his early writings, and he continued to elaborate on its meaning, applications, and limits until his death, gaining him the title of "Philosopher of Autonomy." The word itself is Greek, where auto means "for/by itself" and nomos means "law." It refers to the condition of "self-institution" by which one creates their own laws, whether as an individual or as a whole society. And while every society creates their own institutions, only the members of autonomous societies are fully aware of the fact, and consider themselves to be the ultimate source of justice.[137] In contrast, members of heteronomous societies (hetero- 'other') delegate this process to an authority outside of society, often attributing the source of their traditions to divine origins or, in modern times, to "historical necessity."[138] Castoriadis then identified the need of societies not only to create but to legitimize their laws, to explain, in other words, why their laws are just. Most traditional societies did that through religion, claiming their laws were given by God or a mythical ancestor and therefore must be true.

An exception to this rule is to be found in Ancient Greece, where the constellation of cities (poleis) that spread throughout the eastern Mediterranean, although not all democratic, showed strong signs of autonomy, and during its peak, Athens became fully aware of the fact as seen in Pericles' Funeral Oration.[139] Castoriadis considered Greece, a topic that increasingly drew his attention, not as a blueprint to be copied but an experiment that could inspire a truly autonomous community, one that could legitimize its laws without assigning their source to a higher authority. The Greeks differed from other societies because they not only started as autonomous but maintained this ideal by challenging their laws on a constant basis while obeying them to the same degree (even to the extent of enforcing capital punishment), proving that autonomous societies can indeed exist.

Regarding modern societies, Castoriadis notes that while religions have lost part of their normative function, their nature is still heteronomous, only that this time it has rational pretenses. Capitalism legitimizes itself through "reason," claiming that it makes "rational sense",[140] but Castoriadis observed that all such efforts are ultimately tautological, in that they can only legitimize a system through the rules defined by the system itself. So just like the Old Testament claimed that "There is only one God, God," capitalism defines logic as the maximization of utility and minimization of costs, and then legitimizes itself based on its effectiveness to meet these criteria. Surprisingly, this definition of logic is also shared by Communism, which despite the fact it stands in seeming opposition, it is the product of the same imaginary, and uses the same concepts and categories to describe the world, principally in material terms and through the process of human labor.

The imaginary edit

In the context of being a specific term in psychoanalysis, "imaginary" originates in the writings of the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan (see the Imaginary) and is strongly associated with Castoriadis' work. Castoriadis believed that for a given society, as people penetrate the layers of its culture deeper and deeper, they arrive at meanings that do not mean something other than themselves. They are, so to speak, "final meanings" that the society in question has imposed on the world, on itself.[141] Because these meanings (manifestations of the "radical imaginary" in Castoriadian terminology) do not point to anything concrete, and because the logical categories needed to analyze them are derived from them, these meanings cannot be analysed rationally. They are arational (rather than irrational), and must therefore be acknowledged rather than comprehended in the common use of the term. Castoriadis' views on concept formation is in sharp contrast to that of postmodernists like Jacques Derrida, who explicitly denies the existence of concepts "in and of themselves".[142]

Radical imaginary is at the basis of cultures and accounts for their differences. In his seminal work The Imaginary Institution of Society, Castoriadis argues that societies are founded not as products of historical necessity, but as the result of a new and radical idea of the world, an idea that appears to spring fully formed and is practically irreducible. All cultural forms (laws and institutions, aesthetics and ritual) follow from this radical imaginary, and are not to be explained merely as products of material conditions. Castoriadis then is offering an "ontogenetic",[143] or "emergentist" model of history, one that is apparently unpopular amongst modern historians,[144] but can serve as a valuable critique of historical materialism. For example, Castoriadis believed that Ancient Greeks had an imaginary by which the world stems from Chaos, while in contrast, the Hebrews had an imaginary by which the world stems from the will of a rational entity, God or Yahweh in the Hebrew Bible. The former developed therefore a system of direct democracy where the laws were ever changing according to the people's will while the second a theocratic system according to which man is in an eternal quest to understand and enforce the will of God.

Traditional societies had elaborate imaginaries, expressed through various creation myths, by which they explained how the world came to be and how it is sustained. Capitalism did away with this mythic imaginary by replacing it with what it claims to be pure reason (as examined above). That same imaginary is the foundation of its opposing ideology, Communism. By that measure he observes (first in his main criticism of Marxism, titled the Imaginary Institution of Society,[145] and subsequently in a speech he gave at the Université catholique de Louvain on February 27, 1980)[146] that these two systems are more closely related than was previously thought, since they share the same industrial revolution type imaginary: that of a rational society where man's welfare is materially measurable and infinitely improvable through the expansion of industries and advancements in science. In this respect Marx failed to understand that technology is not, as he claimed, the main drive of social change, since there are historical examples where societies possessing near identical technologies formed very different relations to them. An example given in the book is France and England during the industrial revolution with the second being much more liberal than the first.[145] Similarly, in the issue of ecology he observes that the problems facing the environment are only present within the capitalist imaginary that values the continuous expansion of industries. Trying to solve it by changing or managing these industries better might fail, since it essentially acknowledges this imaginary as real, thus perpetuating the problem.

Castoriadis also believed that the complex historical processes through which new imaginaries are born are not directly quantifiable by science. This is because it is through the imaginaries themselves that the categories upon which science is applied are created. In the second part of his Imaginary Institution of Society (titled "The Social Imaginary and the Institution"), he gives the example of set theory, which is at the basis of formal logic, which cannot function without having first defined the "elements" which are to be assigned to sets.[147] This initial schema of separation[33] (schéma de séparation, σχήμα του χωρισμού) of the world into distinct elements and categories therefore, precedes the application of (formal) logic and, consequently, science.

Social constructionism edit

Castoriadis was a social constructionist and a moral relativist insofar as he held that the radical imaginary of each society was opaque to rational analysis. Since he believed that social norms and morals ultimately derive from a society's unique idea of the world, which emerges fully formed at a given moment in history and cannot be reduced further. From this he concluded that any criteria by which one could evaluate these morals objectively are also derived from the said imaginary, rendering this evaluation subjective. This does not mean that Castoriadis stopped believing in the value of social struggles for a better world, he simply thought that rationally proving their value is impossible.

This however does not mean that Castoriadis believed there is no truth, but that truth is linked to the imaginary which is ultimately arational. In his book World in Fragments, which includes essays on science, he explicitly writes that "We have to understand that there is truth - and that it is to be made/to be done, that to attain [atteindre] it people have to create it, which means, first and foremost, to imagine it".[148] He then quotes Blake who said "What is now proved was once only imagin'd".

Chaos edit

The concept of Chaos, as found in Ancient Greek cosmogony, plays a significant role in Castoriadis' work, and is connected to the idea of the "imaginary".[30][149] Castoriadis translates the Greek word "chaos" as nothingness.[150] According to him, the core of the Greek imaginary was a world that came from Chaos rather than the will of God as described in Genesis. Castoriadis concludes that the Greeks' imaginary of a "world out of chaos" was what allowed them to create institutions such as democracy, because— if the world is created out of nothing— man can model it as he sees fit,[151] without trying to conform to some divine law. He contrasted the Greek imaginary to the Biblical imaginary in which God is a "willing" (i.e. intentional) agent and man's position is to understand God's will and act according to it.

The Ancient Greeks and the modern West edit

Castoriadis views the political organization of the ancient Greek cities (poleis) not as a model to imitate, rather as a source of inspiration towards an autonomous society. He rejects also the term city state used to describe Ancient Greek cities; for him the administration of Greek poleis was not that of a State in the modern sense of the term, since Greek poleis were self–administrated. The same goes for colonisation since the neighbouring Phoenicians, who had a similar expansion in the Mediterranean, were monarchical till their end. During this time of colonization, however, around the time of Homer's epic poems, the Greeks, instead of transferring their mother city's social system to the newly established colony, for the first time in known history, legislate anew from the ground up. What also made the Greeks special was the fact that, following the above, they kept this system as a perpetual autonomy which led to direct democracy.

This phenomenon of autonomy is again present in the emergence of the states of northern Italy during the Renaissance,[152] again as a product of small independent merchants.

He sees a tension in the modern West between, on the one hand, the potentials for autonomy and creativity and the proliferation of "open societies" and, on the other hand, the spirit-crushing force of capitalism. These are respectively characterized as the creative imaginary and the capitalist imaginary:

I think that we are at a crossing in the roads of history, history in the grand sense. One road already appears clearly laid out, at least in its general orientation. That's the road of the loss of meaning, of the repetition of empty forms, of conformism, apathy, irresponsibility, and cynicism at the same time as it is that of the tightening grip of the capitalist imaginary of unlimited expansion of "rational mastery," pseudorational pseudomastery, of an unlimited expansion of consumption for the sake of consumption, that is to say, for nothing, and of a technoscience that has become autonomized along its path and that is evidently involved in the domination of this capitalist imaginary.
The other road should be opened: it is not at all laid out. It can be opened only through a social and political awakening, a resurgence of the project of individual and collective autonomy, that is to say, of the will to freedom. This would require an awakening of the imagination and of the creative imaginary.[153]

He argues that, in the last two centuries, ideas about autonomy again come to the fore: "This extraordinary profusion reaches a sort of pinnacle during the two centuries stretching between 1750 and 1950. This is a very specific period because of the very great density of cultural creation but also because of its very strong subversiveness."[154]

Lasting influence edit

Castoriadis has influenced European (especially continental) thought in important ways. His interventions in sociological and political theory have resulted in some of the most well-known writing to emerge from the continent (especially in the figure of Jürgen Habermas, who often can be seen to be writing against Castoriadis).[155] Hans Joas published a number of articles in American journals in order to highlight the importance of Castoriadis' work to a North American sociological audience,[156] and Johann Pál Arnason has been of enduring importance both for his critical engagement with Castoriadis' thought and for his sustained efforts to introduce it to the English speaking public (especially during his editorship of the journal Thesis Eleven).[157] In the last few years, there has been growing interest in Castoriadis's thought, including the publication of two monographs authored by Arnason's former students: Jeff Klooger's Castoriadis: Psyche, Society, Autonomy (Brill), and Suzi Adams's Castoriadis's Ontology: Being and Creation (Fordham University Press).

Major publications edit

Original French

  • Mai 68 : la brèche [The Breach], Fayard, 1968 (under the pseudonym Jean-Marc Coudray; co-authored with Edgar Morin and Claude Lefort)
  • La Société bureaucratique [Bureaucratic Society] in two volumes: Les Rapports de production en Russie and La Révolution contre la bureaucratie, 1973
  • L'Expérience du mouvement ouvrier [The Experience of the Labor Movement] in two volumes: Comment lutter and Prolétariat et organisation, 1974
  • L'Institution imaginaire de la société [The Imaginary Institution of Society], Seuil, 1975
  • Les Carrefours du labyrinthe [Crossroads in the Labyrinth], Volume I, 1978
  • Le Contenu du socialisme [On the Content of Socialism], 1979—originally published in three parts in S. ou B. (July 1955; translated in PSW 1, pp. 290–307), S. ou B. (July 1957; translated in PSW 2, pp. 90–154), and S. ou B. (January 1958; translated in PSW 2, pp. 155–192)
  • Capitalisme moderne et révolution [Modern Capitalism and Revolution] in two volumes, 1979
  • De l'écologie à l'autonomie [EA] [From Ecology to Autonomy] (avec Daniel Cohn-Bendit et le Public de Louvain-la-Neuve), 1981
  • Devant la guerre [Facing the War], Volume I, 1981 (a second volume was never published)
  • Domaines de l'homme [Domains of Man] (Les carrefours du labyrinthe II), 1986
  • La Brèche: vingt ans après (réédition du livre de 1968 complété par de nouveaux textes) [The Breach: Twenty Years After], 1988
  • Le Monde morcelé [World in Fragments] (Les carrefours du labyrinthe III), 1990
  • La Montée de l'insignifiance [The Rising Tide of Insignificancy] (Les carrefours du labyrinthe IV), 1996
  • Fait et à faire [Done and To Be Done] (Les carrefours du labyrinthe V), 1997

Posthumous publications

  • Η Αρχαία Ελληνική Δημοκρατία και η Σημασία της για μας Σήμερα [Ancient Greek Democracy and Its Importance for Us Today], Athens: Ypsilon, 1999 (based on a lecture delivered in Leonidio on 17 August 1984)
  • Figures du pensable [Figures of the Thinkable] (Les carrefours du labyrinthe VI), 1999
  • Sur Le Politique de Platon [Commentary on The Statesman of Plato], 1999
  • Sujet et vérité dans le monde social-historique. La création humaine 1 [Subject and Truth in the Social-Historical World. Human Creation 1], 2002
  • Ce qui fait la Grèce, 1. D'Homère à Héraclite. La création humaine 2 [What Makes Greece, 1. From Homer to Heraclitus. Human Creation 2], 2004
  • Φιλοσοφία και επιστήμη. Ένας διάλογος με τον Γεώργιο Λ. Ευαγγελόπουλο [Philosophy and Science. A Discussion with Yorgos L. Evangelopoulos], Athens: Eurasia books, 2004, ISBN 960-8187-09-5
  • Une Société à la dérive, entretiens et débats 1974–1997 [A Society Adrift], 2005
  • Post-scriptum sur l'insignifiance : entretiens avec Daniel Mermet; suivi de dialogue [Postscript on Insignificance], 2007
  • Fenêtre sur le chaos [Window on the Chaos] (compiled by Enrique Escobar, Myrto Gondicas, and Pascal Vernay), Seuil, 2007, ISBN 978-2-02-090826-9 (Castoriadis' writings on modern art and aesthetics)
  • Ce qui fait la Grèce, 2. La cité et les lois. La création humaine 3 [What Makes Greece, 2. The City and Laws. Human Creation 3], 2008
  • L'Imaginaire comme tel [The Imaginary As Such], 2008
  • Histoire et création : Textes philosophiques inédits, 1945–1967 [History and Creation: Unedited Philosophical Texts 1945–1967], 2009
  • Ce qui fait la Grèce, 3. Thucydide, la force et le droit. La création humaine 4 [What Makes Greece, 3. Thucydides, Force and Right. Human Creation 4], 2011
  • La Culture de l'égoïsme [The Culture of Egoism] (transcription of an interview that Castoriadis and Christopher Lasch gave to Michael Ignatieff in 1986; translated into French by Myrto Gondicas), Climats, 2012, ISBN 978-2-08-128463-0 (interview about the topic of the retreat of individuals from public space into private matters)
  • Écrits politiques 1945–1997 [Political Writings 1945–1997] (compiled by Myrto Gondicas, Enrique Escobar and Pascal Vernay), Éditions du Sandre:
    • La Question du mouvement ouvrier [The Question of Workers' Movement] (vols. 1 and 2), 2012
    • Quelle démocratie ? [What Democracy?] (vols. 3 and 4), 2013
    • La Société bureaucratique [The Bureaucratic Society] (vol. 5), 2015
    • Devant la guerre et autres écrits [Facing the War and Other Writings] (vol. 6), TBA[158]
    • Sur la dynamique du capitalisme et autres textes, suivi de l'impérialisme et la guerre [On the Dynamics of Capitalism and Other Texts Followed by Imperialism and War] (vol. 7), TBA[158]
  • Dialogue sur l'histoire et l'imaginaire social [Dialogue on History and the Social Imaginary], 2016 (transcription of an interview that Castoriadis gave to Paul Ricœur)
  • Short Introduction to the Political Legacy of Castoriadis, Tarinski Yavor, Athens: Aftoleksi, 2020.

Selected translations of works by Castoriadis

  • The Imaginary Institution of Society [IIS] (trans. Kathleen Blamey). MIT Press, Cambridge 1997 [1987]. 432 pp. ISBN 0-262-53155-0. (pb.)
  • Crossroads in the Labyrinth, Six-Volume Series. Translated from the French and edited anonymously as a public service. Electronic publication date: March 2022
    • Vol. 1. Crossroads in the Labyrinth
    • Vol. 2: Human Domains
    • Vol. 3: World in Fragments
    • Vol. 4: The Rising Tide of Insignificancy
    • Vol. 5: Done and To Be Done
    • Vol. 6: Figures of the Thinkable
  • The Castoriadis Reader [CR] (ed./trans. David Ames Curtis). Blackwell Publisher, Oxford 1997. 470 pp. ISBN 1-55786-704-6. (pb.)
  • World in Fragments: Writings on Politics, Society, Psychoanalysis, and the Imagination [WIF] (ed./trans. David Ames Curtis). Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA 1997. 507 pp. ISBN 0-8047-2763-5.
  • Political and Social Writings [PSW 1]. Volume 1: 1946–1955. From the Critique of Bureaucracy to the Positive Content of Socialism (ed./trans. David Ames Curtis). University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis 1988. 348 pp. ISBN 0-8166-1617-5.
  • Political and Social Writings [PSW 2]. Volume 2: 1955–1960. From the Workers' Struggle Against Bureaucracy to Revolution in the Age of Modern Capitalism (ed./trans. David Ames Curtis). University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis 1988. 363 pp. ISBN 0-8166-1619-1.
  • Political and Social Writings [PSW 3]. Volume 3: 1961–1979. Recommencing the Revolution: From Socialism to the Autonomous Society (ed./trans. David Ames Curtis). University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis 1992. 405 pp. ISBN 0-8166-2168-3.
  • Modern Capitalism and Revolution [MCR] (trans. Maurice Brinton), London: Solidarity, 1965 (including an introduction and additional English material by Brinton; the second English edition was published by Solidarity in 1974, with a new introduction by Castoriadis)
  • Philosophy, Politics, Autonomy. Essays in Political Philosophy [PPA] (ed. David Ames Curtis). Oxford University Press, New York/Oxford 1991. 306 pp. ISBN 0-19-506963-3.
  • Crossroads in the Labyrinth [CL] (trans. M. H. Ryle/K. Soper). MIT Press, Cambridge, MA 1984. 345 pp.
  • On Plato's Statesman [OPS] (trans. David Ames Curtis). Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA 2002. 227 pp.
  • "The Crisis of Western Societies." Telos 53 (Fall 1982). New York: Telos Press.
  • Figures of the Thinkable [FT B] (trans. Helen Arnold). Stanford University Press, Stanford, CA 2007. 304 pp. (Also trans. anon. February 2005 [FT A].)
  • A Society Adrift. Interviews and Debates, 1974–1997 [SA] (trans. Helen Arnold). Fordham University Press, New York 2010. 259 pp. (Also trans. anon. October 2010: A Society Adrift: More Interviews and Discussions on The Rising Tide of Insignificancy, Including Revolutionary Perspectives Today. Translated from the French and edited anonymously as a public service.)
  • "The Dilapidation of the West: An Interview with Cornelius Castoriadis" (trans. David Ames Curtis), Thesis Eleven, May 1995, 41(1): 94–114.
  • "Psychoanalysis and Politics", in: Sonu Shamdasani and Michael Münchow (eds.), Speculations After Freud: Psychoanalysis, Philosophy, and Culture, Routledge, 1994, pp. 1–12 (also in: World in Fragments, 1997, pp. 125–136)
  • Postscript on Insignificance: Dialogues with Cornelius Castoriadis [PI B] (ed./trans. Gabriel Rockhill and John V. Garner). Continuum, London 2011. 160 pp. ISBN 978-1-4411-3960-3. (hb.) (Also trans. anon. March 2011: Postscript on Insignificancy, including More Interviews and Discussions on the Rising Tide of Insignificancy, followed by Six Dialogues, Four Portraits and Two Book Reviews [PI A]. Translated from the French and edited anonymously as a public service.)
  • The Rising Tide of Insignificancy (The Big Sleep) [RTI]. Translated from the French and edited anonymously as a public service. Electronic publication date: December 2003.
  • Democracy and Relativism: A Debate [DR]. Translated from the French by John V. Garner. Rowman & Littlefield, 2019. ISBN 978-1786610959. (Also, trans. anon. January 2013.)
  • Window on the Chaos, Including "How I Didn't Become a Musician" – Beta Version [WC]. Translated from the French and edited anonymously as a public service. Electronic publication date: July 2015.

See also edit

 
The journal Socialisme ou Barbarie.

Notes edit

  1. ^ /ˌkæstəriˈædɪs/; French: [kastɔʁjadis]
  2. ^ Greek: [kastoriˈaðis]

References edit

  1. ^ Suzi Adams, "Towards a Post-Phenomenology of Life: Castoriadis' Naturphilosophie", Cosmos and History: The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy, Vol. 4, Nos. 1–2 (2008).
  2. ^ Andrew Arato. From Neo-Marxism to Democratic Theory. Essays on the Critical Theory of Soviet-Type Societies. M.E. Sharpe, 1993, pp. 122–45. ISBN 978-0-7656-1853-5.
  3. ^ Simon Tormey and Jules Townshend. Key Thinkers from Critical Theory to Post-Marxism. London: Sage Publications. 2006, pp. 13–37. ISBN 978-1-84787-716-1.
  4. ^ a b c Benoît Challand, "Socialisme ou Barbarie or the Partial Encounters Between Anarchism and Critical Marxism", in: Alex Prichard, Ruth Kinna, Dave Berry, Saku Pinta (eds.), Libertarian Socialism: Politics in Black and Red, Palgrave Macmillan, 2012, pp. 210–231, esp. 210, "... Castoriadis's evident legacy to Left-libertarian thinking and his radical break with orthodox Marxist-Leninism ..."
  5. ^ a b Claude Lefort, Writing: The Political Test, Duke University Press, 2000, Translator's Foreword by David Ames Curtis, p. xxiv, "Catoriadis, the historian Pierre Vidal-Naquet, now Lefort ... are themselves quite articulate in their own right and historically associated with a libertarian socialist outlook..."
  6. ^ a b Arthur Hirsh, The French Left, Black Rose Books, 1982, p. 126.
  7. ^ Suzi Adams (ed.). Cornelius Castoriadis: Key Concepts. London and New York: Bloomsbury Academic, 2014, "Democracy" entry by Ingerid S. Straume: "[Castoriadis'] thought certainly reflects ideas of radical, participatory and direct democracy, communitarianism and republicanism ...". ISBN 978-1-4411-7290-7.
  8. ^ Tassis 2007, pp. 1 and 26.
  9. ^ Fernando Urribarri, "Castoriadis: the Radical Imagination and the Post-Lacanian Unconscious", Thesis Eleven, November 2002, 71(1): 40–51.
  10. ^ FT B, p. 78.
  11. ^ a b IIS, p. 146.
  12. ^ a b IIS, p. 160: "We do not need, therefore, to 'explain' how and why the imaginary, the imaginary social significations and the institutions that incarnate them, become autonomous."
  13. ^ a b IIS, p. 373.
  14. ^ a b IIS, p. 3.
  15. ^ a b c IIS, p. 359.
  16. ^ IIS, p. 287.
  17. ^ IIS, p. 298.
  18. ^ IIS, p. 274.
  19. ^ IIS, p. 336.
  20. ^ IIS, p. 282; confer Freud's term (Vorstellungs-) Repräsentanz des Triebes "ideational representative of the drive" (Sigmund Freud, "Die Verdrängung" contained in the volume Internationale Zeitschrift für ärztliche Psychoanalyse, Vol. III, Cahier 3, 1915, p. 130).
  21. ^ IIS, p. 177.
  22. ^ IIS, p. 312.
  23. ^ WIF, pp. 131 and 263; Elliott 2003, p. 91.
  24. ^ PPA, p. 151.
  25. ^ Yannis Stavrakakis. "Creativity and its Limits: Encounters with Social Constructionism and the Political in Castoriadis and Lacan." Constellations, 9(4):522–539 (2002).
  26. ^ Les carrefours du labyrinthe: Le monde morcelé (1990), p. 218.
  27. ^ WIF, p. 268. (Confer Fichte's original insight.)
  28. ^ An Eigenwelt that is organized through its own time (Eigenzeit); WIF, p. 385.
  29. ^ a b IIS, p. 281.
  30. ^ a b IIS, p. 46.
  31. ^ a b "A magma is that from which one can extract (or in which one can construct) an indefinite number of ensemblist organizations but which can never be reconstituted (ideally) by a (finite or infinite) ensemblist composition of these organizations." (IIS, p. 343.)
  32. ^ a b IIS, p. 175.
  33. ^ a b IIS, pp. 224–5.
  34. ^ From the Ancient Greek λέγειν "to say, speak" and τεύχειν "to make."
  35. ^ This is Castoriadis' version (IIS, p. 104) of Freud's motto Wo Es war, soll Ich werden ("Where Id was, Ego shall come to be"; see Sigmund Freud, Neue Folge der Vorlesungen zur Einführung in die Psychoanalyse: 31. Vorlesung).
  36. ^ IIS, p. 2.
  37. ^ Elucidation is a methodology pertaining to historical research (research on the social-historical conditions of possibility) which is "inseparable from a political aim and a political project" (IIS, pp. 2–3).
  38. ^ "The institution presupposes the institution: it can exist only if individuals fabricated by the institution make the institution exist" (WIF, p. 315). Klooger has compared Castoriadis' idea of the 'circle of creation' with Heidegger's idea of the 'hermeneutic circle' (Klooger 2009, p. 254). S. Gourgouris (2003) pointed out that the circle of creation is "a circle whose Being is nowhere, since in itself it accounts for the meaning of Being, a meaning that is always inevitably a human ... affair," and that, contrary to what Heidegger advocates, the circle of creation "is never broken by revelation (by 'unconcealment'—aletheia)" (Stathis Gourgouris, Does Literature Think?, Stanford University Press, 2003, p. 153).
  39. ^ The paradox arising from the assertion that historical consciousness universalizes historical knowledge; see IIS, pp. 34–5; Klooger 2009, p. 242; Konstantinos Kavoulakos, "Cornelius Castoriadis on Social Imaginary and Truth", Ariadne 12 (2006), pp. 201–213.
  40. ^ IIS, p. 208.
  41. ^ Castoriadis posits that new forms are radically novel; this, however, does not imply neither that ontological creation has no prior foundation—it is not in nihilo—nor that it has no constraints—it is not cum nihilo. Confer: FT B, pp. 241, 258.
  42. ^ "Being is creation, vis formandi: not the creation of 'matter-energy,' but the creation of forms" (Fait et à faire, p. 212).
  43. ^ "For what is given in and through history is not the determined sequence of the determined but the emergence of radical otherness, immanent creation, non-trivial novelty." (IIS, p. 184.)
  44. ^ "[T]ime is essentially linked to the emergence of alterity. Time is this emergence as such—whereas space is "only" its necessary concomitant. Time is creation and destruction—that means, time is being in its substantive determinations." (WIF, p. 399.)
  45. ^ WIF, p. 13.
  46. ^ PSW 2, p. 126: "Absolute Wage Equality".
  47. ^ a b Cornelius Castoriadis, "From Marx to Aristotle, from Aristotle to Us" (trans. Andrew Arato), Social Research 45(4):667–738, 1978, esp. p. 738: "It is a question of the destruction of economic motivations, by destroying the "socially objective" conditions of its [sic] possibility: the differentiation of revenues."
  48. ^ PSW 2, p. 152: "As for the administration of justice [in a socialist economy], it will be in the hands of rank-and-file bodies."
  49. ^ PSW 2, p. 121.
  50. ^ PSW 2, p. 147.
  51. ^ PSW 3, p. 252.
  52. ^ "Capitalism can function only by continually drawing upon the genuinely human activity of those subject to it, while at the same time trying to level and dehumanize them as much as possible." (IIS, p. 16.)
  53. ^ MCR, p. 46.
  54. ^ PI A, p. 66.
  55. ^ PPA, ch. 9.
  56. ^ CL, p. 325.
  57. ^ FT B, p. 124.
  58. ^ CR, p. xi.
  59. ^ EA, p. 19.
  60. ^ Suzi Adams, Jeremy Smith (eds.), Social Imaginaries, 1(1), Spring 2015, p. 38: "Ecological autonomy in [Castoriadis'] assessment is 'the question of the self-limitation of society'..."
  61. ^ CL, pp. 153–4.
  62. ^ Jeff Klooger, Castoriadis: Psyche, Society, Autonomy, BRILL, 2009, pp. 226–229.
  63. ^ PPA, ch. 5.
  64. ^ Jens Hoyrup, Ιn Measure, Number, and Weight: Studies in Mathematics and Culture, SUNY Press, 1994, p. 121.
  65. ^ Cornelius Castoriadis, "Democracy as Procedure and Democracy as Regime", Constellations 4(1):1–18 (1997).
  66. ^ IIS, pp. 141, 170, 181.
  67. ^ IIS, pp. 54–6.
  68. ^ MCR, p. 29.
  69. ^ CL, p. 269.
  70. ^ FT A: "What Democracy? (including Passion and Knowledge)", p. 227.
  71. ^ Jonathan Nitzan and Shimshon Bichler, Capital as Power: A Study of Order and Creorder, Routledge, 2009, pp. 148–9: "According to Cornelius Castoriadis ..., [e]quivalence in exchange ... came not from anything intrinsic to commodities, but from what the Greek called the nomos. It was rooted not in the material sphere of consumption and production, but in the broader social–legal–historical institutions of society. It was not an objective substance, but a human creation. ... In all pre-capitalist societies, prices – and distribution more generally – were determined through some mixture of social struggles and cooperation. Authoritarian regimes emphasized power and decree, while more egalitarian societies used negotiation, volition and even gifts..." and p. 306: "The power role of the market cannot be overemphasized... Cornelius Castoriadis ... proclaims that 'where there is capitalism, there is no market; and where there is a market, there cannot be capitalism'".
  72. ^ IIS, p. 66.
  73. ^ CL, pp. 46–115: "Psychoanalysis: Project and Elucidation"; Elliott 2003, p. 92.
  74. ^ Cornelius Castoriadis, "The State of the Subject Today", American Imago, Winter 1989, 46(4), pp. 371–412 (also in: WIF, pp. 137–171). Cf. V. Karalis (2005). "Castoriadis, Cornelius (1922–97)," in: John Protevi (ed.), The Edinburgh Dictionary of Continental Philosophy, Edinburgh University Press, 2005, pp. 86–7.
  75. ^ PSW 3, pp. 272–80.
  76. ^ Christos Memos. "Castoriadis and Social Theory: From Marginalization to Canonization to Re-radicalization". In: Alex Law and Eric Royal Lybeck (eds.). Sociological Amnesia: Cross-currents in Disciplinary History. Palgrave Macmillan, 2015. p. 190.
  77. ^ a b Memos 2014, p. 18: "he was ... granted full French citizenship in 1970."
  78. ^ He was known to intimates as "Corneille" (Dosse 2014, pp. 514–5).
  79. ^ a b Marianthi Bella, "In my Neighborhood, Patisia ...", Glinos Foundation, 2013, p. 5.
  80. ^ a b "Castoriadis, Cornelius, 1922–1997" at E.KE.BI / Biblionet
  81. ^ a b Cornelius Castoriadis, Histoire et création : Textes philosophiques inédits, 1945–1967, Seuil, 2009, Section I, Chapter 4.
  82. ^ a b c Schrift 2006, p. 112.
  83. ^ Dosse 2014, p. 94.
  84. ^ "Cornelius Castoriadis Dies at 75" 2004-06-14 at the Wayback Machine
  85. ^ Tassis 2007, p. 4; Tasis 2007, pp. 27–8.
  86. ^ a b c Dosse 2014, p. 13.
  87. ^ Tasis 2007, p. 37.
  88. ^ a b Cornelius Castoriadis/Agora International Interview Cerisy Colloquium (1990), p. 2 (French original: Entretien d'Agora International avec Cornelius Castoriadis au Colloque de Cerisy (1990)).
  89. ^ Dosse 2014, p. 17.
  90. ^ At the time, Castoriadis was under the influence of the Trotskyist militant Agis Stinas (Tasis 2007, pp. 40–1).
  91. ^ Suzi Adams. Castoriadis's Ontology: Being and Creation. New York: Fordham University Press, 2011, p. 218. ISBN 978-0-8232-3459-2.
  92. ^ Dosse 2014, p. 22.
  93. ^ a b c Cornelius Castoriadis/Agora International Interview Cerisy Colloquium (1990), p. 4.
  94. ^ Tasis 2007, p. 42.
  95. ^ Tasis 2007, p. 43.
  96. ^ Dosse 2014, p. 37.
  97. ^ François Bordes, "Exil et création : des penseurs grecs dans la vie intellectuelle française", in Servanne Jollivet, Christophe Premat, Mats Rosengren, Destins d'exilés, Le Manuscrit, 2011, p. 66.
  98. ^ Castoriadis, Cornelius; L'Anti-Mythes (January 1974). "An Interview with C. Castoriadis". Telos (23): 133.
  99. ^ Howard, Dick (1974). "Introduction to Castoriadis". Telos (23): 117.
  100. ^ a b Dosse 2014, pp. 43–4.
  101. ^ Tasis 2007, pp. 67–8.
  102. ^ a b Dosse 2014, p. 44.
  103. ^ PSW 1, pp. 135–158.
  104. ^ "[L]e mode de répartition du produit social est inséparable du mode de production." (P. Chaulieu, "Les rapports de production en Russie", Socialisme ou Barbarie n° 2 (May 1949) reproduced in La Société bureaucratique - Volumes 1–2, Christian Bourgois Éditeur, 1990, p. 164.)
  105. ^ "L'Idée que l'on puisse dominer la répartition sans dominer la production est de l'enfantillage." (La Société bureaucratique - Volumes 1–2, p. 166.)
  106. ^ Peter Osborne (ed.), A Critical Sense: Interviews with Intellectuals, Routledge, 2013, p. 17.
  107. ^ "Marxism and Revolutionary Theory" later became the first of the two parts of IIS (the second being "The Social Imaginary and the Institution", a previously unpublished follow-up to "Marxism and Revolutionary Theory"). The relevant quote from IIS, p. 14 is: "Starting from revolutionary Marxism, we have arrived at the point where we have to choose between remaining Marxist and remaining revolutionaries".
  108. ^ Roudinesco, Élisabeth. Jacques Lacan & Co. University of Chicago Press. p. 433.
  109. ^ a b "Piera Aulagnier née Spairani" entry at Psychoanalytikerinnen.de
  110. ^ a b Tasis 2007, p. 216.
  111. ^ Sophie de Mijolla-Mellor (2005). "Quatrième Groupe (O.P.L.F.), Fourth Group." In: A. de Mijolla (Ed.), International dictionary of psychoanalysis, vol. 3 (p. 1429). Farmington Hills, MI: Thomson Gale.
  112. ^ Dosse 2014, p. 175.
  113. ^ Dosse 2014, p. 264.
  114. ^ a b Dosse 2014, pp. 264–5.
  115. ^ From the contemporary geological term magma, "blend of molten or semi-molten rock", from the Ancient Greek μάγμα, "thick unguent" (Suzi Adams, ed., 2014, ch. 6).
  116. ^ Klooger, Jeff. "The Guise of Nothing: Castoriadis on Indeterminacy, and its Misrecognition in Heidegger and Sartre," Critical Horizons 14(1), 2013, p. 7: "'Magma' is the name Castoriadis gives to the mode of being which he sees as underlying all others, and which is characterized by an indeterminacy in which particular determinations come to be, but without congealing into inalterable forms, and without diminishing the potential for the emergence of new and different determinations."
  117. ^ Subsequent attempts by Castoriadis at formalizing the notion of magma were not successful. According to logician Athanassios Tzouvaras, the properties of a magma that Castoriadis proposed were either unformalizable or inconsistent (see Athanassios Tzouvaras, "Sets with dependent elements: Elaborating on Castoriadis' notion of 'magma'" [n.d.]).
  118. ^ FT A: "Imaginary and Imagination at the Crossroads" (essay based on a speech given in Abrantes in November 1996), p. 151. The quote appears in a slightly different translation in FT B (Figures of the Thinkable, trans. by Helen Arnold, Stanford University Press, 2007), pp. 89–90.
  119. ^ FT A: "First Institution of Society and Second-Order Institutions" (essay based on a lecture presented on December 15, 1985 in Paris), p. 163.
  120. ^ Castoriadis, Cornelius (February 1980). "Facing the War". Telos (46): 48.
  121. ^ Sophie Klimis and Laurent Van Eynde (eds.), L'imaginaire selon Castoriadis: thèmes et enjeux, Facultés Universitaires Saint Louis à Bruxelles, 2006, p. 47 n. 8.
  122. ^ Dosse 2014, pp. 305–11.
  123. ^ He had proposed in his application form the creation of a Chair in Recherches sur les régimes sociaux contemporains, "Research on contemporary social systems" (Dosse 2014, p. 308), which he eventually occupied.
  124. ^ OPS, p. xxi.
  125. ^ Dosse 2014, pp. 350–1.
  126. ^ Chris Atton, Alternative Literature: A Practical Guide for Librarians, Gower, p. 41.
  127. ^ Tasis 2007, pp. 43 and 85 n. 23.
  128. ^ Anon. (2003), Foreword to The Rising Tide of Insignificancy
  129. ^ Tasis 2007, p. 81.
  130. ^ Alex Economou: Obituary – Cornelius Castoriadis (1922–1997)
  131. ^ Morin, Edgar (30 December 1997). . Radical Philosophy. Archived from the original on 11 June 2008. Retrieved 3 April 2008.
  132. ^ Marcela Tova, "The imaginary term in readings about modernity: Taylor and Castoriadis conceptions", Revista de Estudios Sociales 9, June 2001, pp. 32–39.
  133. ^ Chiara Bottici, Imaginal Politics: Images Beyond Imagination and the Imaginary, Columbia University Press, 2014, p. 50.
  134. ^ Nicolas Poirier, "Cornelius Castoriadis. L'Imaginaire radical", Revue du MAUSS, 1/2003 (No. 21), pp. 383–404.
  135. ^ "The Social Imaginary and the Institution" in IIS, pp. 167–220. Also in CR, pp. 196–217.
  136. ^ Schismenos 2013, p. 86.
  137. ^ Castoriadis, Cornelius; L'Anti-Mythes (January 1974). "An Interview with C. Castoriadis". Telos (23): 152.
  138. ^ "Alienation appears first of all as the alienation of a society to its institutions, as the autonomization of institutions in relation to society." (IIS, p. 115.)
  139. ^ Cornelius Castoriadis. Ce qui fait la Grèce : Tome 3, Thucydide, la force et le droit. Seuil 2011. (Séminaire of 13 February 1985.)
  140. ^ Cornelius Castoriadis (1999). " La rationalité du capitalisme " in Figures du Pensable, Paris: Seuil.
  141. ^ IIS, pp. 142–3.
  142. ^ Jacques Derrida. Positions. University of Chicago Press, 1982, p. 57.
  143. ^ Yannis Ktenas. How Castoriadis read Weber: Meaning, values, and imaginary institution. Published: March 6, 2018 from PUBLIC SEMINAR.
  144. ^ Ricardo Duchesne. Uniqueness of Western Civilization. BRILL, 2011, p. 267.
  145. ^ a b IIS, p. 23.
  146. ^ EA, p. 9.
  147. ^ IIS, pp. 223–5.
  148. ^ WIF, p. 373.
  149. ^ FT B, p. 80.
  150. ^ Note that he doesn't entirely exclude its definition, in chaos theory, as a state of maximum entropy.
  151. ^ Castoriadis advocated that "[t]he surging forth [surgissement] of signification—of the institution, of society—is creation and self-creation. ... Signification emerges to cover over the Chaos, thus bringing into being a mode of being that posits itself as negation of the Chaos" (WIF, p. 315).
  152. ^ WIF, p. 72; cf. List of republics § Middle Ages.
  153. ^ FT A: "Imaginary and Imagination at the Crossroads," p. 146.
  154. ^ FT A: "Imaginary and Imagination at the Crossroads," p. 134.
  155. ^ Elliott 2003, p. 101.
  156. ^ Joas, H. 1989. "Institutionalization as a Creative Process: The Sociological Importance of Cornelius Castoriadis's Political Philosophy", American Journal of Sociology, Vol. 4: 5 (March), 1184–99.
  157. ^ Arnason, J. P. 1989. "Culture and Imaginary Significations", Thesis Eleven, February 1989, 22(1): 25–45.
  158. ^ a b

Sources edit

  • François Dosse. Castoriadis. Une vie. Paris: La Découverte, 2014. ISBN 978-2-7071-7126-9.
  • Anthony Elliott. Critical Visions: New Directions in Social Theory. Rowman & Littlefield, 2003. ISBN 978-0-7425-2690-7.
  • Christos Memos. Castoriadis and Critical Theory: Crisis, Critique and Radical Alternatives. Palgrave Macmillan, 2014. ISBN 978-1-137-03447-2.
  • Alan D. Schrift. Twentieth-Century French Philosophy: Key Themes and Thinkers. John Wiley & Sons, 2006. ISBN 978-1-4051-4394-3.
  • Theofanis Tasis. Καστοριάδης. Μια φιλοσοφία της αυτονομίας [Castoriadis. A philosophy of autonomy]. Athens: Eurasia books. December 2007. ISBN 978-960-8187-22-1.
  • Theofanis Tassis. Cornelius Castoriadis. Disposition einer Philosophie. 2007. FU Dissertationen Online.
  • Alexandros Schismenos. Η Ανθρώπινη Τρικυμία. Ψυχή και Αυτονομία στη Φιλοσοφία του Κορνήλιου Καστοριάδη [The Human Tempest. Psyche and Αutonomy in the Philosophy of Cornelius Castoriadis]. Athens: Exarcheia, 2013. ISBN 978-618-80336-5-8.

Further reading edit

  • Nelly Andrikopoulou. Το ταξίδι του Ματαρόα, 1945 [Mataroa's Voyage, 1945]. Athens: "Hestia" Printing House, 2007. ISBN 978-960-05-1348-6.
  • Giorgio Baruchello and Ingerid S. Straume (eds.). Creation, Rationality and Autonomy: Essays on Cornelius Castoriadis. Aarhus Universitetsforlag. 2013. ISBN 978-878-75-6499-1.
  • Maurice Brinton. For Workers' Power. Selected Writings (ed. David Goodway). Edinburgh/Oakland: AK Press, 2004. ISBN 1-904859-07-0.
  • David Ames Curtis, "Socialism or Barbarism: The Alternative Presented in the Work of Cornelius Castoriadis." Revue Européenne des Sciences Sociales, 86 (December 1989): 293–322. <https://www.academia.edu/13495706/Socialism_or_Barbarism_The_Alternative_Presented_in_the_Work_of_Cornelius_Castoriadis>.
  • Dimitris Eleas. Ιδιωτικός Κορνήλιος: Προσωπική Μαρτυρία για τον Καστοριάδη [Private Cornelius: Personal Testimony about Castoriadis]. Athens: Angelakis, July 2014. ISBN 978-618-5011-69-7.
  • Andrea Gabler. Antizipierte Autonomie. Zur Theorie und Praxis der Gruppe "Socialisme ou Barbarie" (1949–1967). Hanover: Offizin Verlag, 2009. ISBN 978-3-930345-64-9.
  • Jürgen Habermas. The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity: "Excursus on Castoriadis: The Imaginary Institution." Polity Press, 1990, pp. 327–35. ISBN 0-7456-0830-2.
  • Axel Honneth. "Rescuing the Revolution with an Ontology: On Cornelius Castoriadis' Theory of Society". In: The Fragmanted World of the Social. Essays in Social and Political Philosophy (ed. Charles Wright), SUNY Press, 1995, pp. 168–183. ISBN 978-1-4384-0700-5.
  • Hans Joas. Pragmatism and Social Theory. University of Chicago Press, 1993, pp. 154–171. ISBN 978-0-226-40042-6
  • Vrasidas Karalis (ed.). Cornelius Castoriadis and Radical Democracy. Brill, 2009. ISBN 978-90-04-27858-5.
  • Alexandros Kioupkiolis. Freedom After the Critique of Foundations: Marx, Liberalism, Castoriadis and Agonistic Autonomy. Palgrave Macmillan, 2012. ISBN 0-230-27912-0.
  • Jeff Klooger. Castoriadis: Psyche, Society, Autonomy. Brill, 2009. ISBN 978-90-04-17529-7.
  • Yannis Ktenas and Alexandros Schismenos.(eds.) Η Σκέψη του Κορνήλιου Καστοριάδη και η Σημασία της για μας Σήμερα [The Thought of Cornelius Castoriadis and its Significance for Us Today]. Athens: Eurasia books. 2018. ISBN 978-618-5027-89-6.
  • Serge Latouche. Cornelius Castoriadis ou l'autonomie radicale. Le Passager Clandestin, 2014. ISBN 978-2-36935-008-8.
  • Yannis Lazaratos, Το παράθυρο του Καστοριάδη. Χάος, Άβυσσος, Απύθμενο. [The Window of Castoriadis. Chaos, Abyss, Grounless]. Athens: Papazisis, 2018. ISBN 978-960-02-3393-3.
  • Johann Michel. Ricoeur and the Post-Structuralists: Bourdieu, Derrida, Deleuze, Foucault, Castoriadis. Rowman & Littlefield International, 2014. ISBN 978-1-78348-094-4.
  • Mathieu Noury. Cornelius Castoriadis, sociologue ? Critique sociologique de l'ontologie de la création imaginaire sociale. Revue Aspects Sociologiques, 18(1), March 2011.
  • Yorgos Oikonomou (ed.), Η Γένεση της Δημοκρατίας και η Σημερινή Κρίση [The Birth of Democracy and Contemporary Crisis]. Athens: Eurasia books. 2011. ISBN 978-960-8187-77-1.
  • Mathieu Potte-Bonneville, "Risked democracy: Foucault, Castoriadis and the Greeks". Radical Philosophy 166 (March/April 2011).
  • Jean-Louis Prat. Introduction à Castoriadis. Paris: La Découverte. 2007. ISBN 978-2-7071-5083-7.
  • Richard Rorty. "Unger, Castoriadis, and the Romance of a National Future." Northwestern University Law Review, 82(2):335–51 (1988).
  • Alexandros Schismenos and Nikos Ioannou. Μετά τον Καστοριάδη. Δρόμοι της Αυτονομίας στον 21ο Αιώνα. [After Castoriadis. Roads to Autonomy in the 21st Century]. Athens: Exarcheia, 2014. ISBN 978-618-5128-03-6.
  • Schismenos, Alexandros (15 January 2018). "Imagination and Interpretation: On the dialogue between Cornelius Castoriadis and Paul Ricoeur".
  • Schismenos, Alexandros. "Time in the ontology of Cornelius Castoriadis." SOCRATES. 5(3 and 4):64–81 (April 2018).
  • Alexandros Schismenos, Nikos Ioannou and Chris Spannos. Castoriadis and Autonomy in the Twenty First Century. London: Bloomsbury, 2021. ISBN 9781350123373, 9781350123380.
  • Alexandros Schismenos, Castoriadis against Heidegger: Time and existence, 2023, DOI 10.5281/zenodo.7978996.
  • Society of Friends of Cornelius Castoriadis. Ψυχή, Λόγος, Πόλις [Psyche, Logos, Polis]. Athens: Ypsilon, 2007. ISBN 978-960-17-0219-3.
  • Yannis Stavrakakis. The Lacanian Left: Psychoanalysis, Theory, Politics. Edinburgh University Press, 2007, pp. 37–65. ISBN 0-7914-7329-5.
  • Yavor Tarinski. Short Introduction to the Political Legacy of Castoriadis. Athens: Aftoleksi, 2020.
  • Thesis Eleven, Special Issue 'Cornelius Castoriadis', 49(1), May 1997. London: Sage Publications. ISSN 0725-5136.
  • John B. Thompson. Studies in the Theory of Ideology. University of California Press, 1984, Chapter 1: "Ideology and the Social Imaginary. An Appraisal of Castoriadis and Lefort". ISBN 978-0-520-05411-0.
  • Marcela Tovar-Restrepo, Castoriadis, Foucault, and Autonomy: New Approaches to Subjectivity, Society, and Social Change. Continuum International Publishing, 2012. ISBN 978-1-4411-5226-8.
  • Joel Whitebook. "Intersubjectivity and the Monadic Core of the Psyche: Habermas and Castoriadis on the Unconscious". In: Maurizio Passerin d'Entrèves and Seyla Benhabib (eds.), Habermas and the Unfinished Project of Modernity: Critical Essays on The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity. MIT Press, 1997, pp. 172–193. ISBN 978-0-262-54080-3.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Cornelius Castoriadis at Wikimedia Commons
  •   Quotations related to Cornelius Castoriadis at Wikiquote
  •   Cornelius Castoriadis at Wikibooks
  •   The dictionary definition of anerithmon gelasma at Wiktionary

Overviews

Interviews

  • Videotaped interview with Chris Marker
  • Interview with Cornelius Castoriadis for the show "Paraskinio," of the Greek television network ET1 (1984) on YouTube (with English subtitles)
  • "Broadcast information on radio interviews with Cornelius Castoriadis" (in French). Institut National de l'Audiovisuel. Retrieved 17 December 2013. (The files and documents kept at the Inathèque de France can be consulted at the consultation centre at the Bibliothèque nationale de France.)

Obituaries; biographies

  • Cornelius Castoriadis 1922–1997 at the libertarian communist website libcom.org, 27 September 2003
  • David Ames Curtis. "Cornelius Castoriadis: An Obituary." Salmagundi, Spring–Summer 1998: 52–61. Reprinted as "Cornelius Castoriadis: Philosopher of the Social Imagination." Free Associations, 7:3 (1999): 321–30. Available online: <http://www.agorainternational.org/about.html>.
  • Symposium: Cornelius Castoriadis, 1922–1997, obituaries and profiles by Axel Honneth, Edgar Morin, and Joel Whitebook, Radical Philosophy magazine, July/August 1998 (access restricted to subscribers)
  • "Obituary: Castoriadis and the democratic tradition" by Takis Fotopoulos, Democracy & Nature, Vol. 4, No. 1 (1997)

Bibliographies; analyses; critiques

  • The Cornelius Castoriadis/Agora International Website contains bibliographies and videographies in many languages, a Castoriadis interview, a "Teaching Castoriadis" section, videos from the 1990 Castoriadis Colloqium at Cerisy (France), and the complete text of the Socialisme ou Barbarie magazine series (texts scanned in the original French), as well as "News" items of current and past interest
  • L'Association Castoriadis with bibliography, news, media events, original articles (in French)
  • "Castoriadis": entry by John V. Garner, Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy
  • "Cornelius Castoriadis and the triumph of the will" by Alex Callinicos, Chapter 4.3 of Trotskyism, 1990
  • Cornelius Castoriadis, critical analysis at the libertarian communist website libcom.org
  • "An Introduction to Cornelius Castoriadis' Work" by Fabio Ciaramelli, Journal of European Psychoanalysis #6, Winter 1998 (access restricted to subscribers)
  • "The Strange Afterlife of Cornelius Castoriadis" by Scott McLemee, Chronicle of Higher Education, 26 March 2004 (access restricted to subscribers) (reprint)
  • Full text of the Cornelius Castoriadis symposium held at the University of Akureyri, from the special issue of Nordicum-Mediterraneum, e-magazine of Nordic and Mediterranean studies, December 2008
  • Houston, Christopher, "Islam, Castoriadis and autonomy". Thesis Eleven, February 2004, 76(1), pp. 49–69
  • Suzi Adams, "Castoriadis' long journey through Nomos: Institution, creation, interpretation". Tijdschrift voor Filosofie, 70 (June), 269–295 (2008)
  • Linda M.G. Zerilli (2002), , doi:10.1111/1467-8675.00302
  • "The autonomy project and Inclusive Democracy: a critical review of Castoriadis' thought", by Takis Fotopoulos, The International Journal of Inclusive Democracy, Vol. 4, No. 2 (April 2008)
  • "Unities and Tensions in the Work of Cornelius Castoriadis With Some Considerations on the Question of Organization" by David Ames Curtis, talk delivered to "Autonomy or Barbarism"-sponsored event in Athens, 7 December 2007
  • Exchange of letters between Cornelius Castoriadis and Anton Pannekoek, originally published in Socialisme ou Barbarie, translated and introduced by Viewpoint Magazine

cornelius, castoriadis, greek, Κορνήλιος, Καστοριάδης, march, 1922, december, 1997, greek, french, philosopher, social, critic, economist, psychoanalyst, author, imaginary, institution, society, founder, socialisme, barbarie, group, born, 1922, march, 1922cons. Cornelius Castoriadis a Greek Kornhlios Kastoriadhs b 11 March 1922 26 December 1997 was a Greek French 77 philosopher social critic economist psychoanalyst author of The Imaginary Institution of Society and co founder of the Socialisme ou Barbarie group 84 Cornelius CastoriadisBorn 1922 03 11 11 March 1922Constantinople Ottoman Empire present day Istanbul Turkey Died26 December 1997 1997 12 26 aged 75 Paris FranceNationalityGreek French 77 Other namesCorneille Castoriadis 78 Pierre Chaulieu Paul Cardan Jean Marc Coudray Education8th Gymnasium of Athens 79 University of Athens 1937 1942 B A 1942 80 University of Paris Dr cand 1946 1948 81 University of Nanterre DrE 1980 82 Notable workList The Imaginary Institution of Society 1975 Crossroads in the Labyrinth 1978 1999 6 vols SpouseList Catherine May 83 m unkn unkn divorced Piera Aulagnier m 1968 1984 divorced Zoe Christofidi m unkn 1997 his death Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolContinental philosophy Post phenomenology 1 Western Marxism post Marxism 2 3 4 early Libertarian socialism 5 4 late Revolutionary socialism 6 Classical republicanism 7 Philosophy of praxis 8 Post Lacanian psychoanalysis 9 InstitutionsEcole des hautes etudes en sciences socialesMain interestsLibertarian socialism 5 4 political philosophy developmental psychology psychoanalysis economics sovietology social criticism ecology philosophy of science philosophy of history ontology epistemology aestheticsNotable ideasList The Project of Autonomy 10 the radical imaginary 11 underlying social institutions 12 radical imagination 13 the social imaginary 14 social imaginary significations 15 proto representation Ur Vorstellung 16 the monadic core of the psyche 17 the unconscious exists only as an indissociably representative affective intentional flux 18 rejecting the reduction of representation to perception 19 the first delegation of the drive in the psyche is the affect 20 the psyche and the anonymous collective are irreducible to each other 21 sublimation as the process by means of which the psyche is forced to replace its private objects of cathexis with objects that have value through their social institution 22 social fabrication of the individual 23 social constructionism 24 25 lability of investments labilite des investissements 26 identifying representational activity as prior to reflection 27 being in itself as creative of its own proper world 28 idiogenesis koinogenesis 29 the world as a product of Chaos 30 ontological magma 31 identitary ensemblist logic logique ensembliste identitaire 32 the Cantorian definition of set implies the schema of separation 33 proto institutions of legein and teukhein 32 34 Wo Ich bin soll Es auftauchen Where Ego is Id must spring forth 35 conflict of desires 29 the Social Historical 36 the methodology of elucidation elucidation 37 circle of creation 38 the paradox of history 39 society s leaning on the first natural stratum 40 creation is ex nihilo but it is neither in nihilo nor cum nihilo 41 vis formandi 42 radical alterity alterite radicale 43 time as creation destruction of forms 44 societas instituans societas instituta 45 abolition of the wage system 46 47 administration of justice by popular tribunals 48 plan factory 49 democratic planning 50 totalitarian Soviet vs fragmented Western bureaucratic capitalism 51 the final contradiction of capitalism 52 relatively autonomous evolution of technique 53 liberal oligarchy 54 pseudo rational mastery 55 the nomos physis distinction 56 three spheres of social action oikos the private private or domestic sphere agora the public private or implicitly political sphere ekklesia the public public or explicitly political sphere 57 58 ecological self limitation degrowth 59 60 Godelian argument 61 62 the Greco Occidental particuliarity 63 64 democracy as procedure formalist vs democracy as regime substantivist 65 criticism of structuralism logicism and functionalism physicalism 66 criticism of spiritualist and materialist dialectic 67 criticism of Marxian economics 68 69 capital as power 47 70 71 criticism of Marx s theory of history 72 criticism of Lacanianism 73 criticism of the poststructuralist theory of the subject 74 criticism of the New Philosophers 75 76 His writings on autonomy and social institutions have been influential in both academic and activist circles 85 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life in Athens 1 2 Paris and the Chaulieu Montal Tendency 1 3 Early philosophical research 1 4 Career as economist and distancing from Marxism 1 5 Psychoanalyst 1 6 Philosopher of history and ontologist 1 7 Sovietologist 1 8 Later life 2 Philosophy 2 1 Autonomy and heteronomy 2 2 The imaginary 2 3 Social constructionism 2 4 Chaos 2 5 The Ancient Greeks and the modern West 3 Lasting influence 4 Major publications 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksBiography editEarly life in Athens edit Cornelius Castoriadis named after Saint Cornelius the Centurion 86 was born on 11 March 1922 in Constantinople 86 the son of Kaisar Caesar and Sophia Kastoriadis 87 His family had to move in July 1922 86 to Athens due to the Greek Turkish population exchange He developed an interest in politics after he came into contact with Marxist thought and philosophy at the age of 13 88 At the same time he began studying traditional philosophy after purchasing a copy of the book History of Philosophy Istoria ths Filosofias 1933 2 vols by the historian of ideas Nikolaos Louvaris el 88 Sometime between 1932 and 1935 Maximiani Portas later known as Savitri Devi was the French tutor of Castoriadis 89 During the same period he attended the 8th Gymnasium of Athens in Kato Patisia 79 from which he graduated in 1937 His first active involvement in politics occurred during the Metaxas Regime 1937 when he joined the Athenian Communist Youth Kommoynistikh Neolaia A8hnas Kommounistiki Neolaia Athinas a section of the Young Communist League of Greece In 1941 he joined the Communist Party of Greece KKE only to leave one year later in order to become an active Trotskyist 90 The latter action resulted in his persecution by both the Germans and the Communist Party In 1944 he wrote his first essays on social science and Max Weber 91 which he published in a magazine named Archive of Sociology and Ethics Arxeion Koinwniologias kai H8ikhs Archeion Koinoniologias kai Ithikis Castoriadis heavily criticized the actions of the KKE during the December 1944 clashes between the communist led ELAS on one side and the Papandreou government aided by British troops on the other In December 1945 three years 80 after earning a bachelor s degree in law economics and political science from the School of Law Economics and Political Sciences of the University of Athens where he met and collaborated with the Neo Kantian intellectuals Konstantinos Despotopoulos Panagiotis Kanellopoulos Konstantinos Tsatsos 92 93 he got aboard the RMS Mataroa 94 a New Zealand ocean liner to go to Paris where he remained permanently to continue his studies under a scholarship offered by the French Institute of Athens The same voyage organized by Octave Merlier also brought from Greece to France a number of other Greek writers artists and intellectuals including Constantine Andreou Kostas Axelos Georges Candilis Costa Coulentianos Emmanuel Kriaras Adonis A Kyrou Kostas Papaioannou and Virgile Solomonidis 95 96 97 Paris and the Chaulieu Montal Tendency edit Once in Paris Castoriadis joined the Trotskyist Parti Communiste Internationaliste PCI He and Claude Lefort constituted a Chaulieu Montal Tendency in the French PCI in 1946 In 1948 they experienced their final disenchantment with Trotskyism 98 leading them to break away to found the libertarian socialist and councilist group and journal Socialisme ou Barbarie S ou B 1949 1966 which included Jean Francois Lyotard 99 and Guy Debord as members for a while and profoundly influenced the French intellectual left Castoriadis had links with the group known as the Johnson Forest Tendency until 1958 Also strongly influenced by Castoriadis and Socialisme ou Barbarie were the British group and journal Solidarity and Maurice Brinton Early philosophical research edit In the late 1940s Castoriadis started attending philosophical and sociological courses at the Faculty of Letters at the University of Paris faculte des lettres de Paris where among his teachers were Gaston Bachelard 93 100 101 the epistemologist Rene Poirier the historian of philosophy Henri Brehier not to be confused with Emile Brehier Henri Gouhier Jean Wahl Gustave Guillaume Albert Bayet and Georges Davy 100 He submitted a proposal for a doctoral dissertation on mathematical logic to Poirier but he eventually abandoned the project 102 93 The working title of his thesis was Introduction a la logique axiomatique Introduction to Axiomatic logic 81 102 Career as economist and distancing from Marxism edit At the same time starting in November 1948 he worked as an economist at the Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development OECD until 1970 which was also the year when he obtained French citizenship Consequently his writings prior to that date were published pseudonymously as Pierre Chaulieu Paul Cardan Jean Marc Coudray etc In his 1949 essay The Relations of Production in Russia 103 Castoriadis developed a critique of the supposed socialist character of the government of the Soviet Union According to Castoriadis the central claim of the Stalinist regime at the time was that the mode of production in Russia was socialist but the mode of distribution was not yet a socialist one since the socialist edification in the country had not yet been completed However according to Castoriadis analysis since the mode of distribution of the social product is inseparable from the mode of production 104 the claim that one can have control over distribution while not having control over production is meaningless 105 Castoriadis was particularly influential in the turn of the intellectual left during the 1950s against the Soviet Union because he argued that the Soviet Union was not a communist but rather a bureaucratic capitalist state which contrasted with Western powers mostly by virtue of its centralized power apparatus 106 His work in the OECD substantially helped his analyses In the latter years of Socialisme ou Barbarie Castoriadis came to reject the Marxist theories of economics and of history especially in an essay on Modern Capitalism and Revolution first published in Socialisme ou Barbarie in 1960 61 first English translation in 1963 by Solidarity Castoriadis final Socialisme ou Barbarie essay was Marxism and Revolutionary Theory published in April 1964 June 1965 There he concluded that a revolutionary Marxist must choose either to remain Marxist or to remain revolutionary 107 6 Psychoanalyst edit When Jacques Lacan s disputes with the International Psychoanalytical Association led to a split and the formation of the Ecole Freudienne de Paris EFP in 1964 Castoriadis became a member as a non practitioner 108 In 1968 Castoriadis married Piera Aulagnier a French psychoanalyst who had undergone psychoanalytic treatment under Jacques Lacan from 1955 until 1961 109 In 1969 Castoriadis and Aulagnier split from the EFP to join the Organisation psychanalytique de langue francaise OPLF the so called Quatrieme Groupe 110 a psychoanalytic group that claims to follow principles and methods that have opened up a third way between Lacanianism and the standards of the International Psychoanalytical Association 111 Castoriadis began to practice analysis in 1973 after he had undergone analysis in the 1960s first with Irene Roubleff and then later with Michel Renard 110 112 Philosopher of history and ontologist edit In 1967 Castoriadis submitted a proposal for a doctoral dissertation on the philosophy of history to Paul Ricœur then at the University of Nanterre 113 An epistolary dialogue began between them but Ricœur s obligations to the University of Chicago in the 1970s were such that their collaboration was not feasible at the time 114 The subject of his thesis would be Le fondement imaginaire du social historique The Imaginary Foundations of the Social Historical 114 see below In his 1975 work L Institution imaginaire de la societe Imaginary Institution of Society and in Les carrefours du labyrinthe Crossroads in the Labyrinth published in 1978 Castoriadis began to develop his distinctive understanding of historical change as the emergence of irrecoverable otherness that must always be socially instituted and named in order to be recognized Otherness emerges in part from the activity of the psyche itself Creating external social institutions that give stable form to what Castoriadis terms the ontological magma 115 31 116 of social significations 15 117 allows the psyche to create stable figures for the self and to ignore the constant emergence of mental indeterminacy and alterity For Castoriadis self examination as in the ancient Greek tradition could draw upon the resources of modern psychoanalysis Autonomous individuals the essence of an autonomous society must continuously examine themselves and engage in critical reflection He writes psychoanalysis can and should make a basic contribution to a politics of autonomy For each person s self understanding is a necessary condition for autonomy One cannot have an autonomous society that would fail to turn back upon itself that would not interrogate itself about its motives its reasons for acting its deep seated profondes tendencies Considered in concrete terms however society doesn t exist outside the individuals making it up The self reflective activity of an autonomous society depends essentially upon the self reflective activity of the humans who form that society 118 Castoriadis was not calling for every individual to undergo psychoanalysis per se Rather by reforming education and political systems individuals would be increasingly capable of critical self and social reflexion He offers if psychoanalytic practice has a political meaning it is solely to the extent that it tries as far as it possibly can to render the individual autonomous that is to say lucid concerning her desire and concerning reality and responsible for her acts holding herself accountable for what she does 119 Sovietologist edit In his 1980 Facing the War text he took the view that Russia had become the primary world military power To sustain this in the context of the visible economic inferiority of the Soviet Union in the civilian sector he proposed that the society may no longer be dominated by the one party state bureaucracy but by a stratocracy 120 a separate and dominant military sector with expansionist designs on the world He further argued that this meant there was no internal class dynamic which could lead to social revolution within Russian society and that change could only occur through foreign intervention Later life edit In 1980 he joined the faculty of the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales EHESS as Directeur d etudes Director of Studies 121 He had been elected Directeur de recherche Director of Research in EHESS at the end of 1979 82 after submitting his previously published material in conjunction with a defense of his intellectual project of connecting the disciplines of history sociology and economy through the concept of the social imaginary 122 123 see below His teaching career at the EHESS lasted sixteen years 124 In 1980 he was also awarded his State doctorate from the University of Nanterre the final title of his thesis under Ricœur see above was L Element imaginaire de l histoire 82 The Imaginary Element in History In 1984 Castoriadis and Aulagnier divorced 109 In 1989 he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate in Social Sciences by Panteion University and in 1993 another one in Education Sciences by the Democritus University of Thrace 125 In 1992 he joined the libertarian socialist journal Society and Nature established by Takis Fotopoulos as a writer the magazine also featured such writers as Murray Bookchin and Noam Chomsky 126 He died on 26 December 1997 from complications following heart surgery He was survived by Zoe Christofidi his wife at the time of his death his daughter Sparta by an earlier relationship with Jeanine Rilka Walter 127 Comrade Victorine in the Fourth International 128 and Kyveli a younger daughter from his marriage with Zoe 129 130 Philosophy editEdgar Morin proposed that Castoriadis work will be remembered for its remarkable continuity and coherence as well as for its extraordinary breadth which was encyclopaedic in the original Greek sense for it offered a paideia or education that brought full circle the cycle of otherwise compartmentalized knowledge in the arts and sciences 131 Castoriadis wrote essays on mathematics physics biology anthropology psychoanalysis linguistics society economics politics philosophy and art One of Castoriadis many important contributions to social theory was the idea that social change involves radical discontinuities that cannot be understood in terms of any determinate causes or presented as a sequence of events Change emerges through the social imaginary without strict determinations 14 but in order to be socially recognized it must be instituted as revolution Any knowledge of society and social change can exist only by referring to or by positing social imaginary significations 15 Thus Castoriadis developed a conceptual framework where the sociological and philosophical category of the social imaginary has a central place and he offered an interpretation of modernity centered on the principal categories of social institutions and social imaginary significations 12 in his analysis these categories are the product of the human faculties of the radical imagination and the social imaginary the latter faculty being the collective dimension of the former 132 According to Castoriadis the sociological and philosophical category of the radical imaginary 11 can be manifested only through the individual radical imagination and the social imaginary 13 133 134 However the social imaginary cannot be reduced or attributed to subjective imagination since the individual is informed through an internalisation of social significations 135 136 He used traditional terms as much as possible though consistently redefining them Further some of his terminology changed throughout the later part of his career with the terms gaining greater consistency but breaking from their traditional meaning thus creating neologisms When reading Castoriadis it is helpful to understand what he means by the terms he uses since he does not redefine the terms in every piece where he employs them Autonomy and heteronomy edit The concept of autonomy was central to his early writings and he continued to elaborate on its meaning applications and limits until his death gaining him the title of Philosopher of Autonomy The word itself is Greek where auto means for by itself and nomos means law It refers to the condition of self institution by which one creates their own laws whether as an individual or as a whole society And while every society creates their own institutions only the members of autonomous societies are fully aware of the fact and consider themselves to be the ultimate source of justice 137 In contrast members of heteronomous societies hetero other delegate this process to an authority outside of society often attributing the source of their traditions to divine origins or in modern times to historical necessity 138 Castoriadis then identified the need of societies not only to create but to legitimize their laws to explain in other words why their laws are just Most traditional societies did that through religion claiming their laws were given by God or a mythical ancestor and therefore must be true An exception to this rule is to be found in Ancient Greece where the constellation of cities poleis that spread throughout the eastern Mediterranean although not all democratic showed strong signs of autonomy and during its peak Athens became fully aware of the fact as seen in Pericles Funeral Oration 139 Castoriadis considered Greece a topic that increasingly drew his attention not as a blueprint to be copied but an experiment that could inspire a truly autonomous community one that could legitimize its laws without assigning their source to a higher authority The Greeks differed from other societies because they not only started as autonomous but maintained this ideal by challenging their laws on a constant basis while obeying them to the same degree even to the extent of enforcing capital punishment proving that autonomous societies can indeed exist Regarding modern societies Castoriadis notes that while religions have lost part of their normative function their nature is still heteronomous only that this time it has rational pretenses Capitalism legitimizes itself through reason claiming that it makes rational sense 140 but Castoriadis observed that all such efforts are ultimately tautological in that they can only legitimize a system through the rules defined by the system itself So just like the Old Testament claimed that There is only one God God capitalism defines logic as the maximization of utility and minimization of costs and then legitimizes itself based on its effectiveness to meet these criteria Surprisingly this definition of logic is also shared by Communism which despite the fact it stands in seeming opposition it is the product of the same imaginary and uses the same concepts and categories to describe the world principally in material terms and through the process of human labor The imaginary edit In the context of being a specific term in psychoanalysis imaginary originates in the writings of the French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan see the Imaginary and is strongly associated with Castoriadis work Castoriadis believed that for a given society as people penetrate the layers of its culture deeper and deeper they arrive at meanings that do not mean something other than themselves They are so to speak final meanings that the society in question has imposed on the world on itself 141 Because these meanings manifestations of the radical imaginary in Castoriadian terminology do not point to anything concrete and because the logical categories needed to analyze them are derived from them these meanings cannot be analysed rationally They are arational rather than irrational and must therefore be acknowledged rather than comprehended in the common use of the term Castoriadis views on concept formation is in sharp contrast to that of postmodernists like Jacques Derrida who explicitly denies the existence of concepts in and of themselves 142 Radical imaginary is at the basis of cultures and accounts for their differences In his seminal work The Imaginary Institution of Society Castoriadis argues that societies are founded not as products of historical necessity but as the result of a new and radical idea of the world an idea that appears to spring fully formed and is practically irreducible All cultural forms laws and institutions aesthetics and ritual follow from this radical imaginary and are not to be explained merely as products of material conditions Castoriadis then is offering an ontogenetic 143 or emergentist model of history one that is apparently unpopular amongst modern historians 144 but can serve as a valuable critique of historical materialism For example Castoriadis believed that Ancient Greeks had an imaginary by which the world stems from Chaos while in contrast the Hebrews had an imaginary by which the world stems from the will of a rational entity God or Yahweh in the Hebrew Bible The former developed therefore a system of direct democracy where the laws were ever changing according to the people s will while the second a theocratic system according to which man is in an eternal quest to understand and enforce the will of God Traditional societies had elaborate imaginaries expressed through various creation myths by which they explained how the world came to be and how it is sustained Capitalism did away with this mythic imaginary by replacing it with what it claims to be pure reason as examined above That same imaginary is the foundation of its opposing ideology Communism By that measure he observes first in his main criticism of Marxism titled the Imaginary Institution of Society 145 and subsequently in a speech he gave at the Universite catholique de Louvain on February 27 1980 146 that these two systems are more closely related than was previously thought since they share the same industrial revolution type imaginary that of a rational society where man s welfare is materially measurable and infinitely improvable through the expansion of industries and advancements in science In this respect Marx failed to understand that technology is not as he claimed the main drive of social change since there are historical examples where societies possessing near identical technologies formed very different relations to them An example given in the book is France and England during the industrial revolution with the second being much more liberal than the first 145 Similarly in the issue of ecology he observes that the problems facing the environment are only present within the capitalist imaginary that values the continuous expansion of industries Trying to solve it by changing or managing these industries better might fail since it essentially acknowledges this imaginary as real thus perpetuating the problem Castoriadis also believed that the complex historical processes through which new imaginaries are born are not directly quantifiable by science This is because it is through the imaginaries themselves that the categories upon which science is applied are created In the second part of his Imaginary Institution of Society titled The Social Imaginary and the Institution he gives the example of set theory which is at the basis of formal logic which cannot function without having first defined the elements which are to be assigned to sets 147 This initial schema of separation 33 schema de separation sxhma toy xwrismoy of the world into distinct elements and categories therefore precedes the application of formal logic and consequently science Social constructionism edit Castoriadis was a social constructionist and a moral relativist insofar as he held that the radical imaginary of each society was opaque to rational analysis Since he believed that social norms and morals ultimately derive from a society s unique idea of the world which emerges fully formed at a given moment in history and cannot be reduced further From this he concluded that any criteria by which one could evaluate these morals objectively are also derived from the said imaginary rendering this evaluation subjective This does not mean that Castoriadis stopped believing in the value of social struggles for a better world he simply thought that rationally proving their value is impossible This however does not mean that Castoriadis believed there is no truth but that truth is linked to the imaginary which is ultimately arational In his book World in Fragments which includes essays on science he explicitly writes that We have to understand that there is truth and that it is to be made to be done that to attain atteindre it people have to create it which means first and foremost to imagine it 148 He then quotes Blake who said What is now proved was once only imagin d Chaos edit The concept of Chaos as found in Ancient Greek cosmogony plays a significant role in Castoriadis work and is connected to the idea of the imaginary 30 149 Castoriadis translates the Greek word chaos as nothingness 150 According to him the core of the Greek imaginary was a world that came from Chaos rather than the will of God as described in Genesis Castoriadis concludes that the Greeks imaginary of a world out of chaos was what allowed them to create institutions such as democracy because if the world is created out of nothing man can model it as he sees fit 151 without trying to conform to some divine law He contrasted the Greek imaginary to the Biblical imaginary in which God is a willing i e intentional agent and man s position is to understand God s will and act according to it The Ancient Greeks and the modern West edit Castoriadis views the political organization of the ancient Greek cities poleis not as a model to imitate rather as a source of inspiration towards an autonomous society He rejects also the term city state used to describe Ancient Greek cities for him the administration of Greek poleis was not that of a State in the modern sense of the term since Greek poleis were self administrated The same goes for colonisation since the neighbouring Phoenicians who had a similar expansion in the Mediterranean were monarchical till their end During this time of colonization however around the time of Homer s epic poems the Greeks instead of transferring their mother city s social system to the newly established colony for the first time in known history legislate anew from the ground up What also made the Greeks special was the fact that following the above they kept this system as a perpetual autonomy which led to direct democracy This phenomenon of autonomy is again present in the emergence of the states of northern Italy during the Renaissance 152 again as a product of small independent merchants He sees a tension in the modern West between on the one hand the potentials for autonomy and creativity and the proliferation of open societies and on the other hand the spirit crushing force of capitalism These are respectively characterized as the creative imaginary and the capitalist imaginary I think that we are at a crossing in the roads of history history in the grand sense One road already appears clearly laid out at least in its general orientation That s the road of the loss of meaning of the repetition of empty forms of conformism apathy irresponsibility and cynicism at the same time as it is that of the tightening grip of the capitalist imaginary of unlimited expansion of rational mastery pseudorational pseudomastery of an unlimited expansion of consumption for the sake of consumption that is to say for nothing and of a technoscience that has become autonomized along its path and that is evidently involved in the domination of this capitalist imaginary The other road should be opened it is not at all laid out It can be opened only through a social and political awakening a resurgence of the project of individual and collective autonomy that is to say of the will to freedom This would require an awakening of the imagination and of the creative imaginary 153 He argues that in the last two centuries ideas about autonomy again come to the fore This extraordinary profusion reaches a sort of pinnacle during the two centuries stretching between 1750 and 1950 This is a very specific period because of the very great density of cultural creation but also because of its very strong subversiveness 154 Lasting influence editCastoriadis has influenced European especially continental thought in important ways His interventions in sociological and political theory have resulted in some of the most well known writing to emerge from the continent especially in the figure of Jurgen Habermas who often can be seen to be writing against Castoriadis 155 Hans Joas published a number of articles in American journals in order to highlight the importance of Castoriadis work to a North American sociological audience 156 and Johann Pal Arnason has been of enduring importance both for his critical engagement with Castoriadis thought and for his sustained efforts to introduce it to the English speaking public especially during his editorship of the journal Thesis Eleven 157 In the last few years there has been growing interest in Castoriadis s thought including the publication of two monographs authored by Arnason s former students Jeff Klooger s Castoriadis Psyche Society Autonomy Brill and Suzi Adams s Castoriadis s Ontology Being and Creation Fordham University Press Major publications editOriginal French Mai 68 la breche The Breach Fayard 1968 under the pseudonym Jean Marc Coudray co authored with Edgar Morin and Claude Lefort La Societe bureaucratique Bureaucratic Society in two volumes Les Rapports de production en Russie and La Revolution contre la bureaucratie 1973 L Experience du mouvement ouvrier The Experience of the Labor Movement in two volumes Comment lutter and Proletariat et organisation 1974 L Institution imaginaire de la societe The Imaginary Institution of Society Seuil 1975 Les Carrefours du labyrinthe Crossroads in the Labyrinth Volume I 1978 Le Contenu du socialisme On the Content of Socialism 1979 originally published in three parts in S ou B July 1955 translated in PSW 1 pp 290 307 S ou B July 1957 translated in PSW 2 pp 90 154 and S ou B January 1958 translated in PSW 2 pp 155 192 Capitalisme moderne et revolution Modern Capitalism and Revolution in two volumes 1979 De l ecologie a l autonomie EA From Ecology to Autonomy avec Daniel Cohn Bendit et le Public de Louvain la Neuve 1981 Devant la guerre Facing the War Volume I 1981 a second volume was never published Domaines de l homme Domains of Man Les carrefours du labyrinthe II 1986 La Breche vingt ans apres reedition du livre de 1968 complete par de nouveaux textes The Breach Twenty Years After 1988 Le Monde morcele World in Fragments Les carrefours du labyrinthe III 1990 La Montee de l insignifiance The Rising Tide of Insignificancy Les carrefours du labyrinthe IV 1996 Fait et a faire Done and To Be Done Les carrefours du labyrinthe V 1997Posthumous publications H Arxaia Ellhnikh Dhmokratia kai h Shmasia ths gia mas Shmera Ancient Greek Democracy and Its Importance for Us Today Athens Ypsilon 1999 based on a lecture delivered in Leonidio on 17 August 1984 Figures du pensable Figures of the Thinkable Les carrefours du labyrinthe VI 1999 SurLe Politiquede Platon Commentary onThe Statesmanof Plato 1999 Sujet et verite dans le monde social historique La creation humaine 1 Subject and Truth in the Social Historical World Human Creation 1 2002 Ce qui fait la Grece 1 D Homere a Heraclite La creation humaine 2 What Makes Greece 1 From Homer to Heraclitus Human Creation 2 2004 Filosofia kai episthmh Enas dialogos me ton Gewrgio L Eyaggelopoylo Philosophy and Science A Discussion with Yorgos L Evangelopoulos Athens Eurasia books 2004 ISBN 960 8187 09 5 Une Societe a la derive entretiens et debats 1974 1997 A Society Adrift 2005 Post scriptum sur l insignifiance entretiens avec Daniel Mermet suivi de dialogue Postscript on Insignificance 2007 Fenetre sur le chaos Window on the Chaos compiled by Enrique Escobar Myrto Gondicas and Pascal Vernay Seuil 2007 ISBN 978 2 02 090826 9 Castoriadis writings on modern art and aesthetics Ce qui fait la Grece 2 La cite et les lois La creation humaine 3 What Makes Greece 2 The City and Laws Human Creation 3 2008 L Imaginaire comme tel The Imaginary As Such 2008 Histoire et creation Textes philosophiques inedits 1945 1967 History and Creation Unedited Philosophical Texts 1945 1967 2009 Ce qui fait la Grece 3 Thucydide la force et le droit La creation humaine 4 What Makes Greece 3 Thucydides Force and Right Human Creation 4 2011 La Culture de l egoisme The Culture of Egoism transcription of an interview that Castoriadis and Christopher Lasch gave to Michael Ignatieff in 1986 translated into French by Myrto Gondicas Climats 2012 ISBN 978 2 08 128463 0 interview about the topic of the retreat of individuals from public space into private matters Ecrits politiques 1945 1997 Political Writings 1945 1997 compiled by Myrto Gondicas Enrique Escobar and Pascal Vernay Editions du Sandre La Question du mouvement ouvrier The Question of Workers Movement vols 1 and 2 2012 Quelle democratie What Democracy vols 3 and 4 2013 La Societe bureaucratique The Bureaucratic Society vol 5 2015 Devant la guerre et autres ecrits Facing the War and Other Writings vol 6 TBA 158 Sur la dynamique du capitalisme et autres textes suivi de l imperialisme et la guerre On the Dynamics of Capitalism and Other Texts Followed by Imperialism and War vol 7 TBA 158 Dialogue sur l histoire et l imaginaire social Dialogue on History and the Social Imaginary 2016 transcription of an interview that Castoriadis gave to Paul Ricœur Short Introduction to the Political Legacy of Castoriadis Tarinski Yavor Athens Aftoleksi 2020 Selected translations of works by Castoriadis The Imaginary Institution of Society IIS trans Kathleen Blamey MIT Press Cambridge 1997 1987 432 pp ISBN 0 262 53155 0 pb Crossroads in the Labyrinth Six Volume Series Translated from the French and edited anonymously as a public service Electronic publication date March 2022 Vol 1 Crossroads in the Labyrinth Vol 2 Human Domains Vol 3 World in Fragments Vol 4 The Rising Tide of Insignificancy Vol 5 Done and To Be Done Vol 6 Figures of the Thinkable The Castoriadis Reader CR ed trans David Ames Curtis Blackwell Publisher Oxford 1997 470 pp ISBN 1 55786 704 6 pb World in Fragments Writings on Politics Society Psychoanalysis and the Imagination WIF ed trans David Ames Curtis Stanford University Press Stanford CA 1997 507 pp ISBN 0 8047 2763 5 Political and Social Writings PSW 1 Volume 1 1946 1955 From the Critique of Bureaucracy to the Positive Content of Socialism ed trans David Ames Curtis University of Minnesota Press Minneapolis 1988 348 pp ISBN 0 8166 1617 5 Political and Social Writings PSW 2 Volume 2 1955 1960 From the Workers Struggle Against Bureaucracy to Revolution in the Age of Modern Capitalism ed trans David Ames Curtis University of Minnesota Press Minneapolis 1988 363 pp ISBN 0 8166 1619 1 Political and Social Writings PSW 3 Volume 3 1961 1979 Recommencing the Revolution From Socialism to the Autonomous Society ed trans David Ames Curtis University of Minnesota Press Minneapolis 1992 405 pp ISBN 0 8166 2168 3 Modern Capitalism and Revolution MCR trans Maurice Brinton London Solidarity 1965 including an introduction and additional English material by Brinton the second English edition was published by Solidarity in 1974 with a new introduction by Castoriadis Philosophy Politics Autonomy Essays in Political Philosophy PPA ed David Ames Curtis Oxford University Press New York Oxford 1991 306 pp ISBN 0 19 506963 3 Crossroads in the Labyrinth CL trans M H Ryle K Soper MIT Press Cambridge MA 1984 345 pp On Plato s Statesman OPS trans David Ames Curtis Stanford University Press Stanford CA 2002 227 pp The Crisis of Western Societies Telos 53 Fall 1982 New York Telos Press Figures of the Thinkable FT B trans Helen Arnold Stanford University Press Stanford CA 2007 304 pp Also trans anon February 2005 FT A A Society Adrift Interviews and Debates 1974 1997 SA trans Helen Arnold Fordham University Press New York 2010 259 pp Also trans anon October 2010 A Society Adrift More Interviews and Discussions on The Rising Tide of Insignificancy Including Revolutionary Perspectives Today Translated from the French and edited anonymously as a public service The Dilapidation of the West An Interview with Cornelius Castoriadis trans David Ames Curtis Thesis Eleven May 1995 41 1 94 114 Psychoanalysis and Politics in Sonu Shamdasani and Michael Munchow eds Speculations After Freud Psychoanalysis Philosophy and Culture Routledge 1994 pp 1 12 also in World in Fragments 1997 pp 125 136 Postscript on Insignificance Dialogues with Cornelius Castoriadis PI B ed trans Gabriel Rockhill and John V Garner Continuum London 2011 160 pp ISBN 978 1 4411 3960 3 hb Also trans anon March 2011 Postscript on Insignificancy including More Interviews and Discussions on the Rising Tide of Insignificancy followed by Six Dialogues Four Portraits and Two Book Reviews PI A Translated from the French and edited anonymously as a public service The Rising Tide of Insignificancy The Big Sleep RTI Translated from the French and edited anonymously as a public service Electronic publication date December 2003 Democracy and Relativism A Debate DR Translated from the French by John V Garner Rowman amp Littlefield 2019 ISBN 978 1786610959 Also trans anon January 2013 Window on the Chaos Including How I Didn t Become a Musician Beta Version WC Translated from the French and edited anonymously as a public service Electronic publication date July 2015 See also edit nbsp The journal Socialisme ou Barbarie Autopoiesis a term inspired by Castoriadis philosophy The French autonome movement Verstehen Castoriadis adopted methodology of studying social meaning Workers councilNotes edit ˌ k ae s t er i ˈ ae d ɪ s French kastɔʁjadis Greek kastoriˈadis References edit Suzi Adams Towards a Post Phenomenology of Life Castoriadis Naturphilosophie Cosmos and History The Journal of Natural and Social Philosophy Vol 4 Nos 1 2 2008 Andrew Arato From Neo Marxism to Democratic Theory Essays on the Critical Theory of Soviet Type Societies M E Sharpe 1993 pp 122 45 ISBN 978 0 7656 1853 5 Simon Tormey and Jules Townshend Key Thinkers from Critical Theory to Post Marxism London Sage Publications 2006 pp 13 37 ISBN 978 1 84787 716 1 a b c Benoit Challand Socialisme ou Barbarie or the Partial Encounters Between Anarchism and Critical Marxism in Alex Prichard Ruth Kinna Dave Berry Saku Pinta eds Libertarian Socialism Politics in Black and Red Palgrave Macmillan 2012 pp 210 231 esp 210 Castoriadis s evident legacy to Left libertarian thinking and his radical break with orthodox Marxist Leninism a b Claude Lefort Writing The Political Test Duke University Press 2000 Translator s Foreword by David Ames Curtis p xxiv Catoriadis the historian Pierre Vidal Naquet now Lefort are themselves quite articulate in their own right and historically associated with a libertarian socialist outlook a b Arthur Hirsh The French Left Black Rose Books 1982 p 126 Suzi Adams ed Cornelius Castoriadis Key Concepts London and New York Bloomsbury Academic 2014 Democracy entry by Ingerid S Straume Castoriadis thought certainly reflects ideas of radical participatory and direct democracy communitarianism and republicanism ISBN 978 1 4411 7290 7 Tassis 2007 pp 1 and 26 Fernando Urribarri Castoriadis the Radical Imagination and the Post Lacanian Unconscious Thesis Eleven November 2002 71 1 40 51 FT B p 78 a b IIS p 146 a b IIS p 160 We do not need therefore to explain how and why the imaginary the imaginary social significations and the institutions that incarnate them become autonomous a b IIS p 373 a b IIS p 3 a b c IIS p 359 IIS p 287 IIS p 298 IIS p 274 IIS p 336 IIS p 282 confer Freud s term Vorstellungs Reprasentanz des Triebes ideational representative of the drive Sigmund Freud Die Verdrangung contained in the volume Internationale Zeitschrift fur arztliche Psychoanalyse Vol III Cahier 3 1915 p 130 IIS p 177 IIS p 312 WIF pp 131 and 263 Elliott 2003 p 91 PPA p 151 Yannis Stavrakakis Creativity and its Limits Encounters with Social Constructionism and the Political in Castoriadis and Lacan Constellations 9 4 522 539 2002 Les carrefours du labyrinthe Le monde morcele 1990 p 218 WIF p 268 Confer Fichte s original insight An Eigenwelt that is organized through its own time Eigenzeit WIF p 385 a b IIS p 281 a b IIS p 46 a b A magma is that from which one can extract or in which one can construct an indefinite number of ensemblist organizations but which can never be reconstituted ideally by a finite or infinite ensemblist composition of these organizations IIS p 343 a b IIS p 175 a b IIS pp 224 5 From the Ancient Greek legein to say speak and teyxein to make This is Castoriadis version IIS p 104 of Freud s motto Wo Es war soll Ich werden Where Id was Ego shall come to be see Sigmund Freud Neue Folge der Vorlesungen zur Einfuhrung in die Psychoanalyse 31 Vorlesung IIS p 2 Elucidation is a methodology pertaining to historical research research on the social historical conditions of possibility which is inseparable from a political aim and a political project IIS pp 2 3 The institution presupposes the institution it can exist only if individuals fabricated by the institution make the institution exist WIF p 315 Klooger has compared Castoriadis idea of the circle of creation with Heidegger s idea of the hermeneutic circle Klooger 2009 p 254 S Gourgouris 2003 pointed out that the circle of creation is a circle whose Being is nowhere since in itself it accounts for the meaning of Being a meaning that is always inevitably a human affair and that contrary to what Heidegger advocates the circle of creation is never broken by revelation by unconcealment aletheia Stathis Gourgouris Does Literature Think Stanford University Press 2003 p 153 The paradox arising from the assertion that historical consciousness universalizes historical knowledge see IIS pp 34 5 Klooger 2009 p 242 Konstantinos Kavoulakos Cornelius Castoriadis on Social Imaginary and Truth Ariadne 12 2006 pp 201 213 IIS p 208 Castoriadis posits that new forms are radically novel this however does not imply neither that ontological creation has no prior foundation it is not in nihilo nor that it has no constraints it is not cum nihilo Confer FT B pp 241 258 Being is creation vis formandi not the creation of matter energy but the creation of forms Fait et a faire p 212 For what is given in and through history is not the determined sequence of the determined but the emergence of radical otherness immanent creation non trivial novelty IIS p 184 T ime is essentially linked to the emergence of alterity Time is this emergence as such whereas space is only its necessary concomitant Time is creation and destruction that means time is being in its substantive determinations WIF p 399 WIF p 13 PSW 2 p 126 Absolute Wage Equality a b Cornelius Castoriadis From Marx to Aristotle from Aristotle to Us trans Andrew Arato Social Research 45 4 667 738 1978 esp p 738 It is a question of the destruction of economic motivations by destroying the socially objective conditions of its sic possibility the differentiation of revenues PSW 2 p 152 As for the administration of justice in a socialist economy it will be in the hands of rank and file bodies PSW 2 p 121 PSW 2 p 147 PSW 3 p 252 Capitalism can function only by continually drawing upon the genuinely human activity of those subject to it while at the same time trying to level and dehumanize them as much as possible IIS p 16 MCR p 46 PI A p 66 PPA ch 9 CL p 325 FT B p 124 CR p xi EA p 19 Suzi Adams Jeremy Smith eds Social Imaginaries 1 1 Spring 2015 p 38 Ecological autonomy in Castoriadis assessment is the question of the self limitation of society CL pp 153 4 Jeff Klooger Castoriadis Psyche Society Autonomy BRILL 2009 pp 226 229 PPA ch 5 Jens Hoyrup In Measure Number and Weight Studies in Mathematics and Culture SUNY Press 1994 p 121 Cornelius Castoriadis Democracy as Procedure and Democracy as Regime Constellations 4 1 1 18 1997 IIS pp 141 170 181 IIS pp 54 6 MCR p 29 CL p 269 FT A What Democracy including Passion and Knowledge p 227 Jonathan Nitzan and Shimshon Bichler Capital as Power A Study of Order and Creorder Routledge 2009 pp 148 9 According to Cornelius Castoriadis e quivalence in exchange came not from anything intrinsic to commodities but from what the Greek called the nomos It was rooted not in the material sphere of consumption and production but in the broader social legal historical institutions of society It was not an objective substance but a human creation In all pre capitalist societies prices and distribution more generally were determined through some mixture of social struggles and cooperation Authoritarian regimes emphasized power and decree while more egalitarian societies used negotiation volition and even gifts and p 306 The power role of the market cannot be overemphasized Cornelius Castoriadis proclaims that where there is capitalism there is no market and where there is a market there cannot be capitalism IIS p 66 CL pp 46 115 Psychoanalysis Project and Elucidation Elliott 2003 p 92 Cornelius Castoriadis The State of the Subject Today American Imago Winter 1989 46 4 pp 371 412 also in WIF pp 137 171 Cf V Karalis 2005 Castoriadis Cornelius 1922 97 in John Protevi ed The Edinburgh Dictionary of Continental Philosophy Edinburgh University Press 2005 pp 86 7 PSW 3 pp 272 80 Christos Memos Castoriadis and Social Theory From Marginalization to Canonization to Re radicalization In Alex Law and Eric Royal Lybeck eds Sociological Amnesia Cross currents in Disciplinary History Palgrave Macmillan 2015 p 190 a b Memos 2014 p 18 he was granted full French citizenship in 1970 He was known to intimates as Corneille Dosse 2014 pp 514 5 a b Marianthi Bella In my Neighborhood Patisia Glinos Foundation 2013 p 5 a b Castoriadis Cornelius 1922 1997 at E KE BI Biblionet a b Cornelius Castoriadis Histoire et creation Textes philosophiques inedits 1945 1967 Seuil 2009 Section I Chapter 4 a b c Schrift 2006 p 112 Dosse 2014 p 94 Cornelius Castoriadis Dies at 75 Archived 2004 06 14 at the Wayback Machine Tassis 2007 p 4 Tasis 2007 pp 27 8 a b c Dosse 2014 p 13 Tasis 2007 p 37 a b Cornelius Castoriadis Agora International Interview Cerisy Colloquium 1990 p 2 French original Entretien d Agora International avec Cornelius Castoriadis au Colloque de Cerisy 1990 Dosse 2014 p 17 At the time Castoriadis was under the influence of the Trotskyist militant Agis Stinas Tasis 2007 pp 40 1 Suzi Adams Castoriadis s Ontology Being and Creation New York Fordham University Press 2011 p 218 ISBN 978 0 8232 3459 2 Dosse 2014 p 22 a b c Cornelius Castoriadis Agora International Interview Cerisy Colloquium 1990 p 4 Tasis 2007 p 42 Tasis 2007 p 43 Dosse 2014 p 37 Francois Bordes Exil et creation des penseurs grecs dans la vie intellectuelle francaise in Servanne Jollivet Christophe Premat Mats Rosengren Destins d exiles Le Manuscrit 2011 p 66 Castoriadis Cornelius L Anti Mythes January 1974 An Interview with C Castoriadis Telos 23 133 Howard Dick 1974 Introduction to Castoriadis Telos 23 117 a b Dosse 2014 pp 43 4 Tasis 2007 pp 67 8 a b Dosse 2014 p 44 PSW 1 pp 135 158 L e mode de repartition du produit social est inseparable du mode de production P Chaulieu Les rapports de production en Russie Socialisme ou Barbarie n 2 May 1949 reproduced in La Societe bureaucratique Volumes 1 2 Christian Bourgois Editeur 1990 p 164 L Idee que l on puisse dominer la repartition sans dominer la production est de l enfantillage La Societe bureaucratique Volumes 1 2 p 166 Peter Osborne ed A Critical Sense Interviews with Intellectuals Routledge 2013 p 17 Marxism and Revolutionary Theory later became the first of the two parts of IIS the second being The Social Imaginary and the Institution a previously unpublished follow up to Marxism and Revolutionary Theory The relevant quote from IIS p 14 is Starting from revolutionary Marxism we have arrived at the point where we have to choose between remaining Marxist and remaining revolutionaries Roudinesco Elisabeth Jacques Lacan amp Co University of Chicago Press p 433 a b Piera Aulagnier nee Spairani entry at Psychoanalytikerinnen de a b Tasis 2007 p 216 Sophie de Mijolla Mellor 2005 Quatrieme Groupe O P L F Fourth Group In A de Mijolla Ed International dictionary of psychoanalysis vol 3 p 1429 Farmington Hills MI Thomson Gale Dosse 2014 p 175 Dosse 2014 p 264 a b Dosse 2014 pp 264 5 From the contemporary geological term magma blend of molten or semi molten rock from the Ancient Greek magma thick unguent Suzi Adams ed 2014 ch 6 Klooger Jeff The Guise of Nothing Castoriadis on Indeterminacy and its Misrecognition in Heidegger and Sartre Critical Horizons 14 1 2013 p 7 Magma is the name Castoriadis gives to the mode of being which he sees as underlying all others and which is characterized by an indeterminacy in which particular determinations come to be but without congealing into inalterable forms and without diminishing the potential for the emergence of new and different determinations Subsequent attempts by Castoriadis at formalizing the notion of magma were not successful According to logician Athanassios Tzouvaras the properties of a magma that Castoriadis proposed were either unformalizable or inconsistent see Athanassios Tzouvaras Sets with dependent elements Elaborating on Castoriadis notion of magma n d FT A Imaginary and Imagination at the Crossroads essay based on a speech given in Abrantes in November 1996 p 151 The quote appears in a slightly different translation in FT B Figures of the Thinkable trans by Helen Arnold Stanford University Press 2007 pp 89 90 FT A First Institution of Society and Second Order Institutions essay based on a lecture presented on December 15 1985 in Paris p 163 Castoriadis Cornelius February 1980 Facing the War Telos 46 48 Sophie Klimis and Laurent Van Eynde eds L imaginaire selon Castoriadis themes et enjeux Facultes Universitaires Saint Louis a Bruxelles 2006 p 47 n 8 Dosse 2014 pp 305 11 He had proposed in his application form the creation of a Chair in Recherches sur les regimes sociaux contemporains Research on contemporary social systems Dosse 2014 p 308 which he eventually occupied OPS p xxi Dosse 2014 pp 350 1 Chris Atton Alternative Literature A Practical Guide for Librarians Gower p 41 Tasis 2007 pp 43 and 85 n 23 Anon 2003 Foreword to The Rising Tide of Insignificancy Tasis 2007 p 81 Alex Economou Obituary Cornelius Castoriadis 1922 1997 Morin Edgar 30 December 1997 An encyclopaedic spirit Radical Philosophy Archived from the original on 11 June 2008 Retrieved 3 April 2008 Marcela Tova The imaginary term in readings about modernity Taylor and Castoriadis conceptions Revista de Estudios Sociales 9 June 2001 pp 32 39 Chiara Bottici Imaginal Politics Images Beyond Imagination and the Imaginary Columbia University Press 2014 p 50 Nicolas Poirier Cornelius Castoriadis L Imaginaire radical Revue du MAUSS 1 2003 No 21 pp 383 404 The Social Imaginary and the Institution in IIS pp 167 220 Also in CR pp 196 217 Schismenos 2013 p 86 Castoriadis Cornelius L Anti Mythes January 1974 An Interview with C Castoriadis Telos 23 152 Alienation appears first of all as the alienation of a society to its institutions as the autonomization of institutions in relation to society IIS p 115 Cornelius Castoriadis Ce qui fait la Grece Tome 3 Thucydide la force et le droit Seuil 2011 Seminaire of 13 February 1985 Cornelius Castoriadis 1999 La rationalite du capitalisme in Figures du Pensable Paris Seuil IIS pp 142 3 Jacques Derrida Positions University of Chicago Press 1982 p 57 Yannis Ktenas How Castoriadis read Weber Meaning values and imaginary institution Published March 6 2018 from PUBLIC SEMINAR Ricardo Duchesne Uniqueness of Western Civilization BRILL 2011 p 267 a b IIS p 23 EA p 9 IIS pp 223 5 WIF p 373 FT B p 80 Note that he doesn t entirely exclude its definition in chaos theory as a state of maximum entropy Castoriadis advocated that t he surging forth surgissement of signification of the institution of society is creation and self creation Signification emerges to cover over the Chaos thus bringing into being a mode of being that posits itself as negation of the Chaos WIF p 315 WIF p 72 cf List of republics Middle Ages FT A Imaginary and Imagination at the Crossroads p 146 FT A Imaginary and Imagination at the Crossroads p 134 Elliott 2003 p 101 Joas H 1989 Institutionalization as a Creative Process The Sociological Importance of Cornelius Castoriadis s Political Philosophy American Journal of Sociology Vol 4 5 March 1184 99 Arnason J P 1989 Culture and Imaginary Significations Thesis Eleven February 1989 22 1 25 45 a b Ecrits politiques Cornelius Castoriadis Livres LaProcure comSources editFrancois Dosse Castoriadis Une vie Paris La Decouverte 2014 ISBN 978 2 7071 7126 9 Anthony Elliott Critical Visions New Directions in Social Theory Rowman amp Littlefield 2003 ISBN 978 0 7425 2690 7 Christos Memos Castoriadis and Critical Theory Crisis Critique and Radical Alternatives Palgrave Macmillan 2014 ISBN 978 1 137 03447 2 Alan D Schrift Twentieth Century French Philosophy Key Themes and Thinkers John Wiley amp Sons 2006 ISBN 978 1 4051 4394 3 Theofanis Tasis Kastoriadhs Mia filosofia ths aytonomias Castoriadis A philosophy of autonomy Athens Eurasia books December 2007 ISBN 978 960 8187 22 1 Theofanis Tassis Cornelius Castoriadis Disposition einer Philosophie 2007 FU Dissertationen Online Alexandros Schismenos H An8rwpinh Trikymia PSyxh kai Aytonomia sth Filosofia toy Kornhlioy Kastoriadh The Human Tempest Psyche and Autonomy in the Philosophy of Cornelius Castoriadis Athens Exarcheia 2013 ISBN 978 618 80336 5 8 Further reading editNelly Andrikopoulou To ta3idi toy Mataroa 1945 Mataroa s Voyage 1945 Athens Hestia Printing House 2007 ISBN 978 960 05 1348 6 Giorgio Baruchello and Ingerid S Straume eds Creation Rationality and Autonomy Essays on Cornelius Castoriadis Aarhus Universitetsforlag 2013 ISBN 978 878 75 6499 1 Maurice Brinton For Workers Power Selected Writings ed David Goodway Edinburgh Oakland AK Press 2004 ISBN 1 904859 07 0 David Ames Curtis Socialism or Barbarism The Alternative Presented in the Work of Cornelius Castoriadis Revue Europeenne des Sciences Sociales 86 December 1989 293 322 lt https www academia edu 13495706 Socialism or Barbarism The Alternative Presented in the Work of Cornelius Castoriadis gt Dimitris Eleas Idiwtikos Kornhlios Proswpikh Martyria gia ton Kastoriadh Private Cornelius Personal Testimony about Castoriadis Athens Angelakis July 2014 ISBN 978 618 5011 69 7 Andrea Gabler Antizipierte Autonomie Zur Theorie und Praxis der Gruppe Socialisme ou Barbarie 1949 1967 Hanover Offizin Verlag 2009 ISBN 978 3 930345 64 9 Jurgen Habermas The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity Excursus on Castoriadis The Imaginary Institution Polity Press 1990 pp 327 35 ISBN 0 7456 0830 2 Axel Honneth Rescuing the Revolution with an Ontology On Cornelius Castoriadis Theory of Society In The Fragmanted World of the Social Essays in Social and Political Philosophy ed Charles Wright SUNY Press 1995 pp 168 183 ISBN 978 1 4384 0700 5 Hans Joas Pragmatism and Social Theory University of Chicago Press 1993 pp 154 171 ISBN 978 0 226 40042 6 Vrasidas Karalis ed Cornelius Castoriadis and Radical Democracy Brill 2009 ISBN 978 90 04 27858 5 Alexandros Kioupkiolis Freedom After the Critique of Foundations Marx Liberalism Castoriadis and Agonistic Autonomy Palgrave Macmillan 2012 ISBN 0 230 27912 0 Jeff Klooger Castoriadis Psyche Society Autonomy Brill 2009 ISBN 978 90 04 17529 7 Yannis Ktenas and Alexandros Schismenos eds H Skepsh toy Kornhlioy Kastoriadh kai h Shmasia ths gia mas Shmera The Thought of Cornelius Castoriadis and its Significance for Us Today Athens Eurasia books 2018 ISBN 978 618 5027 89 6 Serge Latouche Cornelius Castoriadis ou l autonomie radicale Le Passager Clandestin 2014 ISBN 978 2 36935 008 8 Yannis Lazaratos To para8yro toy Kastoriadh Xaos Abyssos Apy8meno The Window of Castoriadis Chaos Abyss Grounless Athens Papazisis 2018 ISBN 978 960 02 3393 3 Johann Michel Ricoeur and the Post Structuralists Bourdieu Derrida Deleuze Foucault Castoriadis Rowman amp Littlefield International 2014 ISBN 978 1 78348 094 4 Mathieu Noury Cornelius Castoriadis sociologue Critique sociologique de l ontologie de la creation imaginaire sociale Revue Aspects Sociologiques 18 1 March 2011 Yorgos Oikonomou ed H Genesh ths Dhmokratias kai h Shmerinh Krish The Birth of Democracy and Contemporary Crisis Athens Eurasia books 2011 ISBN 978 960 8187 77 1 Mathieu Potte Bonneville Risked democracy Foucault Castoriadis and the Greeks Radical Philosophy 166 March April 2011 Jean Louis Prat Introduction a Castoriadis Paris La Decouverte 2007 ISBN 978 2 7071 5083 7 Richard Rorty Unger Castoriadis and the Romance of a National Future Northwestern University Law Review 82 2 335 51 1988 Alexandros Schismenos and Nikos Ioannou Meta ton Kastoriadh Dromoi ths Aytonomias ston 21o Aiwna After Castoriadis Roads to Autonomy in the 21st Century Athens Exarcheia 2014 ISBN 978 618 5128 03 6 Schismenos Alexandros 15 January 2018 Imagination and Interpretation On the dialogue between Cornelius Castoriadis and Paul Ricoeur Schismenos Alexandros Time in the ontology of Cornelius Castoriadis SOCRATES 5 3 and 4 64 81 April 2018 Alexandros Schismenos Nikos Ioannou and Chris Spannos Castoriadis and Autonomy in the Twenty First Century London Bloomsbury 2021 ISBN 9781350123373 9781350123380 Alexandros Schismenos Castoriadis against Heidegger Time and existence 2023 DOI 10 5281 zenodo 7978996 Society of Friends of Cornelius Castoriadis PSyxh Logos Polis Psyche Logos Polis Athens Ypsilon 2007 ISBN 978 960 17 0219 3 Yannis Stavrakakis The Lacanian Left Psychoanalysis Theory Politics Edinburgh University Press 2007 pp 37 65 ISBN 0 7914 7329 5 Yavor Tarinski Short Introduction to the Political Legacy of Castoriadis Athens Aftoleksi 2020 Thesis Eleven Special Issue Cornelius Castoriadis 49 1 May 1997 London Sage Publications ISSN 0725 5136 John B Thompson Studies in the Theory of Ideology University of California Press 1984 Chapter 1 Ideology and the Social Imaginary An Appraisal of Castoriadis and Lefort ISBN 978 0 520 05411 0 Marcela Tovar Restrepo Castoriadis Foucault and Autonomy New Approaches to Subjectivity Society and Social Change Continuum International Publishing 2012 ISBN 978 1 4411 5226 8 Joel Whitebook Intersubjectivity and the Monadic Core of the Psyche Habermas and Castoriadis on the Unconscious In Maurizio Passerin d Entreves and Seyla Benhabib eds Habermas and the Unfinished Project of Modernity Critical Essays on The Philosophical Discourse of Modernity MIT Press 1997 pp 172 193 ISBN 978 0 262 54080 3 External links edit nbsp Media related to Cornelius Castoriadis at Wikimedia Commons nbsp Quotations related to Cornelius Castoriadis at Wikiquote nbsp Cornelius Castoriadis at Wikibooks nbsp The dictionary definition of anerithmon gelasma at WiktionaryOverviews Cornelius Castoriadis Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Interviews Videotaped interview with Chris Marker Interview with Cornelius Castoriadis for the show Paraskinio of the Greek television network ET1 1984 on YouTube with English subtitles Broadcast information on radio interviews with Cornelius Castoriadis in French Institut National de l Audiovisuel Retrieved 17 December 2013 The files and documents kept at the Inatheque de France can be consulted at the consultation centre at the Bibliotheque nationale de France Obituaries biographies Cornelius Castoriadis 1922 1997 at the libertarian communist website libcom org 27 September 2003 David Ames Curtis Cornelius Castoriadis An Obituary Salmagundi Spring Summer 1998 52 61 Reprinted as Cornelius Castoriadis Philosopher of the Social Imagination Free Associations 7 3 1999 321 30 Available online lt http www agorainternational org about html gt Symposium Cornelius Castoriadis 1922 1997 obituaries and profiles by Axel Honneth Edgar Morin and Joel Whitebook Radical Philosophy magazine July August 1998 access restricted to subscribers Obituary Castoriadis and the democratic tradition by Takis Fotopoulos Democracy amp Nature Vol 4 No 1 1997 Bibliographies analyses critiques The Cornelius Castoriadis Agora International Website contains bibliographies and videographies in many languages a Castoriadis interview a Teaching Castoriadis section videos from the 1990 Castoriadis Colloqium at Cerisy France and the complete text of the Socialisme ou Barbarie magazine series texts scanned in the original French as well as News items of current and past interest L Association Castoriadis with bibliography news media events original articles in French Castoriadis entry by John V Garner Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy Cornelius Castoriadis and the triumph of the will by Alex Callinicos Chapter 4 3 of Trotskyism 1990 Cornelius Castoriadis critical analysis at the libertarian communist website libcom org An Introduction to Cornelius Castoriadis Work by Fabio Ciaramelli Journal of European Psychoanalysis 6 Winter 1998 access restricted to subscribers The Strange Afterlife of Cornelius Castoriadis by Scott McLemee Chronicle of Higher Education 26 March 2004 access restricted to subscribers reprint Full text of the Cornelius Castoriadis symposium held at the University of Akureyri from the special issue of Nordicum Mediterraneum e magazine of Nordic and Mediterranean studies December 2008 Houston Christopher Islam Castoriadis and autonomy Thesis Eleven February 2004 76 1 pp 49 69 Suzi Adams Castoriadis long journey through Nomos Institution creation interpretation Tijdschrift voor Filosofie 70 June 269 295 2008 Linda M G Zerilli 2002 Castoriadis Arendt and the Problem of the New doi 10 1111 1467 8675 00302 The autonomy project and Inclusive Democracy a critical review of Castoriadis thought by Takis Fotopoulos The International Journal of Inclusive Democracy Vol 4 No 2 April 2008 Unities and Tensions in the Work of Cornelius Castoriadis With Some Considerations on the Question of Organization by David Ames Curtis talk delivered to Autonomy or Barbarism sponsored event in Athens 7 December 2007 Exchange of letters between Cornelius Castoriadis and Anton Pannekoek originally published in Socialisme ou Barbarie translated and introduced by Viewpoint Magazine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cornelius Castoriadis amp oldid 1216902132, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.