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  1. Cave Dwellers or Labyrinth Diggers? Castoriadis and Plato on Philosophy and Politics.Toula Nicolacopoulos - 2017 - Critical Horizons 18 (2):119-135.
    Beginning with a consideration of Castoriadis’s elucidation of autonomous thinking, both by way of the contrast he draws with the inherited tradition and in relation to his account of the demands of the political project of autonomy, we compare Plato’s story of the Cave to suggest that Castoriadis overestimates the power of questioning and of creating new social forms. We then argue that Castoriadis and Plato emerge as two extremes: whereas the first favours the power of questioning to the exclusion (...)
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  • The Guise of Nothing: Castoriadis on Indeterminacy, and its Misrecognition in Heidegger and Sartre.Jeff Klooger - 2013 - Critical Horizons 14 (1):1-21.
    Castoriadis’s radical ontology of indeterminacy postulates a third term between the complete determinacy of the traditional conception of being and the absolute indeterminacy of the traditional conception of nothingness. Castoriadis himself made considerable efforts to demonstrate how ontological conceptions which equate being with determinacy fail to grasp the reality of being in all ontological regions and contexts. He did somewhat less in regard to the opposite pole of the ontological dichotomy, the identification of indeterminacy with nothingness, though he certainly recognized (...)
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  • Ontological Anti-naturalism and the Emergence of Life and Mind: Castoriadis and Deacon.Jeff Klooger - 2017 - Critical Horizons 18 (2):136-153.
    This essay compares the ideas of Cornelius Castoriadis and Terrence W. Deacon. Castoriadis’s anti-Naturalistic ontology, with its conception of radical ontological creation and fundamental indeterminacy, along with his analysis of the category of the “for-itself”, comprising all subjective beings from the living organism to the social-historical, is compared to Deacon’s exploration of the emergence of life and mind, which sees the emergence of teleological beings as resulting from the creation of form-generating constraints that involve new types of dynamic process. Significant (...)
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  • Castoriadis on the being of human: An elucidation of creation ex nihilo.Jodie Lee Heap - 2021 - Thesis Eleven 166 (1):54-69.
    Taking inspiration from the vast breadth of Castoriadis’ oeuvre, this article provides an ongoing elucidation of the being of human as creation ex nihilo. It does so by engaging with Castoriadis’ reflections on the vis formandi pertaining to the human condition and his tentative introduction to the concept of the ‘human Nonconscious’. Across many of his essays, Castoriadis refers to the vis formandi of the being of human as an ‘a-causal’ and as a corporeal power of formation and of creation. (...)
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