Transindividuality: The affective continuity of the social in Spinoza
Publikation: Beiträge in Sammelwerken › Aufsätze in Sammelwerken › Forschung › begutachtet
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Critical theory and New Materialism. Hrsg. / Hartmut Rosa; Christoph Henning; Arthur Bueno. London: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group, 2021. S. 84-94 (Routledge studies in social and political thought; Band 161).
Publikation: Beiträge in Sammelwerken › Aufsätze in Sammelwerken › Forschung › begutachtet
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TY - CHAP
T1 - Transindividuality
T2 - The affective continuity of the social in Spinoza
AU - Andermann, Kerstin
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Spinoza’s metaphysical system precedes the division of philosophical thought into empirical and transcendental premises. In this respect, it is not surprising to see that he has become an important reference in overcoming dualistic aporias and proclaiming a new materialism that promises to place the human individual into the constitutive relations of the material world.For Spinoza, the question of man is associated with the metaphysical explanation of immanent self-causation of the one and only substance the world is. From this presupposition, he deduces an immanent causality by which things are connected in causal relations and through causal effects. The continuity of immanent effects gives rise to differential structures and transitions of activity and passivity, that is, potentiality and depotentiality, through which every individual is connected with its environment.The principle of affection is already crucial on an ontological level where Spinoza identifies the infinite modes as affections of the substance. In an affective continuity the power of the material world becomes visible, which means that the affective and transindividual constitution among individuals can be made comprehensible and the material premises of the social world can be identified. The emancipatory and critical horizon of such an approach is to describe the social world in terms of relations and transitions between individuals who strive to realize their potential. In order to give such an explanation, I connect Spinoza’s metaphysical premises with its interpretations by Deleuze and Balibar.
AB - Spinoza’s metaphysical system precedes the division of philosophical thought into empirical and transcendental premises. In this respect, it is not surprising to see that he has become an important reference in overcoming dualistic aporias and proclaiming a new materialism that promises to place the human individual into the constitutive relations of the material world.For Spinoza, the question of man is associated with the metaphysical explanation of immanent self-causation of the one and only substance the world is. From this presupposition, he deduces an immanent causality by which things are connected in causal relations and through causal effects. The continuity of immanent effects gives rise to differential structures and transitions of activity and passivity, that is, potentiality and depotentiality, through which every individual is connected with its environment.The principle of affection is already crucial on an ontological level where Spinoza identifies the infinite modes as affections of the substance. In an affective continuity the power of the material world becomes visible, which means that the affective and transindividual constitution among individuals can be made comprehensible and the material premises of the social world can be identified. The emancipatory and critical horizon of such an approach is to describe the social world in terms of relations and transitions between individuals who strive to realize their potential. In order to give such an explanation, I connect Spinoza’s metaphysical premises with its interpretations by Deleuze and Balibar.
KW - Philosophy
UR - https://www.taylorfrancis.com/chapters/edit/10.4324/9780429289262-9/transindividuality-kerstin-andermann?context=ubx&refId=a149f8d1-b65f-4cf6-b999-4e385a7bb0e8
UR - https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429289262
UR - http://swbplus.bsz-bw.de/bsz1747943452inh.htm
M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies
SN - 978-0-367-25704-0
SN - 978-1-03-202051-8
T3 - Routledge studies in social and political thought
SP - 84
EP - 94
BT - Critical theory and New Materialism
A2 - Rosa, Hartmut
A2 - Henning, Christoph
A2 - Bueno, Arthur
PB - Routledge Taylor & Francis Group
CY - London
ER -