Bibtex export

 

@article{ Ferreira2021,
 title = {O conceito de outrem},
 author = {Ferreira, Filipe},
 journal = {Griot: Revista de Filosofia},
 number = {2},
 pages = {466-480},
 volume = {21},
 year = {2021},
 issn = {2178-1036},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.31977/grirfi.v21i2.2298},
 abstract = {This article combines Deleuze's extraordinary analysis of Michel Tournier's 'Friday', where we find the presentation of a duplicated, perverted, version of Robinson Crusoe when compared to Daniel Defoe's classical version, with a critical analysis of conceptions such as being-in-the-world, stemming from Heidegger's hermeneutic phenomenology. My point is that without Others [Autrui], or what Deleuze calls the structure-Other [structure Autrui], it is the very possibility of 'interpreting' being-in-the-world which is at stake, being a world without Others, the structure-Other, one wherein a pre-ontological comprehension of being is 'uncomprehended', no longer being it possible to attain a facticity of being precisely insofar as one lives, suffers, without Others, a process of an inverted nature, not so much of the facticity of being but of its 'defacticization' (the movement of being-thrown out of and not into the world). I propose, therefore, a new conception of the limit of being-in-the-world not in terms of death but of Others, of what it is to lose Others, the structure-Other, and how this loss implies losing being-in-the-world, the very possibility of interpreting, of comprehending its different structures (being-there, being-with, being-towards-death, etc.). The concept of Others functions then as a giant fold between being-in-the-world and what Artaud called 'the other side of existence', but also between the absence of Others and the creation of 'worlds without Others', all of which 'minor', 'desert islands', 'plateaus', constituted in the immanence of this absence, of the 'outside'.},
}