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沉思的生活,或无所事事
沉思的生活,或无所事事
[德]韩炳哲
¥40.60
“滚动着,像石头一样滚动着,按照愚蠢的机械定律。”——我们正在成为这样一群行动者。我们对生活的感知只剩工作和绩效,“无所事事”也就成了我们想尽快清除的赤字。人的存在被行动榨干,变成可以被剥削的对象。我们失去了对无所事事的感知。无所事事不是无力行动、拒绝行动,也不是简单地在行动中缺席,而是一种独立的能力。它有自身的逻辑和语言,有其自身的时间性,有自身的结构与气势,甚至有其自身的魔力。 无所事事是人性的构成部分。它参与到“做”中来,让“做”实实在在具有了人性。倘若没有迟疑和中止,行动将沦为盲目的活动与反应。缺失了安宁,就会出现一种新的野蛮。 假若失去无所事事的能力,我们就会像一部只会运转的机器。对生存的忧虑和纯然属于生命的困苦终止之处,便是真正生命的起。无所事事是人努力的最终目标。在来临中的和平国度里,人不过是“生命体共和国”的公民,与植物、动物、石头、云、星无异。 -------------------- 韩炳哲作品(第2辑) 《山寨:中国式解构》(2023年1月出版) Shanzhai. Dekonstruktion auf Chinesisch. 《超文化:文化与全球化》(2023年1月出版) Hyperkulturalität. Kultur und Globalisierung. 《妥协社会:今日之痛》(2023年1月出版) Palliativgesellschaft. Schmerz heute. 《不在场:东亚文化与哲学》(2023年7月出版) Abwesen. Zur Kultur und Philosophie des Fernen Ostens. 《禅宗哲学》(2023年8月出版) Philosophie des Zen-Buddhismus. 《什么是权力?》(2023年7月出版) Was ist Macht? 《仪式的消失:当下的世界》(2023年8月出版) Vom Verschwinden der Rituale.Eine Topologie der Gegenwart. 《资本主义与死亡驱力》(2023年8月出版) Kapitalismus und Todestrieb. 《沉思的生活,或无所事事》(2023年7月出版) Vita contemplativa.oder von der Untätigkeit. 韩炳哲作品(第3辑) 《大地颂歌:花园之旅》(2024年1月即将出版) Lob der Erde. Eine Reise in den Garten. 《时间的香气:驻留的艺术》(2024年1月即将出版) Duft der Zeit. Ein philosophischer Essay zur Kunst des Verweilens. 《叙事的危机》(2024年1月即将出版) Die Krise der Narration.
49元5本 世纪
世纪
(法)阿兰•巴迪欧
¥40.60
本书收录了阿兰·巴迪欧的13篇讲座,它们是巴迪欧于1998—1999学年、1999—2000学年、2000—2001学年,为哲学国际学院研究班设的课程内容。巴迪欧在其中号召用内在性方法来取代外在性方法,以评价波澜壮阔的20世纪。巴迪欧将20世纪描述为“野兽”,这个新世纪超脱于旧的世界,践行了其思想中的一种真正的无限,它是新生的,同时也是脆弱的。在本书中,可以看到一种后马克思视域中不同寻常的百年反思。
时间的香气:驻留的艺术(韩炳哲作品系列)
时间的香气:驻留的艺术(韩炳哲作品系列)
[德]韩炳哲
¥40.60
如今的时间危机并非加速。加速的时代早已过去。目前我们认为的加速,只是时间涣散的症状之一。今日的时间危机源于一种导致各类时间障碍和错误感知的时间紊乱。时间缺乏有序的节奏,陷失调状态。这种紊乱让时间仿佛在飞驰。 这种时间紊乱并非强制加速的结果,其首要原因是时间的原子化,这也是为什么人们感觉时间的流逝比以往快得多。时间涣散导致人们不可能去经验何为持存。没什么能让时间驻足。生命不再被嵌能创建持存的秩序体或坐标系中。 本书通过回顾历史提请人们注意,必须换一种方式理解日常生活,以避免陷时间危机。作者缅怀的并非“讲述的时间”。讲述的终结,或故事的终结,并不一定意味着时间上的空白。它有可能启一种无关神学和目的论的、散发自己独特香气的生命时间。它的前提是让“沉思的生活”复苏。 -------------------- 韩炳哲作品(第2辑) 《山寨:中国式解构》(2023年1月出版) Shanzhai. Dekonstruktion auf Chinesisch. 《超文化:文化与全球化》(2023年1月出版) Hyperkulturalität. Kultur und Globalisierung. 《妥协社会:今日之痛》(2023年1月出版) Palliativgesellschaft. Schmerz heute. 《不在场:东亚文化与哲学》(2023年7月出版) Abwesen. Zur Kultur und Philosophie des Fernen Ostens. 《禅宗哲学》(2023年8月出版) Philosophie des Zen-Buddhismus. 《什么是权力?》(2023年7月出版) Was ist Macht? 《仪式的消失:当下的世界》(2023年8月出版) Vom Verschwinden der Rituale.Eine Topologie der Gegenwart. 《资本主义与死亡驱力》(2023年8月出版) Kapitalismus und Todestrieb. 《沉思的生活,或无所事事》(2023年7月出版) Vita contemplativa.oder von der Untätigkeit. 韩炳哲作品(第3辑) 《大地颂歌:花园之旅》(2024年5月出版) Lob der Erde. Eine Reise in den Garten. 《时间的香气:驻留的艺术》(2024年5月出版) Duft der Zeit. Ein philosophischer Essay zur Kunst des Verweilens. 《叙事的危机》(2024年5月出版) Die Krise der Narration.
49元5本 张载天人关系新说——论作为宗教哲学的理学--儒教哲学丛书
张载天人关系新说——论作为宗教哲学的理学--儒教哲学丛书
周赟
¥40.70
  儒家哲学,究竟仅仅是哲学,抑或仅仅是伦理,还是一套宗教思想,这是有争议的。这个争议尤其凸显在对理学哲学的认识上。周赟编著的《张载天人关系新说--论作为宗教哲学的理学》认为,理学是一套哲学,但主要是一套宗教哲学。为了说明这个问题,本书主要考察了有代表性的理学家——张载。张载哲学的核心概念主要有两个,即天道与祭祀。哲学研究者往往*青睐张载的“天道”,却忽视了他极其重视的“祭祀”。本书认为,“天道”就是“祭祀”的哲学根据,而“祭祀”则是“天道”的物质基础,只有将这两个方面结合起来,才能真正认清理学哲学的宗教本质。
Eugenie Grandet
Eugenie Grandet
Honore de Balzac
¥40.79
Eugenie's father Felix is a former cooper who has become wealthy through both business ventures and inheritance. However, he is very miserly, and he, his wife, daughter and their servant Nanon live in a run-down old house which he is too miserly to repair. His banker des Grassins wishes Eugenie to marry his son Adolphe, and his lawyer Cruchot wishes Eugenie to marry his nephew President Cruchot des Bonfons, both parties eyeing the inheritance from Felix.
The Model Millionaire
The Model Millionaire
Oscar Wilde
¥40.79
Hughie Erskine is in love and wants to marry, but the girl's father will not allow it, since Erskine has no money. Erskine's friend Alan Trevor is a painter, and he visits him at his studio one day to find him with a pitiable beggar — the model for his painting. Erskine only has one coin, on which he depends for transportation, but he decides he can walk for a couple of weeks and gives the beggar the coin.
The Water-Babies: A Fairy Tale for a Land-Baby
The Water-Babies: A Fairy Tale for a Land-Baby
Charles Kingsley
¥40.79
Tom is a young chimney sweep, who falls into a river after meeting an upper-class girl named Ellie and being chased out of her house. There he drowns and is transformed into a water-baby. Tom embarks on a series of adventures and lessons, and enjoys the community of other water-babies once he proves himself a moral creature.
Tales of Dostoyevsky, Volume 1
Tales of Dostoyevsky, Volume 1
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
¥40.79
Dostoyevsky is the only psychologist from whom I had something to learn', remarked Friedrich Nietzsche. 'He ranks among the most beautiful strokes of fortune in my life'. Discover the universal truths and wisdoms of Dostoyevsky in this volume of Dostoyevsky's tales including: An Honest Thief, The Heavenly Christmas Tree, The Peasant Marey.
The Odd Women
The Odd Women
George Gissing
¥40.79
Alice and Virginia Madden move to London and renew their friendship with Rhoda, an unmarried bluestocking. She is living with the also unmarried Mary Barfoot, and together they run an establishment teaching secretarial skills to young middle-class women remaindered in the marriage equation.
Thyrza
Thyrza
George Gissing
¥40.79
Thyrza Trent, a young hat-trimmer, meets and falls in love with Walter Egremont, an Oxford-trained idealist who gives lectures on literature to workers. Trapped by birth and circumstance, Thyrza is attempting to escape her destiny in this tale of ambition, romance, betrayal and disillusionment.
The Selfish Giant
The Selfish Giant
Oscar Wilde
¥40.79
Perpetual winter comes to a beautiful garden of the selfish giant who erected a wall around it to stop children playing in the garden. Unexpected consequences follow. The birds stop singing in this garden and both trees and flowers stop blossoming. One day discovers that spring has returned to the garden, as the children have found a way in through a gap in the wall. He sees the error of his ways, and resolves to destroy the wall.
The Devoted Friend
The Devoted Friend
Oscar Wilde
¥40.79
Little Hans spends most of his time gardening and makes a living from sales of his beautiful flowers. Little Hans always treats his neighbours well and even allows neighbouring rich Miller to pick flowers from his garden. But the Miller rarely invites Hans into his house or responds in kind. The Miller instead develops has his own philosophy of friendship: ‘Lots of people act well but very few people talk well, which shows that talking is much the more difficult thing of the two, and much the finer thing also'.
A Woman of No Importance
A Woman of No Importance
Oscar Wilde
¥40.79
The play opens with a party on a terrace in Lady Hunstanton's estate. The upper class guests exchange social gossip and small talk. Lady Caroline Pontrefact patronizes an American visitor, Hester Worsley, and proceeds to give her own opinion on everyone in the room and her surrounding life. Lady Caroline also denounces Hester's enthusiasm for Gerald Arbuthnot until Gerald himself enters to proclaim that Lord Illingworth, a powerful, flirtatious male political figure intends to take him under his wing as secretary.
The Secret of the Island
The Secret of the Island
Jules Verne
¥40.79
It was now two years and a half since the castaways from the balloon had been thrown on Lincoln Island, and during that period there had been no communication between them and their fellow-creatures. Once the reporter had attempted to communicate with the inhabited world by confiding to a bird a letter which contained the secret of their situation, but that was a chance on which it was impossible to reckon seriously. Ayrton, alone, under the circumstances which have been related, had come to join the little colony.
Bobok
Bobok
Fyodor Dostoyevsky
¥40.79
Ivan Ivanovitch attends the funeral of a casual acquaintance and falls to contemplation in the graveyard. He hears the voices of the recently deceased and buried, and he listens to their conversation. They discuss card games and political scandals. As the deceased entertain themselves by revealing all of the shameful details of their earthly lives, Ivan Ivanovitch sneezes.
The African Wars
The African Wars
Julius Caesar
¥40.79
Caesar, advancing by moderate journeys, and continuing his march without intermission, arrived at Lilybaeum, on the 14th day before the calends of January. Designing to embark immediately, though he had only one legion of new levies, and not quite six hundred horse, he ordered his tent to be pitched so near the sea-side that the waves lashed the very foot of it. This he did with a view that none should think he had time to delay, and that his men might be kept in readiness at a day or an hour's warning. Though the wind at that time was contrary, he nevertheless detained the soldiers and mariners on board, that he might lose no opportunity of sailing; the rather, because the forces of the enemy were announced by the inhabitants of the province, to consist of innumberable cavalry not to be numbered; four legions headed by Juba, together with a great body of light-armed troops; ten legions under the command of Scipio; a hundred and twenty elephants, and fleets in abundance. Yet he was not alarmed, nor lost his confident hopes and spirits. Meantime the number of galleys and transports increased daily; the new-levied legions flocked in to him from all parts; among the rest the fifth, a veteran legion, and about two thousand horse.
Meno
Meno
Plato
¥40.79
This Dialogue begins abruptly with a question of Meno, who asks, 'whether virtue can be taught.' Socrates replies that he does not as yet know what virtue is, and has never known anyone who did. 'Then he cannot have met Gorgias when he was at Athens.' Yes, Socrates had met him, but he has a bad memory, and has forgotten what Gorgias said. Will Meno tell him his own notion, which is probably not very different from that of Gorgias? 'O yes—nothing easier: there is the virtue of a man, of a woman, of an old man, and of a child; there is a virtue of every age and state of life, all of which may be easily described.'
Categories
Categories
Aristotle
¥40.79
Categories is a text from Aristotle's Organon that enumerates all the possible kinds of things that can be the subject or the predicate of a proposition. They are considered the single most heavily discussed of all Aristotelian notions.
The African Wars: English and Latin Language
The African Wars: English and Latin Language
Julius Caesar
¥40.79
Caesar, advancing by moderate journeys, and continuing his march without intermission, arrived at Lilybaeum, on the 14th day before the calends of January. Designing to embark immediately, though he had only one legion of new levies, and not quite six hundred horse, he ordered his tent to be pitched so near the sea-side that the waves lashed the very foot of it. This he did with a view that none should think he had time to delay, and that his men might be kept in readiness at a day or an hour's warning. Though the wind at that time was contrary, he nevertheless detained the soldiers and mariners on board, that he might lose no opportunity of sailing; the rather, because the forces of the enemy were announced by the inhabitants of the province, to consist of innumberable cavalry not to be numbered; four legions headed by Juba, together with a great body of light-armed troops; ten legions under the command of Scipio; a hundred and twenty elephants, and fleets in abundance. Yet he was not alarmed, nor lost his confident hopes and spirits. Meantime the number of galleys and transports increased daily; the new-levied legions flocked in to him from all parts; among the rest the fifth, a veteran legion, and about two thousand horse.
The Spanish Wars: English and Latin Language
The Spanish Wars: English and Latin Language
Julius Caesar
¥40.79
On the defeat of Pharnaces and reduction of Africa, those who escaped from those battles fled to young Cn. Pompey, who had taken possession of Further Spain, while Caesar was detained in Italy in exhibiting games. Pompey began to throw himself on the protection of every state, in order the more readily to establish the means of defense against him. Accordingly, with a considerable force which had been collected, partly by entreaty, partly by force, he began to lay waste the province. Under these circumstances some states voluntarily sent him supplies, others shut the gates of their towns against him. If any of these chanced to fall into his hands by assault, although some citizen in it had deserved well of Cn. Pompey (his father), yet some cause was alleged against him on account of the greatness of his wealth, so that, he being dispatched, his fortune might become the reward of the soldiers.
Crito
Crito
Plato
¥40.79
The Crito seems intended to exhibit the character of Socrates in one light only, not as the philosopher, fulfilling a divine mission and trusting in the will of heaven, but simply as the good citizen, who having been unjustly condemned is willing to give up his life in obedience to the laws of the state . . .