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Christopher Norris

    Norris s'impose comme un éminent spécialiste mondial de la déconstruction, avec un accent particulier sur l'œuvre de Jacques Derrida. Ses écrits approfondis explorent la théorie littéraire et la philosophie continentale, examinant souvent les liens complexes entre la critique et la pensée philosophique. Il est reconnu non seulement comme un interprète d'autrui, mais comme un philosophe à part entière, dont l'approche distinctive des textes et des idées en fait une voix contemporaine significative. Ses analyses abordent en profondeur les questions fondamentales de la théorie et de la pratique.

    Back Rehabilitation
    Hedgehogs
    Minding the Gap
    • Back Rehabilitation

      Core Stability Re-examined

      • 362pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      Critically appraising work from several approaches to produce an integrated, practical approach suitable for day-to-day clinicians and personal trainers, this essential guide looks at the science and practice of designing and teaching the best exercise programmes for low back pain. číst celé

      Back Rehabilitation2023
    • Hedgehogs

      verse reflections after Derrida

      • 170pages
      • 6 heures de lecture

      Exploring Jacques Derrida's philosophical ideas, this collection features poems and verse-essays that blend wit, irony, and reflection with formal verse structures. The author aims to bridge poetry and philosophy, engaging readers from both fields while challenging the limitations of free verse. By juxtaposing traditional rhyme and meter with Derrida's modernist influences, the work advocates for the liberating potential of formal constraints in poetry. This collection contributes significantly to the evolving landscape of creative criticism, inviting deeper exploration of linguistic innovation.

      Hedgehogs2021
    • Minding the Gap

      Epistemology and Philosophy of Science in the Two Traditions

      • 296pages
      • 11 heures de lecture

      In this sweeping volume, Christopher Norris challenges the notion that productive engagement between mainstream analytic philosophers and post-Kantian continental thinkers is impossible. He argues that this perspective stems from a limiting view that emerged with logical positivism. Norris uncovers shared concerns often overlooked due to parochial interests and the desire to delineate separate philosophical territories. He critiques the analytic tradition's rejection of Husserlian phenomenology and its dismissal of what was deemed "psychologistic" approaches to meaning, knowledge, and truth. These issues, he contends, have reemerged from the era of logical empiricism to the present. Norris provides critical readings of philosophers such as Quine, Kuhn, Davidson, Putnam, Rorty, Dummett, Nagel, and McDowell, while discussing Wittgenstein's influence and its detrimental effect on theories of knowledge. On the continental side, he advocates for a reassessment of Husserl's phenomenological project, exploring its relevance to contemporary Anglo-American debates in epistemology and philosophy of science. He also examines Bachelard and Canguilhem as alternatives to Kuhnian paradigms. Through two chapters on Derrida, Norris delves into deconstruction's "supplementary" logic, highlighting the common interests between the two philosophical cultures and the rigor of continental engagement with issues often neglected by Anglophone writers.

      Minding the Gap2000
      5,0