Zeitschrift | Ausgabe
Theory, Culture & Society 40 (2023), 3
Isabelle Stengers’ cosmopolitical proposal is an influential attempt by a European philosopher to transform the burdensome legacy of Western thought. Reconsidering her comprehensive engagement with the cosmology of the British mathematician and philosopher Alfred North Whitehead, this article reveals two concepts as foundational to Stengers’ cosmopolitics: civilization and commerce. While not usually associated with a critical political theory, in her development of what we call a commercial political ontology, Stengers explores the modes of inheriting these ostracized notions. By tracing the genealogy of this political ontology back to Pericles’ first explicit defense of persuasion as a requisite for civilization, we argue that Pericles’ famous funeral oration provides the structure for Whitehead’s cosmology, and, ultimately, Stengers’ cosmopolitics. As such, we understand her cosmopolitical proposal as a dress rehearsal of a funeral eulogy for bourgeois society.
CONTENT
Inheriting Cosmopolitics: Pericles, Whitehead, Stengers
Milan Stürmer, Daniel Bella
Reinventing the Diplomat: Isabelle Stengers, Bruno Latour and Baptiste Morizot
Iwona Janicka
Rhetoric as Critique: Towards a Rhetorical Philosophy
Gerald Posselt, Andreas Hetzel
Neoliberalism and the Defence of the Corporation
Nicholas Gane
The ‘Optimistic Cruelty’ of Hayek’s Market Order: Neoliberalism, Pain and Social Selection
Carla Ibled
Financial Eschatology and the Libidinal Economy of Leverage
Amin Samman, Stefano Sgambati