Flora Renz is a Senior Lecturer in Law at Kent Law School and Co-Director of the Centre for Sexuality, Race and Gender Justice. Her monograph Gender Recognition and the Law: Troubling Transgender ...
Present theories of computation and artificial intelligence often claim that philosophy should either discard its principal modes of gnoseology (that is, its theories of knowledge and cognition) and ...
Abdaljawad Omar is a part-time Lecturer in the Philosophy and Cultural Studies Department at Birzeit University and has contributed to a number of different outlets, including Mondoweiss and ...
As the articles contained in this issue of Radical Philosophy indicate, ‘social reproduction’ is today more than ever at the centre of feminist debates. Yet the same articles also express a legitimate ...
The crisis of the neoliberal stage of capitalism has been unfolding spectacularly under our eyes in recent months, provoking ever greater social upheavals in an ever greater number of places. 1 Events ...
Radical Philosophy: A key concept of your work is ‘the motley crew’, which you mobilise to designate transversal alliances of sailors, slaves and pirates at sea. This seems a very productive notion ...
Gilbert Simondon was at the height of his philosophical creativity when, at the end of the 1950s, he wrote his two doctoral theses: ‘Individuation in the Light of the Notions of Form and Information’ ...
The word culture entails a value judgement, and to a certain extent it relates to an axiological type of content.* When used with reference to human culture, its primary meaning is metaphorical, since ...
Nasser Abourahme is a writer and teacher, and currently Assistant Professor of Middle Eastern and North African Studies at Bowdoin College.
F.T.C. Manning is a writer, researcher and educator based in San Francisco, California.
Fredric Jameson has been a busy man over the last decade. As well as two massive tomes on science fiction and modernism, combining republished essays with extensive new material, there has been a ...
I have a vivid memory – too vivid to be an accident – of the first time I read something written by Ellen Meiksins Wood. It was an article in New Left Review on the separation of the economic from the ...
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