Available Formats
Clandestine Theology: A Non-Philosopher's Confession of Faith
By (Author) Professor Francois Laruelle
Translated by Andrew Sackin-Poll
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
3rd September 2020
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Ethics and moral philosophy
Philosophy of religion
Christianity
Theology
230
Paperback
240
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
308g
In this new translation, Laruelle offers a serious and rigorous challenge to contemporary theological thought, calling into question the dominant understanding of the relation between Christ, theology, and philosophy, not only from a theoretical, but also political perspective. He achieves this through an inversion of St Pauls reading of Christ, through which the ground for Christianity shifts. It is no longer the event of the resurrection, as philosophical and theological operation (Badious St Paul), so much as the Risen Himself that forms the starting point for a non-philosophical confession. Between the Greek and the Jew, Laruelle places the Gnostic-Christ in order to disrupt and overturn such theologico-philosophical interpretations of the resurrection and set the Risen within the radical immanence of Man-in-Person. Forming the basis for a non-Christianity, Clandestine Theology offers a more radical deconstruction of Christianity, resting upon the last identity of Man and the humanity of Christ as opposed to endless deferral or difference (Nancy) or the universalising economy of Ideas and Events (Badiou).
Laruelles questioning of the dualistic arbitrariness of all philosophies inevitably returns us to a monism that is theological, and an immediacy of experience that is religious. His consequent clandestine engagement with Christianity is a provocation that no contemporary theologian should ignore. * Catherine Pickstock, Norris-Hulse Professor of Divinity, University of Cambridge, UK *
Clandestine Theology is the latest work of one of the most important and radical philosophers today. Franois Laruelle has radicalized philosophy by ridding it of its principle of self-sufficiency and by bringing it back to its metaphysical roots and simultaneously closer to the practice and posture of scientific thought. His theology is a surprising yet perfectly consistent part of his entire non-philosophical project also called the non-standard philosophy. * Katerina Kolozova, Professor of Philosophy of Law at the University American College - Skopje, North Macedonia *
Franois Laruelle is a French philosopher formerly Professor of Contemporary Philosophy at the Universit de Paris X (Nanterre) and the Collge International de Philosophie, France. He is the creator of the concept of 'non-philosophy' and author of over twenty works of philosophy. Andrew Sackin-Poll is a doctoral researcher in the French Department of the University of Cambridge, UK, under the direction of Dr Ian James and Prof Catherine Pickstock. He has translated works by Jean-Louis Chrtien, Emmanuel Falque and Michel Henry.