maandag 7 mei 2018

Christina Rawls schreef dissertatie over “Spinoza’s Ethology” - #spinoza


Of het alle moeite waard was weet ik nog niet – het ruim 400 bladzijden tellende proefschrift heb ik nog slechts even globaal ingekeken – maar ik ben wel een beetje trots dat ik het, door er gericht naar te zoeken, heb gevonden. Toen ik bezig was met informatie verzamelen over Daniel Alan Forbes [cf. blog] las ik in ‘zijn’ faculteitsblad, West Chester University Philosophy Department Newsletter [Vol 16, Summer 2013, p. 7] bij de naam Christina Rawls (MA, 2004)
“I am currently teaching in a one year position at John Carroll University. I hope to defend my dissertation on Spinoza's dynamic epistemology next Spring. I have published poetry, photography in the interdisciplinary anthology Spinoza Beyond Philosophy, a book review in the New School journal Critical Horizons on another interdisciplinary anthology on Spinoza about to appear in August, and am working to publish several journal articles this coming year, including on Hegel's Science of Logic, and on the importance and often over-looked significance of Spinoza's theory on the imagination. I am working with Samantha Noll (WCU, 2008) as co-coordinator of the Feminist Philosophy Archive Project. It's all new and its short term goal is to collect and permanently house the SWIP (Society for Women in Philosophy) archives, among other things [cf.].
Dat was voor mij voldoende aanleiding om naar méér te zoeken. Daarna vond ik nog een vergelijkbare presentatie van een jaar eerder [cf.] en een korte voorstelling mét foto van vier jaar later [cf.] Toen ik Google haar naam ingaf +Spinoza kwam ik bij de site van de locatie waar haar dissertatieverdediging zou plaats hebben en die de titel van haar dissertatie en een afbeelding van de uitnodiging gaf. Ik geef hier de duidelijker versie ervan die ik later tegenkwam op de facebookpagina van haar filosofieafdeling.

Toen ik eenmaal de titel had vond ik snel de website waar meer informatie én het PDF werd gegeven:

Spinoza's ethology: Recognizing dynamic transitions between imagination, reason, and intuition
by Rawls, Christina, Ph.D., Duquesne University, 2015, 439; 3739950 [cf.]
Abstract (Summary). Ik geef die uit haar dissertatie die op enkele kleine onderdelen anders luidt én een voetnoot heeft:
Seventeenth Century lens grinder and Dutch philosopher, Benedictus Spinoza, illuminates a rigorous and dynamic theory of knowledge and action in his major system the Ethics. What we adequately understand by learning Spinoza’s epistemology is that within it is a proto-physics of ideational force between the three kinds of knowledge expressed by the attribute of thought and, simultaneously, expressed as ratios of motion and rest, speed and slowness, intensity and transformation by the attribute of extension. Such dynamic processes or ways lead to one’s capacity for increased rational thought and action, increased uses of creativity, and the enhanced ability to join with others in powerfully effective, affirmative ways. This is Spinoza’s proto-physics of force. The outcome of the enhanced ideational force and extensive action includes an increase in one’s overall singular conatus, the capacity for continuous understanding, and perseverance, joy and energy, not only for oneself but also for the benefit of all of Nature. In the end, Spinoza rigorously demonstrates that all of Nature is one organic substance with infinite varieties of expressive power. We are singular, conscious expressions of that power in our own determinate ways. Our mind does not have ideas, it is ideas, and our ratios of motion and rest expressed in extension are multiple yet maintain a homeostatic balance for bodily integrity and comportment. Combined, the two attributes create affects that influence the increases and decreases in our power of continued thought and action. Affects cannot be explained by any theory of representation. Spinoza’s dynamic epistemology requires such an understanding.
In the end, Spinoza’s ethology involves an enhancement in our ability for creativity and experimentation as well. Such expressions and affects are not possible without other minds and bodies, but they are also not possible without a singular power and enhanced capacity for increasing ideational power and rational conscious reflection. As Paulo Freire writes, “Liberating education consists in acts of cognition, not transferrals of information.”[1] For Spinoza, acts of enhanced cognition (and thus action) are increases in our overall conatus through continued understanding of natural phenomena. Our love of Nature (or God) is transformed into actions of real living experiences, joy and levity, peace of mind, and an acute interest in all expressions of the laws of Nature. Still, we cannot possibly approach or exhaust the totality of causal processes and effects in Nature. In our awareness of this fact, we are transformed to create and understand our individual human affects and relations with other bodies in our environments towards freedom of thought, happiness, and safety while living amidst a diversity of interests.

Op haar pagina bij academia.edu (waar ze alleen het 5e hoofdstuk van haar thesis brengt) gebruikt ze een stukje van een afbeelding die ik vervolgens helemaal vond: op 21 februari 2017 zou zij spreken over: Spinoza Beyond Philosophy: Revolución creativa by Dr. Christina Rawls [cf. facebook]

Zij verzorgde samen met Lance Brewer en Shelley Campbell een "Interlude" in Beth Lord (Ed.), Spinoza Beyond Philosophy [Edinburgh University Press, 2015, pp 109-116.], waarin Spinoza wordt toegepast op filosofie over film, die haar bijzondere belangstelling heeft. Grappig is dat ze haar proefschrift (na de bibliografie) eindigt met “The End”. Hieronder haar presentatie van zichzelf in dat boek.






[1] Paulo Freire, pedagogy of the oppressed, trans. Myra Bergman Ramos (New York: Continuum Press, 1970), 79.

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