Pascalian Meditations

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2000-01-01
Publisher(s): Stanford Univ Pr
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Summary

A synthesis of forty years' work by France's leading sociologist, this book pushes the critique of scholarly reason to a new level. It is a brilliant example of Bourdieu's unique ability to link sociological theory, historical information, and philosophical thought. Pascalian Meditationsmakes explicit the presuppositions of a state of "scholasticism," a certain leisure liberated from the urgencies of the world. Philosophers, unwilling to engage these presuppositions in their practice, have brought them into the order of discourse, not so much to analyze them as to legitimate them. This situation is the primary systematic, epistemological, ethical, and aesthetic error that Bourdieu subjects to methodological critique. This critique of scholarly reason is carried out in the name of Pascal because he, too, pointed out the features of human existence that the scholastic outlook ignores: he was concerned with symbolic power; he refused the temptation of foundationalist thinking; he attended (without populist naivete) to "ordinary people"; and he was determined to seek theraison d'etreof seemingly illogical behavior rather than condemning or mocking it. Through this critique, Bourdieu charts a negative philosophy that calls into question some of our most fundamental presuppositions, such as a "subject" who is free and self-aware. This philosophy, with its intellectual debt to such other "heretical" philosophers as Wittgenstein, Austin, Dewey, and Peirce, renews traditional questioning of the concepts of violence, power, time, history, the universal, and the purpose and direction of existence.

Author Biography

Pierre Bourdieu is Professor of Sociology at the Collège de France and Director of Studies at the Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales. Stanford University Press has published eleven other books by Bourdieu, most recently The Weight of the World: Social Suffering in Contemporary Societies (1999).

Table of Contents

Introduction 1(9)
Critique of Scholastic Reason
9(40)
Implication and the implicit
9(3)
The ambiguity of the scholastic disposition
12(4)
The genesis of the scholastic disposition
16(1)
The great repression
17(8)
The scholastic point of honour
25(3)
Radical doubt radicalized
28(21)
Impersonal Confessions
33(10)
Forgetting History
43(6)
The Three Forms of Scholastic Fallacy
49(44)
Scholastic epistemocentrism
50(4)
Practical logics
54(3)
The scholastic barrier
57(3)
Digression: A critique of my critics
60(5)
Moralism as egoistic universalism
65(8)
The impure conditions of a pure pleasure
73(4)
The ambiguity of reason
77(4)
Digression: A `habitual' limit to `pure' thought
81(2)
The supreme form of symbolic violence
83(10)
How to Read an Author
85(8)
The Historicity of Reason
93(35)
Violence and law
94(2)
Nomos and illusio
96(1)
Digression: Common sense
97(2)
Instituted points of view
99(3)
Digression: Differentiation of powers and circuits of legitimation
102(4)
A rationalist historicism
106(3)
The dual face of scientific reason
109(2)
Censorship of the field and scientific sublimation
111(4)
The anamnesis of origin
115(3)
Reflexivity and twofold historicization
118(4)
The universality of strategies of universalization
122(6)
Bodily Knowledge
128(36)
Analysis situs
131(3)
The social space
134(1)
Comprehension
135(2)
Digression on scholastic blindness
137(1)
Habitus and incorporation
138(4)
A logic in action
142(4)
Coincidence
146(4)
The encounter of two histories
150(5)
The dialectic of positions and dispositions
155(4)
Mismatches, discordance and misfirings
159(5)
Symbolic Violence and Political Struggles
164(42)
Libido and illusio
164(4)
Bodily constraint
168(4)
Symbolic power
172(7)
Twofold naturalization and its effects
179(3)
Practical sense and political labour
182(6)
The twofold truth
188(18)
The twofold truth of the gift
191(11)
The twofold truth of labour
202(4)
Social Being, Time and the Sense of Existence
206(40)
The presence of the forth-coming
208(5)
`The order of successions'
213(3)
The relationship between expectations and chances
216(2)
Digression: Still more scholastic abstractions
218(3)
A social experiment on time and power
221(3)
The plurality of times
224(3)
Time and power
227(4)
Back to the relationship between expectations and chances
231(3)
A margin of freedom
234(3)
The question of justification
237(3)
Symbolic capital
240(6)
Subject Index 246(7)
Name Index 253

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