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DIA-LOGOS: Ramon Llull's Method of Thought and Artistic Practice [Pehme köide]

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  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 300 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 249x170x38 mm, 220
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jul-2019
  • Kirjastus: University of Minnesota Press
  • ISBN-10: 1517906091
  • ISBN-13: 9781517906092
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 300 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 249x170x38 mm, 220
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jul-2019
  • Kirjastus: University of Minnesota Press
  • ISBN-10: 1517906091
  • ISBN-13: 9781517906092

The life and work of the outstanding Catalan-Majorcan philosopher, logician, and mystic Ramon Llull continues to fascinate thinkers, artists, and scholars worldwide

In this book, international experts from Europe and the United States address Lullism as a remarkable and distinctive method of thinking and experimenting. The origins and impact of Ramon Llull’s oeuvre as a modern thinker are presented, and their interdisciplinary and intercultural implications, which continue to this day, are explored. Ars combinatoria, generative and permutative generation of texts, the epistemic and poetic power of algorithmic systems, plus the principle of unconditional dialogue between cultural groups and their individual members, are the most important coordinates of this combinatorial–dialogical media and communication theory, which appeared very early in the history of science, technology, and art. It was developed in the work of Ramon Llull during the transition from the thirteenth to the fourteenth century when Arab-Islamic, Jewish, and Christian cultures intersected. 

The legacy of Lullism lives on in poetry and in the visual and electronic-based arts, as well as in research on the history of informatics, formal logic, and media archaeology. The primary idea of Llull’s teachings—to enable rational and therefore trustworthy dialogue between cultures and religions through a universally valid system of symbols—is today still topical and of great relevance, especially in the tensions prevailing in globalized spaces of possibility.

Contributors: Miquel Bassols, Florian Cramer, Salvador Dalí, Fernando Domínguez Reboiras, Diane Doucet-Rosenstein, Jordi Gayà, Jonathan Gray, Daniel Irrgang, David Link, Sebastián Moro Tornese, Josep E. Rubio, Henning Schmidgen, Wilhelm Schmidt-Biggemann, Gianni Vattimo, Janet Zweig.

Preface 6(9)
Amador Vega
Peter Weibel
Siegfried Zielinski
Is Religion an Enemy of Civilization?
15(8)
Gianni Vattimo
Ramon Llull. Background and Horizons
23(15)
Fernando Dominguez Reboiras
Llull, Leibniz, Kircher, and the History of Lullism in the Early Modern Era
38(24)
Wilhelm Schmidt-Biggemann
Combinatorics as Scientific Method in the Work of Ramon Llull and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
62(20)
Diane Doucet-Rosenstein
Deus Ex Machina: Eschatologies of Auto-mation in Seventeenth-Century Lullism and Present-day Post-Scarcity Utopias
82(13)
Florian Cramer
Ramon Llull: Poet and Pioneer of Digital Philosophy
95(33)
Peter Weibel
The Language and Science of Ramon Llull in the Light of Jacques Lacan's Teachings: The Beloved, the Affatus, and the Art
128(10)
Miquel Bassols
The Act of Communicating: Language and Meaning in Ramon Llull
138(11)
Josep E. Rubio
The Movements of Ramon Llull & the Lullist Network: A Chrono-topological Cartogram
149(30)
Robert Preusse
Stefanie Rau
Introduction to Salvador Dali's Mystical Manifesto: Dali and Iberian Mysticism
179(4)
Amador Vega
Mystical Manifesto
183(7)
Salvador Dali
Cyborg Art: Dali, Llull, and the Sciences
190(13)
Henning Schmidgen
Imperceptible Analogy in Art. The Forest Metaphors of Ramon Llull and Perejaume
203(20)
Amador Vega
Musical Representations of the Scala Naturae in the Neoplatonic Tradition
223(19)
Sebastian F. Moro Tornese
Leibniz --- I Ching --- Cage: Blind Thinking and Chance Operations
242(13)
Daniel Irrgang
Ars Combinatoria: Mystical Systems, Procedural Art, and the Computer
255(22)
Janet Zweig
Lullism: A Modern (Media-) Philosophical Approach
277(16)
Siegfried Zielinski
Computational Imaginaries: Some Further Remarks on Leibniz, Llull, and Rethinking the History of Calculating Machines
293(8)
Jonathan Gray
Freedom for Dialogue
301(10)
Jordi Gaya
About the Miniatures and Meditationes
311(2)
David Link
The Blue Catalogue: Exhibiting Ramon Llull, Thinking Machines, and Combinatorial Arts --- Fragments
313(139)
Amador Vega
Peter Weibel
Siegfried Zielinski
Computational Thinking and Thinking Computationally
452(7)
Pierre Vandergheynst
Roland Tormey
Lisandra S. Costiner
Sarah Kenderdine
If I could reconcile Reason and Madness ...
459(4)
Vicenc Villatoro
Contributors 463(3)
Index 466
Amador Vega is professor of aesthetics and art theory at Pompeu Fabra University in Barcelona, and author of Ramon Llull and the Secret of Life.

Peter Weibel is professor of media theory at the University of Applied Arts Vienna and chairman and CEO of  ZKM Center for Art and Media Karlsruhe. He has been published widely in the intersecting fields of art and science. 

Siegfried Zielinski is head of the Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design and is Michel Foucault Chair at the European Graduate School in Saas-Fee.