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Tables of Contents for Broken Hegemonies
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Translator's Remarks
xiii
 
VOLUME ONE
1
48
General Introduction
3
46
On Hegemonic Fantasms
6
10
From Difference to Differend
16
10
The Birth of the Law from the Denial of the Tragic
26
11
The Law of the One, of Nature, and of Consciousness
37
12
PART ONE: IN THE NAME OF THE ONE
49
2
The Greek Hegemonic Fantasm
I. Its Institution: The One That Holds Together (Parmenides)
51
86
Contradictories: Their Juxtaposition and Their Confusion
55
16
Two paths?
55
4
Only one path?
59
6
Or three paths?
65
6
Contraries: The Ground for Obligation
71
24
The ``symphysis'' of thinking and being
74
7
The ``synthesis'' of the present and the absent
81
8
The ``synechia'' of contraries
89
6
On Power and Forces: The Normative System
95
15
Legality and legitimacy
96
7
The logos, condition of laws
103
7
Henology Turned against Itself?
110
12
The Disparate: Narrative of a Journey
122
15
Narrating gathered singular things
122
3
Nomadic and eonic procedures
125
6
The henological differend: the phenomenalizing and singularizing one
131
6
II. Its Destitution: The One Turned against Itself (Plotinus)
137
52
Introduction
139
4
The Temporalizing Event
143
18
The henological difference
145
2
The one as event
147
4
Originary time
151
2
Time as bad eternity
153
3
Being as time
156
5
The Singularizing Contretemps
161
28
On an insubordinate act that makes the law
164
6
From detachment to solitude
170
9
From stabilizing solitude to temporalizing audacity
179
7
The one, destituted by its agonic truth
186
3
PART TWO: IN THE NAME OF NATURE
189
12
The Latin Hegemonic Fantasm
Introduction
191
10
Excursus: Xerxes punished by nature
195
6
I. Its Institution: The Principle of Telic Continuity (Cicero and Augustine)
201
68
Concerning Singular Given Natures
205
17
On the nature that returns
206
6
On self-narrating natures
212
10
On the Erratic Differend
222
18
On a normative singular that was
223
8
On a normative singular that will be
231
9
On the Natural Double Bind: The Will Turned against Itself
240
29
Willing one's own as well as the common
244
5
Willing one's own as well as what is exogenous
249
12
On natural contre-temps: the law suffering singularizations
261
8
II. Its Destitution: the Double Bind of Principle and Origin (Meister Eckhart)
269
72
Introduction
271
4
Nature, Principle of Subordinations
275
23
The rotation of elements
278
4
The rotation of forces
282
9
Thomas Aquinas: nerves on edge
291
7
Feet on One's Neighbor's Head
298
21
The immediate communication of the law
299
2
A poietic law
301
2
The temporality of natural law
303
1
The instance of self-possession
304
3
From a pure place to proper places
307
4
Limitation, delimitation, illimitation
311
8
Nature Denatured by the Origin
319
22
``Detaching oneself'': against the appropriation of ends
320
4
``Re-imaging oneself'': against the a priori imagination of order
324
6
``Piercing through'': for absolute freedom
330
5
``Articulating oneself'': for singularization
335
6
VOLUME TWO
341
10
Preface: Analytic of Ultimates and Topology of Broken Hegemonies
343
8
PART THREE: IN THE NAME OF CONSCIOUSNESS
351
14
The Modern Hegemonic Fantasm
Introduction
353
12
Excursus: the consciousness of Ulysses
356
9
I. Its Institution: On the Consciousness That Determines (Kant with Luther)
365
146
The Regime of Passive Consciousness: `An Obedient Spirit that Lets Itself be Broken . . .'
369
2
The Identity of the ``I''
371
37
Topography of speech
371
7
Being-for-consciousness
378
6
Consciousness through the word
384
6
The consciousness of a causality
390
8
The unity of receptive consciousness
398
10
A Pathetic Differend
408
45
The time of the ego and the time of the self
412
8
Positing and letting-be
420
7
Perverse teleology
427
4
Normative consciousness broken
431
14
The Regime of Spontaneous Consciousness: ``I, The Possessor of the World''
445
2
Introduction
447
6
The Torments of Autonomy
453
29
On pre-regional unification: the self reconsidered
454
15
On a pre-individual singularization: the ego reconsidered
469
13
The Differend in Being-for-Consciousness
482
29
On givenness as position
486
1
The singular, limit of doing
487
7
The singular in consciousness
494
5
Time turned against itself
499
5
Recanting the denial
504
7
II. The Diremption: On Double Binds without a Common Noun (Heidegger)
511
110
Introduction: Proteus Alone Can Save Us Now
513
16
Riveted to a monstrous site
515
7
A ``terrible warning''
522
7
On the Historial Differend
529
24
On the late modern pathology: the self as other
529
6
Fantasms of the same: the integrative violence of the law
535
6
On the isomorphic: archic and anarchic
541
5
On the other that is being: what the diremption reveals
546
7
What, the Deferred There?
553
22
On topology
553
9
``Now, in the transition toward the other beginning . . .''
562
13
On the Discordance of Times
575
46
On the singularizing ``momentary sites''
575
7
The ``fissured'' moment
582
7
The event of what?
589
10
Whither expropriation?
599
10
The singularization to come
609
12
Conclusion
621
12
On the conditions of evil: denying dispossession
621
6
On impossible normative simplicity
627
6
Notes
633
48
Index of Names
681
4
Index of Terms
685