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  1.  50
    Towards a Philosophy of Photography.Vilém Flusser -1984 - Reaktion Books.
    Media philosopher Vilém Flusser proposed a revolutionary new way of thinking about photography.
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  2.  9
    Writings.Vilém Flusser -2002 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Ten years after his death, Vilém Flusser’s reputation as one of Europe’s most original modern philosophers continues to grow. Increasingly influential in Europe and Latin America, the Prague-born intellectual’s thought has until now remained largely unknown in the English-speaking world. His innovative writings theorize—and ultimately embrace—the epochal shift that humanity is undergoing from what he termed "linear thinking" toward a new form of multidimensional, visual thinking embodied by digital culture. For Flusser, these new modes and technologies of communication make possible (...) a society in which dialogue between people becomes the supreme value.The first English-language anthology of Flusser’s work, this volume displays the extraordinary range and subtlety of his intellect. A number of the essays collected here introduce and elaborate his theory of communication, influenced by thinkers as diverse as Martin Buber, Edmund Husserl, and Thomas Kuhn. While taking dystopian, posthuman visions of communication technologies into account, Flusser celebrates their liberatory and humanizing aspects. For Flusser, existence was akin to being thrown into an abyss of absurd experience or "bottomlessness"; becoming human required creating meaning out of this painful event by consciously connecting with others, in part through such technologies. Other essays present Flusser’s thoughts on the future of writing, the revolutionary nature of photography, the relationship between exile and creativity, and his unconventional concept of posthistory. Taken together, these essays confirm Flusser’s importance and prescience within contemporary philosophy.Vilém Flusser was born in Prague and taught philosophy in Brazil. Andreas Ströhl is director of the film department at the Goethe-Institut Inter Nationes in Munich. Erik Eisel works for a software technology company in Southern California. (shrink)
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  3.  62
    Gestures.Vilém Flusser -2014 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Gestures is a collection of essays that proposes a daring and ambitious new conception of human behavior. Defining gesture as “a movement of the body or of a tool attached to the body for which there is no satisfactory causal explanation,” Flusser moves around the topic from different points of view, angles and distances: sometimes he zooms in on a modest, ordinary movement like taking a photograph, shaving, or smoking a pipe. Sometimes he pulls back to look at something as (...) vast and varied as human “making,” embracing everything from the fashioning of simple tools to mass manufacturing. Holding firmly to basic phenomenological principles – that consciousness is always consciousness of something, that we know others by reference to ourselves, he claims that we constantly “read” states of mind, i.e. thoughts, intentions, emotions, from gestures; still we lack a theory about how this happens. Gestures takes a first step. It offers alternatives to theories by now so veiled by habit and myth that we are hardly conscious of them, and so hardly realize that they are failing. These include the assumption that we can “know” something without being affected by it, the belief that science is value-free, and the common conviction that science and art are fundamentally different activities. (shrink)
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  4.  17
    Bodenlos: eine philosophische Autobiographie.Vilém Flusser -1992 - Bensheim: Bollmann.
  5.  13
    Post history.Vilém Flusser -2013 - Univocal Publishing.
    In Post-History, Vilém Flusser asks the essential question: Is there any room left for freedom in a programmed world? Written as a series of lectures to be delivered at universities in Brazil, Israel, and France, this first English translation of Post-History brings to an anglophone readership Flusser's first critique of apparatus as the aesthetic, ethical, and epistemological model of present times.
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  6.  14
    Dinge und Undinge: phänomenologische Skizzen.Vilém Flusser -1993 - München: C. Hanser.
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  7.  10
    Vampyroteuthis Infernalis: A Treatise, with a Report by the Institut Scientifique de Recherche Paranaturaliste.Vilém Flusser &Louis Bec -2012 - Univ of Minnesota Press.
    Vilém Flusser was born in Prague. He emigrated to Brazil, where he taught philosophy and wrote a daily newspaper column in Sao Paulo, then later moved to France. He wrote several books in Portuguese and German. Writings, Into the Universe of Technical Images, and Does Writing Have a Future? have been published by the University of Minnesota Press, and the Shape of Things, Towards a Philosophy of Photography, and The Freedom of the Migrant have also been translated into English.
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  8.  18
    (1 other version)The Freedom of Migrant: Objections to Nationalism.Vilem Flusser -2003 - University of Illinois Press.
    Vilém Flusser was one of the most fascinating and original European thinkers of the late twentieth century. In this collection of his essays on emigration, nationalism, and information theory, he raises questions about the viability of ideas of national identity in a world whose borders are becoming increasingly arbitrary and permeable. Flusser argues that modern societies are in flux, with traditional linear and textual epistemologies being challenged by global circulatory networks and a growth in visual stimulation. Beyond globalization, Flusser's ideas (...) about communication and identity are rooted in the Judeo-Christian concept of self-determination and self-realization through recognition of the other. (shrink)
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  9.  12
    Le vivant et l’artificiel.Vilém Flusser -2019 -Multitudes 74 (1):199-202.
    Deux tendances sont en train de converger. L’une tend vers la simulation artificielle du comportement vivant dans des objets inanimés. L’autre vers la simulation de cette simulation dans les hommes, pour que ce comportement devienne programmable. Quand ces deux tendances se fondront pour n’en former qu’une, la distinction entre le vivant et l’artificiel deviendra caduque. L’art de la vie deviendra le méta-jeu de toutes les autres disciplines, y compris la science, la technique, la politique et l’art, au sens traditionnel de (...) ce terme. (shrink)
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  10.  8
    Natural Mind.Vilém Flusser -2013 - Minneapolis, MN: Univocal Publishing. Edited by Siegfried Zielinski, Norval Baitello & Rodrigo Maltez Novaes.
    Natural:Mind, published for the first time in São Paulo, Brazil, in 1979, investigates the paradoxical connection between the concepts of nature and culture through a lively para-phenomenological analysis of natural and cultural phenomena. Always applying his fluid and imagistic Husserlian style of phenomenology, Vilém Flusser explores different perspectives and relations of items from everyday life.
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  11.  6
    Nachgeschichte: eine korrigierte Geschichtsschreibung.Vilém Flusser -1993 - Bensheim: Bollmann.
  12.  35
    The gesture of writing.Vilém Flusser -2009 -Flusser Studies 8 (1).
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  13.  86
    On Edmund Husserl.Vilém Flusser -2012 -Philosophy of Photography 2 (2):234-238.
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  14.  21
    Thought and Reflection.Vilém Flusser -2005 -Flusser Studies 1.
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  15.  68
    The City as Wave‐Trough in the Image‐Flood.Vilém Flusser -2005 -Critical Inquiry 31 (2):320-328.
  16.  164
    Towards a theory of techno-imagination.Vilém Flusser -2012 -Philosophy of Photography 2 (2):195-201.
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  17. Language and reality.Vilém Flusser -2018 - Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Edited by Rodrigo Maltez Novaes.
    Language is reality -- Language shapes reality -- Language creates reality -- Language propagates reality -- The greater conversation.
     
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  18.  60
    Immaterialism.Vilém Flusser -2012 -Philosophy of Photography 2 (2):215-219.
  19.  41
    On doubt.Vilém Flusser -2012 -Philosophy of Photography 2 (2):220-229.
  20.  19
    Se faire des idées.Vilém Flusser -2019 -Multitudes 74 (1):194-198.
    L’être humain préhistorique invente, par le calcul, la notion de possibilité. Avec l’ordinateur, on peut désormais computer ces calculs. On peut ramasser les points pour en faire des mondes objectifs, des mondes subjectifs et des valeurs alternatives. Ceci implique un changement radical des idées que nous nous faisons : un abandon de la distinction entre la science, l’art et la politique en faveur de la projection.
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  21.  6
    A dúvida.Vilém Flusser -1999 - Rio de Janeiro: Relume Dumará.
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  22.  37
    Cows.Vilém Flusser -2012 -Philosophy of Photography 2 (2):244-247.
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  23.  10
    Critique, Critères, Crise.Vilém Flusser -2019 -Multitudes 74 (1):212-217.
    Notre faculté critique est en crise par manque de critères qui soient adéquats à notre situation culturelle. À la racine des termes « critique », « crise » et « critères » que je viens d’utiliser, se trouve le verbe grec krinein. Ce verbe signifie à peu près : diviser pour pouvoir juger. Il s’agit, dans ce verbe, d’un geste qui casse une unité pour voir ses composants. C’est un geste destructif. C’est pourquoi nous retrouvons le même verbe à la (...) racine du terme « crime ». (shrink)
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  24.  9
    Deux lectures du monde.Vilém Flusser -2019 -Multitudes 74 (1):203-206.
    Notre crise n’est pas seulement la perte de la foi en l’objectivité scientifique. Notre programme occidental est menacé partout, aussi bien dans le monde codifié qui nous entoure que dans notre intimité. C’est l’existence occidentale elle-même, cette existence historique, dramatique, conceptuelle, progressive, qui est à la mort. Or la science reste « valable », même après la chute du programme occidental, quoiqu’elle soit « valable » pour des valeurs nouvelles que nous ne pouvons pas encore articuler par manque de foi.
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  25. Ficções filosóficas.Vilém Flusser -1964 - São Paulo, SP, Brasil: Edusp.
     
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  26.  61
    How should photographs be deciphered?Vilém Flusser -2012 -Philosophy of Photography 2 (2):210-214.
  27.  29
    Judaism of the second temple period (Vol 1: Qumran and Apocalypticism).David Flusser -2008 -HTS Theological Studies 64 (4):1961-1962.
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  28. Judaism of the Second Temple Period. Vol. 1: Qumran and Apocalypticism.David Flusser -2007
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  29.  13
    L’art et l’ordinateur.Vilém Flusser -2019 -Multitudes 1:186-189.
    La production d’images par ordinateur fait apparaître deux aspects d’une telle importance pour le futur imminent que tous les autres aspects de cette nouvelle technique seront ici éliminés. Ces deux aspects sont l’auto-programmation et l’imagination conceptuelle. Il s’agit là d’une révolution de la structure de la société et de la conscience, de l’émergence d’une existence nouvelle.
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  30.  13
    Língua e realidade.Vilém Flusser -1963 - São Paulo,: Editôra Herder.
    Língua e realidade é um dos mais instigantes ensaios escritos em língua portuguesa e, ao mesmo tempo, um dos primeiros livros filosóficos de abordagem moderna da linguagem.Vilém Flusser junta a teoria linguística de Ludwig Wittgenstein com a fenomenologia de Edmund Husserl para criar o seu próprio método de análise fenomenológica da linguagem, que lhe permite captar a língua como um elemento vivo, capaz de transformar o caos dos dados imediatos no cosmos das palavras preenchidas de sentido. No entanto, a obra (...) não é estritamente científica, como pode parecer à primeira vista. De forma sofisticada, estrutura-se em várias camada, como a poética ou a ficcional, todas emaranhadas por uma leveza lúdica. Flusser mostra-se, assim, não só um grande pensador, mas também escritor excelente, capaz de criar uma obra plástica, poética e provocativa, o que torna Língua e realidade atraente e acessível a um vasto público de leitores. (shrink)
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  31.  61
    Man as subject or project.Vilém Flusser -2012 -Philosophy of Photography 2 (2):239-243.
  32. Natural:mind.Vilém Flusser -2013 - Minneapolis, MN: Univocal. Edited by Siegfried Zielinski, Norval Baitello & Rodrigo Maltez Novaes.
    Translator's introduction -- Paths -- Valleys -- Birds -- Rain -- The cedar in the park -- Cows -- Grass -- Fingers -- The moon -- Mountains -- The false spring -- Meadows -- Winds -- Wonders -- Buds -- Fog -- Natural:Mind.
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  33.  8
    On doubt.Vilém Flusser -2014 - Minneapolis, Minnesota: Univocal. Edited by Rodrigo Maltez Novaes, Siegfried Zielinski & Rainer Guldin.
    In On Doubt, Vilém Flusser refines Martin Heidegger's famous declaration that "language is the dwelling of Being." For Flusser, "the word is the dwelling of being," because in fact, in the beginning, there was the word. On Doubt is a treatise on the human intellect, its relation to language, and the reality-forming discourses that subsequently emerge. For Flusser, the faith that the modern age places in Cartesian doubt plays a role similar to the one that faith in God played in (...) previous eras--a faith that needs to be challenged. Descartes doubts the world through his proposition cogito ergo sum, but leaves doubt itself untouched as indubitable and imperious. His cogito ergo sum may have proved to the Western intellect that thoughts exist, but it did not prove the existence of that which thinks: one can eliminate thinking and yet continue being. Therefore, should we not doubt doubt itself? Should we not try to go beyond this last step of Cartesian doubt and look for a new faith? The twentieth century has seen many attempts to defeat Cartesian doubt, however, this doubt of doubt has instead generated a complete loss of faith, which the West experiences as existential nihilism. Hence, the emergent emptying of values that results from such extreme doubt. Everything loses its meaning. Can this climate be overcome? Will the West survive the modern age? (shrink)
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  34.  29
    Our programme.Vilém Flusser -2012 -Philosophy of Photography 2 (2):205-209.
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  35.  7
    Philosophy of language.Vilém Flusser -2016 - Minneapolis, MN: Univocal Publishing. Edited by Rodrigo Maltez Novaes & Sean Cubitt.
    In 1963 Vilem Flusser presented a series of lectures at the Brazilian Institute of Philosophy (IBF) in Sao Paulo concerning the philosophy of language. The resulting ten essays would eventually be published in 1965 in the annual magazine of the Brazilian Institute of Technology and Aeronautics (ITA), and published here for the first time in book form. Flusser prepared each lecture as a response to the dialogs that followed the preceding lecture, thereby expanding and explicating his philosophy of language in (...) an intense dialogical process. Despite the fact that the other side of the dialogue was not recorded, it becomes clear to the reader that the resulting discussions and polemics generated by the lectures progressively and profoundly changed Flusser's intended trajectory for the course. This kind of philosophy in fieri was in part the result of a group effort between all of those present, and subsequently synthesized by Flusser in every essay. As a result of this experience, Flusser adopted this dialogic method as an integral part of his future work -- Provided by publisher. (shrink)
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  36.  13
    Programme (Tes père et mère honoreras).Vilém Flusser -2019 -Multitudes 74 (1):190-193.
    Ce terme, et son équivalent latin « prescription », signifient « texte dont le propos est de provoquer un comportement spécifique de la part de son récepteur ». Le comportement se dépolitise progressivement, pour devenir de plus en plus fonctionnel. Mais, dans cette série progressive, il y a rupture. Toutes les prescriptions, des Dix Commandements jusqu’au mode d’emploi, s’orientent vers l’Homme. Tout programme d’ordinateur, lui, indique une machine. Je proposerai dans cet essai l’idée que la rupture entre l’avant-dernier et le (...) dernier exemple de la série est ce qui nous caractérise. (shrink)
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  37.  8
    Pünktlich.Vilém Flusser -2011 -Flusser Studies 12 (1).
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  38.  9
    Reconsidérer le temps.Vilém Flusser -2019 -Multitudes 74 (1):207-211.
    Si on considère les appareils électroniques, on a tendance à croire que c’est leur vélocité qui caractérisera notre expérience temporelle dans le futur. Or toutes les machines précédentes, à commencer par le levier, et à finir par l’avion, en ont fait autant. La révolution informatique aura des conséquences beaucoup plus profondes sur notre vécu du temps : c’est sous le signe de l’ennui que le temps sera vécu dans la société informatisée.
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  39.  5
    Lob der Oberflächlichkeit: für eine Phänomenologie der Medien.Vilâem Flusser,Stefan Bollmann,Edith Flusser &Klaus Sander -1993
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  40. The Ground We Tread.Vilém Flusser -2012 -Continent 2 (2):60-63.
    continent. 2.2 (2012): 60–63 Translated by Rodrigo Maltez Novaes. From the forthcoming book Post-History , Minneapolis: Univocal Publishing, 2013. It is not necessary to have a keen ear in order to find out that the steps we take towards the future sound hollow. But it is necessary to have concentrated hearing if one wishes to find out which type of vacuity resonates with our progress. There are several types of vacuity, and ours must be compared to others, if the aim (...) is to understand it. The incomparable is incomprehensible. If we affirm that our situation is incomparable, we give up the effort to grasp it. The comparison that imposes itself is to the vacuity of the Baroque. There are innumerable traces in the present that evoke the Baroque. We bear the mark of the same somber rationalism (logics, informatics, cybernetics), and of the same magic and fanatic irrationalism (mass media, phantastic ideologies). But there is a decisive difference. Humanity advanced over a stage during the Baroque. All of its gestures, even the most sincere, were marked by theatricality. The vacuity that resonated under its feet was of the void under the stage. Baroque man represented. 1 For example he represented faith in waging religious wars. Baroque vacuity was the consequence of a medieval loss of faith in dogmas . Our vacuity is different. We do not represent anything. Our world is not a stage. We are not actors, and if we act, it is not to represent a drama, but to divert the audience's attention and our own from the subjects that really matter. We act like criminals that try to hide their tracks. We pretend. Our progress is a farce. The vacuity under our feet is not Baroque. We have not lost our faith in dogmas: we have lost faith in ourselves . We are as counter-reformists as was the Baroque (we want to cover up the recent revolution with warm cloths), but for different reasons. Although comparable with the Baroque, in certain aspects, our situation is in fact incomparable to any other. That is because an incomparable, unheard of, never before seen event happened recently, which emptied the ground we tread. Auschwitz . Other posterior events; Hiroshima, the Gulags, are nothing but variations of the first. Therefore every attempt to grasp the present leads to the following questions: how was Auschwitz possible? How can we live after this? Such questions relate not only to the ones directly or indirectly responsible, and not only to those who were directly or indirectly hit by it: they relate to everyone who takes part in our culture. Because what is so incomparable, unheard of, never before seen and therefore incomprehensible in Auschwitz, is that it was there that Western culture revealed one of its inherent virtualities. Auschwitz is a characteristic realization of our culture. It is neither the product of a particular Western ideology, nor of specific “advanced” industrial techniques. It springs directly from the depths of culture and of its concepts and values. The possibility to realize Auschwitzes is implicit within our culture from the very start: the Western “project” already harbored it, although as a remote possibility. Auschwitz lies within the initial program of the West, which progressively realizes all of its virtualities as history unfolds. That is why the question that Auschwitz poses before us is not: how did it happen? It serves no purpose to “explain” Auschwitz. The fundamental question is: how was it possible? Because what is being questioned is not the extermination camp, but the West. Thus one other question: how to live within a culture henceforth unmasked? Everything that happened afterwards resonates with such a question, with such vacuity. Every economic, social, political, technical, scientific, artistic, philosophic event is corroded by such an undigested question. The distance that separates us from the event does not mitigate the abyss, it erodes it even deeper. Because the distance progressively dissolves the aura of the horror that envelops the event, and it progressively opens up a vision of the scene. It progressively reveals that there all of our categories, all of our “models”, suffered an irreparable shipwreck. Auschwitz was a revolutionary event, in the sense that it overthrew our culture. Insofar as we seek ways to cover up such revolution with trips to the moon or with genetic manipulations, we are counter-revolutionaries: we are inverting the course of history in order to cover up the past. The unspoken in Auschwitz is not the mass murder, it is not the crime . It is the ultimate reification of people into amorphous objects, into ashes. The Western tendency towards objectification was finally realized and it was done so in the shape of an apparatus . The SS were functionaries of an extermination apparatus, and their victims functioned in function of their own annihilation. The extermination camp's program, once it started functioning, developed in an automatic fashion, autonomous from the decisions of the initial programmers, even if, as it effectively did, it contributed to the defeat of the programmers. The SS and the Jews functioned one in function of the other like cogwheels. The models for such functionality were provided by the highest of Western values: the SS behaved like “heroes” and the Jews like “martyrs”. This is an apparatus that functions at a borderline situation: objective even beyond death. What has just been said is intolerable. We cannot accept it and so we mobilize arguments against it. Good arguments. The SS behaved like criminals: they removed the gold teeth from the cadavers. The Jews behaved like victims: they rose up in the Warsaw ghetto. Such arguments are true, but they do not reach the nucleus, the “ eidos ” of the phenomenon: they do not grasp it. Although there was “normal” behavior: (theft, murder, revolt, heroism), there was also “abnormal” behavior: functionality during a borderline situation. And this is what counts. There, for the first time in the history of humanity, an apparatus was put into operation that was programmed with the most advanced techniques available, which realized the objectification of man, together with the functional collaboration of man. The previous horrors committed by Western society against other societies and against itself (and there are many) were crimes . They were violations of Western models of behavior: anti-Christian, anti-human, irrational. So that it is possible to condemn them and continue to be Western, even if the horror is so colossal, such as the enslavement of Africans. However, it is not possible to condemn Auschwitz and continue to adhere consciously to the West. Auschwitz is not a violation of Western models of behavior, it is, on the contrary, the result of the application of such models. Our culture allowed its mystifying mask to fall and must be rejected in toto if we admit that the purpose of every culture is to allow for the convivial existence of men that recognize each other mutually as subjects. However: it is not possible to reject one's own culture. It is the ground we tread . Those who seek to reject their own culture (as Nietzsche did in rejecting Judeo-Christianity), fall victim to madness. Those who reject their culture's models, are incapable of grasping the world in which they live. Cultural models are traps to catch the world. Those who seek to substitute their own models for other's (for example by shouting “Hare Krishna”) will find that such exotic models have already been caught by the very models to be substituted. There is no exit: we are condemned to use our models and to serve such models, even after they have been unmasked, if we wish to continue living. The only alternative would be to commit suicide. That is: we must continue our economic, political, scientific, artistic, philosophic activities despite Auschwitz. We must continue progressing despite everything . That is why there are those who recommend that we should seek to forget what happened, that we should repress the event. They sustain that enough has already been said and written about the subject and that it is time to “overcome” it. But such an ostrich strategy reveals itself disastrous. Because the result is that Auschwitz transfers itself from Poland of the 1940s to the post-industrial society of the future. What characterizes the extermination camp is precisely that it is not an event that can be “overcome”, because it is the first realization of an inherent virtuality within the Western project, which will repeat itself in other formats unless we become totally conscious of it. The advantage (if this is an appropriate term) that Auschwitz offers us, is to give us a concrete example of the West’s tendency towards the apparatus. For the first time in our history it is possible for us to experience concretely the utopia inherent in our culture. For the first time in our history we have the experience that utopia, no matter in what form, towards which we progress, is the extermination camp. Everywhere we can observe, as of now, the emergence of variations on the theme “Auschwitz”. Everywhere apparatus spring, just like mushrooms after a Nazi rain, from the ground that has become rotten. Certainly: such new apparatus are not externally similar to the Nazi extermination camps. Their labels are different, as are the ideologies that pretend to inspire them. Even the apparatus that admittedly envision extermination, such as the Gulags, the ones of a future nuclear war, or the ones that functioned in Vietnam, claim to be different from Auschwitz. Others claim to be “friends of mankind”, such as the scientific, technical and administrative apparatus. But such labels and such ideologies are deceptive and serve only to cover up the essence of apparatus. They are all just like Auschwitz, black boxes that function with complex inner-workings in order to realize a program. They all function according to an inertia that is inherent to them and such functionality escapes , from a certain point, the control of their initial programmers. In a final analysis such apparatuses function, all of them, towards the annihilation of all their functionaries, including their programmers. Exactly because they objectify and dehumanize man. Thus Western culture reveals itself as a project that seeks to transform itself into an apparatus. What characterizes the West is its capacity for an objectifying transcendence. Such transcendence allows for the transformation of all phenomena, including the human phenomenon, into an object of knowledge and manipulation. The space for such transcendence opened up thanks to Judeo-Christianity and resulted, in the course of our history, in science, technique and recently, in Auschwitz. The ultimate objectification of the Jews into ashes is the ultimate victory of the spirit of the West. It is social technique taken to the extreme. Certainly: the transformation of men into ashes is primitive, incipient social technique that progressively refines itself. It will be followed by less brutal objectifications, such as the robotization of society. But it does not matter which form it will assume: it will always be an objectifying manipulation of mankind. Although the apparatus of the immediate future are not necessarily incineration ovens, all will be, and not only the nuclear ones, apparatus for the annihilation of man. The Western program contains several virtualities, not only apparatus. Numerous virtualities have not yet been realized. In this sense the “history of the West” has not ended yet, the Western game continues. But all not-yet realized virtualities are infected by apparatus. That is why it has become currently impossible to engage ourselves in the “ progress of culture .” As it would be to engage ourselves in our own annihilation. We have lost our faith in our culture, in the ground we tread. That is: we have lost faith in ourselves. It is this hollow vibration that follows our steps towards the future. What remains is for us to analyze the event “Auschwitz” in all its details in order to discover the fundamental project that realized itself there for the first time, so that we may nurture the hope to project ourselves out of that project. Out of the history of the West. This is the “post- historical” climate in which we are condemned to live from hereon. NOTES 1. In Portuguese representar (to represent) also means “to act” or “to play a role.&rdquo. (shrink)
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  41.  8
    The History of the Devil.Vilém Flusser -2014 - Univocal Publishing.
    In 1939, a young Vilém Flusser faced the Nazi invasion of his hometown of Prague. He escaped with his wife to Brazil, taking with him only two books: a small Jewish prayer book and Goethe's Faust. Twenty-six years later, in 1965, Flusser would publish The History of the Devil, and it is the essence of those two books that haunts his own. From that time his life as a philosopher was born. While Flusser would later garner attention in Europe and (...) elsewhere as a thinker of media culture, The History of the Devil is considered by many to be his first significant work, containing nascent forms of the main themes that would come to preoccupy him over the following decades. In The History of the Devil, Flusser frames the human situation from a pseudo-religious point of view. The phenomenal world, or “reality” in a general sense, is identified as the “Devil,” and that which transcends phenomena, or the philosophers' and theologians' “reality,” is identified as “God.” Referencing Wittgenstein's Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus in its structure, Flusser provocatively leads the reader through an existential exploration of nothingness as the bedrock of reality, where “phenomenon” and “transcendence,” “Devil” and “God” become fused and confused. So radically confused, in fact, that Flusser suggests we abandon the quotation marks from the terms “Devil” and “God.” At this moment of abysmal confusion, we must make the existential decisions that give direction to our lives. (shrink)
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  42.  43
    To photograph is to define.Vilém Flusser -2012 -Philosophy of Photography 2 (2):202-204.
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  43.  27
    Will and power.Vilém Flusser -2012 -Philosophy of Photography 2 (2):230-233.
  44. Zwiegespräche: interviews, 1967-1991.Vilém Flusser -1996 - Göttingen: European Photography. Edited by Klaus Sander.
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