The researcher Jure Simoniti edited and provided the afterword to two Wittgenstein's classical works, The Blue and Brown Books, presenting the notes on his lectures in the period between 1933 and 1935 in Cambridge. The Blue and Brown Books are the most important textual documents of the genesis of Wittgenstein's mature, developed thought. But they do not merely represent an introduction to Wittgenstein's greatest oeuvre, Philosophical Investigations, but can be read as autonomous works in which some of the most original and far-reaching ideas o Wittgenstein appear for the first time.
C.02 Editorial board of a national monograph
COBISS.SI-ID: 286967808The contribution of Jure Simoniti offers some insight into how the process of subjectivization generally takes place. In early Christian philosophy, as represented most notably by Augustine, for instance, the subject performs the function of the isolated and condensed playground of good and evil still standing sharply one against the other in the midst of a universe of gradual increase and decrease of pure good. On this basis, a certain matrix of the processes of subjectivization can be proposed. At the very place where a metaphysical binary opposition forfeits its entitlement to structure reality, the subject emerges in order for the concepts to preserve their meanings at least within the boundaries of the ideal realm of his subjectivity.
B.03 Paper at an international scientific conference
COBISS.SI-ID: 61067874The researcher Sebastjan Vörös is a member of the editorial board of a renowned peer-reviewed academic journal that focusses on constructivist approaches to science and philosophy, including radical constructivism, enactive cognitive science, second order cybernetics, biology of cognition and the theory of autopoietic systems, and non-dualizing philosophy
C.04 Editorial board of an international magazine
COBISS.SI-ID: 515792665Antigone is universally celebrated as the ultimate figure of ethical resistance to the state power which oversteps its legitimate scope and as the defender of simple human dignity (more important than all political struggles). However, Slavoj Žižek in his three versions of this plays, poses the question: Is she really so innocent and pure? What if there is a dark side to her? What if Creon, the representative of state power, also has a valuable point to make? And what if both Antigone and Creon are part of a problem that only a popular intervention can confront?
F.29 Contribution to the development of national cultural identity
COBISS.SI-ID: 2555783