The average rating for Kristeva and the Political based on 2 reviews is 4 stars.
Review # 1 was written on 2017-04-12 00:00:00 Norman Newton This is a perfect introduction to the some of the most interesting ideas in biology told through the writings of the best thinkers in the business. A really wonderful book |
Review # 2 was written on 2020-02-26 00:00:00 Benjamin Reynolds Very frustrating, in the sense that the author does a far better job in attacking the views of others rather than in presenting his own. What he is doing is not so much making a case FOR amorality, as he is making a case AGAINST any sort of a priori, Natural Law, hell against sort of system of thought where specifics can be drawn from generalities. As an example: he criticizes the US invasion and occupation of Iraq. And then criticizes it again, and then again. All fine by me, in fact I think we may even be on the same page there. But that's where he stops. Is this how you "make a case?" Isn't he supposed to be, well, presenting how the "amoral" would have gone about things in a post 09/11 world? I felt like I couldn't evaluate amorality in this text, for the simple reason that it is never actually presented. Very odd text, indeed. Oh, yes. And though I claim no great expertise on Daoism, I'm fairly sure they had no strenuous objection to the death penalty, had a decidedly mixed view of homosexuality, and over time degenerated into a syncretized blob of Buddhism, Chinese folk religion and who knows what else.Moeller hippity-hops past that bunny trail entirely, presuming a Daoism unchanging and ahistorical. And we never get his comments on how a leader is advised to keep his people's bellies full and minds empty (per the Tao de Jing), which is a pity. |
CAN'T FIND WHAT YOU'RE LOOKING FOR? CLICK HERE!!!