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  1. faculty.umb.edu › gary_zabel › CoursesEssays in Self-Criticism

    Here I must make my self-criticism, and give way to John Lewis on one precise point. In my first essays, I suggested that after the "epistemological break" of 1845 (after the discovery by which Marx founded the science of history) the philosophical categories of alienation and the negation of the negation (among others) disappear.

  2. Essays in Self-Criticism contains all of Louis Althusser's work from the 1970s. It is composed of three texts, each of which in a different way presents elements of self-criticism. The first is Althusser's extended reply to the English philosopher John Lewis. In it he for the first time discusses the problem of the political causes of Stalinism, which he argues should be seen as the ...

  3. 5. März 2015 · Self-criticism, when it isn’t useful in the way any self-correcting approach can be, is self-hypnosis. It is judgment as spell, or curse, not as conversation; it is an order, not a negotiation; it is dogma not over-interpretation. Psychoanalysis sets itself the task of wanting to have a conversation with someone – call it the super-ego – who, because he knows what a conversation is, is ...

  4. 7. Feb. 2022 · But your self-criticism will stand in your way while you try to improve yourself. 8 ways to overcome self-criticism. Each day, think of ways to be kinder to yourself. These small kindnesses may not change your life overnight, but with time you'll see the power in your new habits. Read these eight tips and think about the ones that you can start ...

  5. The year 1967 marks the beginning of a period of self-critical activity in which Althusser takes his distance from some, though not all, of the concepts and theses of his essays of the early and mid — sixties. In the course of these self-criticisms, new theoretical positions emerge. As we shall see, these ‘new’ positions sometimes are ...

  6. 23. Mai 2016 · Self-criticism, and the self as critical, are essential to our sense, our picture, of our so-called selves. Nothing makes us more critical, more confounded — more suspicious, or appalled, or even mildly amused — than the suggestion that we should drop all this relentless criticism; that we should be less impressed by it.

  7. Essays in Criticism is edited by Christopher Ricks, Professor of the Humanities, Boston University, and Seamus Perry, Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford. Articles for publication may be sent to Seamus Perry at the editorial address below or emailed, preferably as Word attachments, to seamus.perry@balliol.ox.ac.uk.