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    <dc:date>2026-02-04T10:51:56Z</dc:date>
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    <title>The genealogy of Nick Land's anti-anthropocentric philosophy: a psychoanalytic conception of machinic desire.</title>
    <link>http://theses.ncl.ac.uk/jspui/handle/10443/3350</link>
    <description>Title: The genealogy of Nick Land's anti-anthropocentric philosophy: a psychoanalytic conception of machinic desire.
Authors: Overy, Stephen
Abstract: In recent years the philosophical texts of Nick Land have begun to attract increasing attention,&#xD;
yet no systematic treatment of his work exists. This thesis considers one significant and&#xD;
distinctive aspect of Land's work: his use of a psychoanalytic vocabulary, which is deployed&#xD;
to try and avoid several problems associated with metaphysical discourse. Land's larger&#xD;
project of responding to the Kantian settlement in philosophy is sketched in the introduction,&#xD;
as is his avowed distaste for thought which is conditioned by anthropocentricism. This thesis&#xD;
then goes on to provide a genealogical reading of the concepts which Land will borrow from&#xD;
psychoanalytic discourse, tracing the history of drive and desire in the major psychoanalytic&#xD;
thinkers of the twentieth century. Chapter one considers Freud, his model of the unconscious,&#xD;
and the extent to which it is anthropocentric. Chapter two contrasts Freud's materialism to&#xD;
Lacan's idealism. Chapter three returns to materialism, as depicted by Deleuze and Guattari in&#xD;
Anti-Oedipus. This chapter also goes on to consider the implications of their 'schizoanalysis',&#xD;
and contrasts 'left' and 'right' interpretations of Deleuze, showing how they have appropriated&#xD;
his work. Chapter four considers Lyotard's works from his 'libidinal period' of the late sixties&#xD;
to early seventies. These four readings, and the various theories of drive and desire they&#xD;
contain, are then contextualised in relation to Land's work in chapter five. This final chapter&#xD;
considers Land's theory of 'machinic-desire', and evaluates if his construction of the concept,&#xD;
via psychoanalysis, offers a superior approach to anti-anthropocentric positions constructed in&#xD;
metaphysics. The role of psychoanalytic thought in constructing Land's cosmological theory&#xD;
of thermodynamic entropy and extropy is also considered.
Description: Ph.D thesis</description>
    <dc:date>2016-01-01T00:00:00Z</dc:date>
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