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Book reviews for "Greflinger,_Georg" sorted by average review score:

Hegel: The Restlessness of the Negative
Published in Paperback by Univ of Minnesota Pr (Txt) (2002)
Authors: Jean-Luc Nancy, Steven Miller, and Jason Smith
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restlessness indeed
It is often said contemporary French philosophy mistakes obscurity for profundity. There is more than a kernel of truth to that statement when applied to Jean-Luc Nancy's writing on Hegel. As far writing goes, Nancy's musings on Hegel are not altogether displeasing when taken as poetry but, philosophically, Nancy has not given us much. This is a shame because Nancy's work on Lacan, _The Title of the Letter_, (with Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe) is a rather ingenious interpretation. This should not surprise us, however, considering the body of Nancy's work, taken as a whole, is not very philosophical but rather really an exercise in aesthetics. (Perhaps this is why American literature departments rave about various French posties while most actual philosophers view French "play" much like Bismark viewed Napolean III's statesmanship: erratic, ill-conceived, and ultimately without the substance necessary to sustain itself.)

Hegel of course was (and still is) considered quite obscure by many, but taken to be philosophically formidable and rigorous. The French philosopher that initiated contemporary interest of Hegel in France, Kojeve, managed to put together a few positive concepts on Hegel's philosophy of negativity. Nancy does not. He is content to remain, despite his own best deconstructive efforts, in the world of Nietzsche's last man--endlessly searching in vain for an answer to the demise of the Enlightenment and taking the search itself to now be the best option available. Such nihilistic gamesmanship is appealing to disaffected lefties because they, like Nancy, will not move beyond the liberal naivetes no longer tenable in a post-Nietzschean world. They wish to promote a Kantian style ethical practice by invoking an unstated catergorical imperative of unconditional equality and toleration. The fact that there is no ground or reason for their political project is taken to be somehow supportive of "radical" equality; their hope being that by supporting epistemic skepticism they can institute a paralysis of the bildung that make the hierarchies of social systems possible. Of course what they have actually done is given themselves a way to advance an extreme version of the Enlightenment project of political emancipation while rhetorically denying the other positive claims of the Enlightenment. Hegel himself did his best to put a good face on the aporias exposed by Kant's reaction to Hume's skepticism but was not, in the end, successful. Herein lies the problem for Nancy and his ilk. They would be better served to strike a more truly Hegelian pose rather than languish in the death throws of a long since faded Enlightenment. Such political tactics are philosophically transparent. If you are looking for an actual philosophic treatment and explanation of Hegel's thought I would suggest Stanley Rosen's book on Hegel.

The greatest living philosopher
After the death of both Deleuze and Levinas in 1995, the mantle of "greatest living philosopher" presumably went to Jacques Derrida for a while. But Derrida has always refused to be a philosopher other than in the sense of not being a philosopher (which is also being a philosopher). So his cohort and quasi-follower Jean-Luc Nancy had to take the real philosophy from Derrida back to the question underlying all post-modern thought, namely how to deal with the empty space left behind by Heidegger's deconstruction of the tradition. With this little book, Nancy himself has become "the greatest living philosopher" - that is to say he has done to Hegel what Heidegger did to Nietzsche in the 1930s and 1940s: presented him as the key thinker of the break of modernity, and, unnoticeably perhaps, stepped beyond him. This book is indeed a marvel - one gets slightly dizzy reading it. Its intensity is at times (no: always) well-nigh unbearable. Nancy, like Heidegger with Nietzsche, takes a drill to the concepts of Hegel and allows them to shine in ways hitherto unthought(see the editorial review above, no need to repeat the details). In the end, this is the overturning of the boring old French Hegel of Kojeve and Hyppolite and the most exciting discovery in philosophical reading of another in sixty some years. I had always thought of Hegel as the great synthesizer. But Nancy's Hegel "returns" Hegel to pre-Socratic instability and shaky difference, where the restless thought-in-process constitutes the sense of the world, and philosophy is as alive as it ever was. A friend of mine says that Nancy reminds him of the color of the LED on alarm clocks: well, he's right, 'cause Jean-Luc Nancy is very much a phenomenon of a new morning. The owl is disoriented but it is all a marvel. Yes, I guess that is what you could say.


Holy Madness: The Shock Tactics and Radical Teachings of Crazy-Wise Adepts, Holy Fools, and Rascal Gurus
Published in Paperback by Arkana (1992)
Author: Georg Feuerstein
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Another arm chair psychoanalytic viewpoint expressed
The author seemed to be analyzing the subject matter from a seemingly armchair analytic point of view rather than allowing the reader to explore the odd behavior of these spiritual individuals and come to our own conclusions. I would have preferred not to have the author pose his hypothesis as to why these individuals do what they do in that who is he to judge such "crazy behavior" if he himself is not "Enlightened"!

Important issues & info; misleading spiritual viewpoint.
This book talks about important issues but, to my mind, suffers from a terrible blindness to abuses both subtle and blatant. The author does recognize that many observers willcondemn the antinomian "shock tactics" he thinks are so valuable. He himself seems ambivalent about the more blatant abuses, but mostly he excuses them as necessary in the holy war against "concensus trance", which seems to mean any state of consciousness which opposes cosmic or "oneness" consciousness. Feuerstein's attitude seems to be that the avowed purpose of rascal gurus -- to bestow"enlightenment" on the lazy-minded -- is of such transcendant value that merely mundane ethical values are expendable. This is another version of the end justifying the means. Cult leaders are expert manipulators and "shock tactics" are useful weapons in their arsenal. One might well question the spiritual attainments of gurus who are oblivious to thepsychological reality of personal boundary violations. One might also question the motivation of self-appointed teachers who enjoy giving others "difficult lessons". Victor Frankl, the psychiatrist, learned some very difficult (and valuable) lessons from his enforced stay in the NAZI concentration camps. Are we to conclude, then, that his captors were his benefactors? It is useful to have a long recitation of the many abuses perpetrated by gurus over the years. Read them and weep, not least for the author's blindness. Let me give examples: One Zen Master gives his disciple a koan to solve. A koan is a verbal puzzle not soluable by rational thought. Its purpose in Zen ideology is to force the student to abandon reasoning, which is devalued by Zen, and snap into a state of awareness valued by Zen, namely "satori" or enlightenment. This particular koan was: "Stop the train from Tokyo." The disciple wrestled with the koan for weeks. Finally his frustration led to what I would guess was despair. In an ironic suicidal gesture, he obeyed literally the koan's injunction; he laid his body on the tracks and was killed by a train. Feuerstein's remarkable comment on this tragedy is the glimmer of hope that the poor fellow may have attained enlightenment in the seconds before the train smashed into him! No mention of the Zen Master's insensitivity to his disciple's state of mind, nor any thought that an overly brutal teaching method might be partly at fault. This is an example of valuing transcendance over worldliness, a cruel result of what Alice Miller has called "salvational ideology". It was particularly painful to read the account of a young husband whose wife was sexually seduced by the guru Adi Da, after the guru befuddled the husband by getting him drunk. The husband has a vague sense that he has been wronged, but is focused on the lesser issue of his sobriety being violated. He is still asleep to the greater violation because he is still deluded by the guru's claim to perfection and holiness. Surely the selfless guru is teaching his disciple a valuable lesson in giving up attachment [attachment to his wife, no less!] Surely that has to be the explanation, ....doesn't it? Since Feuerstein pooh-poohs the idea of mind control, he is blind to the power relationship operating here, a kind of confidence game that can lead to spiritual slavery. The guru mind-rapes the husband in order to sexually use the wife. I pray for this man's deliverance from domination by his guru, but I pity the pain and rage that will likely accompany the dawning of the truth. To his credit, Feuerstein is at least trying to grapple with the troubling manifestations of religion's incestuous and confusing love affair with obedience and authority. I believe his worldview suffers from the hidden dualism so well explained by Kramer and Alstad in "The Guru Papers: Masks of Authoritarian Power", which I recommend highly as a useful antidote to the present book.

Penetrating and impeccable.
This is a penetrating and impeccable book, and it's a shame that it's out of print. The author's comments above are a start at the necessary postscript addressing the controversies of the last ten years; it remains, however, a gift of rare integrity and objectivity from personal experience.


Metaphysics to Metafictions: Hegel, Nitzsche, and the End of Philosophy (Suny Series in Hegelian Studies)
Published in Hardcover by State Univ of New York Pr (1998)
Author: Paul S. Miklowitz
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confused and obtuse; difficult to follow
Miklowitz's tome is written in the language of solipsistic academese. THough most of his interpretations and analogies start out well, they disintegrate into obfuscated enigmas shortly thereafter. Having read other authors on the same subject--including Paul Ricouer, under whom Miklowitz has studied--I recommend going to straightforward sources and not trying to waft through pages of dense and tricky text if you are looking for something comprehensible.

Considerable Interpretation of a Pivotal Event
Do not let the sentences packed full of jargon discourage you from spelunking through the Hegelian word-stalagtites to the core of this work! First, a dtermined reader will find great illumination not only of Hegel's thinking (and who couldn't use this), but of his place and meaning in the Continental tradition. And once through the mires of the Hegelian "Meta-mess", a light-hearted, though still heavy-worded adventure through the enigmatic "Thus Spoke Zarathustra" examines Nietzsche's ironic and complex literary wit. The interpretation offered is viable and must be discussed in any subsequent work attempting to grapple with the Hegel, Nietzsche and any possible future for philosophy.

Difficult but brilliant
This book attempts to explain how and why the traditional philosopher's ambition to provide a complete account of reality and truth has been largely abandoned in the twentieth century. Miklowitz argues that this high-minded ambition is realized in Hegel, but that its realization is catastrophic: the audacity of "absolute idealism" discredits the entire project, and leads to the nihilism of Nietzsche's anti-systematic perspectivism. This is a subtle and difficult book about an extremely important paradigm shift from "modernity" to what some call "postmodernity." Highly recommended for anyone interested in a serious interpretation of the philosophical underpinnings of contemporary culture.


Fast Algorithms for 3D-Graphics/Book and Disk
Published in Paperback by Springer Verlag (1994)
Author: Georg Glaeser
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Not for professionals
The algorithms provided in this book have nothing to offer over the standard ones everyone uses in the games industry. If you're just getting started, this book might be fine. If you're a professional, stick with Foley/ van Dam and Graphics Gems.

valuable hands-on introduction
For those who like a hands-on approach to learning a subject this can be an excellent intro to 3D graphics. Glaeser provides a minimal (and occasionally cryptic) introduction to the subject in prose alongside most of the C source code you will need to implement the concepts. He explains the ideas just enough that you can understand the code.

But be forewarned: the floppy disk containing source code is fairly worthless. It does not correspond to the source in the text, it seems to be a much more advanced version of the system he developed on an SGI Iris running Unix. If you happen to have such a machine, perhaps you can get it to compile. But even if you did, you would have a "black box" consisting of a lot of code that is difficult to understand (and with very few comments). I decided instead to type in sections by hand, coming to understand everything I put in, fixing some glaring errors even before compiling, and bringing up sections incrementally. I also had to provide a good bit of my own code to actually make a functioning system. For me this was a good learning experience. The book is valuable but it would benefit by a second edition.

The worst part of the book is the license for the software on the disk, which states that you may have no more than one copy and that "Springer-Verlag has the right to audit your computer". Since I didn't wind up using anything from the disk I take it that the license doesn't apply to me, but who knows? A new addition with an "open source" style license and a reworking of the organization would be very welcome.

Great book for understanding Graphics Programming
If you're looking for a book to give you details of Graphics programming, I would strongly recommend Fast Algorithms for 3D Graphics. Although Fast Algorithms was originally written for Dos and Unix, I found the text and source to be complete enough to be able to port the source to any Operating System. The text and the code is easily readable; I enjoyed reviewing the real-time shadow algorithm in particular. After reading the book I was able to understand a lot of the graphics work being done while working at Alias/Wavefront. Since then I have become more interested in 3D Graphics and look forward to reading "Open Geometry", Prof. Glaeser's next addition. Over all, I found this book to reveal a lot technical questions I had about graphics programming. The code provided a real time solution to the questions at hand, not like other books that give snippets or pseudo code.


Seven Hermetic Letters : Letters for the Development of the Secret Powers of the Soul
Published in Paperback by Merkur Pub Co (1999)
Authors: Georg Lomer, Gerhard Hanswille, and Franca Gallo
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Outdated
This is not Bardon.

This is does not have to be read before Bardon.

Bardon disagrees with some of the core principles in this book e.g. Sexual abstinence.

I would reccommend this work for the sincere student who has the time to commit to it and who accepts all it's principles etc. and who will stick to it to the end.

If you want this book, get it for what it's worth not because you like Bardon. It does have a few similar practices but it also has contraditions. And the theory part is not that solid either.

Forget this precurser
Although the philosophical side of this book is okay, the practices are not. Lomer suggests you to get your palm and handwriting analyzed, gather peas, sit still (without blinking), and many other seemingly pointless tasks. I suggest that you begin with Initiation Into Hermetics without this.

A Relevant Regimen for Those who seek Mastery of Self
This book sets forth an excellent regimen for training the mind and body for spiritual work. It stands alone and needs no follow-up. Well translated, the book flows well and reads well. For those who are serious about increasing their potential mastery I believe this to be a fine book. The step by step course is simple to understand ( however rigorous and demanding). If there is someone contemplating true psychic development and training, this is a very good read in so much as you will gain a quick idea as to the amount of hard work and dedication this type of undertaking requires. The typeset is comfortable and easy on the eyes. I think this is a true treasure and should be a welcome addition to any esoteric library. If followed with rigorous dedication this book will change anyones' life!


The Microscope and How to Use It
Published in Paperback by Dover Pubns (1970)
Author: Georg Stehli
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Historical Interest
Probably groundbreaking in 1955 when it was written. Historically interesting in 1999.

Good introduction to microscopy but chemicals are a problem.
In its English translation, this book is a good introduction to microscopy and microtechnique but suffers from two problems:

1. The translation from the German is sometimes awkward and not always clear as to meaning (I have read the book in German as well);

2. The book makes reference to chemicals which cannot be obtained by private individuals in the US. Some chemical references are also no longer available: "wood vinegar", given by Dr. Stehli as a constituent of Pfeiffer's Fixative for algae, does not exist anywhere on this side of the Atlantic. Wood vinegar is actually a literal translation of the German "Holzessig" and is apparently an impure form of glatial acetic acid (which is available, but again not to individuals).

Students who have access to a college laboratory or who can order chemicals through a third party will be very happy with this book. The information on basic setup of a microscope, hand-cutting sections and preparation of fresh (as opposed to fixed) specimens is excellent.

Detailed source of microscope technique

[Note that this is a review of the hardcover, seventh printing in 1969 distributed by Sterling Pub. Co., not the Dover edition that Amazon is selling -- to me! Rated at 8 only because I don't know whether more current information is available. Otherwise, call it a 10.]

This is the only serious book on microscope technique that I could find in the Fairfax County VA public library system which is probably one of the best in the country. All the other books are superficial and aimed at kids.

This one covers apparatus care and use, simple (temporary) preparations of various kinds of specimens, microphotography (though superficially), but the best part is the appendix on microtome technique which presents a full procedure for fixing, dehydration, and paraffin infiltration.

Here are the chapter titles:

1. The Microscope and Essential Tools
2. How to Use the Microscope
3. Examining Simple Preparations
4. Insect Preparations
5. Exploring a Drop of Water
6. The Structure of Plants
7. The Structure of Animals
8. Bacteria
9. Microphotography
Appendix. Microtome Technique
with Index.

Thank God for Dover Press and their willingness to keep these oldies but goodies available. With libraries catering to the bestseller crowd, our technical know-how would otherwise perish.


Leonce and Lena. Lenz. Woyzeck (German Literary Classics in Translation)
Published in Hardcover by University of Chicago Press (1972)
Author: Georg Buchner
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Some words about Woyzeck
We read this book at school (we were forced to)! I can tell you something: Stop! Don't spend a penny for this book! Really, I know what I am talking about. In Europe this book is quite well known, but we really couldn't find out why. My friends and me had all the same opinion.

In defence of Herr Büchner!
Despite his untimely demise, Georg Büchner stands as one of the most astonishing German writers of the 19th century. Along with Kleist, he helped reconfigure narrative and drama in ways that we moderns and postmoderns ought to acknowledge. Concerning this particular title, Michael Hamburger's translation is up to his usual very high standard. An essential read for anyone interested in the problematics of modern literature.


Three Critics of the Enlightenment
Published in Paperback by Princeton Univ Pr (15 November, 2000)
Authors: Isaiah Berlin and Henry Hardy
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(Addition to my already posted review)
Following that dictum, I might point out that, especially in two areas of contemporary concern, Hamann's thought is highly relevant: Oswald Bayer has shown in Autoritaet und Kritik (1991) that Hamann's hermeneutics -- antedating by two centuries Derrida's reflections on intertextuality -- provides the basis for a devastating critique of deconstruction by subverting the French thinker's concept of the "center," and demonstrating where the true center ("Mitte") is to be located. Further, there is presently a lively discussion among scholars of Hamann's critique of Kant's famous essay: "What is Enlightenment"? Berlin's present study would have done more justice to Hamann's thought by discussing such developments as these and others, which were available during his lifetime.

"The Magus of the North" in THREE CRITICS
My review is limited to the study of Johann Georg Hamann in the present volume, and the three star rating applies to it alone. Combining Isaiah Berlin's books on Vico, Hamann and Herder under one cover was a felicitous idea of Berlin's editor and literary executor Henry Hardy. The position which these thinkers share: their anti-Cartesianism, their emphasis on history, tradition, language and mythology may now be seen through the considerably different lenses they employ. I feel compelled, however, to register a caveat. When the present Hamann study appeared in book form in 1993, I expressed my reservations about it in a letter to the "New York Review of Books," to which Berlin replied. I lamented the fact that he had ignored modern Hamann scholarship, and had clung to the interpretation of Hamann as an irrationalist, especially that espoused by Rudolf Unger in his 1911 book,"Hamann und die Aufklaerung,"ignoring modern discussions of the "dialectic of the Enlightenment." Specialists in the field now consider Unger's interpretation outdated, and see Hamann as a champion of one side of the Enlightenment, albeit a severe critic of its other, extremely rationalistic, side.

The question of Hamann's relation to the Enlightenment turns on the conception of reason. I have maintained that Hamann employed a mode of reason distinct from that of the rationalistic Enlighteners as well as from that of his friendly adversary,Kant. In order to designate that mode, I adopted a term once used by Kant in referring to Hamann's thought,i.e., "intuitive reason," or, in the original German, "anschauende Vernunft." I accepted the term as an apt one for Hamann's mode of thought, however Kant felt about it. Further, I have demonstrated how it can be linguistically distinguished from the traditional logico-mathematical mode of thought in my book "The Quarrel of Reason with Itself"(1988),and elsewhere. It is one which Berlin rightly sees as akin to Dilthey's "verstehen," which Berlin also rejects. He lists a group of philosophers whose conception of reason matches his own: Jeremy Bentham, J.S. Mill, Franz von Brentano, William James, Bertrand Russell and the "Vienna Circle." Most of these thinkers are about as far removed from any kind of "verstehen" as possible. Who then, besides Hamann, may be said to have employed what I have called "intuitive reason"? The prime examples are the great epistemological heirs of Hamann: Goethe and Nietzsche. Goethe belongs here because of his refusal to analyze the "Urphaenomen." Hence, his anti-Newtonian stance. Nietzsche, especially in "Zarathustra," which I have analyzed closely from the standpoint of intuitive reason in "Nietzsche and the Judaeo-Christian Tradition"(1985).

Having stated my reservations concerning Berlin's interpretation of Hamann, I must say, however, that we can be grateful that he has helped mightily to rescue that German philosopher from the obscurity to which he has been unjustly relegated by those who remain under the spell of the strictly rationalistic wing of the Enlightenment. Berlin, in spite of his basic lack of empathy with Hamann, not only recognized his importance, but was always fascinated by him. He was an early and enthusiastic subscriber to "The Hamann News-Letter," which I edited and published in the early 195O's and 196O's. Further, his correspondence with me regarding Hamann over a period of three and a half decades shows an unflagging interest in the man who both attracted and repelled him. In a letter to me of June 25,1972, he wrote: "My passion for Hamann is undiminished." Not too surprisingly, there are certain passages in the present book in which Berlin seems, unwittingly, to move toward a certain degree of empathy,hence to a kind of "verstehen." But such passages are few, and many others are unjustly harsh. Nevertheless, for all its shortcomings, Berlin's study of Hamann is valuable for introducing the reader, especially the anglophone reader, to the historically important pre-Romantic figure, known as "The Magus of the North," without whom the development of German Romanticism would be unthinkable, and whose insights increasingly bear fruit today, especially in theology and philosophy. As Berlin has said: "Hamann repays study."


Blowing Up Hitler: A Life of Johann Georg Elser, Would-Be Assassin
Published in Paperback by Michael E Coughlin (1986)
Author: Gerald. Williams
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Good example of applying investigative method to poetry
This is a little tome. Clocks in at 11 pages. It is probably of more interest to poets than to historians. But Williams does uncover some little known facts and he applies a novel technique in order to cast light upon the failed Hitler assasain Johann Georg Elser. Works like Williams' are in the forefont of a poetry style known as investigative poetry. The I.P school was founded by Ed Sanders. A central tenet: To relieve poetry of its obsessive preoccupation with egoistic internal states and to focus content around things that really happened.


Deterministic chaos : an introduction
Published in Unknown Binding by VCH ; Distribution, USA and Canada, VCH ()
Author: Heinz Georg Schuster
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Was a real help in the mid-eighties
In the eighties, when many of us were trying to learn nonlinear dynamics (by teaching it) from outdated texts on nonlinear differential equations (no chaos theory) and newer research papers, this book was extremely helpful. In contrast with Lichtenberg and Lieberman, which preceded it (and was for a few years the only modern book on chaos available), it did not ignore driven-dissipative systems but rather emphasized them. Still provides a good introduction for a beginner (when one supplements it by going to the orginal literature), although I would of course recommend my own books on the subject, especially with regard to understanding what is meant by integrability/nonintegrability, what is meant by a 'chaotic orbit', and to avoid confusing randomness with deterministic chaos. It is a disease with all books on chaos that the writers do not advise the student to do backard in time integration to check the validity of forward time numerical integrations. therefore, the cookbook recipe given in those texts for calculating Liapunov exponents is wrong and misleading. Another way to say it is that deterministic chaos is not developed from the systematic standpoint of symbollic dynamics in those texts, but rather from the standpoint of meaningless numerical integrations packed full with machine errors.


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