Cahiers pour l'Analyse

Cahiers pour l'Analyse was a journal published by a group of young philosophy graduates at the Ecole Normale Supérieure (ENS) in Paris in the 1960s. Ten issues of the journal appeared between 1966 and 1969. According to its official website[1] the Cahiers were "guided by the examples of Georges Canguilhem, Jacques Lacan and Louis Althusser" (all instructors at the ENS during this period).

Edited by a small group of Althusser's students at the Ecole Normale Supérieure, the Cahiers pour l’Analyse appeared during what were – arguably – the most fertile and productive years in French philosophy during the whole of the twentieth century.[2] As distinct from philosophies based on the interpretation of meaning or lived experience, the Cahiers sought to combine structuralism and psychoanalysis with logical or mathematical formalization, generating a field of theoretical reflection that continues to guide some of today's most significant and provocative philosophical work."[3]

Contributors to Cahiers pour l'Analyse

Texts of notable modern authors, mostly French or eventually in translation, have been published in the Cahiers, including works by René Descartes, Niccolò Machiavelli, David Hume, Antoine Lavoisier, Dimitri Mendeleev, George Boole, Georg Cantor.

Among the contemporary contributors to Cahiers pour l'Analyse, some of the names who appeared in its pages continue to be guiding forces into the 21st century (in both the Continental and Analytic philosophical traditions):

References

  1. The Initial version went online and was made public 31 March 2010, with plans to launch the definitive version of the site in September 2010
  2. Project Overview & "About the Website"
  3. Concept and Form: The Cahiers pour l'Analyse and Contemporary French Thought

External links


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