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    An event is conceived as something singular and non-repea... — Carmelics
    Home/Philosophy of Language
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    Supports→The concepts of 'event' and 'machine' (singular living occurrence and calculable mechanical repetition) currently appear antinomic and incompatible

    An event is conceived as something singular and non-repeatable, associated with the living and organic sensation

    Modality & PossibilityPhilosophy of Language
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    Philosophy of LanguageModality & Possibility

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    Related propositions within the same area of thought.
    A machine is based in repetition, operating impassively without affect or auto-a...Organic living singularity and inorganic dead universality are incompatible cate...The concepts of 'event' and 'machine' (singular living occurrence and calculable...

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    Any genuine event must be singular and non-resembling to past events78%Sound is not an event but a property of the event which produces it78%A mindreading event is, by definition, a mental event in which a subje...77%Representing an event as past gives memory a different content from th...76%

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    SEP: derrida
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    In an essay from 1998, “Typewriter Ribbon,” Derrida investigates the relation of confession to archives. But, before he starts the investigation (which will concern primarily Rousseau), he says, “Let us put in place the premises of our question.” He says, “Will this be possible for us? Will we one day be able to, and in a single gesture, to join the thinking of the event to the thinking of the machine? Will we be able to think, what is called thinking, at one and the same time, both what is happ

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