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Carlos A. Segovia

    Este autor profundiza en la reconsideración y el remapeo de eventos pasados, con el objetivo de extraer una imagen nueva y tentativa que es necesariamente más compleja y ambigua que cualquier narrativa maestra. Al "cepillar la historia a contrapelo", como sugirió Walter Benjamin, su obra ofrece una perspectiva radicalmente diferente de los acontecimientos históricos. Este enfoque descubre nuevas posibilidades virtuales capaces de transformar tanto el presente como el futuro. En última instancia, su investigación busca ayudarnos a ser diferentes al reimaginar las premisas mismas de nuestras identidades.

    The Quranic Noah and the Making of the Islamic Prophet
    Guattari Beyond Deleuze
    • 2024

      Guattari Beyond Deleuze

      Ontology and Modal Philosophy in Guattari's Major Writings

      • 319 páginas
      • 12 horas de lectura

      The book presents a compelling argument for the significant impact of a philosopher on ontology and modal philosophy. Through a collection of texts, it explores the philosopher's original ideas and their lasting influence on contemporary thought. The analysis delves into key concepts and theories, highlighting the evolution of philosophical discourse and the implications for understanding existence and possibility. This work serves as both a critical examination and a tribute to the philosopher's enduring legacy in these fields.

      Guattari Beyond Deleuze
    • 2015

      The Quranic Noah and the Making of the Islamic Prophet

      A Study of Intertextuality and Religious Identity Formation in Late Antiquity

      • 170 páginas
      • 6 horas de lectura

      Still in its infancy because of the overly conservative views and methods assumed by the majority of scholars working in it since the mid-19th century, the field of early Islamic and quranic studies is one in which the very basic questions must nowadays be addressed with decision. Accordingly, this book tries to resituate the Qur'an at the crossroads of the conversations of old, to which its parabiblical narratives witness, and explores how Muhammad's image - which was apparently modelled after that of the anonymous prophet repeatedly alluded to in the Qur'an - originally matched that of other prophets and/or charismatic figures distinctive in the late-antique sectarian milieu out of which Islam gradually emerged. Moreover, it contends that the Quranic Noah narratives provide a first-hand window into the making of Muhammad as an eschatological prophet and further examines their form, content, purpose, and sources as a means of deciphering the scribal and intertextual nature of the Qur'a n as well as the Jewish-Christian background of the messianic controversy that gave birth to the new Arab religion. The previously neglected view that Muhammad was once tentatively thought of as a new Messiah challenges our common understanding of Islam's origins.

      The Quranic Noah and the Making of the Islamic Prophet