Contemporary philosophy struggles with thinking differentiation as a tense opposition in universality, on the one hand, and singularity, on the other hand. Universality can lead to an abstract general notion of being with no relevance to the differentiation of Singularity, and Singularity can lead to a concrete idiosyncratic concept with no relevance to the differentiation of Universality. Hegel's Science of Logic offers us a way of thinking the differentiation of Universality and Singularity as a perfect opposition. Throughout this anthology, you will find a collection of authors (Singularities) who have wrestled with the Science of Logic, and have committed to thinking the relevance of this logic for contemporary theory and praxis (Universality). This theory and praxis is indispensable for the future of underground philosophers and philosophical communities, as well as artistic and religious projects, that may birth a culture for a truly global world, a world that must reconcile with both Universality and Singularity. TABLE OF
Note on the Science of Logic by Cadell Last
Editor’s Note by Daniel L. Garner (O.G. Rose)
Perfect Opposition by Cadell Last
The Logic by Cadell Last
PART 1: STAKES IN THE UNDERGROUND
1: Concept to Being by Cadell Last
2: From Mediation to Meditation and Back Again by Layman Pascal
3: On Analysis Communitas by Daniel L. Garner (O.G. Rose)
4: Scenes vs. Intellectual Milieus by David McKerracher
INTERMISSION 1: History of Frequency A Conversation with Alex Ebert
PART 2: PORTAL LOGIC
5: Do We Need Hegel’s Presuppositionless Philosophy? by Max Macken
6: Hegel’s Concept of True Infinity by Dimitri Crooijmans
7: The Work of Love by Dimitri Crooijmans
8: The Living Contradiction by Quinn Whelehan
9: Forgetting the Forgetting by Jason Bernstein
10: Nothing Matters by James Wisdom
11: (In)ternal-a(n)d-(Ex)ternal by Raza Ali
12: Est Ist So by Phillip Shinn
INTERMISSION 2: Singularities, Between New Atheism and Spiritual A Conversation with Peter Robinson
PART 3: FOR SPECULATIVE FUTURES
13: The Androgynous Organisation by Timothée Brès
14: Hegel and the Lateralized Brain by Matthew A. Stanley