Sven Greitschus | University of Cambridge (original) (raw)
A passionate guardian of the Oxford comma and general supporter of moderate quirkiness in professional contexts; a humble beginner in engineering life philosophy without dogmatism; a true believer in the kernel of good that is shaping a crucial part in all of us; and a pretend warrior-poet because our words should always be the only weapon.
Supervisors: Dr Damian Catani, Dr Francesco Manzini, Prof Carol Tully, Dr Maria Scott, and Dr Gillian Jein
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Manuscript / Monograph by Sven Greitschus
Based on my Idealist epistemological reading of Baudelaire's famous sonnet 'A Une Passante' and i... more Based on my Idealist epistemological reading of Baudelaire's famous sonnet 'A Une Passante' and intended as a cover for my monograph 'Fragments in the Dark'.
Research Proposals by Sven Greitschus
This study will consider the emotion of hate as a socio-collective mechanism that may be triggere... more This study will consider the emotion of hate as a socio-collective mechanism that may be triggered at any moment and as such is prone to exploitation. Hate, in this context, becomes institutionalised in the form of terror (terrorism) and counter-terror (war against terrorism) and as such is transformed into a social, cultural, and political precondition for the operation of markets. The intellectual trajectory leading up to this research premise is based on the Idealist epistemological hypothesis that all of knowledge is essentially grounded in experience, and that the experience of modern society leads to ignorance or lack of knowledge as a requirement for the establishment of hate on a socio-collective scale.
Based on my Idealist epistemological reading of Baudelaire's famous sonnet 'A Une Passante' and i... more Based on my Idealist epistemological reading of Baudelaire's famous sonnet 'A Une Passante' and intended as a cover for my monograph 'Fragments in the Dark'.
This study will consider the emotion of hate as a socio-collective mechanism that may be triggere... more This study will consider the emotion of hate as a socio-collective mechanism that may be triggered at any moment and as such is prone to exploitation. Hate, in this context, becomes institutionalised in the form of terror (terrorism) and counter-terror (war against terrorism) and as such is transformed into a social, cultural, and political precondition for the operation of markets. The intellectual trajectory leading up to this research premise is based on the Idealist epistemological hypothesis that all of knowledge is essentially grounded in experience, and that the experience of modern society leads to ignorance or lack of knowledge as a requirement for the establishment of hate on a socio-collective scale.