Living with Indifference

Living with Indifference

Author: Charles E. Scott

Publisher: Indiana University Press

Published: 2007-05-18

Total Pages: 184

ISBN-13: 0253117038

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Living with Indifference is about the dimension of life that is utterly neutral, without care, feeling, or personality. In this provocative work that is anything but indifferent, Charles E. Scott explores the ways people have spoken and thought about indifference. Exploring topics such as time, chance, beauty, imagination, violence, and virtue, Scott shows how affirming indifference can be beneficial, and how destructive consequences can occur when we deny it. Scott's preoccupation with indifference issues a demand for focused attention in connection with personal values, ethics, and beliefs. This elegantly argued book speaks to the positive value of diversity and a world that is open to human passion.


Indifferent

Indifferent

Author: Branko Jovanovski

Publisher: Indifferent Concept

Published: 2012-06-01

Total Pages: 320

ISBN-13: 9780615632117

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Mojag is in his early twenties, as he is leaving his homeland to seek for better opportunities in a distant world. His painful, almost martyr-like departure from his family, his shaken relationship with his girlfriend - his first love, and the warmth of his home initiate a beginning of coping with realities of the imaginary roller-coaster called life. Finding himself in a position of a wanderer, he soon realizes that being away from the warmth of his home is not the only cause of his own misery, but his reluctance to a natural change in life. The mental evolution of his character is what he is unconsciously aspiring to achieve. That is the only objective goal. His girlfriend, his comfort, his friends, his family are vivid aids in his quest of life; the foreign land of his childhood dreams only his playground. "Mojag is perhaps the same person like we all are, but he has the courage and the honesty to write his own reality. And Mojag's honesty is what makes readers find themselves in his actions, in his unbiased feelings, in his lust for life, in his quest for freedom, in his restless character. Neither a hero, nor a spineless cord, Mojag is someone that we all claim we are not. And Indifferent is a story so real that it can be touched."- The Indifferent Concept.


The Universe is Indifferent

The Universe is Indifferent

Author: Ann W Duncan

Publisher: Lutterworth Press

Published: 2017-10-26

Total Pages: 428

ISBN-13: 0718847334

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Centred on the lives of the employees at a Manhattan advertising firm, the television series Mad Men touches on the advertising world's unique interests in consumerist culture, materialistic desire, and the role of deception in Western capitalism. While this essay collection has a decidedly socio-historical focus, the authors use this as the starting point for philosophical, religious, and theological reflection, showing how Mad Men reveals deep truths concerning the social trends of the 1960s and deserves a significant amount of scholarly consideration. Going beyond mere reflection, the authors make deeper inquiries into what these trends say about American cultural habits, the business world within Western capitalism, and the rapid social changes that occurred during this period. From the staid and conventional early seasons to the war, assassinations, riots, and counterculture of later seasons, The Universe is Indifferent shows how social change underpins the interpersonal dramas of the characters in Mad Men.


Depraved Indifference

Depraved Indifference

Author: Gary Indiana

Publisher: Macmillan

Published: 2003-07-17

Total Pages: 338

ISBN-13: 9780312316419

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Gary Indiana, a 'huge satirical talent' (The New York Times), presents a darkly comic novel fueled by the virtuoso con artist Evangeline Slote and her extravagant life of chicanery and petty crime. Inspired by the case of Sante and Ken Kimes, the real-life mother/son grifters, the novel is a dissection of the mind of a charismatic sociopath and a satire of the society that appeases and abets her.


Badiou and Indifferent Being

Badiou and Indifferent Being

Author: William Watkin

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing

Published: 2017-09-21

Total Pages: 297

ISBN-13: 1350015687

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The first critical work to attempt the mammoth undertaking of reading Badiou's Being and Event as part of a sequence has often surprising, occasionally controversial results. Looking back on its publication Badiou declared: “I had inscribed my name in the history of philosophy”. Later he was brave enough to admit that this inscription needed correction. The central elements of Badiou's philosophy only make sense when Being and Event is read through the corrective prism of its sequel, Logics of Worlds, published nearly twenty years later. At the same time as presenting the only complete overview of Badiou's philosophical project, this book is also the first to draw out the central component of Badiou's ontology: indifference. Concentrating on its use across the core elements Being and Event-the void, the multiple, the set and the event-Watkin demonstrates that no account of Badiou's ontology is complete unless it accepts that Badiou's philosophy is primarily a presentation of indifferent being. Badiou and Indifferent Being provides a detailed and lively section by section reading of Badiou's foundational work. It is a seminal source text for all Badiou readers.


Religious Indifference

Religious Indifference

Author: Johannes Quack

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2017-04-11

Total Pages: 274

ISBN-13: 3319484761

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book provides a conceptually and empirically rich introduction to religious indifference on the basis of original anthropological, historical and sociological research. Religious indifference is a central category for understanding contemporary societies, and a controversial one. For some scholars, a growing religious indifference indicates a dramatic decline in religiosity and epitomizes the endpoint of secularization processes. Others view it as an indicator of moral apathy and philosophical nihilism, whilst yet others see it as paving the way for new forms of political tolerance and solidarity. This volume describes and analyses the symbolic power of religious indifference and the conceptual contestations surrounding it. Detailed case studies cover anthropological and qualitative data from the UK, Germany, Estonia, the USA, Canada, and India analyse large quantitative data sets, and provide philosophical-literary inquiries into the phenomenon. They highlight how, for different actors and agendas, religious indifference can constitute an objective or a challenge. Pursuing a relational approach to non-religion, the book conceptualizes religious indifference in its interrelatedness with religion as well as more avowed forms of non-religion.


The Indifferent Children

The Indifferent Children

Author: Louis Auchincloss

Publisher:

Published: 1964

Total Pages: 408

ISBN-13:

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Witty and ironic picture of New York society and society people in rear-eschelon desk jobs in the Canal Zone and at sea. Beverly Stregelinus, a young, upper-class New Yorker, is a charming young man, but aware of his ingratiating deficiencies. At the eve of World War II, his days are filled with charity and committee work after losing hisart gallery job. Pearl Harbor shatters all this and catapults him into a desk job in the Canal Zone as a lieutenant. Under these strange and bewildering circumstances, a court-martial scandal entangles Beverly and his Navy friends and marks the beginning of the real education of Beverly Stregelinus.


Indifference to Difference

Indifference to Difference

Author: Madhavi Menon

Publisher: U of Minnesota Press

Published: 2015-12-16

Total Pages: 160

ISBN-13: 1452944970

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Indifference to Difference organizes around Alain Badiou’s suggestion that, in the face of increasing claims of identitarian specificity, one might consider the politics and practice of being indifferent to difference. Such a politics would be based on the superabundance of desire and its inability to settle into identity. Madhavi Menon shows that if we turn to another kind of universalism—not one that insists we are all different but one that recognizes we are all similar in our powerlessness to contain desire—then difference no longer becomes the focus of our identity. Instead, we enter the worlds of desire. Following up on ideas of sameness and difference that have animated queer theory, Menon argues that what is most queer about indifference is not that it gives us queerness as an identity but that it is able to change queerness into a resistance of ontology. Firmly committed to the detours of desire, queer universalism evades identity. This polemical book demonstrates that queerness is the condition within which we labor. Our desires are not ours to be owned; they are indifferent to our differences.


Deadly Indifference

Deadly Indifference

Author: Michael D. Brown

Publisher: Taylor Trade Publications

Published: 2011-06-16

Total Pages: 245

ISBN-13: 1589794869

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

At last, former Under Secretary of Homeland Security Michael Brown—infamously praised by President George W. Bush for doing a "heckuva job" in the wake of Hurricane Katrina—tells his side of the response to one of the greatest natural disasters to occur in the United States. Without making excuses for anyone, least of all the President of the United States or himself, Brown describes in detail what ultimately turned out to be the largest federal response to a natural disaster in U.S. history.