Frank Ruda (Author) Frank Ruda is Professor of Modern and Contemporary Philosophy at the University of Dundee, Scotland. His most recent books are Reading Hegel (with Agon Hamza and Slavoj Zizek); The Dash-The Other Side of Absolute Knowing (with Rebecca Comay); and Abolishing Freedom: A Plea for a Contemporary Use of Fatalism. Alain Badiou (Foreword By) Alain Badiou is former chair of the Ecole Normale Superieure in Paris, France, and, with Gilles Deleuze, Michel Foucault, and Jean-Francois Lyotard, founder of the faculty of Philosophy at the University of Paris VIII. Heather H. Yeung (Translator) Heather H. Yeung is Reader in Literature (Poetry and Poetics) at the University of Dundee
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Foreword: Frank Ruda's Philosophical Oeuvre by Alain Badiou vii Preface to the English Edition: Freedom as Slavery xi List of Abbreviations xxv Introduction: Indifference and the History of Philosophical Rationalism 1 1 Descartes and the Transcendental of All My Future Errors 13 2 Kant and the Fall into Natural Necessity 47 3 Hegel, the Dead Disposition, and the Mortification of Freedom 82 Conclusion: Toward Another Type of Indifference 113 Translator's Afterword by Heather H. Yeung 127 Acknowledgments 133 Notes 135 Bibliography 171 Index 183
Indifference and Repetition is a timely and interesting challenge to the modern liberal ideology that freedom is our inalienable natural right. It offers a weapon against the illusory freedom of algorithmically determined choice in increasingly virtual social interactions.---S. D. Chrostowska, York University Ruda writes with authority, masterfully guiding readers through material that ranges from the familiar to the intriguingly obscure, while demonstrating how the latter still matters.---Vincent Lloyd, author of Black Dignity: The Struggle against Domination The free offer of freedom, of a capacity one is permitted to use at will, is a gift horse Ruda looks in the mouth. What he finds stowed away there is indifference and the arbitrariness of choice. The alternative he argues for is remarkable for being off-menu: a freedom won only from the negation of the given. A strongly argued, important book.---Joan Copjec, Brown University

