Pharmakon: Difference between revisions

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(New page: '''In Philosophy''' . Derrida employs the word ''pharmakon'' within a chain of signifiers connoting an endless deferral of meaning in language. The word ''pharmakon'' could be taken to me...)
 
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'''In Philosophy'''
'''''Pharmakon'' in Philosophy'''
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Derrida employs the word ''pharmakon'' within a chain of signifiers connoting an endless deferral of meaning in language. The word ''pharmakon'' could be taken to mean a remedy or medicine.  The meaning is ambiguous because the drug or ''Pharmakon'' can also function as as poison. As a function of language, ''pharmakon'' can refer to a spell, a form of persuasion, an object of seduction, a text or anything else that has the power, e.g., in the case of writing, to make "one stray from one's general, natural, habitual paths and laws (''Dissemination'' 70)."
Derrida employs the Greek word ''pharmakon'' to denote the endless deferral of meaning in language, a power of reversal that is hidden in language itself. The word ''pharmakon'' could be taken to mean a remedy or medicine.  The meaning is ambiguous because the drug or ''Pharmakon'' can also function as as poison. As a function of language, ''pharmakon'' can refer to a spell, a form of persuasion, an object of seduction, a text or anything else that has the power, e.g., in the case of writing, to make "one stray from one's general, natural, habitual paths and laws (''Dissemination'' 70)."

Revision as of 23:58, 1 April 2011

Pharmakon in Philosophy

Derrida employs the Greek word pharmakon to denote the endless deferral of meaning in language, a power of reversal that is hidden in language itself. The word pharmakon could be taken to mean a remedy or medicine. The meaning is ambiguous because the drug or Pharmakon can also function as as poison. As a function of language, pharmakon can refer to a spell, a form of persuasion, an object of seduction, a text or anything else that has the power, e.g., in the case of writing, to make "one stray from one's general, natural, habitual paths and laws (Dissemination 70)."