Translator's RemarksVOLUME ONEGeneral IntroductionPART ONE IN THE NAME OF THE ONE: THE GREEK HEGEMONIC FANTASMI. ITS INSTITUTION: THE ONE THAT HOLDS TOGETHER (PARMENIDES)Chapter 1. Contradictories: Their Juxtaposition and Their ConfusionChapter 2. Contraries: The Foundation for ObligationChapter 3. On Power and Forces: The Normative SystemChapter 4. Henology Turned Against Itself?Chapter 5. The Disparate: Narrative of a JourneyII. ITS DESTITUTION: THE ONE TURNED AGAINST ITSELF (PLOTINUS)IntroductionChapter 6.
The Temporalizing EventChapter 7. The Singularising ContretempsPART TWO IN THE NAME OF NATURE: THE HEGEMONIC LATIN FANTASMIntroductionI. ITS INSTITUTION: THE PRINCIPLE OF TELIC CONTINUITY (CICERO AND AUGUSTINE)Chapter 8. Concerning Singular Given NaturesChapter 9. On the Erratic DifferendChapter 10. On the Natural Double Bind: The Will Turned Against ItselfII. ITS DESTITUTION: THE DOUBLE BIND OF PRINCIPLE AND ORIGIN (MEISTER ECKHART)IntroductionChapter 11. Nature, Principle of SubordinationsChapter 12.
Feet On One's Neighbor's HeadChapter 13. Nature Denatured by the OriginVOLUME TWOPreface: Analytic of Ultimates and Topology of Broken HegemoniesPART THREE: IN THE NAME OF CONSCIOUSNESS: THE MODERN HEGEMONIC FANTASMIntroductionI. ITS INSTITUTION: OF THE CONSCIOUSNESS THAT DETERMINES (KANT WITH LUTHER)A. The Regime of Passive Consciousness: 'An Obedient Spirit that Lets Itself be Broken.'Chapter 1. The Identity of the 'I'Chapter 2. A Pathetic DifferendB. The Regime of Spontaneous Consciousness: "I, the Possessor of the World"IntroductionChapter 3.
The Torments of AutonomyChapter 4. The Differend in Being-For-ConsciousnessII. THE DIREMPTION: ON DOUBLE BINDS WITHOUT A COMMON NOUN (HEIDEGGER)Introduction: Proteus Alone Can Save Us NowChapter 5. On the Historical DifferendChapter 6. What, the Deferred There?Chapter 7. On the Discordance of TimesConclusionNotes.