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  1. Alain Badiou (2013). Badiou and the Philosophers: Interrogating 1960s French Philosophy. Bloomsbury Academic.
    Philosophy and history (with Jean Hyppolite) -- Philosophy and science (with Georges Canguilhem) -- Philosophy and sociology (with Raymond Aron) -- Philosophy and psychology (with Michel Foucault) -- Philosophy and language (with Paul Ricœur) -- Philosophy and truth (with Jean Hyppolite, Georges Canguilhem, Raymond Aron, Michel Foucault, Paul Ricœur, Alain Badiou and Dina Dreyfus) -- Philosophy and ethics (with Michel Henry) -- Model and structure (with Michel Serres) -- Teaching philosophy through television (with excerpts from Jean Hyppolite, Georges Canguilhem, Raymond (...)
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  2. Patrick L. Bourgeois (1971). Phenomenology and the Sciences of Language. Research in Phenomenology 1 (1):119-136.
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  3. Wayne Froman (1989). Toward a Theory of Textuality. Research in Phenomenology 19 (1):298-303.
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  4. Mitchell P. Jones (2000). Transcendental Intersubjectivity and the Objects of the Human Sciences. Symposium 4 (2):209-219.
    In this essay I show that Structuralism, in order to combat the impression that it is “untenable and outmoded,” needs to be attached to a phenomenology of transcendental intersubjectivity. My argument for this conclusion is: 1) that Peter Caws is right in arguing that Structuralism needs a notion of the transcendental subject because its objects, qua intentional, presuppose such a subject; 2) the objects withwhich Structuralism is concemed are objects in the sense that Husserl speaks of objects ofthe spiritual world; (...)
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  5. Paul M. Livingston (2011). The Politics of Logic: Badiou, Wittgenstein, and the Consequences of Formalism. Routledge.
    In this book, Livingston develops the political implications of formal results obtained over the course of the twentieth century in set theory, metalogic, and computational theory. He argues that the results achieved by thinkers such as Cantor, Russell, Gödel, Turing, and Cohen, even when they suggest inherent paradoxes and limitations to the structuring capacities of language or symbolic thought, have far-reaching implications for understanding the nature of political communities and their development and transformation. Alain Badiou's analysis of logical-mathematical structures forms (...)
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  6. Thérèse Vedet (2005). Parry in Paris: Structuralism, Historical Linguistics, and the Oral Theory. Classical Antiquity 24 (2):257-284.
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