"Wit and Innovative Action" explores the ambivalence
inevitably arising when the semiotic and the semantic,
grammar and experience, rule and regularity, and right
and fact intersect. Virno unravels the infinite potential
and wonders of everyday linguistic praxis and ambiguity.
Wit, he argues, is a public performance, and its modus
operandi characterizes human action in a state of emergency;
it is a reaction, an articulate response, and a possible
solution to a state of crisis. "Mirror Neurons,
Linguistic Negation, and Mutual Recognition" examines
the relationship of language and intersubjective empathy:
without language, would human beings be able to recognize
other members of their species? And finally, in "Multitude
and Evil," Virno challenges the distinction between
the state of nature and civil society and argues for
a political institution that resembles language in its
ability to be at once nature and history.
Few thinkers take the risks required by innovation. Like
a philosophical entrepreneur, Virno is engaged in no less
than rewriting the dictionary of political theory, an urgent
and ambitious project when language, caught in a permanent
state of emergency impossible to sustain, desperately needs
to articulate and enact new practices of freedom for the
multitude. |