Daniel C. Barry - Die Geschichtsschrift – on Formalising History
Any theory of historicity requires, commands, entails an encounter between thinking and its history. What we witness here, we might say, is the chance of historicity. For it is in this encounter with its history that thinking is offered the prospect of its own historical comprehension. Yet, the very achievement of historicity also coincides with an inherent danger. For the concept of historicity portends its immanent ruination and collapse. Because when this thinking becomes ‘for itself’, it is opened to the risk of its self-unification. Such a thinking would thus resume and (re) appropriate its history and therefore reappropriate itself. That is to say, it would live and breathe in absolute self-community, in an interpenetrating self-consciousness. Both in-itself and for-itself. By comprehending its own history, thought would therefore culminate in the comprehension of a totality. Here, an outside, a transcendent Other, is appropriated and re-appropriated to figure a whole where no Other figures outside this entirety. The history of thought would be conceived according to an absolute presence of thought to itself. History thus features as entirely present to thinking. Thus, thinking would be without historicity. Since the concept of historicity seems to produce and induce a thorough privilege of the present, history, as Parmenides held, must be thought under the species of that which remains and persists, proximal and disponsible. Such is the drama of historicity: its self-dissolution, the cancellation of its dialectic where the “two fuses into One”. Idealism. This scandal is precisely what Alain Badiou’s Marque et manque: à propos du zéro seeks to remedy. Certainly, Badiou’s endeavour in this text is not at all an apology for idealism, but rather a rehabilitation of the concept of historicity.
https://www.crisiscritique.org/storage/app/media/daniel-c-barry.pdf