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Reengineering Philosophy

A major later Negarestani page that treats philosophy as something to be redesigned, retooled, and rebuilt for synthetic reason.

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Core idea

These pages matter because they give the clearest account of Negarestani's mature inhumanism. The human is treated as revisable and constructible, and philosophy becomes a labor of transformation rather than an elegy for lost essence.

The mechanism is explicitly constructive. Conceptual engineering, revision, and rational navigation replace both nostalgic humanism and Landian anti-philosophy as the dominant way of thinking the inhuman.

That matters because this cluster marks one of the archive's most important departures from its own darker inheritances. It shows how post-CCRU theory-fiction can mutate into a demanding rationalist program without losing conceptual intensity.

How to read this text

Read for the verbs of construction, revision, and engineering. Those are the quickest route into how Negarestani is changing the meaning of the inhuman.

Track where the page explicitly distances itself from anti-humanism as doom, finitude, or exteriority-worship. That is where the distinctiveness of this line is clearest.

Representative extracts

Definition · paragraph 1

Firstly, that intelligence, or Geist, can only be defined functionally—in terms of what it does; and secondly, Reza Negarestani expands upon the major themes of his new book Intelligence and Spirit in this edited and expanded version of his conversation with Robin Mackay at the launch of the book in New York in November 2018 Reengineering Philosophy DOCUMENT UFD034 Reza Negarestani, Robin Mackay Philosophy, as a programme of con­ structing an outside view of ourselves, is already a programme for artificialization

Definition · paragraph 4

So philosophy of intelligence not only renegoti­ ates the very concept of mind, but also investigates the prospects of what can be done—theoretically and practically—with a concept of mind not as a thing but as an ongoing project.

Definition · paragraph 5

RM: In the book your reappropriation of the histo­ ry of philosophy is enmeshed with the thoroughly contemporary question of artificial intelligence. So can AI research really learn something by going back to the transcendental turn, to German Idealism, or even to Plato? What do the various projects of AI have to gain from going back to what would appear to be centuries-old, perhaps even obsolete, philo­ sophical conceptions of mind?

Definition · paragraph 4

Throughout the course of the book, then, we see that this problem cannot be co­ herently answered if we take the paradigm of mind­ edness as something stable, if we regard the list of faculties and transcendental structures as immuta­ ble. So philosophy of intelligence not only renegoti­ ates the very concept of mind, but also investigates the prospects of what can be done—theoretically and practically—with a concept of mind not as a thing but as an ongoing project.

Definition · paragraph 7

Of course, the idea that we speak in terms of anal­ ogy with our own conceptual behaviour raises a further question: If every behaviour we recognize in the world is recognized in analogy to our own par­ adigms of theoretical and practical reasoning, then does this mean that we are infinitely projecting our image into the universe—particularly if the way in which we reason is tethered to the particular tran­ scendental structures of our experience (neurologi­ cal diversity, language, culture, etc)?

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