body of water

Triangles All the Way Down: Mimesis and Human Violence

I envisioned this book as a sort of layman's introduction to mimetic theory---a theory of imitation that has run like a bright thread through the history of Western thought since Plato. Until modern times, it was the province of philosophy and theology, but since the 1960s, when René Girard published the first of his books on the subject, the theory has attracted immense scholarly interest throughout the humanities, particularly in psychology, sociology, anthropology, political science, literary theory, and theories of religion. In the mid-nineties, mirror neurons were discovered by neuroscientists in Parma, Italy, giving mimetic theory a firm footing in scientific research.

So, why should any of this matter? the answer is that mimetic theory---a theory of mediated, or triangular, desire, has vast implications for humanity's understanding of itself and its prospects for survival.

Doughlas Remy

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