[D66] Plan B

A.O. jugg at ziggo.nl
Sat Mar 4 12:31:08 CET 2017


Plan B van de Partij voor de Dieren:

B = 66 (Ascii, http://www.asciitable.com/)
Plan B = Plan 66

https://www.partijvoordedieren.nl/data/files/2016/10/PvdDVerkiezingsprogramaTweedeKamerverkiezingen2017-a2e7a068.pdf

Thieme is tenminste naamvast als zevendedagsadventist, dat kan je van 
andere partijen niet altijd zeggen (d'66 -> D66) ...:

https://soundcloud.com/partij-voor-de-dieren/whats-in-a-nam
-> Waarom de Partij voor de Dieren haar naam niet moet wijzigen!

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In Badiou’s theory, Events are not limited to politics. What others,
such as Kuhn, term “scientific revolutions” are also examples of Events.
In maths, Events occur when new, previously unspeakable numbers are
discovered and named. The act of naming a new number transforms maths.
This view is similar to Kuhn’s idea of scientific revolutions, except
that the transformative force is an act of naming rather than an anomaly
in the empirical field. Indeed, Badiou is almost extending this model
outside science. In many ways, every Event is a ‘reforging’, similar to
a scientific revolution. Political revolutions are akin to scientific
revolutions in the ways their effects unfold.

https://ceasefiremagazine.co.uk/alain-badiou-event/

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https://dingpolitik.wordpress.com/2014/02/18/alain-badiou-two-names-for-infinity/

Only names and nothingness exist. The previous example looks more like
this then:

Name “Two” equals Nothingness and One as the Name of Nothingness

Arithmetics is perhaps the complete understanding of the world: the
world is composed of only names and nothingness.

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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naming_and_Necessity

Naming and Necessity is a 1980 book with the transcript of three
lectures, given by philosopher Saul Kripke, at Princeton University in
1970, in which he dealt with the debates of proper nouns in the
philosophy of language.[1] The transcript was brought out originally in
1971 in The Semantics of Natural Language, edited by Donald Davidson and
Gilbert Harman. Among analytic philosophers, Naming and Necessity is
widely considered one of the most important philosophical works of the
twentieth century.[2]


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a.out


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