Abstract
Every metaphysic, according to Reiner Schürmann, involves the positing
of a first principle for thinking and doing whereby the world becomes
intelligible and masterable. What happens when such rules or norms no
longer have the power they previously had? According to Cornelius
Castoriadis, the world makes sense through institutions of imaginary
significations. What happens when we discover that these significations
and institutions truly are imaginary, without ground? Both thinkers
begin their ontologies by acknowledging a radical finitude that threatens
to destroy meaning or order. For Schürmann it is the ontological anarchy
revealed between epochs when principles governing modes of thinking
and doing are foundering but new principles to take their place have not
yet emerged. For Castoriadis it is chaos that names the indeterminationdetermination
that governs the unfolding of the socio-historical with
contingency and unpredictability. And yet for both thinkers their
respective ontologies have political or ethical implications. On the basis
of the anarchy of being, Schürmann unfolds an anarchic praxis or ethos
of “living without why.” And on the basis of his notion of being as chaos,
Castoriadis develops his political praxis of autonomy. The challenge for
both is this move from ontology to practical philosophy, how to bridge
theory and practice. The key for both seems to be a certain ontologically
derived sense of freedom. In this paper, I analyze and compare their
respective thoughts, and pursue the question of how anarchy or chaos
and the implied sense of an ontological freedom might be made viable
and sensible for human praxis, how radical finitude in the face of
ontological groundlessness might nevertheless serve to situate a viable
political praxis.