Of Minimal Things is an exploration and reassessment of the
philosophical notion of relation. In contrast to the scholastic,
ontological conception of relation as a thing of diminished being, this
book views relation as the minimal and elemental theme and structure of
philosophy. Drawing radical conclusions from the classical understanding
of relation as a being-toward-another, it argues that rethinking
relation engages the very possibility and limits of philosophical
discourse.
In the author's studies of Nietzsche and Benjamin, Husserl and
Heidegger, Derrida and Blanchot, relation is shown to be central to
their thought and to undergo elaborations that escape the ontological,
categorial, and formalist ways in which the concept has traditionally
been interpreted. Comprehending relation in terms of determination,
foundation, mediatization, translation, or communication, these authors
are shown to draw out and refine a host of structural implications of
the notion that unseat its formalist and categorial conception.
Studying the writings of Mallarmé and Kafka, the author argues that
rethought from, and in light of the other to which a relation tends,
philosophy necessarily opens up to and is implicated in its others, one
such possible other being literature.