Ulysses and Finnegans Wake: A Q-Methodological Look at Profundity (Part II: Finnegans Wake)
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Abstract
In contrast to the mainly substantive content of Ulysses, James Joyce's 
Finnegans Wake is wholly transitive, a distinction introduced by William
James and fundamental to the principle of complementarity in quantum 
theory. The free-floating "inner" thought of Molly Bloom (in Ulysses) 
and that which permeates Finnegans Wake is the same that provides 
creativity and truths which are outside the substantive conventions of 
literary and scientific discourse. Finnegans Wake is therefore 
methodological, Joyce's equation of void, incertitude, and unlikelihood 
corresponding to the quantum principles of Q methodology.
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							How to Cite
						
						Stephenson, W. (1991). Ulysses and Finnegans Wake: A Q-Methodological Look at Profundity (Part II: Finnegans Wake). Operant Subjectivity, 14(4). Retrieved from https://ojs.library.okstate.edu/osu/index.php/osub/article/view/9048
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