He even uses the term “co-essence” and “co-ipséité” to describe this condition: Or returning to the language of sense: the sensing of sense (acting of being) is invariably sensing (touching) sense (being). Instead, Nancy affirms that the mode of existing (performing the act of being) is to be-with. But not because they appear together under one essential motion there is no force that assembles them into simultaneously existing. Put differently, they take place together. The concept refers to the fact that all things, every single one of them, co-appears (compearing, in some translations). Nancy uses the concept of comparution to describe this aspect of being. The existing thing does not exist purely, in a neutral and unaffected “place” rather, beings exist as the world (the finite configuration of every-single-thing together. There is no “background field” where all things are and “with” points to the interaction between them. The “with” is an inherent part of being because the world is the togetherness of all things, therefore there is no neutral place where being happens (“Of Being-in-Common” 1-2). Things can only be-with., because every-single-thing exists and they all exist together. “Sensing” (as acting in direction) is at the same time “sensing” (touching) other “senses” (beings), so presence is never individual but only “singular-plural”. Nancy explains that being-with is the invariable condition of existing because being is being-sense. Hence, besides “being-with”, the central concept here will be “touching”.
According to Nancy, the existing things are always in constant “contact” with each other and with themselves. It is reaching as closes as possible without gaining access to it, since there is no inner “nature” to be discovered. The analysis of the existing thing always “interferes” with it and is not an observation from a distance. Further on this line on reasoning, since a thing is always being-with, by commenting on existence one is touching it. The analysis of singularity is invariably the analysis of the way things exist together rather than the analysis of the individual unrelated object. This is not the essential principle behind the togetherness of things, but it establishes the central fact concerning existence: there is no existence in isolation. Then clear the map again.In my view, the best place to enter Nancy’s analysis of existence is the question of being-with. You'll see Story playback at the top, set it to repeat. If you skipped it the first time, go into settings and go to the game tab. You can even retreat units if you so need.
There's 10 units on the map, so just deploy two echelons and have them fight 5 battles each. Yeah, you know that strategy I use for the map? Just do that but don't deploy a dummy to make things very marginally easier.Ġ6:00: Kill the last enemy with exactly 0 ammo left.Īgain, pretty self explanatory. They don't even come in packs of three, so it's a joke compared to later Typhons. You will have to defend your Command Center against some Typhons, but they're pretty weak, so it shouldn't be an issue. Each hostage has 5 battles in them, so you'll have to pick them up when they're all at 1 HP. Just don't finish the map until you've surrounded the last unit/node.Ġ0:30: Let the hostages kill 12 enemies before winning.Īll you need to do is let the """"hostages""" fight off 12 enemies. Use a dummy and do the map until you eventually get it.Ģ0:10: Before clearing the map, capture all the nodes. This is EXTREMELY annoying due to the fact that each node has a 50% chance of spawning a red Golyat. All you do is go down the random nodes on the right side of the map until you hit the enemy Command Center. This is.the most annoying achievement on the planet. These are all optional and they only really give 1k all resources, so don't feel pressured to get them. While this was used once in VA-11 Hall-A, you'll first see these really come into play here in Singularity.