Claude Lefort

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  claude lefort: The Philosophy of Claude Lefort Bernard Flynn, 2005 This study of Claude Lefort offers an account of Lefort's accomplishment - its unique merits, its relation to political philosophy within the Continental tradition, and its great relevance today.
  claude lefort: The Political Forms of Modern Society Claude Lefort, 1986-08-26 Claude Lefort is one of the leading social and political theorists in France today. This anthology of his most important work published over the last four decades makes his writing widely accessible to an English-speaking audience for the first time. With exceptional skill Lefort combines the analysis of contemporary political events with a sensitivity to the history of political thought. His critical account of the development of bureaucracy and totalitarianism in the Soviet Union and Eastern Europe is a timely contribution to current debates about the nature and shortcomings of these societies. His incisive analyses of Marx's theory of history and concept of ideology provide the backdrop for a highly original account of the role of symbolism in modern societies. While critical of many traditional assumptions and doctrines, Lefort develops a political position based on a reappraisal of the idea of human rights and a reconsideration of what democracy means today. The Political Forms of Modern Society is a major contribution to contemporary social and political theory. The volume includes a substantial introduction that describes the context of Lefort's writings and highlights the central themes of his work.
  claude lefort: Claude Lefort M. Plot, 2013-06-11 This is the first English language volume to offer such a wide-ranging scholarly and intellectual perspective on Claude Lefort. It constitutes the most comprehensive attempt to reconstruct Lefort's engagement with his theoretical interlocutors as well as his influence on today's democratic thought and contemporary continental political philosophy.
  claude lefort: Complications Claude Lefort, 2007 Complications: Communism and the Dilemmas of Democracyties together the central concerns of the work of Claude Lefort over the past half-century. A pivotal figure in French thought, Lefort studied under Maurice Merleau-Ponty, cofounded with Cornelius Castoriadis the influential journal Socialisme ou Barbarie, and famously engaged in a heated debate with Jean-Paul Sartre over the Soviet Union and Communist parties in the West. He has influenced generations of political thinkers and throughout his career has offered invaluable leftist, non-communist critiques of both liberalism and Communism. It is the prevailing belief that the death of communism was a victory for liberal democracy. In Complications, however, Lefort challenges this interpretation and provides new ways of understanding the rise and fall of the Soviet Union and the Communist phenomenon. Lefort engages the work of prominent historians Martin Malia and Francois Furet and shows how their emphasis on illusion and ideology led to their failure to understand the logic and workings of the Communist Party, and its impact on Soviet society, and the reasons why so many in the West had Communist sympathies. He also maintains that those who regard the end of Communism as the triumph of markets and freedom restrict the scope of democratic thought and the possibility of greater social equality. Lefort contends that Communism must be seen as part of a larger history of modernity and believes that the diagnosis of its death is dangerous to the future of democracy. In the tradition of Hannah Arendt and Raymond Aron, Lefort complicates the pieties of historical understanding and offers a new approach to thinking about totalitarianism and a more vital democracy.
  claude lefort: Writing, the Political Test Claude Lefort, 2000 One of the preeminient political philosophers of the 20th century makes a compelling argument for the political cogency of literary writing in this book which among to his intellectual autobiography and an introduction to his work.
  claude lefort: Machiavelli in the Making Claude Lefort, 2012-03-30 In Machiavelli in the Making, the influential French scholar and public intellectual Claude Lefort introduces a wholly novel interpretation of Niccoló Machiavelli's oeuvre, revealing in the Florentine's thought a thoroughly modern concept of the political with implications for our experience of politics here and now. Lefort extricates Machiavelli's thought from the dominant interpretations of Machiavelli as the founder of objective political science, which, having liberated itself from the religious and moralizing tendencies of medieval political reflection, attempts to arrive at a realistic discourse on the operations of raw power. Lefort ultimately finds that Machiavelli's discourse opens the place of the political, which had previously been occupied by theology and morality. An essential contribution to the ongoing reassessment of Machiavelli's significance, Machiavelli in the Making also stands as a crucial text for the understanding of Lefort's later writings on democracy and totallitarianism.
  claude lefort: Claude Lefort M. Plot, 2013-06-11 This is the first English language volume to offer such a wide-ranging scholarly and intellectual perspective on Claude Lefort. It constitutes the most comprehensive attempt to reconstruct Lefort's engagement with his theoretical interlocutors as well as his influence on today's democratic thought and contemporary continental political philosophy.
  claude lefort: Dante’s Modernity Claude Lefort, Judith Revel, 2020-02-04 Claude Lefort, one of the most prominent political philosophers of the twentieth century, reads Dante’s Monarchia and demonstrates the surprising relevance of this radical fourteenth-century treatise defending the necessity of a universal monarchy independent from the Church. Written to accompany a new French translation of Dante’s treatise in 1993 and appearing here for the first time in English, Lefort’s essay exemplifies his signature method of taking political philosophy in new directions by reframing key works from the history of political thought. Dante’s Monarchia was attacked early on by the Church, burned as heretical in 1329, and remained on the Vatican’s index of prohibited works until 1881. With trenchant insight and his characteristic attention to detail, Lefort pursues the often hidden influence of Dante’s long suppressed treatise on the politics and political thought of subsequent centuries. He also challenges us to explore its still unrealized potential by disentangling Dante’s notion of universal sovereignty from its historical links to imperialism and nationalism. Drawing out the provocation of Dante’s treatise for contemporary debates, Lefort’s essay presents readers of Dante with a remarkably fresh account of an oft-neglected yet crucial part of the author’s oeuvre. In her extensive interpretive essay, Judith Revel submits Lefort’s encounter with Dante to a transformative mis/reading and shows the importance of Dante’s text for Lefort’s conception of political philosophy. She carefully reconstructs its radical legacy, all too frequently reduced to a postmarxist turn or even mistaken for an affirmation of liberal democracy. The two essays are accompanied by a note from their translator, Jennifer Rushworth, and a preface by Christiane Frey.
  claude lefort: Democracy and Political Theory Claude Lefort, 1991-01-08 This book examines the central questions of democracy and politics in modern societies. Through an analysis of some of the key texts of 19th and 20th century thought - from Marx, Michelet and de Tocqueville to Hannah Arendt - the author explores the ambiguities of democracy, the nature of human rights, the idea and the reality of revolution, the emergence of totalitarianism and the changing relations between politics, religion and the image of the body. While developing a highly original account of the nature of politics and power in modern societies, he links political reflection to the interpretation of history as an open, indeterminate process of which we are part. This work should interest specialists in social and political theory and philosophers.
  claude lefort: Thinking Radical Democracy Martin Breaugh, Christopher Holman, Rachel Magnusson, Paul Mazzocchi, Devin Penner, 2015-02-26 Thinking Radical Democracy is an introduction to nine key political thinkers who contributed to the emergence of radical democratic thought in post-war French political theory: Hannah Arendt, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Pierre Clastres, Claude Lefort, Cornelius Castoriadis, Guy Debord, Jacques Rancière, Étienne Balibar, and Miguel Abensour. The essays in this collection connect these writers through their shared contribution to the idea that division and difference in politics can be perceived as productive, creative, and fundamentally democratic. The questions they raise regarding equality and emancipation in a democratic society will be of interest to those studying social and political thought or democratic activist movements like the Occupy movements and Idle No More.
  claude lefort: The Modernist Imagination Martin Jay, 2009 Some of the most exciting and innovative work in the humanities is occurring at the intersection of intellectual history and critical theory. This volume includes work from some of the most prominent contemporary scholars in the humanities.
  claude lefort: The Specter of Democracy Dick Howard, 2006-04-18 In this rethinking of Marxism and its blind spots, Dick Howard argues that the collapse of European communism in 1989 should not be identified with a victory for capitalism and makes possible a wholesale reevaluation of democratic politics in the U.S. and abroad. The author turns to the American and French Revolutions to uncover what was truly revolutionary about those events, arguing that two distinct styles of democratic life emerged, the implications of which were misinterpreted in light of the rise of communism. Howard uses a critical rereading of Marx as a theorist of democracy to offer his audience a new way to think about this political ideal. He argues that it is democracy, rather than Marxism, that is radical and revolutionary, and that Marx could have seen this but did not. In Part I, Howard explores the attraction Marxism held for intellectuals, particularly French intellectuals, and he demonstrates how the critique of totalitarianism from a Marxist viewpoint allowed these intellectuals to see the radical nature of democracy. Part II examines two hundred years of democratic political life—comparing America's experience as a democracy to that of France. Part III offers a rethinking of Marx's contribution to democratic politics. Howard concludes that Marx was attempting a philosophy by other means, and that paradoxically, just because he was such an astute philosopher, Marx was unable to see the radical political implications of his own analyses. The philosophically justified revolution turns out to be the basis of an anti-politics whose end was foreshadowed by the fall of European communism in 1989.
  claude lefort: Adventures of the Symbolic Warren Breckman, 2013-06-18 Warren Breckman critically revisits thrilling experiments in the aftermath of Marxism.
  claude lefort: The Anthropological Turn Jacob Collins, 2020-04-24 A close look at post-1968 French thinkers Régis Debray, Emmanuel Todd, Marcel Gauchet, and Alain de Benoist In The Anthropological Turn, Jacob Collins traces the development of what he calls a tradition of political anthropology in France over the course of the 1970s. After the social revolution of the 1960s brought new attention to identities and groups that had previously been marginal in French society, the country entered a period of stagnation: the economy slowed, the political system deadlocked, and the ideologies of communism and Catholicism lost their appeal. In this time of political, cultural, and economic indeterminacy, political anthropology, as Collins defines it, offered social theorists grand narratives that could give greater definition to the social by anchoring its laws and histories in the deep and sometimes archaic past. Political anthropologists sought to answer the most basic of questions: what is politics and what constitutes a political community? Collins focuses on four influential, yet typically overlooked, French thinkers—Régis Debray, Emmanuel Todd, Marcel Gauchet, and Alain de Benoist —who, from Left to far Right, represent different political leanings in France. Through a close and comprehensive reading of their work, he explores how key issues of religion, identity, citizenship, and the state have been conceptualized and debated across a wide spectrum of opinion in contemporary France. Collins argues that the stakes have not changed since the 1970s and rival conceptions of the republic continue to vie for dominance. Political and cultural issues of the moment—the burkini, for example—become magnified and take on the character of an anthropological threat. In this respect, he shows how the anthropological turn, as it figures in the work of Debray, Todd, Gauchet, and Benoist, is a useful lens for viewing the political and social controversies that have shaped French history for the last forty years.
  claude lefort: French Intellectuals Against the Left Michael Scott Christofferson, 2004 Christofferson argues that French anti-totalitarianism was the culmination of direct-democratic critiques of communism & revisions of the revolutionary project after 1956. He offers an alternative interpretation for the denunciation of communism & Marxism by the French intellectual left in the late 1970s.
  claude lefort: A Companion to Continental Philosophy Simon Critchley, William R. Schroeder, 1998-06-08 Covering the complete development of post-Kantian Continental philosophy, this volume serves as an essential reference work for philosophers and those engaged in the many disciplines that are integrally related to Continental and European Philosophy.
  claude lefort: A Bibliographical Life Jean-Paul Sartre, 1974-06
  claude lefort: Poland's Solidarity Movement and the Global Politics of Human Rights Robert Brier, 2021-06-10 Offers a fresh perspective on recent human rights history by reconstructing debates around dissent and human rights across four countries.
  claude lefort: Constituent Power Arvidsson Matilda Arvidsson, 2020-08-18 With a strong focus on constitutional law, this book examines the legal as well as the political power of 'the people' in constitutional democracies. Bringing together an international range of contributors from the USA, Latin America, the UK and continental Europe, it explores the complex relationship between constitutional democracy and 'the people' from the angles of constitutional law, legal theory, political theory, and history. Contributors explore this relationship through the lens of radical democracy, engaging with the work of key figures such as Hannah Arendt, Carl Schmitt, Claude Lefort, and Jacques Ranciere.
  claude lefort: French Liberalism from Montesquieu to the Present Day Raf Geenens, Helena Rosenblatt, 2012-01-19 There is an enduring assumption that the French have never been and will never be liberal. As with all clichés, this contains a grain of truth, but it also overlooks an important school of thought that has been a constant presence in French intellectual and political culture for nearly three centuries: French political liberalism. In this collaborative volume, a distinguished group of philosophers, political theorists and intellectual historians uncover this unjustly neglected tradition. The chapters examine the nature and distinctiveness of French liberalism, providing a comprehensive treatment of major themes including French liberalism's relationship with republicanism, Protestantism, utilitarianism and the human rights tradition. Individual chapters are devoted to Montesquieu, Tocqueville, Aron, Lefort and Gauchet, as well as to some lesser known, yet important thinkers, including several political economists and French-style 'neoliberals'. French Liberalism from Montesquieu to the Present Day is essential reading for all those interested in the history of political thought.
  claude lefort: The Body Politic Catherine A. Holland, 2013-07-04 This work advances an original thesis that challenges the dominant schools of thought concerning the liberal tradition in the US.
  claude lefort: The Plebeian Experience Martin Breaugh, 2013-12-10 How do people excluded from political life achieve political agency? Through a series of historical events that have been mostly overlooked by political theorists, Martin Breaugh identifies fleeting yet decisive instances of emancipation in which people took it upon themselves to become political subjects. Emerging during the Roman plebs's first secession in 494 BCE, the plebeian experience consists of an underground or unexplored configuration of political strategies to obtain political freedom. The people reject domination through political praxis and concerted action, therefore establishing an alternative form of power. Breaugh's study concludes in the nineteenth century and integrates ideas from sociology, philosophy, history, and political science. Organized around diverse case studies, his work undertakes exercises in political theory to show how concepts provide a different understanding of the meaning of historical events and our political present. The Plebeian Experience describes a recurring phenomenon that clarifies struggles for emancipation throughout history, expanding research into the political agency of the many and shedding light on the richness of radical democratic struggles from ancient Rome to Occupy Wall Street and beyond.
  claude lefort: Democracy and Defiance Bryan Nelson, 2024-04-30 This book explores an often neglected current in contemporary French political thought that challenges the limits of the concept of democracy. It situates the projects of Jacques Ranciere, Claude Lefort and Miguel Abensour in relation to each other, as well as to the larger philosophical question of the nature of democracy itself. In doing so, Bryan Nelson illuminates democracy's potential as a profound emancipatory and transformative project, offering an unprecedented challenge to modes of domination, strategies of inequality and hierarchies of all kinds. Against prevailing interpretations, the author draws on the central concepts, problems and polemics in the works of Ranciere, Lefort and Abensour to develop a bold conception of democracy that allows us to rethink its character, power and broader social and political implications.
  claude lefort: The Aesthetico-Political Martín Plot, 2014-10-23 This study uses new arguments to reinvestigate the relation between aesthetics and politics in the contemporary debates on democratic theory and radical democracy. First, Carl Schmitt and Claude Lefort help delineate the contours of an aesthetico-political understanding of democracy, which is developed further by studying Merleau-Ponty, Rancière, and Arendt. The ideas of Merleau-Ponty serve to establish a general ontological framework that aims to contest the dominant currents in contemporary democratic theory. It is argued that Merleau-Ponty, Arendt, and Rancière share a general understanding of the political as the contingently contested spaces and times of appearances. However, the articulation of their thought leads to reconsider and explore under-theorized as well as controversial dimensions of their work. This search for new connections between the political and the aesthetic thought of Arendt and Merleau-Ponty on one hand and the current widespread interest in Rancière's aesthetic politics on the other make this book a unique study that will appeal to anyone who is interested in political theory and contemporary continental philosophy.
  claude lefort: Democracy to Come Fred Dallmayr, 2017-04-19 In this book Fred Dallmayr lays the groundwork for a new understanding of democracy. He argues that democracy is not a stable system anchored in a manifest authority (like monarchy), but is sustained by the recessed and purely potential rule of the people. Hence, democracy has to constantly reinvent itself, resembling theologically a creatio continua. Like one of Calder's mobiles, democracy for him involves three basic elements that must be balanced constantly: the people, political leaders, and policy goals. Where this balance is disrupted, democracy derails into populism, Bonapartism, or messianism. Given this need for balance, democratic politics is basically a relational praxis. In our globalizing age, democracy cannot be confined domestically. Dallmayr rejects the idea that it can be autocratically imposed abroad through forced regime change, or that the dominant Western model can simply be transferred elsewhere. In this respect, he challenges the equation of democracy with the pursuit of individual or collective self-interest, insisting that other, more ethical conceptions are possible and that different societies should nurture democracy with their own cultural resources. Providing examples, he discusses efforts to build democracy in the Middle East, China, and India (respectively with Islamic, Confucian and Hindu resources). In the end, Dallmayr's hope is for a democracy to come, that is, a cosmopolitan community governed not by hegemonic force but by the spirit of equality and mutual respect.
  claude lefort: The Spirit of Democracy Sofia Näsström, 2021-06-20 How does one revitalize democracy in times of crisis? Democracy is today challenged by populism and elitism, as well as by the resurgence of new forms of authoritarianism. The Spirit of Democracy: Corruption, Disintegration, Renewal shows that while we have good reasons to worry about the corruption of democratic practices and ideals, these worries are often attributable to questionable assumptions about what democracy is. Drawing on Montesquieu's classical work on the spirit of laws, the book sets out to reconceive the ways in which we understand and conceptualise modern democracy: from sovereignty to spirit. According to Montesquieu, different political forms are animated and sustained by different spirits: a republic by virtue, a monarchy by honour, and a despotic form by fear. This book argues that modern democracy is a sui generis political form animated and sustained by a spirit of emancipation. The removal of divine, natural, and historical authorities in political affairs unleashes a fundamental uncertainty about the purpose and direction of society. In a democracy, we respond to that uncertainty by sharing and dividing it equally. It emancipates us from a state of self-incurred tutelage. Based on this argument, the book develops a new theoretical framework for studying the corruption, disintegration, and renewal of democracy: what it is, how it begins, and where in society it plays out.
  claude lefort: Imagining Europe Paul Blokker, 2022-01-01 This book provides an extensive analysis and discussion of the transnational mobilization of citizens and youth, alongside the production of creative, imaginative, and constructive solutions to the European crisis. The volume provides a variety of interdisciplinary analyses, as well as a series of perspectives on populism that have not been addressed extensively, including an examination of left-wing populism, the constituent power dimension of populism, and transnational manifestations of populism, contributing to debates on political science, political sociology, social movements studies, and political and constitutional theory.
  claude lefort: Leo Strauss and Contemporary Thought Jeffrey A. Bernstein, Jade Larissa Schiff, 2021-06-01 Leo Strauss's readings of historical figures in the philosophical tradition have been justly well explored; however, his relation to contemporary thinkers has not enjoyed the same coverage. In Leo Strauss and Contemporary Thought, an international group of scholars examines the possible conversations between Strauss and figures such as Walter Benjamin, Jacques Derrida, Michel Foucault, Charles Taylor, and Hans Blumenberg. The contributors examine topics including religious liberty, the political function of comedy, law, and the relation between the Ancients and the Moderns, and bring Strauss into many new and original discussions that will be of use to those interested in the thought of Strauss, the history of philosophy and political theory, and contemporary continental thought.
  claude lefort: Recognition, Work, Politics Jean-Philippe Dr. Deranty, Danielle Petherbridge, J. Rundell, Robert Sinnerbrink, 2007-06-30 The essays in Recognition, Work, Politics indicate the diversity and continuity of contemporary French critical theory concerning both the question of politics and its philosophical articulation. These themes are approached and addressed from directions that include post-structuralism, the paradigm of the gift, and post-marxism. Recognition, Work, Politics also highlights critical theories developed in France today that concentrate on the central issues of recognition and work. These themes highlight the renewed reception of German Critical Theory in contemporary French thought particularly around the project of recognition developed by Axel Honneth. Philosophers and social and critical theorists published in Recognition, Work, Politics include Etienne Balibar, Jacques Rancière, Axel Honneth, Christophe Dejours, Alain Caillé, Christian Lazzeri, Emmanuel Renault, Gérard Raulet and Yves Sintomer.
  claude lefort: Marcel Gauchet and the Loss of Common Purpose Natalie J. Doyle, 2017-12-20 This book explores the work of Marcel Gauchet, one of France’s most prominent contemporary intellectuals, to examine the contemporary crisis of European democracy. It does so by examining the threats from ideological co-radicalization associated with the combined impact of economic crisis and Islamic fundamentalism. It locates Gauchet’s ideas in the context of French intellectual history and notes the significant influence upon it of the social and political theories of Cornelius Castoriadis and Claude Lefort and its reaction against those of Foucault. The book reviews the entire scope of Gauchet’s writings, from the early publications to the most recent publications on the “new world” of neo-liberal individualism, economism, and globalization. The book reveals how Gauchet’s work overcomes many of the misunderstandings affecting current discussions of controversial topics including the European Union, the nation-state, political Islam, the paradoxes of democracy, secularization, and reactionary political movements. It highlights the need for European societies to rediscover their political underpinnings: their capacity to invent a new collective future starting from the nation-state and to adapt to a new mode of international relations on a global scale. To do so, and to counter the threat of radicalization, they must retrieve the lost common purpose encapsulated in the notion of democratic sovereignty.
  claude lefort: The Work of Literary Translation Clive Scott, 2018-06-07 Explores a literary translation dedicated more to the reader's perception and experience of text than to textual interpretation.
  claude lefort: The Legitimacy of Modern Democracy Pedro T. Magalhães, 2020-12-30 By re-examining the political thought of Max Weber, Carl Schmitt and Hans Kelsen, this book offers a reflection on the nature of modern democracy and the question of its legitimacy. Pedro T. Magalhães shows that present-day elitist, populist and pluralist accounts of democracy owe, in diverse and often complicated ways, an intellectual debt to the interwar era, German-speaking, scholarly and political controversies on the problem(s) of modern democracy. A discussion of Weber’s ambivalent diagnosis of modernity and his elitist views on democracy, as they were elaborated especially in the 1910s, sets the groundwork for the study. Against that backdrop, Schmitt’s interwar political thought is interpreted as a form of neo-authoritarian populism, whereas Kelsen evinces robust, though not entirely unproblematic, pluralist consequences. In the conclusion, the author draws on Claude Lefort’s concept of indeterminacy to sketch a potentially more fruitful way than can be gleaned from the interwar German discussions of conceiving the nexus between the elitist, populist and pluralist faces of modern democracy. The Legitimacy of Modern Democracy will be of interest to political theorists, political philosophers, intellectual historians, theoretically oriented political scientists, and legal scholars working in the subfields of constitutional law and legal theory. The Open Access version of this book, available at https://doi.org/10.4324/9781315157566, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4.0 license
  claude lefort: Institution and Passivity Maurice Merleau-Ponty, 2010-06-30 Institution and Passivity is based on course notes for classes taught at the Bibliothèque Nationale de Paris. Philosophically, this collection connects the issue of passive constitution of meaning with the dimension of history, furthering discussions and completing arguments started in The Visible and the Invisible and Signs (both published by Northwestern). Leonard Lawlor and Heath Massey’s translation makes available to an English-speaking readership a critical transitional text in the history of phenomenology.
  claude lefort: Making Constituencies Lisa Jane Disch, 2021-11-12 Introduction : responsiveness in reverse -- In defense of mobilization -- From the bedrock norm to the constituency paradox -- Can the realist remain a democrat? -- Realism for democrats -- Manipulation : How will I know it when I see it? And should I worry when I do?-- Debating constructivism and democracy in 1970s France -- Radical democracy and the value of plurality -- Conclusion.
  claude lefort: The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 2, The Twentieth Century Warren Breckman, Peter E. Gordon, 2019-08-29 An authoritative and comprehensive survey of the major themes, thinkers, and movements in modern European intellectual history.
  claude lefort: The Cambridge History of Modern European Thought: Volume 2, The Twentieth Century ,
  claude lefort: Rethinking the Political Simonetta Falasca-Zamponi, 2011 A compelling account of a controversial and innovative episode in sociological thought
  claude lefort: In Need of a Master Dominik Finkelde, Rebekka Klein, 2021-05-10 The volume In Need of a Master: Politics, Theology, and Radical Democracy discusses how our so-called postmodern age of widespread ideological critique paves the way for reactionary and conservative political movements. At center stage is the question of whether these movements can and must be – contrary to widespread beliefs among liberal elites – interpreted both as a symptom of a political awakening in the horizon of political theology in our era of immanence, as well as perhaps the perilous end of democracy as we know it. The book brings to the fore political theology as the hidden agenda of politics and presents at the same time Christian and Jewish theological traditions as an antidote to a global empire with its often unacknowledged rule of immanence.
如何评价字节新出的AI编程IDE——Trae(念chui)? - 知乎
前天无意中浏览Trae的主页,看到PC版也出来了,而且还支持最新的claude 3.7(免费用) 这两天一直在用,感觉实在太棒了,虽然还有不少的问题。 目前的体验问题: 1、经常容易出现“远 …

现在这些大模型,哪个在代码编写上表现的最好呀? - 知乎
最近的趋势就是Claude 3.7的确好用,但是Google的Gemini-2.5系列追赶势头很猛。 另一个维度就是你看AI编程软件最推荐你用什么模型,比如字节的Trae,你点卡它的海外版本,最前面的两 …

cursor编程工具能在国内正常使用吗? - 知乎
多模型融合提示:整合 GPT、Claude、Gemini 等大模型,通过集成投票方式,优化代码生成质量。 智能开发的新时代已经到来。现在的你,只需要一个简单的 idea 和几句 prompt,就能构建 …

目前(25年2月)为止,最好用的代码生成大模型是哪个? - 知乎
Jan 29, 2025 · Claude 3.7 Sonnet在指令遵循、通用推理、多模态能力和代理编码方面表现出色,扩展思考模式在数学和科学任务中提供了显著提升。 除了传统基准测试外,它甚至在我们 …

如何评价 OpenAI 发布的 GPT4.5,有哪些看点和不足? - 知乎
Andrej Karpathy 的评价 :. 今天,OpenAI 发布了 GPT4.5。自从 GPT4 发布以来,我期待这一刻已经大约两年了,因为这次发布提供了一个关于通过扩展预训练计算(即简单地训练一个更大 …

如何评价豆包大模型正式发布升级的Doubao1.5-Pro ? - 知乎
综合指标已经全面领先GPT-4o、Claude 3.5 Sonnet,不管是开源还是闭源的榜单。 超大稀疏MoE,加其他没写在报告的改进,算法和系统极致联合优化,训推成本极低(做AI Infra的同 …

Claude 3 追上 GPT-4,它来自怎样一家公司? - 知乎
Claude 来自一家叫做Anthropic的公司,2023年入选福布斯Top50 AI公司。 Anthropic于2021年成立,累计融资13亿美元,人工智能模型开发,该公司由OpenAI的前成员创立。 Anthropic注册 …

如何评价谷歌的 Gemini flash 2.5 模型? - 知乎
所以说,Gemini 2.5 Flash的发布会改变很多玩法,一来是继续壮大开源agent ide的发展,以后cursor和windsurf这类以低价包月卖claude api使用权的企业怎么应对? 二来是它性能不输其 …

多所高校毕业论文将检测 AI 率,论文的「AI 味」到底啥样?如何 …
Mar 17, 2025 · 今年的 DeepSeek R1、Grok 3、Claude 3.7、GPT-4.5 这些模型出来以后,如果有心有意拿 AI 洗稿或者写的话,很难判断或检测出来。 但说实话,现在的公众号推荐、知乎热 …

求问deepseek出现这种情况怎么办啊? - 知乎
Jan 31, 2025 · Claude 3.5 Sonnect超过对话长度限制的错误提示 所以这种情况在目前这个阶段是无法避免的,目前比较通用的办法就是 让LLM自己对于这段对话生成一个摘要,然后把这段 …

如何评价字节新出的AI编程IDE——Trae(念chui)? - 知乎
前天无意中浏览Trae的主页,看到PC版也出来了,而且还支持最新的claude 3.7(免费用) 这两天一直在用,感觉实在太棒了,虽然还有不少的问题。 目前的体验问题: 1、经常容易出现“远程客户端无 …

现在这些大模型,哪个在代码编写上表现的最好呀? - 知乎
最近的趋势就是Claude 3.7的确好用,但是Google的Gemini-2.5系列追赶势头很猛。 另一个维度就是你看AI编程软件最推荐你用什么模型,比如字节的Trae,你点卡它的海外版本,最前面的两个 …

cursor编程工具能在国内正常使用吗? - 知乎
多模型融合提示:整合 GPT、Claude、Gemini 等大模型,通过集成投票方式,优化代码生成质量。 智能开发的新时代已经到来。现在的你,只需要一个简单的 idea 和几句 prompt,就能构建起属于自己 …

目前(25年2月)为止,最好用的代码生成大模型是哪个? - 知乎
Jan 29, 2025 · Claude 3.7 Sonnet在指令遵循、通用推理、多模态能力和代理编码方面表现出色,扩展思考模式在数学和科学任务中提供了显著提升。 除了传统基准测试外,它甚至在我们的小精灵游戏 …

如何评价 OpenAI 发布的 GPT4.5,有哪些看点和不足? - 知乎
Andrej Karpathy 的评价 :. 今天,OpenAI 发布了 GPT4.5。自从 GPT4 发布以来,我期待这一刻已经大约两年了,因为这次发布提供了一个关于通过扩展预训练计算(即简单地训练一个更大的模型)所获 …

如何评价豆包大模型正式发布升级的Doubao1.5-Pro ? - 知乎
综合指标已经全面领先GPT-4o、Claude 3.5 Sonnet,不管是开源还是闭源的榜单。 超大稀疏MoE,加其他没写在报告的改进,算法和系统极致联合优化,训推成本极低(做AI Infra的同学建议也多关注 …

Claude 3 追上 GPT-4,它来自怎样一家公司? - 知乎
Claude 来自一家叫做Anthropic的公司,2023年入选福布斯Top50 AI公司。 Anthropic于2021年成立,累计融资13亿美元,人工智能模型开发,该公司由OpenAI的前成员创立。 Anthropic注册于美国 …

如何评价谷歌的 Gemini flash 2.5 模型? - 知乎
所以说,Gemini 2.5 Flash的发布会改变很多玩法,一来是继续壮大开源agent ide的发展,以后cursor和windsurf这类以低价包月卖claude api使用权的企业怎么应对? 二来是它性能不输其他旗舰模型的同 …

多所高校毕业论文将检测 AI 率,论文的「AI 味」到底啥样?如何 …
Mar 17, 2025 · 今年的 DeepSeek R1、Grok 3、Claude 3.7、GPT-4.5 这些模型出来以后,如果有心有意拿 AI 洗稿或者写的话,很难判断或检测出来。 但说实话,现在的公众号推荐、知乎热榜、头条、 …

求问deepseek出现这种情况怎么办啊? - 知乎
Jan 31, 2025 · Claude 3.5 Sonnect超过对话长度限制的错误提示 所以这种情况在目前这个阶段是无法避免的,目前比较通用的办法就是 让LLM自己对于这段对话生成一个摘要,然后把这段概要作为上 …