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Books > Humanities > Philosophy > Western philosophy > Modern Western philosophy, c 1600 to the present > Western philosophy, from c 1900 -
In a bold new argument, Ulrika Carlsson grasps hold of the figure
of Eros that haunts Soren Kierkegaard's The Concept of Irony, and
for the first time, uses it as key to interpret that text and his
second book, Either/Or. According to Carlsson, Kierkegaard adopts
Plato's idea of Eros as the fundamental force that drives humans in
all their pursuits. For him, every existential stance-every way of
living and relating to the outside world-is at heart a way of
loving. By intensely examining Kierkegaard's erotic language, she
also challenges the theory that the philosopher's first two books
have little common ground and reveals that they are in fact
intimately connected by the central and explicit topic of love. In
this text suitable for both students and the Kierkegaard
specialist, Carlsson claims that despite long-held beliefs about
the disparity of his early work, his first two books both relate to
love and Part I of Either/Or should be treated as the sequel to The
Concept of Irony.
A critique of theory through literature that celebrates the
diversity of black being, The Desiring Modes of Being Black
explores how literature unearths theoretical blind spots while
reasserting the legitimacy of emotional turbulence in the
controlled realm of reason that rationality claims to establish.
This approach operates a critical shift by examining
psychoanalytical texts from the literary perspective of black
desiring subjectivities and experiences. This combination of
psychoanalysis and the politics of literary interpretation of black
texts helps determine how contemporary African American and black
literature and queer texts come to defy and challenge the racial
and sexual postulates of psychoanalysis or indeed any theoretical
system that intends to define race, gender and sexualities. The
Desiring Modes of Being Black includes essays on James Baldwin,
Sigmund Freud, Melvin Dixon, Essex Hemphill, Assotto Saint, and
Rozena Maart. The metacritical reading they unfold interweaves
African American Culture, Fanonian and Caribbean Thought, South
African Black Consciousness, French Theory, Psychoanalysis, and
Gender and Queer Studies.
George Berkeley's investigation of human epistemology remains one
of the most respected of its time - this edition contains the
treatise in full, complete with the author's preface. One of
Berkeley's most important beliefs was that of immaterialism. The
meaning being that nothing material exists unless it is perceived
by something or someone. Distinct from solipsism - the belief that
only the self exists - Berkeley's view is that material items are
ideas formed by distinct conscious minds; the concept of reality
being simply the summation of shared ideas rather than physical
objects fascinated philosophers of the era. Much of Berkeley's
philosophy is framed by then-new discoveries in the field of
physics. The concepts of color and light thus have a frequent
bearing on the overall thesis; disagreeing with Isaac Newton on the
subject of space, it was later that Berkeley's contrarian opinions
on matters such as calculus and free-thinking gained him further
renown.
Life on earth is currently approaching what has been called the
sixth mass extinction, also known as the Holocene or anthropocene
extinction. Unlike the previous five, this extinction is due to the
destructive practices of a single species, our own. Up to 50% of
plant and animal species face extinction by the year 2100, as well
as 90% of the world's languages. Biocultural diversity is a recent
appellation for thinking together the earth's biological, cultural
and linguistic diversity, the related causes of their extinctions
and the related steps that need to be taken to ensure their
sustainability. This book turns to the work of Jacques Derrida to
propose a notion of 'general ecology' as a way to respond to this
loss, to think the ethics, ontology and epistemology at stake in
biocultural sustainability and the life and death we differentially
share on earth with its others. It articulates an appreciation of
the ecological and biocultural stakes of deconstruction and
provokes new ways of thinking about a more just sharing of the
earth.
Historical Imagination defends a phenomenological and hermeneutical
account of historical knowledge. The book's central questions are
what is historical imagination, what is the relation between the
imaginative and the empirical, in what sense is historical
knowledge always already imaginative, how does such knowledge serve
us, and what is the relation of historical understanding and
self-understanding? Paul Fairfield revisits some familiar
hermeneutical themes and endeavors to develop these further while
examining two important periods in which historical reassessments
or re-imaginings of the past occurred on a large scale. The
conception of historical imagination that emerges seeks to advance
beyond the debate between empiricists and postmodern
constructivists while focusing on narrative as well as a more
encompassing interpretation of who an historical people were, how
things stood with them, and how this comes to be known. Fairfield
supplements the philosophical argument with an historical
examination of how and why during late antiquity, early Christian
thinkers began to reimagine their Greek and Roman past, followed by
how and why renaissance and later enlightenment figures reimagined
their ancient and medieval past.
To what extent can non-Christian religious traditions utilize
Plantinga's epistemology? And, if there are believers from
differing religious traditions that can rightfully utilize
Plantinga's religious epistemology, does this somehow prevent a
Plantingian's creedal-specific religious belief from being
warranted? In order to answer these questions, Baldwin and McNabb
first provide an introduction to Plantinga's religious
epistemology. Second, they explore the prospects and problems that
members of non-Christian religions face when they attempt to
utilize Plantingian religious epistemology. Finally, they sketch
out possible approaches to holding that a Plantingian's
creedal-specific religious belief can be warranted, even given
believers from other religious traditions who can also rightfully
make full use of Plantinga's religious epistemology.
In her new book, Corine Pelluchon argues that the dichotomy between
nature and culture privileges the latter. She laments that the
political system protects the sovereignty of the human and leaves
them immune to impending environmental disaster. Using the
phenomenological writings of French philosophers like Emmanuel
Levinas, Jacques Derrida, and Paul Ricoeur, Pelluchon contends that
human beings have to recognise humanity's dependence upon the
natural world for survival and adopt a new philosophy of existence
that advocates for animal welfare and ecological preservation. In
an extension of Heidegger's ontology of concern, Pelluchon declares
that this dependence is not negative or a sign of weakness. She
argues instead, that we are nourished by the natural world and that
the very idea of nourishment contains an element of pleasure. This
sustenance comforts humans and gives their lives taste. Pelluchon's
new philosophy claims then, that eating has an affective, social
and cultural dimension, but that most importantly it is a political
act. It solidifies the eternal link between human beings and
animals, and warns that the human consumption of animals and other
natural resources impacts upon humanity's future.
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