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Books > Humanities > Philosophy > Western philosophy
In May 2010, philosophers, family and friends gathered at the
University of Notre Dame to celebrate the career and retirement of
Alvin Plantinga, widely recognized as one of the world's leading
figures in metaphysics, epistemology, and the philosophy of
religion. Plantinga has earned particular respect within the
community of Christian philosophers for the pivotal role that he
played in the recent renewal and development of philosophy of
religion and philosophical theology. Each of the essays in this
volume engages with some particular aspect of Plantinga's views on
metaphysics, epistemology, or philosophy of religion. Contributors
include Michael Bergman, Ernest Sosa, Trenton Merricks, Richard
Otte, Peter VanInwagen, Thomas P. Flint, Eleonore Stump, Dean
Zimmerman and Nicholas Wolterstorff. The volume also includes
responses to each essay by Bas van Fraassen, Stephen Wykstra, David
VanderLaan, Robin Collins, Raymond VanArragon, E. J. Coffman,
Thomas Crisp, and Donald Smith.
This is an important collection of essays examining and promoting
Foucault's influence on present-day philosophy, in both the
analytic and Continental philosophical traditions."Foucault's
Legacy" brings together the work of eight Foucault specialists in
an important collection of essays marking the 25th anniversary of
Foucault's death. Focusing on the importance of Foucault's most
central ideas for present-day philosophy, the book shows how his
influence goes beyond his own canonical tradition and linguistic
milieu. The essays in this book explore key areas of Foucault's
thought by comparing aspects of his work with the thought of a
number of major philosophers, including Nietzsche, Heidegger,
Rorty, Hegel, Searle, Vattimo and Williams. Crucially the book also
considers the applicability of his central ideas to broader issues
such as totalitarianism, religion, and self-sacrifice. Presenting a
fresh and exciting vision of Foucault as a philosopher of enduring
influence, the book shows how important Foucault remains to
philosophy today.
Philoponus' commentary on the last part of Aristotle's Physics Book
4 does not offer major alternatives to Aristotle's science, as did
his commentary on the earlier parts, concerning place, vacuum and
motion in a vacuum. Aristotle's subject here is time, and his
treatment of it had led to controversy in earlier writers.
Philoponus does offer novelties when he treats motion round a bend
as in one sense faster than motion on the straight over the same
distance in the same time, because of the need to consider the
greater effort involved. And he points out that in an earlier
commentary on Book 8 he had argued against Aristotle for the
possibility of a last instant of time.This book is in the
prestigious series, The Ancient Commentators on Aristotle, which
translates the works of the ancient commentators into English for
the first time.
Exploring the latest research in Husserl Studies, this collection
presents fifteen new essays on key topics in the field from an
international team of writers. "Epistemology, Archaeology, Ethics:
Current Investigations of Husserl's Corpus" presents fifteen
original essays by an international team of expert contributors
that together represent a cross-section of Husserl Studies today.
The collection manifests the extent to which single themes in
Husserl's corpus cannot be isolated, but must be considered in
relation to their overlap with each other. Many of the accepted
views of Husserl's philosophy are currently in a state of flux,
with positions that once seemed incontestable now finding
themselves relegated to the status of one particular school of
thought among several. Among all the new trends and approaches,
this volume offers a representative sample of how Husserlian
research should be conducted given the current state of the corpus.
The book is divided into four parts, each dedicated to an area of
Husserl Studies that is currently gaining prominence: Husserlian
epistemology; his views on intentionality; the archaeology of
constitution; and, ethics, a relatively recent field of study in
phenomenology.
Material objects persist through time and survive change. How do
they manage to do so? What are the underlying facts of persistence?
Do objects persist by being "wholly present" at all moments of time
at which they exist? Or do they persist by having distinct
"temporal segments" confined to the corresponding times? Are
objects three-dimensional entities extended in space, but not in
time? Or are they four-dimensional spacetime "worms"? These are
matters of intense debate, which is now driven by concerns about
two major issues in fundamental ontology: parthood and location. It
is in this context that broadly empirical considerations are
increasingly brought to bear on the debate about persistence.
Persistence and Spacetime pursues this empirically based approach
to the questions. Yuri Balashov begins by setting out major rival
views of persistence -- endurance, perdurance, and exdurance -- in
a spacetime framework and proceeds to investigate the implications
of Einstein's theory of relativity for the debate about
persistence. His overall conclusion -- that relativistic
considerations favour four-dimensionalism over three-dimensionalism
-- is hardly surprising. It is, however, anything but trivial.
Contrary to a common misconception, there is no straightforward
argument from relativity to four-dimensionalism. The issues
involved are complex, and the debate is closely entangled with a
number of other philosophical disputes, including those about the
nature and ontology of time, parts and wholes, material
constitution, causation and properties, and vagueness.
This edition includes the letters exchanged between Charles S.
Peirce and the Open Court Publishing Company between 1890 and 1913.
Open Court published more of Peirce's philosophical writings than
any other publisher during his lifetime, and played a critical role
in what little recognition and financial income he received during
these difficult, yet philosophically rich, years. This
correspondence is the basis for much of what is known surrounding
Peirce's publications in The Monist and The Open Court-two of the
publishers most popular forums for philosophical, scientific, and
religious thought-and is therefore referenced heavily in Peirce
editions dealing partly or wholly with his later work, including
The Essential Peirce series and Writings of Charles S. Peirce. The
edition provides for the first time a complete text of this
oft-cited correspondence, with textual apparatus, contextual
annotation, and careful replications of existential graphs and
other complex illustrations. By so doing, this edition sheds
critical light not only on Peirce and Open Court, but also on the
context, relationships, and concepts that influenced the
development of Progressive Era intellectual history and philosophy.
The epics of the three Flavian poets-Silius Italicus, Statius, and
Valerius Flaccus-have, in recent times, attracted the attention of
scholars, who have re-evaluated the particular merits of Flavian
poetry as far more than imitation of the traditional norms and
patterns. Drawn from sixty years of scholarship, this edited
collection is the first volume to collate the most influential
modern academic writings on Flavian epic poetry, revised and
updated to provide both scholars and students alike with a broad
yet comprehensive overview of the field. A wide range of topics
receive coverage, and analysis and interpretation of individual
poems are integrated throughout. The plurality of the critical
voices included in the volume presents a much-needed variety of
approaches, which are used to tackle questions of intertextuality,
gender, poetics, and the social and political context of the
period. In doing so, the volume demonstrates that by engaging in a
complex and challenging intertextual dialogue with their literary
predecessors, the innovative epics of the Flavian poets respond to
contemporary needs, expressing overt praise, or covert anxiety,
towards imperial rule and the empire.
Maine de Biran's work has had an enormous influence on the
development of French Philosophy - Henri Bergson called him the
greatest French metaphysician since Descartes and Malebranche,
Jules Lachelier referred to him as the French Kant, and
Royer-Collard called him simply 'the master of us all' - and yet
the philosopher and his work remain unknown to many English
speaking readers. From Ravaisson and Bergson, through to the
phenomenology of major figures such as Maurice Merleau-Ponty,
Michel Henry, and Paul Ricoeur, Biran's influence is evident and
acknowledged as a major contribution. The notion of corps propre,
so important to phenomenology in the twentieth century, originates
in his thought. His work also had a huge impact on the distinction
between the virtual and the actual as well as the concepts of
effort and puissance, enormously important to the development of
Deleuze's and Foucault's work. This volume, the first English
translation of Maine de Biran in nearly a century, introduces
Anglophone readers to the work of this seminal thinker. The
Relationship Between the Physical and the Moral in Man is an
expression of Biran's mature 'spiritualism' and philosophy of the
will as well as perhaps the clearest articulation of his
understanding of what would later come to be called the mind-body
problem. In this text Biran sets out forcefully his case for the
autonomy of mental or spiritual life against the reductive
explanatory power of the physicalist natural sciences. The
translation is accompanied by critical essays from experts in
France and the United Kingdom, situating Biran's work and its
reception in its proper historical and intellectual context.
Drawing from the works of Dante, Catherine of Siena, Boccaccio,
Aquinas, and Cavalcanti and other literary, philosophic, and
scientific texts, Heather Webb studies medieval notions of the
heart to explore the "lost circulations" of an era when individual
lives and bodies were defined by their extensions into the world
rather than as self-perpetuating, self-limited entities.
The Hegel Lectures Series Series Editor: Peter C. Hodgson Hegel's
lectures have had as great a historical impact as the works he
himself published. Important elements of his system are elaborated
only in the lectures, especially those given in Berlin during the
last decade of his life. The original editors conflated materials
from different sources and dates, obscuring the development and
logic of Hegel's thought. The Hegel Lectures series is based on a
selection of extant and recently discovered transcripts and
manuscripts. The original lecture series are reconstructed so that
the structure of Hegel's argument can be followed. Each volume
presents an accurate new translation accompanied by an editorial
introduction and annotations on the text, which make possible the
identification of Hegel's many allusions and sources. Hegel's
interpretation of the history of philosophy not only played a
central role in the shaping of his own thought, but also has had a
great influence on the development of historical thinking. In his
own view the study of the history of philosophy is the study of
philosophy itself. This explains why such a large proportion of his
lectures, from 1805 to 1831, the year of his death, were about
history of philosophy. The text of these lectures, presented here
in the first authoritative English edition, is therefore a document
of the greatest importance in the development of Western thought:
they constitute the very first comprehensive history of philosophy
that treats philosophy itself as undergoing genuine historical
development. And they are crucial for understanding Hegel's own
systematic works such as the Phenomenology, the Logic, and the
Encyclopedia, for central to his thought is the theme of spirit as
engaged in self-realization through the processes of historical
change. Furthermore, they played a crucial role in one of the
determining events of modern intellectual history: the rise of a
new consciousness of human life, culture, and intellect as
historical in nature. This third volume of the lectures covers the
medieval and modern periods, and includes fascinating discussion of
scholastic, Renaissance, and Reformation philosophy, and of such
great modern thinkers as Descartes, Locke, Leibniz, and especially
Kant.
John Cottingham explores central areas of Descartes's rich and
wide-ranging philosophical system, including his accounts of
thought and language, of freedom and action, of our relationship to
the animal domain, and of human morality and the conduct of life.
He also examines ways in which his philosophy has been
misunderstood. The Cartesian mind-body dualism that is so often
attacked is only a part of Descartes's account of what it is to be
a thinking, sentient, human creature, and the way he makes the
division between the mental and the physical is considerably more
subtle, and philosophically more appealing, than is generally
assumed. Although Descartes is often considered to be one of the
heralds of our modern secular worldview, the 'new' philosophy which
he launched retains many links with the ideas of his predecessors,
not least in the all-pervasive role it assigns to God (something
that is ignored or downplayed by many modern readers); and the
character of the Cartesian outlook is multifaceted, sometimes
anticipating Enlightenment ideas of human autonomy and independent
scientific inquiry, but also sometimes harmonizing with more
traditional notions of human nature as created to find fulfilment
in harmony with its creator.
The International Kierkegaard Commentary-For the first time in
English the world community of scholars systematically assembled
and presented the results of recent research in the vast literature
of Soren Kierkegaard. Based on the definitive English edition of
Kierkegaard's works by Princeton University Press, this series of
commentaries addresses all the published texts of the influential
Danish philosopher and theologian. This is volume 7 in a series of
commentaries based upon the definitive translations of
Kierkegaard's writings published by Princeton University Press,
1980ff.
The keywords of the Enlightenment-freedom, tolerance, rights,
equality-are today heard everywhere, and they are used to endorse a
wide range of positions, some of which are in perfect
contradiction. While Orwell's 1984 claims that there is one phrase
in the English language that resists translation into Newspeak,
namely the opening lines of that key Enlightenment text, the
Declaration of Independence: 'We hold these truths to be
self-evident, that all men are created equal...', we also find the
Wall Street Journal saying of the Iraq War that the US was
'fighting for the very notion of the Enlightenment'. It seems we
are no longer sure whether these truths are self-evident nor quite
what they might mean today. Based on the critically acclaimed
Oxford Amnesty Lectures series, this book brings together a number
of major international figures to debate the history of freedom,
tolerance, equality, and to explore the complex legacy of the
Enlightenment for human rights. The lectures are published here
with responses from other leading figures in the field.
In our contemporary age aesthetics seems to crumble and no longer
be reducible to a coherent image. And yet given the vast amount of
works in aesthetics produced in the last hundred years, this age
could be defined "the century of aesthetics." "20th Century
Aesthetics" is a new account of international aesthetic thought by
Mario Perniola, one of Italy's leading contemporary thinkers.
Starting from four conceptual fields - life, form, knowledge,
action - Perniola identifies the lines of aesthetic reflection that
derive from them and elucidates them with reference to major
authors: from Dilthey to Foucault (aesthetics of life), from
Wolfflin to McLuhan and Lyotard (aesthetics of form), from Croce to
Goodman (aesthetics and knowledge), from Dewey to Bloom (aesthetics
and action). There is also a fifth one that touches on the sphere
of affectivity and emotionality, and which comes to aesthetics from
thinkers like Freud, Heidegger, Wittgenstein, Lacan, Derrida and
Deleuze. The volume concludes with an extensive sixth chapter on
Japanese, Chinese, Indian, Islamic, Brazilian, South Korean and
South East Asian aesthetic thought and on the present decline of
Western aesthetic sensibility.
In the Platonic work "Alcibiades I," a divinely guided Socrates
adopts the guise of a lover in order to divert Alcibiades from an
unthinking political career. The contributors to this carefully
focussed volume cover aspects of the background to the work; its
arguments and the philosophical issues it raises; its relationship
to other Platonic texts, and its subsequent history up to the time
of the Neoplatonists. Despite its ancient prominence, the
authorship of "Alcibiades I" is still unsettled; the essays and two
appendices, one historical and one stylometric, come together to
suggest answers to this tantalising question.
This is the classic book by Nietzsche in hardcover format.
This book explores a popular topic in Continental Philosophy - this
is a very active area of research, one that students often
encounter at upper-undergraduate/postgraduate level.In Heidegger's
"Early Philosophy", James Luchte sets forth a comprehensive
examination of Heidegger's phenomenology between 1924 and 1929,
during which time Heidegger was largely concerned with a radical
temporalization of thought. The book seeks to reconstruct
Heidegger's radical phenomenology through an interpretation of all
his published and unpublished works of the period, including the
1920s lecture courses and his published works, "Kant and the
Problem of Metaphysics" and his magnum opus, "Being and Time". The
book also explores Heidegger's relationship with other
philosophers, such as Husserl, Kant and Leibniz, with respect to
the question of the relationship of thought and temporality.The
book addresses a significant void in the treatment of Heidegger's
early phenomenology, emphasizing the importance of Heidegger's
lecture courses and other works besides "Being and Time", and
thereby investigates the many fragments of Heidegger's work so as
to more fully comprehend the meaning and significance of the
original project. James Luchte makes an extraordinary and hugely
important contribution to the field of Heidegger Studies.
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