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Bergsonian Philosophy and Thomism - Collected Works of Jacques Maritain, Volume 1 (Hardcover, 2nd edition)
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Bergsonian Philosophy and Thomism - Collected Works of Jacques Maritain, Volume 1 (Hardcover, 2nd edition)
Series: Collected Works of Jacques Maritain
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Published in 1913 as La Philosophie Bergsonienne, this incisive
critique of the thought of Henri Bergson was Jacques Maritain's
(1882-1973) first book. In it he shows himself already to have an
authoritative grasp of the thought of St. Thomas Aquinas and an
uncanny ability to demonstrate its relevance to alternative
philosophical systems such as that of Henri Bergson. Volume 1 in
the series The Collected Works of Jacques Maritain, this edition
faithfully reproduces the 1955 translation published by the
Philosophical Library. It would be difficult to overestimate
Bergson's role in extricating French philosophy from the deadening
materialism that dominated the Sorbonne. It was that cultural
milieu that brought Maritain and his wife Raissa to the brink of
suicide. They drew back for two major reasons. First were the
lectures of Henri Bergson at the College de France, in which the
Maritains found a defense of metaphysics, of the transcendent
beyond the material, within which they could find meaning in life.
The second reason was their conversion to Catholicism, a move they
and many of their contemporaries made after being introduced to
Bergson's work. Soon after his conversion, Jacques Maritain
immersed himself in the thought of Thomas Aquinas and was struck by
the comparative weaknesses of Bergson. This book is Maritain's
relentless criticism of the philosophy of the man whose lectures
had meant so much to him. Its ferocity marks it as a young man's
book, written in part to exorcize the defects of Bergson's
philosophy as they were understood by one now schooled in Thomism.
Twenty-five years later, Maritain, while not retracting his
criticisms, regretted their intemperance and, as a result,
moderated his assessment of Bergson in a long preface to the second
edition. In it, we find a philosopher who mastered his craft and a
critic of rare perception and refinement.
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