Contemporary Continental Philosophy steps back from current debates
comparing Continental and analytic philosophy and carefully, yet
critically outlines the tradition's main philosophical views on
epistemology and ontology. Forgoing obscure paraphrases, D'Amico
provides a detailed, clear account and assessment of the tradition
from its founding by Husserl and Heidegger to its challenge by
Derrida and Foucault. Though intended as a survey of this tradition
throughout the twentieth century, this study's focus is on the
philosophical problems which gave it birth and even now continue to
shape it.The book reexamines Husserl as an early critic of
epistemological naturalism whose grasp of the philosophical
importance of the theory of meaning was largely ignored.
Heidegger's contrasting effort to revive ontology is examined in
terms of his distinction between ontic and ontological questions.
In contrast with many earlier studies, the author outlines
confusions engendered by the misappropriation of the distinct
philosophical agendas of Husserl and Heidegger by such famous
figures as Sartre and Merleau-Ponty. The book is also original in
its emphasis on how social externalism in epistemology, inspired by
Karl Mannheim, influenced this tradition's structuralist and
Marxist phases. The philosophical defenses of a theory of
interpretation by Gadamer and Habermas are closely examined and
assessed and the study concludes with a a probing yet balanced
account of Foucault and Derrida as critics of philosophical
autonomy. The book concludes by reassessing this century-long
divide between the analytic and Continental traditions and its
implication for the future of philosophy.
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