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This book explores the phenomenon of the Third Reich from a
philosophical perspective. It concentrates on the ways in which the
subjects and experiences of Nazi Germany, the Holocaust and
Anti-Semitism are conceived by eight German thinkers from the
Continental tradition. These eight intellectuals include Martin
Heidegger, Hannah Arendt, Karl Loewith, Carl Schmitt, Ernst Junger,
Jean Amery, Hans-Georg Gadamer, and Jan Assmann. Based on careful
philosophical examinations of both known and unknown texts of these
eight thinkers (including an English translation of two forgotten
texts by Schmitt and Junger), this study exposes and then explores
the tension between ideology and philosophy, between submission to
authority and genuine critical thinking, all of which constitute
the essence of the Continental philosophical tradition.
Descartes' philosophy plays a special role in the works of both
renowned and marginal writers in the Continental Tradition,
particularly in their views on society and politics. This is the
first book length study to consider political responses to
Descartes in 19th and 20th century European thinkers. Alon Segev
shows how on the one hand Continental authors utilize Descartes'
philosophy to advance the core ideas of Enlightenment and to combat
the movements and systems of Capitalism, Materialism, Absolutism,
Fascism, Nazism, and Neo-Paganism; however on the other hand, Segev
also demonstrates that Continental authors have also discerned in
Descartes' philosophy the main source of all these maladies of
modernity. These opposing views are examined as they are unfolded
in known and forgotten texts by authors such as Vico, Sorel,
Nietzsche, Husserl and Heidegger and by lesser known figures such
as Baader, Borkenau and Boehm. By exploring celebrated and
overlooked texts and authors, Alon Segev both details the Cartesian
influence on the touchstone thinkers of political modernity, and
also fills a wide historical gap in the research, providing a
significant contribution to the discussion about the crises of the
contemporary social and political world. In short, this book
enables us, through Descartes, to assess the advantages and
shortcomings of modern society.
Descartes' philosophy plays a special role in the works of both
renowned and marginal writers in the Continental Tradition,
particularly in their views on society and politics. This is the
first book length study to consider political responses to
Descartes in 19th and 20th century European thinkers. Alon Segev
shows how on the one hand Continental authors utilize Descartes'
philosophy to advance the core ideas of Enlightenment and to combat
the movements and systems of Capitalism, Materialism, Absolutism,
Fascism, Nazism, and Neo-Paganism; however on the other hand, Segev
also demonstrates that Continental authors have also discerned in
Descartes' philosophy the main source of all these maladies of
modernity. These opposing views are examined as they are unfolded
in known and forgotten texts by authors such as Vico, Sorel,
Nietzsche, Husserl and Heidegger and by lesser known figures such
as Baader, Borkenau and Boehm. By exploring celebrated and
overlooked texts and authors, Alon Segev both details the Cartesian
influence on the touchstone thinkers of political modernity, and
also fills a wide historical gap in the research, providing a
significant contribution to the discussion about the crises of the
contemporary social and political world. In short, this book
enables us, through Descartes, to assess the advantages and
shortcomings of modern society.
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