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Historical study has traditionally been built around the placement
of the human at the center of inquiry. The de-stabilized concepts
of the human in contemporary thought challenge this configuration.
However, the ways in which these challenges provoke new historical
perspectives both expand and enrich historical study but are also
weak and vulnerable in their concept of the human, lacking or
omitting something valuable in our self-understanding. A
Personalist Philosophy of History argues for a robust concept of
personhood in our experience of the past as a way to resolve this
conflict. Focused on those who know history, rather than on the
abstract properties of knowledge, it extends the moral agency of
persons into non-human, trans-human, and deep history domains. It
describes an approach to moral life through historical experience
and study, rather than through abstractions. And it describes a
kind of historiography that matches factual accuracy to both the
constructed nature of understanding and to unavoidable moral
purpose.
This interdisciplinary volume connects the philosophy of history to
moral philosophy with a unique focus on time. Taking in a range of
intellectual traditions, cultural, and geographical contexts, the
volume provides a rich tapestry of approaches to time, morality,
culture, and history. By extending the philosophical discussion on
the ethical importance of temporality, the editors disentangle some
of the disciplinary tensions between analytical and hermeneutic
philosophy of history, cultural theory, meta-ethical theory, and
normative ethics. The ethical and existential character of
temporality reveals itself within a collection that resists the
methodological underpinnings of any one philosophical school. The
book's distinctive cross-cultural approach ensures a wide range of
perspectives with contributions on life and death in Japanese
philosophy, ethics and time in Maori philosophy, non-traditional
temporalities and philosophical anthropology, as well as global
approaches to ethics. These new directions of study highlight the
importance of the ethical in the temporal, inviting further points
of departure in this burgeoning field.
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