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The German philosopher Robert Spaemann provides an important
contribution to a number of contemporary debates in philosophy and
theology, opening up possibilities for conversation between these
disciplines. He engages in a dialogue with classical and
contemporary positions and often formulates important and original
insights which lie beyond common alternatives. In this study Holger
Zaborowski provides an analysis of the most important features of
Spaemann's philosophy and shows the unity of his thought.
The question 'Who is a person?' is of increasing significance: Are
all human beings persons? Are there animals that can be considered
persons? What does it mean to speak of personal identity and of the
dignity of the person? Spaemann provides an answer to these
questions: Every human being, he argues, is a person and,
therefore, 'has' his nature in freedom. In order to understand the
person, Spaemann explains, we have to think about the relation
between nature and freedom and avoid the reductive accounts of this
relation prevalent in important strands of modern thought.
Spaemann develops a challenging critique of modernity,
incorporating analysis of modern anti-modernisms and showing that
these are also subject to a dialectical development, perpetuating
the problematic shortcomings of many features of modern reasoning.
If we do not want to abolish ourselves as persons, Spaemann
reasons, we need to find a way of understanding ourselves that
evades the dialectic of modernity. Thus, he reminds his readers of
'self-evident' knowledge: insights that we have once already known,
but tend to forget.
The number of open and controversial questions in contemporary
Heidegger research continues to be a source of scholarly dialogue.
There are important questions that concern the development, as it
were, of his thought and the differences and similarities between
his early main work Being and Time and his later so-called
being-historical thought, the thinking of the event, or
appropriation, of Being. There are questions that focus on his
relation to important figures in the history of ideas such as the
pre-Socratics, Plato, Aristotle, Thomas Aquinas, Descartes,
Leibniz, Kant, the German idealists, and Nietzsche. Other questions
focus on his biography, on his rectorate and on his relation to
politics in general and to National Socialism in particular or on
his influence on subsequent philosophers. The contributions to this
volume, written by leading scholars in the field of Heidegger
research, address many of these questions in close readings of
Heidegger's texts and thus provide sound orientation in the field
of contemporary Heidegger research. They show how the different
trajectories of Heidegger's thought-his early interest in the
meaning of Being and in Dasein, his discussion of, and involvement
with, politics, his understanding of art, poetry, and technology,
his concept of truth and the idea of a history of Being-all
converge at one point: the question of Being. It thus becomes clear
that, all differences notwithstanding, Heidegger followed one very
consistent path of thinking.
The volume Church as Politeia comprises fifteen papers which were
presented at a German-British Research Colloquium of the Becket
Institute in Oxford. In these papers the political
self-understanding of Christianity is analyzed in its historical
development from various denominational perspectives. The authors
of these contributions are theologians, lawyers, philosophers and
historians from Germany and Great Britain.
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