|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
|
Post-Truth? (Hardcover)
Jeffrey Dudiak; Foreword by Ronald A. Kuipers, Robert Sweetman
|
R701
R577
Discovery Miles 5 770
Save R124 (18%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
This festschrift collects a number of insightful essays by a group
of accomplished Christian scholars, all of who have either worked
with or studied under Hendrik Hart during his 35-year tenure as
Senior Member in Systematic Philosophy at the Institute for
Christian Studies, Toronto, Canada. As reflected in the title,
these essays are organized around the theme of responsibility,
which is central to Hart's philosophical work. Illustrating the
breadth of Hart's philosophical contributions, as well as the
diverse interests of the book's contributors, the essays contained
herein cover a diverse range of topics, including philosophy of
religion, moral philosophy, philosophy of science, aesthetics,
pragmatism, feminist thought, theology, and cultural studies.
|
Post-Truth? (Paperback)
Jeffrey Dudiak; Foreword by Ronald A. Kuipers, Robert Sweetman
|
R346
R284
Discovery Miles 2 840
Save R62 (18%)
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
This work explains how human beings can live more peacefully with
one another by understanding the conditions of possibility for
dialogue. Philosophically, this challenge is articulated as the
problem of: how dialogue as dia-logos is possible when the shared
logos is precisely that which is in question. Emmanuel Levinas, in
demonstrating that the shared logos is a function of interhuman
relationship, helps us to make some progress in understanding the
possibilities for dialogue in this situation. If the terms of the
argument to this point are taken largely from Levinas's 1961
Totality and Infinity, Dudiak further proposes that Levinas's 1974
Otherwise than Being can be read as a deepening of these earlier
analyses, delineating, both the conditions of possibility and
impossibility for discourse itself. Throughout these analyses
Dudiak discovers that in Levinas's view dialogue is ultimately
possible, only for a gracious subjectivity already graced by God by
way of the other, but where the word God is inseparable from my
subjectivity as graciousness to the other. Finally, for Levinas,
the facilitation of dialogue, the facilitation of peace, comes down
to the subject's capacity and willingness to be who he or she is,
to take the beautiful risk of a peaceful gesture offered to the
other, and that peace, in this gesture itself. As Levinas himself
puts it: "Peace then is under my responsibility. I am a hostage,
for I am alone to wage it, running a fine risk, dangerously."
Levinas's philosophical discourse is precisely itself to be read as
such a gesture.
This work explains how human beings can live more peacefully with
one another by understanding the conditions of possibility for
dialogue. Philosophically, this challenge is articulated as the
problem of: how dialogue as dia-logos is possible when the shared
logos is precisely that which is in question. Emmanuel Levinas, in
demonstrating that the shared logos is a function of interhuman
relationship, helps us to make some progress in understanding the
possibilities for dialogue in this situation. If the terms of the
argument to this point are taken largely from Levinas's 1961
Totality and Infinity, Dudiak further proposes that Levinas's 1974
Otherwise than Being can be read as a deepening of these earlier
analyses, delineating, both the conditions of possibility and
impossibility for discourse itself. Throughout these analyses
Dudiak discovers that in Levinas's view dialogue is ultimately
possible, only for a gracious subjectivity already graced by God by
way of the other, but where the word God is inseparable from my
subjectivity as graciousness to the other. Finally, for Levinas,
the facilitation of dialogue, the facilitation of peace, comes down
to the subject's capacity and willingness to be who he or she is,
to take the beautiful risk of a peaceful gesture offered to the
other, and that peace, in this gesture itself. As Levinas himself
puts it: "Peace then is under my responsibility. I am a hostage,
for I am alone to wage it, running a fine risk, dangerously."
Levinas's philosophical discourse is precisely itself to be read as
such a gesture.
|
You may like...
Ab Wheel
R209
R149
Discovery Miles 1 490
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
Loot
Nadine Gordimer
Paperback
(2)
R383
R310
Discovery Miles 3 100
|