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Anthropology's Interrogation of Philosophy from the Eighteenth to
the Twentieth Century presents and discusses key aspects of the
German tradition of philosophical anthropology from the eighteenth
to the twentieth century, centering on the concept of anthropology
as a study of the 'whole, concrete man' (Heinrich Weber, 1810).
Philosophical anthropology appears during the last decades of the
eighteenth century in the often practically-oriented writings of
men such as Ernst Platner, Karl Wezel, and Johann Herder, and is
then taken up in the twentieth century by thinkers including Max
Scheler, Helmut Plessner, Arnold Gehlen, and Hans Blumenberg. In
presenting this tradition, the book serves two primary purposes.
Firstly, it introduces English readers in a coherent manner to key
aspects of a two-hundred year tradition in German thought.
Secondly, the book analyzes in an unprecedented manner, even in
German scholarship, the connections between the philosophical
debates associated with anthropology at the end of the eighteenth
century and ongoing philosophical issues in the twentieth century.
Specifically, author Jerome Carroll argues that late eighteenth
century anthropology diverges pointedly from traditional,
"foundational" approaches to philosophy, for instance rejecting
philosophy's quest for absolute foundations for knowledge or a
priori categories and turning to a more descriptive account of
man's "being in the world." Notably, by drawing on the
epistemological, ontological, and methodological aspects and
implications of anthropological holism, this book reads the
philosophical significance of classical twentieth century
anthropology through the lens of eighteenth century writings on
anthropology.
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