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This highly original collection of essays contributes to a critique
of the common understanding of modernity as an enlightened project
that provides rational grounds for orientation in all aspects and
dimensions of the world. An international team of contributors
contend that the modern principles of foundation show in themselves
rather how modernity is disorienting itself. The book brings
together discussions on the writings of philosophers who treat more
systematically the questions of foundation and orientation, such as
Kant, Nietzsche, Husserl, Heidegger, Pascal, and Patocka, and
studies of literary works that explicitly thematize this question,
such as Novalis, Hoelderlin, Beckett, Platonov, and Benjamin. This
multi-disciplinary approach brings to the fore the paradox that
modern figures of grounding and orientation unground and disorient
and demonstrates a critical path to review current understandings
of modernity and post-modernity.
Omnipresent in popular culture, especially in film and literature,
the theme of the 'end of the world' is often rejected from
contemporary philosophy as hysterical apocalyptism. This volume
attempts to show that, on the contrary, it is vital that we address
the motif of the 'end' in contemporary world - but that this cannot
be done without thinking it anew. The 'end of the world' opens up
philosophical questions concerning the very notion of the world,
which is a fundamental element of all existential, phenomenological
and hermeneutical philosophy. Is the 'end of the world' for us
rather 'somebody's' death (the end of 'being-in-the-world') or the
extinction of many or of all (the end of the world itself)? Is the
erosion of the 'world' a phenomenon that does not in fact affect
the notion of the world as a fundamental feature of all
existential-ontological inquiry? Or is there on the contrary an
inherent negativity in the very notion of the world which is only
now really becoming a question ? Can the world really 'end'? What
would it mean? Or should one rather speak about an 'unworlding' of
the world in order to bring about an interrogation or maybe even a
deconstruction of the notion of the world? This volume demonstrates
the origins and the present state of these concerns, in philosophy,
film and literature. The book opens with a philosophical
hermeneutics of the present state of the world by showing how the
end of the world takes place in the world itself. It goes on to
show how different arts have ventured to express the end of the
world while asking if a consequent expression of the end of the
world is also an end of its expression. Finally the book explores
how philosophy copes with the problematic of the end of the world
today.
The 'end of the world' opens up philosophical questions concerning
the very notion of the world, which is a fundamental element of all
existential, phenomenological and hermeneutical philosophy. Is the
'end of the world' for us 'somebody's' death (the end of
'being-in-the-world') or the extinction of many or of all (the end
of the world itself)? Is the erosion of the 'world' a phenomenon
that does not in fact affect the notion of the world as a
fundamental feature of all existential-ontological inquiry? This
volume examines the present state of these concerns in philosophy,
film and literature. It presents a philosophical hermeneutics of
the present state of the world and explores the principal questions
of the philosophical accounts of the end of the world, such as
finality and finitude. It also shows how literature and cinema have
ventured to express the end of the world while asking if a
consequent expression of the end of the world is also an end of its
expression.
This highly original collection of essays contributes to a critique
of the common understanding of modernity as an enlightened project
that provides rational grounds for orientation in all aspects and
dimensions of the world. An international team of contributors
contend that the modern principles of foundation show in themselves
rather how modernity is disorienting itself. The book brings
together discussions on the writings of philosophers who treat more
systematically the questions of foundation and orientation, such as
Kant, Nietzsche, Husserl, Heidegger, Pascal, and Patocka, and
studies of literary works that explicitly thematize this question,
such as Novalis, Hoelderlin, Beckett, Platonov, and Benjamin. This
multi-disciplinary approach brings to the fore the paradox that
modern figures of grounding and orientation unground and disorient
and demonstrates a critical path to review current understandings
of modernity and post-modernity.
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