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Through a curated selection of papers written over four decades by
one of Australia's leading philosophers, this collection
demonstrates the impact of Continental philosophy on philosophical
thought in Australia. The development of specific philosophical
problems, over a period of more than forty years by a philosopher
whose first training was 'pre-continental', shows that it is
possible to achieve interaction between 'continental' and
'pre-continental' methods in philosophy, even while recognizing
their distinctiveness. These essays 'work towards' continental
philosophy in the ways they pay attention to language, to how we
experience things and are experienced by others, and to the
structures of language and power that frame what it is possible to
say and to hear, to write and to read.
Taking its bearings from classic texts including Plato, Kant, Hegel
and Arendt this thoughtful and intriguing book provides
philosophical reflection on what it is to judge and what judgement
achieves alongside, and sometimes in competition with, thinking and
willing. Opening with the landmark Mabo High Court case in
Australia and with detailed reference to other significant debates
of judgement of the twentieth century Max Deutscher seeks to
explore and explain approaches to the concepts of what is good,
right and legal. Describing a connection between reason and grounds
intrinsic to judgement he analyses and explores the tendency
towards absolutism that displaces proper judgement. By weaving
concrete instances of judgement with philosophical thought
Deutscher provides a fascinating phenomenology of practices of
judgement that should appeal to all readers with an interest in
legal, philosophical and political thought.
Judgment After Arendt is both the first full-length study of Hannah
Arendt's The Life of the Mind and, at the same time, a
philosophical work on the core concepts of thinking, willing and
judging. Comprised of Thinking and Willing, her final and most
sustained philosophical project, Arendt's work is framed by the
'thought-less' Adolf Eichmann whose 'banality' of mind in
committing evil she observed at his trial in Jerusalem. Arendt's
project, cut short by her death, was to have included Judgment.
Without judgment, she argued, a life of thought and of will can
still collude with evil. In analysing Arendt's work Deutscher
develops this theme of judgment and shows how, by drawing upon
literature, history, myth and idiom, Arendt contributes
significantly to contemporary philosophy.
Taking its bearings from classic texts including Plato, Kant, Hegel
and Arendt this thoughtful and intriguing book provides
philosophical reflection on what it is to judge and what judgement
achieves alongside, and sometimes in competition with, thinking and
willing. Opening with the landmark Mabo High Court case in
Australia and with detailed reference to other significant debates
of judgement of the twentieth century Max Deutscher seeks to
explore and explain approaches to the concepts of what is good,
right and legal. Describing a connection between reason and grounds
intrinsic to judgement he analyses and explores the tendency
towards absolutism that displaces proper judgement. By weaving
concrete instances of judgement with philosophical thought
Deutscher provides a fascinating phenomenology of practices of
judgement that should appeal to all readers with an interest in
legal, philosophical and political thought.
This book was first published in 2003: Developing a reading of some
of Beauvoir's and Sartre's most influential writings in philosophy,
Max Deutscher explores contemporary philosophy in the light of the
phenomenological tradition within which Being and Nothingness and
The Second Sex occurred as striking events operating on the border
of the modern and the post-modern. Deutscher traces the shifts of
genre that produce their gendered philosophies, and responds in
terms of contemporary experience to the mood and the arguments of
their works. Drawing upon the writings of two contemporary critics
in particular - Michele Le DA"uff and Luce Irigaray - Deutscher
reworks this part of philosophy's history in order to advance
thinking in contemporary philosophy, generate renewed philosophical
reflection on consciousness, freedom and one's relation to others,
and to return a look still cast in our direction from an earlier
time.
This book was first published in 2003: Developing a reading of some
of Beauvoir's and Sartre's most influential writings in philosophy,
Max Deutscher explores contemporary philosophy in the light of the
phenomenological tradition within which Being and Nothingness and
The Second Sex occurred as striking events operating on the border
of the modern and the post-modern. Deutscher traces the shifts of
genre that produce their gendered philosophies, and responds in
terms of contemporary experience to the mood and the arguments of
their works. Drawing upon the writings of two contemporary critics
in particular - Michele Le DA"uff and Luce Irigaray - Deutscher
reworks this part of philosophy's history in order to advance
thinking in contemporary philosophy, generate renewed philosophical
reflection on consciousness, freedom and one's relation to others,
and to return a look still cast in our direction from an earlier
time.
Judgment After Arendt is both the first full-length study of Hannah
Arendt's The Life of the Mind and, at the same time, a
philosophical work on the core concepts of thinking, willing and
judging. Comprised of Thinking and Willing, her final and most
sustained philosophical project, Arendt's work is framed by the
'thought-less' Adolf Eichmann whose 'banality' of mind in
committing evil she observed at his trial in Jerusalem. Arendt's
project, cut short by her death, was to have included Judgment.
Without judgment, she argued, a life of thought and of will can
still collude with evil. In analysing Arendt's work Deutscher
develops this theme of judgment and shows how, by drawing upon
literature, history, myth and idiom, Arendt contributes
significantly to contemporary philosophy.
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