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Leo Strauss famously asserted that the fundamental, defining debate
within Western civilization is that between Jerusalem and Athens,
piety and philosophy, the Bible and Plato. And yet, surprisingly,
Strauss never published any of his thoughts on Plato’s dialogue
on piety, the Euthyphro. This volume presents, for the first time,
Strauss’s 1948 notebook on the dialogue, written in preparation
for a class at the New School for Social Research. Featuring close
analysis and line-by-line commentary, the notebook opens a window
onto a philosophic mind in action, as Strauss asks questions of the
classic text, jots down observations and formulations, and analyzes
very specific terms and arguments but also steps back, reviews the
overall movement of the dialogue, and reconsiders previous
conclusions. Beyond the notebook, the volume also brings together
all the known materials that lay out Strauss’s thoughts on the
Euthyphro. This includes newly transcribed and edited public
lectures, illuminating appendixes, critical essays by volume
editors Hannes Kerber and Svetozar Y. Minkov and scholar Wayne
Ambler, an account of Strauss’s public lecture, and a new English
translation of Plato’s Euthyphro by Seth Benardete, a classicist
and one of Strauss’s students. Engaging and inspiring, Leo
Strauss on Plato’s “Euthyphro” is a vital resource for
scholars and students of political theory, readers interested in
the intersection of philosophy and religion, and a must-have for
anyone who studies Strauss.
In the early modern period, thinkers began to suggest that
philosophy abjure the ideal of dispassionate contemplation of the
natural world in favor of a more practically minded project that
aimed to make human beings masters and possessors of nature.
Humanity would seize control of its own fate and overthrow the rule
by hostile natural or imaginary forces. The gradual spread of
liberal democratic government, the Enlightenment, and the rise of
technological modernity are to a considerable extent the fruits of
this early modern shift in intellectual concern and focus. But
these long-term trends have also brought unintended consequences in
their wake as the dynamic forces of social reason, historical
progress, and the continued recalcitrance of the natural world have
combined to disillusion humans of the possibility-even the
desirability-of their mastery over nature. The essays in Mastery of
Nature constitute an extensive analysis of the fundamental aspects
of the human grasp of nature. What is the foundation and motive of
the modern project in the first place? What kind of a world did its
early advocates hope to bring about? Contributors not only examine
the foundational theories espoused by early modern thinkers such as
Machiavelli, Bacon, Descartes, and Hobbes but also explore the
criticisms and corrections that appeared in the works of Rousseau,
Kant, Nietzsche, and Heidegger. Ranging from ancient Greek thought
to contemporary quantum mechanics, Mastery of Nature investigates
to what extent nature can be conquered to further human ends and to
what extent such mastery is compatible with human flourishing.
Contributors: Robert C. Bartlett, Mark Blitz, Daniel A. Doneson,
Michael A. Gillespie, Ralph Lerner, Paul Ludwig, Harvey C.
Mansfield, Arthur Melzer, Svetozar Y. Minkov, Christopher Nadon,
Diana J. Schaub, Adam Schulman, Devin Stauffer, Bernhardt L. Trout,
Lise van Boxel, Richard Velkley, Stuart D. Warner, Jerry
Weinberger.
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