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The full century that has elapsed since Nietzsche was at the height
of his work did not obliterate his impact. In many ways he is still
a contemporary philosopher, even in that sense of 'contemporary'
which points to the future. We may have outgrown his style (always,
however, admirable and exciting to read), his sense of drama, his
creative exaggeration, his sometimes flamboy ant posture of a rebel
wavering between the heroic and the puerile. Yet Nietzsche's
critique of transcendental values and, especially, his attack on
the inherited conceptions of rationality remain pertinent and
continue to pro voke anew cultural critique or dissent. Today
Nietzsche is no longer discussed apologetically, nor is his
radicalism shunned or suppressed. That his work remains the object
of extremely diverse readings is befitting a philosopher who
replaced the concept of truth with that of interpretation. It is,
indeed, around the concept of interpretation that much of the rem:
wed interest in Nietzsche seems to center today. Special emphasis
is being laid on his manner of doing philosophy, and his views on
interpretation and the genealogical method are often re-read in the
context of contemporary hermeneutics and "deconstructionist"
positions."
In the year 1985, presumed to mark the 850th anniversary of
Maimonides' birth, the Sixth Jerusalem Philosophical Encounter was
dedicated to Maim onides as philosopher. We did not enter into the
other aspects of his work, rabbinical, legal, medical, etc., except
in so far as the relation between his philosophy and his work in
halakha (Jewish law) is itself a philosophical question. That no
one is quite certain about Maimonides' date of birth is symbolic of
the state of his philosophy as well. Maimonides' thought poses
various enigmas, lends itself to contradictory interpretations and
gives rise today, as it did in the Middle Ages, to sustained
controversies. Some of the contribu tions to the present volume
deal with these and cognate topics. Others deal with certain
aspects of the philosophical tradition in which Maimonides was
rooted, with some traits peculiar to the Islamic society in the
midst of which he lived, and with his influence on Christian
scholasticism. Maimonides' thought had many facets, and for this
and other reasons the question as to his place and stature in the
history of philosophy admits of no simple answer. In this volume an
attempt has been made to draw atten tion to some of these
complexities."
That Kant's ideas remain vitally present in ethical thinking today
is as impossible to deny as it is to overlook their less persisting
aspects and sometimes outdated idiom. The essays in this volume
attempt to reassess some crucial questions in Kant's practical
philosophy both by sketching the lines for new systematic
interpretations and by examining how Kantian themes apply to
contemporary moral concerns. In the previous decade, when Kant was
primarily read as an answer to utilitarianism, emphasis was mainly
laid on the fundamentals of his moral theory, stressing such
concepts as universalization, duty for its own sake, personal
autonomy, unconditional imperatives or humanity as end-in-itself,
using the Groundwork and its broader (ifless popular) systematic
parallel, the Analytic of the Critique of Practical Reason, as main
sources. In recent years, however, emphasis has shifted and become
diversified. The present essays reflect this diversification in
discussing the extension of Kantian ethics in the domains of law,
justice, politics and moral history, and also in considering such
meta-philosophical questions as the relation between the various
"inter ests of reason" (as Kant calls them), above all between
knowledge and moral practice. The papers were first presented at
the Seventh Jerusalem Philosophical Encounter, held at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem in December 1986. The Jerusalem
Philosophical Encounters are a series of bi-annual international
symposia, in which philosophers of different backgrounds meet in
Jerusalem to discuss a common issue. Organized by the S. H."
In the year 1985, presumed to mark the 850th anniversary of
Maimonides' birth, the Sixth Jerusalem Philosophical Encounter was
dedicated to Maim onides as philosopher. We did not enter into the
other aspects of his work, rabbinical, legal, medical, etc., except
in so far as the relation between his philosophy and his work in
halakha (Jewish law) is itself a philosophical question. That no
one is quite certain about Maimonides' date of birth is symbolic of
the state of his philosophy as well. Maimonides' thought poses
various enigmas, lends itself to contradictory interpretations and
gives rise today, as it did in the Middle Ages, to sustained
controversies. Some of the contribu tions to the present volume
deal with these and cognate topics. Others deal with certain
aspects of the philosophical tradition in which Maimonides was
rooted, with some traits peculiar to the Islamic society in the
midst of which he lived, and with his influence on Christian
scholasticism. Maimonides' thought had many facets, and for this
and other reasons the question as to his place and stature in the
history of philosophy admits of no simple answer. In this volume an
attempt has been made to draw atten tion to some of these
complexities."
This volume contains the proceedings of the First Jerusalem
Philosophical Encounter - started by the Hebrew University
Institute of Philosophy (now the S. H. Bergman Centre for
Philosophical Studies), which took place on December 28-31, 1974.
In recent years the culture-gap that separates philosophers seems
slowly - indeed much too slowly - to be narrowing. Although short
circuits in communication still do happen and mutual disrespect has
not vanished, it is becoming unfashionable to demonstrate ignorance
of another philosophical tradition or to shrug it off with a
supercilious smile. Perhaps dialectically, the insufficiency of any
self-centred view that tries to immunize itself to challenges from
without starts to disturb it from within. Moreover, as the culture-
(and language-) bound nature of many philosophical divergencies is
sinking more deeply into consciousness, the irony of an attitude of
intolerance to them becomes more apparent. Our aim was to make a
modest contribution to this development. We did not, however, mean
to confuse genuine differences and problems in communication.
Consequently, the more realistic term "encounter" was preferred to
the idealizing "dialogue. " The Israeli hosts, themselves trained
in a variety of philosophical traditions, felt that there is
something in between real dialogue on the one hand and mutual
estrangement on the other, and wished to provide a meeting place
for it."
The full century that has elapsed since Nietzsche was at the height
of his work did not obliterate his impact. In many ways he is still
a contemporary philosopher, even in that sense of 'contemporary'
which points to the future. We may have outgrown his style (always,
however, admirable and exciting to read), his sense of drama, his
creative exaggeration, his sometimes flamboy ant posture of a rebel
wavering between the heroic and the puerile. Yet Nietzsche's
critique of transcendental values and, especially, his attack on
the inherited conceptions of rationality remain pertinent and
continue to pro voke anew cultural critique or dissent. Today
Nietzsche is no longer discussed apologetically, nor is his
radicalism shunned or suppressed. That his work remains the object
of extremely diverse readings is befitting a philosopher who
replaced the concept of truth with that of interpretation. It is,
indeed, around the concept of interpretation that much of the rem:
wed interest in Nietzsche seems to center today. Special emphasis
is being laid on his manner of doing philosophy, and his views on
interpretation and the genealogical method are often re-read in the
context of contemporary hermeneutics and "deconstructionist"
positions."
That Kant's ideas remain vitally present in ethical thinking today
is as impossible to deny as it is to overlook their less persisting
aspects and sometimes outdated idiom. The essays in this volume
attempt to reassess some crucial questions in Kant's practical
philosophy both by sketching the lines for new systematic
interpretations and by examining how Kantian themes apply to
contemporary moral concerns. In the previous decade, when Kant was
primarily read as an answer to utilitarianism, emphasis was mainly
laid on the fundamentals of his moral theory, stressing such
concepts as universalization, duty for its own sake, personal
autonomy, unconditional imperatives or humanity as end-in-itself,
using the Groundwork and its broader (ifless popular) systematic
parallel, the Analytic of the Critique of Practical Reason, as main
sources. In recent years, however, emphasis has shifted and become
diversified. The present essays reflect this diversification in
discussing the extension of Kantian ethics in the domains of law,
justice, politics and moral history, and also in considering such
meta-philosophical questions as the relation between the various
"inter ests of reason" (as Kant calls them), above all between
knowledge and moral practice. The papers were first presented at
the Seventh Jerusalem Philosophical Encounter, held at the Hebrew
University of Jerusalem in December 1986. The Jerusalem
Philosophical Encounters are a series of bi-annual international
symposia, in which philosophers of different backgrounds meet in
Jerusalem to discuss a common issue. Organized by the S. H."
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