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Philosophy, Writing, and the Character of Thought
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2018
About this book
Lysaker examines the relationship between philosophical thought and the act of writing to explore how this dynamic shapes the field of philosophy.
Philosophy’s relation to the act of writing is John T. Lysaker’s main concern in Philosophy, Writing, and the Character of Thought. Whether in Plato, Montaigne, Nietzsche, Wittgenstein, or Derrida, philosophy has come in many forms, and those forms—the concrete shape philosophizing takes in writing—matter. Much more than mere adornment, the style in which a given philosopher writes is often of crucial importance to the point he or she is making, part and parcel of the philosophy itself.
Considering how writing influences philosophy, Lysaker explores genres like aphorism, dialogue, and essay, as well as logical-rhetorical operations like the example, irony, and quotation. At the same time, he shows us the effects of these rhetorical devices through his own literary experimentation. In dialogue with such authors as Benjamin, Cavell, Emerson, and Lukács, he aims to revitalize philosophical writing, arguing that philosophy cannot fulfill its intellectual and cultural promise if it keeps to professional articles and academic prose. Instead, philosophy must embrace writing as an essential, creative activity, and deliberately reform how it approaches its subject matter, readership, and the evolving social practices of reading and reflection.
Philosophy’s relation to the act of writing is John T. Lysaker’s main concern in Philosophy, Writing, and the Character of Thought. Whether in Plato, Montaigne, Nietzsche, Wittgenstein, or Derrida, philosophy has come in many forms, and those forms—the concrete shape philosophizing takes in writing—matter. Much more than mere adornment, the style in which a given philosopher writes is often of crucial importance to the point he or she is making, part and parcel of the philosophy itself.
Considering how writing influences philosophy, Lysaker explores genres like aphorism, dialogue, and essay, as well as logical-rhetorical operations like the example, irony, and quotation. At the same time, he shows us the effects of these rhetorical devices through his own literary experimentation. In dialogue with such authors as Benjamin, Cavell, Emerson, and Lukács, he aims to revitalize philosophical writing, arguing that philosophy cannot fulfill its intellectual and cultural promise if it keeps to professional articles and academic prose. Instead, philosophy must embrace writing as an essential, creative activity, and deliberately reform how it approaches its subject matter, readership, and the evolving social practices of reading and reflection.
Author / Editor information
John T. Lysaker is the William R. Kenan Professor of Philosophy at Emory University. He is the author of many books, including After Emerson and You Must Change Your Life: Poetry, Philosophy, and the Birth of Sense.
Reviews
“This is one of the best books I have read in a while. Powerful and original, it is about writing and not knowing how to write. It is about displacement, and being uprooted, and disorientation. About stuttering, about not knowing one’s way in an argument or how to say it, so that it is to the height of what it is being expressed. It is about how philosophy is homeless, and how just as it has no mother tongue, it also has no distinct or owned, sovereign, genre. This is a book about how to philosophize that requires that we create new ways, forms, genres, “styles,” gestures, of writing and communicating. But, the book is more than that; it is also a reflection on how thought is impacted by its mode of delivery. The thought is its own expression, or mode of presentation.”
— Eduardo Mendieta, Pennsylvania State University"Philosophy, Writing, and the Character of Thought is a bold and courageous book. John Lysaker, at the level of form and in the substance of his powerful writing, shows us what philosophy can be and what it can do."
— Eddie Glaude, Princeton University“This book is a profound meditation on what it means to write philosophy in all the remarkable diversity of ways in which this has happened. Examples abound from a rich tapestry composed of figures from Plato through Emerson and Thoreau, into Heidegger, Cavell, Nietzsche, and Wittgenstein. Lysaker’s own text defies all standard genres—it is itself sui generis—as it creates its own original unique mixture of reflection and critique. Showing how philosophy must move beyond traditional aims of demonstration and validity, it concerns itself not just with the relationship between the philosophical text and the reader but also, and especially, with the times in which it exists: it must be ‘equal to the moment.’ Lysaker shows that philosophy at its best is an experimentation and a provocation; and his own text, at once learned and wry, humorous and dead serious, eloquent and forceful, is both of these at once.”
— Edward S. Casey, State University of New York at Stony Brook"Lysaker is attempting something very difficult, maybe impossible, in philosophy: a revitalization of the discipline by returning to its most vibrant (but also most confusing) expressions — fragments, aphorisms, quotations, confessions, essays, ironies, rhetorical questions. His book is, unapologetically, a stylistic mash-up. A reader accustomed to, if not delighted by, straightforward argumentation will find it to be a maddening journey of switchbacks and dead ends. Yet someone bored by contemporary philosophy’s hidebound method of analysis will find it a joyful intellectual jaunt."
— Los Angeles Review of Books"[Lysaker's] writing is scholarly, to be sure, but never merely so; he takes philosophy as we all should—personally. His prose is full of personality, wit, self-awareness, even self-doubt, and always good will."
— Scott F. Parker, Rain Taxi"Lysaker provides a tour de force self-examination and analysis of philosophical writing and philosophical purpose. He addresses multiple facets of the nature of philosophical writing: what is written, how it is written, why it is written, by and to whom it is written. Lysaker engages with these concerns thoughtfully and honestly, so the book is far more than a survey. . . . Summing Up: Essential."
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Frontmatter
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Contents
vii -
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Gambits and Gambles
1 -
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Iron Filings
6 -
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Pardon the Interruption
9 -
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Content and Form
12 -
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Form and Content
15 -
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In the Beginning Was the Deed
18 -
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Reworking Making
20 -
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Deliberate Writing
24 -
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Mistaking Instrumental Reason
27 -
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Fits and Starts
31 -
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A Cultivar
34 -
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Quotation beyond Quotas
38 -
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For Examples
41 -
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In Nuce
45 -
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Irony
46 -
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Message in a Bottle
54 -
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The Hour of the Wolf
57 -
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It’s the Gesture That Counts
61 -
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Furnishing the Space of Reasons
63 -
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A Struggle with Ourselves
68 -
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Who’s on First
71 -
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Every One Is Everybody
76 -
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The Secret Addressee
81 -
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When We Undo Things with Words
85 -
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Unknown Friends
89 -
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Resoundingly Reticent
97 -
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Provocation/Demonstration
100 -
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Among the Pros (and Cons)
105 -
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A: “O my friend, there are no friends.” B: “At least we’ve got each other.”
111 -
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Then Came History
121 -
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Equal to the Moment
124 -
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Unequal to the Moment
130 -
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After Beauvoir
134 -
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Property Is Theft
136 -
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Strange Alchemy
140 -
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Public Commitment
143 -
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Propagation without Propaganda
146 -
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Bit by Bit
148 -
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Taking Stances
152 -
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Character Studies
158 -
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Where Do We Find Ourselves?
167 -
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Acknowledgments
173 -
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Notes
175 -
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References
183 -
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Index
191
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
December 11, 2018
eBook ISBN:
9780226569734
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
224
eBook ISBN:
9780226569734
Keywords for this book
philosopher; philosophical; thinking; thinker; brain; mind; mental; relationship; academic; scholarly; analysis; critique; critical; college; university; research; plato; montaigne; nietzsche; wittgenstein; derrida; famous people; great minds; aphorism; dialogue; essay; rhetoric; rhetorical; logical; quotation; logic; quotes; debate; argument; reasoning; reason
Audience(s) for this book
Professional and scholarly;