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12. Late pragmatism, logical positivism, and their aft ermath
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David Ingram
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Chapters in this book
- Front Matter 1 i
- Contents 2339
- Series Preface vii
- Contributors xiii
- Introduction 1
- 1. Immanuel Kant’s turn to transcendental philosophy 15
- 2. Kant’s early critics: Jacobi, Reinhold, Maimon 49
- 3. Johann Gottfried Herder 83
- 4. Play and irony: Schiller and Schlegel on the liberating prospects of aesthetics 107
- 5. Fichte and Husserl: life-world, the Other, and philosophical reflection 131
- 6. Schelling: philosopher of tragic dissonance 163
- 7. Schopenhauer on empirical and aesthetic perception and cognition 187
- 8. G. W. F. Hegel 211
- 9. From Hegelian reason to Marxian revolution, 1831–48 237
- 10. Saint-Simon, Fourier, and Proudhon: “Utopian” French socialism 265
- Chronology 305
- Bibliography 327
- Index 335
- Front Matter 2 347
- Contents 349
- Series Preface 351
- Contributors 357
- Introduction 361
- 1. Feuerbach and the Left and Right Hegelians 377
- 2. Marx and Marxism 395
- 4. Dostoevsky and Russian philosophy 445
- 5. Life aft er the death of God: thus spoke Nietzsche 463
- 6. Hermeneutics: Schleiermacher and Dilthey 499
- 7. French spiritualist philosophy 521
- 8. The emergence of sociology and its theories: from Comte to Weber 537
- 9. Developments in philosophy of science and mathematics 553
- 10. Peirce: pragmatism and nature aft er Hegel 577
- 11. Aesthetics and the philosophy of art, 1840–1900 599
- Chronology 621
- Bibliography 645
- Index 661
- Front Matter 3 679
- Contents 683
- Series Preface 685
- Contributors 691
- Introduction 697
- 1. Henri Bergson 715
- 2. Neo-Kantianism in Germany and France 743
- 3. The emergence of French sociology: Émile Durkheim and Marcel Mauss 783
- 4. Analytic and continental traditions: Frege, Husserl, Carnap, and Heidegger 807
- 5. Edmund Husserl 845
- 6. Max Scheler 867
- 7. The early Heidegger 883
- 8. Karl Jaspers 909
- 9. Phenomenology at home and abroad 935
- 10. Early continental philosophy of science 959
- 11. Ludwig Wittgenstein 983
- 12. Freud and continental philosophy 1015
- 13. Responses to evolution: Spencer’s evolutionism, Bergsonism, and contemporary biology 1043
- Chronology 1077
- Bibliography 1097
- Index 1121
- Front Matter 4 1135
- Contents 1139
- Series Preface 1141
- Contributors 1147
- Introduction 1151
- 1. Dialectic, difference, and the Other: the Hegelianizing of French phenomenology 1167
- 2. Existentialism 1193
- 3. Sartre and phenomenology 1217
- 4. Continental aesthetics: phenomenology and antiphenomenology 1237
- 5. Merleau-Ponty at the limits of phenomenology 1261
- 6. The hermeneutic transformation of phenomenology 1281
- 7. The later Heidegger 1307
- 8. Existential theology 1327
- 9. Religion and ethics 1345
- 10. The philosophy of the concept 1367
- 11. Analytic philosophy and continental philosophy: four confrontations 1385
- Chronology 1417
- Bibliography 1437
- Index 1455
- Front Matter 5 1471
- Contents 1475
- Series Preface 1477
- Contributors 1483
- Introduction 1487
- 1. Carl Schmitt and early Western Marxism 1505
- 2. The origins and development of the model of early critical theory in the work of Max Horkheimer, Erich Fromm, and Herbert Marcuse 1533
- 3. Theodor W. Adorno 1567
- 4. Walter Benjamin 1591
- 5. Hannah Arendt: rethinking the political 1619
- 6. Georges Bataille 1641
- 7. French Marxism in its heyday 1665
- 8. Black existentialism 1685
- 9. Ferdinand de Saussure and linguistic structuralism 1707
- 10. Claude Lévi-Strauss 1731
- 11. Jacques Lacan 1749
- 12. Late pragmatism, logical positivism, and their aft ermath 1767
- Chronology 1787
- Bibliography 1807
- Index 1821
- Front Matter 6 1831
- Contents 1835
- Series Preface 1837
- Contributors 1843
- Introduction 1847
- 1. French Nietzscheanism 1865
- 2. Louis Althusser 1893
- 3. Michel Foucault 1913
- 4. Gilles Deleuze 1937
- 5. Jacques Derrida 1957
- 6. Jean-François Lyotard 1979
- 7. Pierre Bourdieu and the practice of philosophy 1999
- 8. Michel Serres 2023
- 9. Jürgen Habermas 2043
- 10. Second generation critical theory 2073
- 11. Gadamer, Ricoeur, and the legacy of phenomenology 2099
- 12. The linguistic turn in continental philosophy 2125
- 13. Psychoanalysis and desire 2157
- 14. Luce Irigaray 2183
- 15. Cixous, Kristeva, and Le Doeuff : three “French feminists” 2205
- 16. Deconstruction and the Yale School of literary theory 2233
- 17. Rorty among the continentals 2247
- Chronology 2269
- Bibliography 2289
- Index 2313
- Front Matter 7 2335
- Series Preface 2341
- Contributors 2347
- Introduction 2353
- 1. Postmodernism 2365
- 2. German philosophy aft er 1980: themes out of school 2385
- 3. The structuralist legacy 2407
- 4. Italian philosophy between 1980 and 1995 2435
- 5. Continental philosophy in the Czech Republic 2463
- 6. Third generation critical theory: Benhabib, Fraser, and Honneth 2481
- 7. French and Italian Spinozism 2501
- 8. Radical democracy 2521
- 9. Cultural and postcolonial studies 2539
- 10. The “ethical turn” in continental philosophy in the 1980s 2555
- 11. Feminist philosophy: coming of age 2573
- 12. Continental philosophy of religion 2599
- 13. The performative turn and the emergence of post-analytic philosophy 2627
- 14. Out of bounds: philosophy in an age of transition 2659
- Chronology 2689
- Bibliography 2705
- Index 2735
- Front Matter 8 2751
- Contents 2755
- Series Preface 2757
- Contributors 2763
- Introduction 2767
- 1. Rethinking gender: Judith Butler and feminist philosophy 2779
- 2. Recent developments in aesthetics: Badiou, Rancière, and their interlocutors 2797
- 3. Rethinking Marxism 2815
- 4. Thinking the event: Alain Badiou’s philosophy and the task of critical theory 2835
- 5. Rethinking Anglo- American philosophy: the neo- Kantianism of Davidson, McDowell, and Brandom 2855
- 6. Rethinking science as science studies: Latour, Stengers, Prigogine 2875
- 7. European citizenship: a post nationalist perspective 2893
- 8. Postcolonialism, postorientalism, postoccidentalism: the past that never went away and the future that never arrived 2915
- 9. Continental philosophy and the environment 2939
- 10. Rethinking the new world order: responses to globalization/American hegemony 2959
- Chronology 2975
- Bibliography 2995
- Index 3009
Chapters in this book
- Front Matter 1 i
- Contents 2339
- Series Preface vii
- Contributors xiii
- Introduction 1
- 1. Immanuel Kant’s turn to transcendental philosophy 15
- 2. Kant’s early critics: Jacobi, Reinhold, Maimon 49
- 3. Johann Gottfried Herder 83
- 4. Play and irony: Schiller and Schlegel on the liberating prospects of aesthetics 107
- 5. Fichte and Husserl: life-world, the Other, and philosophical reflection 131
- 6. Schelling: philosopher of tragic dissonance 163
- 7. Schopenhauer on empirical and aesthetic perception and cognition 187
- 8. G. W. F. Hegel 211
- 9. From Hegelian reason to Marxian revolution, 1831–48 237
- 10. Saint-Simon, Fourier, and Proudhon: “Utopian” French socialism 265
- Chronology 305
- Bibliography 327
- Index 335
- Front Matter 2 347
- Contents 349
- Series Preface 351
- Contributors 357
- Introduction 361
- 1. Feuerbach and the Left and Right Hegelians 377
- 2. Marx and Marxism 395
- 4. Dostoevsky and Russian philosophy 445
- 5. Life aft er the death of God: thus spoke Nietzsche 463
- 6. Hermeneutics: Schleiermacher and Dilthey 499
- 7. French spiritualist philosophy 521
- 8. The emergence of sociology and its theories: from Comte to Weber 537
- 9. Developments in philosophy of science and mathematics 553
- 10. Peirce: pragmatism and nature aft er Hegel 577
- 11. Aesthetics and the philosophy of art, 1840–1900 599
- Chronology 621
- Bibliography 645
- Index 661
- Front Matter 3 679
- Contents 683
- Series Preface 685
- Contributors 691
- Introduction 697
- 1. Henri Bergson 715
- 2. Neo-Kantianism in Germany and France 743
- 3. The emergence of French sociology: Émile Durkheim and Marcel Mauss 783
- 4. Analytic and continental traditions: Frege, Husserl, Carnap, and Heidegger 807
- 5. Edmund Husserl 845
- 6. Max Scheler 867
- 7. The early Heidegger 883
- 8. Karl Jaspers 909
- 9. Phenomenology at home and abroad 935
- 10. Early continental philosophy of science 959
- 11. Ludwig Wittgenstein 983
- 12. Freud and continental philosophy 1015
- 13. Responses to evolution: Spencer’s evolutionism, Bergsonism, and contemporary biology 1043
- Chronology 1077
- Bibliography 1097
- Index 1121
- Front Matter 4 1135
- Contents 1139
- Series Preface 1141
- Contributors 1147
- Introduction 1151
- 1. Dialectic, difference, and the Other: the Hegelianizing of French phenomenology 1167
- 2. Existentialism 1193
- 3. Sartre and phenomenology 1217
- 4. Continental aesthetics: phenomenology and antiphenomenology 1237
- 5. Merleau-Ponty at the limits of phenomenology 1261
- 6. The hermeneutic transformation of phenomenology 1281
- 7. The later Heidegger 1307
- 8. Existential theology 1327
- 9. Religion and ethics 1345
- 10. The philosophy of the concept 1367
- 11. Analytic philosophy and continental philosophy: four confrontations 1385
- Chronology 1417
- Bibliography 1437
- Index 1455
- Front Matter 5 1471
- Contents 1475
- Series Preface 1477
- Contributors 1483
- Introduction 1487
- 1. Carl Schmitt and early Western Marxism 1505
- 2. The origins and development of the model of early critical theory in the work of Max Horkheimer, Erich Fromm, and Herbert Marcuse 1533
- 3. Theodor W. Adorno 1567
- 4. Walter Benjamin 1591
- 5. Hannah Arendt: rethinking the political 1619
- 6. Georges Bataille 1641
- 7. French Marxism in its heyday 1665
- 8. Black existentialism 1685
- 9. Ferdinand de Saussure and linguistic structuralism 1707
- 10. Claude Lévi-Strauss 1731
- 11. Jacques Lacan 1749
- 12. Late pragmatism, logical positivism, and their aft ermath 1767
- Chronology 1787
- Bibliography 1807
- Index 1821
- Front Matter 6 1831
- Contents 1835
- Series Preface 1837
- Contributors 1843
- Introduction 1847
- 1. French Nietzscheanism 1865
- 2. Louis Althusser 1893
- 3. Michel Foucault 1913
- 4. Gilles Deleuze 1937
- 5. Jacques Derrida 1957
- 6. Jean-François Lyotard 1979
- 7. Pierre Bourdieu and the practice of philosophy 1999
- 8. Michel Serres 2023
- 9. Jürgen Habermas 2043
- 10. Second generation critical theory 2073
- 11. Gadamer, Ricoeur, and the legacy of phenomenology 2099
- 12. The linguistic turn in continental philosophy 2125
- 13. Psychoanalysis and desire 2157
- 14. Luce Irigaray 2183
- 15. Cixous, Kristeva, and Le Doeuff : three “French feminists” 2205
- 16. Deconstruction and the Yale School of literary theory 2233
- 17. Rorty among the continentals 2247
- Chronology 2269
- Bibliography 2289
- Index 2313
- Front Matter 7 2335
- Series Preface 2341
- Contributors 2347
- Introduction 2353
- 1. Postmodernism 2365
- 2. German philosophy aft er 1980: themes out of school 2385
- 3. The structuralist legacy 2407
- 4. Italian philosophy between 1980 and 1995 2435
- 5. Continental philosophy in the Czech Republic 2463
- 6. Third generation critical theory: Benhabib, Fraser, and Honneth 2481
- 7. French and Italian Spinozism 2501
- 8. Radical democracy 2521
- 9. Cultural and postcolonial studies 2539
- 10. The “ethical turn” in continental philosophy in the 1980s 2555
- 11. Feminist philosophy: coming of age 2573
- 12. Continental philosophy of religion 2599
- 13. The performative turn and the emergence of post-analytic philosophy 2627
- 14. Out of bounds: philosophy in an age of transition 2659
- Chronology 2689
- Bibliography 2705
- Index 2735
- Front Matter 8 2751
- Contents 2755
- Series Preface 2757
- Contributors 2763
- Introduction 2767
- 1. Rethinking gender: Judith Butler and feminist philosophy 2779
- 2. Recent developments in aesthetics: Badiou, Rancière, and their interlocutors 2797
- 3. Rethinking Marxism 2815
- 4. Thinking the event: Alain Badiou’s philosophy and the task of critical theory 2835
- 5. Rethinking Anglo- American philosophy: the neo- Kantianism of Davidson, McDowell, and Brandom 2855
- 6. Rethinking science as science studies: Latour, Stengers, Prigogine 2875
- 7. European citizenship: a post nationalist perspective 2893
- 8. Postcolonialism, postorientalism, postoccidentalism: the past that never went away and the future that never arrived 2915
- 9. Continental philosophy and the environment 2939
- 10. Rethinking the new world order: responses to globalization/American hegemony 2959
- Chronology 2975
- Bibliography 2995
- Index 3009