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World Affairs Online
Cover -- Half-title page -- Dedication -- Title page -- Copyright -- Contents -- Preface -- Introduction -- Part I The Philosophy of Nature -- 1 Spinoza: Founder of Modern Naturalism -- 2 Hume: The Experimental Method and the Science of Man -- 3 Kant: Copernican Turn -- Nature, Reason, and Freedom -- 4 Hegel: Nature and Geist -- Part II The Hermeneutics of Suspicion -- Prologue -- 5 Marx: The Transaction of Nature and Social Man -- 6 Nietzsche: Nature and the Affirmation of Life -- 7 Freud: Human Nature, Psychic Reality, and Cosmological Speculation -- Coda -- Concluding Remarks -- Notes -- References -- Index of Names -- General Index.
Inhaltsverzeichnis: Statelessness and refugees -- The right to have rights -- Loyal opposition : Arendt's critique of Zionism -- Racism and segregation -- The banality of evil -- Truth, politics and lying -- Plurality, politics, and public freedom -- The American Revolution and the revolutionary spirit -- Personal and political responsibility.
In: Routledge studies in American philosophy 3
Pragmatism and its history -- The romance of philosophy -- The pragmatic turn -- Richard Rorty: so much the worse for your old intuitions, start working up some new ones -- John Dewey's encounter with Leon Trotsky -- Democracy and pluralism -- The spectre haunting multiculturalism -- Cultural pluralism -- Charles Taylor's engaged pluralism -- Democratic hope -- The normative core of the public sphere -- Critique in dark times -- Herbert Marcuse's critical legacy -- Hannah Arendt: thought-defying evil -- The justification of violence? -- Morality, politics, and religion -- Can we justify universal moral norms? -- Is politics practicable without religion? -- The secular-religious divide: Kant's legacy -- Paul Ricoeur's Freud
Hannah Arendt is increasingly recognised as one of the most original social and political thinkers of the twentieth century. In this important book, Richard Bernstein sets out to show that many of the most significant themes in Arendt's thinking have their origins in their confrontation with the Jewish Question. By approaching her mature work from this perspective, we can gain a richer and more subtle grasp of her main ideas. Bernstein discusses some of the key experiences and events in Arendt's life story in order to show how they shaped her thinking. He examines her distinction between th
In: Themes for the 21st Century Series
Since 9/11 politicians, preachers, conservatives and the media are all speaking about evil. In the past the dicourse about evil in our religious, philosophic and literary traditions has provoked thinking, questioning and inquiry. But today the appeal to evil is being used as a political tool to obscure compex issues, block serious thinking and stifle public discussion and debate.We are now confronting a clash of mentalities, not a clash of civilisations. One mentality is drawn to absolutes, moral certainties, and simplistic dichotomies of good and evil. The other seriously question
We live in a time when we are overwhelmed with talk and images of violence. Whether on television, the internet, films or the video screen, we can't escape representations of actual or fictional violence - another murder, another killing spree in a high school or movie theatre, another action movie filled with images of violence. Our age could well be called "The Age of Violence" because representations of real or imagined violence, sometimes fused together, are pervasive. But what do we mean by violence? What can violence achieve? Are there limits to violence and, if so, what are they?
We live in a time when we are overwhelmed with talk and images of violence. Whether on television, the internet, films or the video screen, we can't escape representations of actual or fictional violence - another murder, another killing spree in a high school or movie theatre, another action movie filled with images of violence. Our age could well be called "The Age of Violence" because representations of real or imagined violence, sometimes fused together, are pervasive. But what do we mean by violence? What can violence achieve? Are there limits to violence and, if so, what are they?
In: University-Paperbacks 664
Cover -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- PART ONE BEYOND OBJECTIVISM AND RELATIVISM: AN OVERVIEW -- Objectivism and Relativism -- The Cartesian Anxiety -- Postempiricist Philosophy and History of Science -- The Idea of a Social Science -- The Recovery of the Hermeneutical Dimension of Science -- Philosophic Hermeneutics: A Primordial Mode of Being -- Hermeneutics and Praxis -- Political Judgment and Practical Discourse -- Science, Hermeneutics, and Praxis -- PART TWO SCIENCE, RATIONALITY, AND INCOMMENSURABILITY -- The Practical Rationality of Theory-Choice -- Kuhn and His Critics: The Common Ground -- The Development of the Philosophy of Science -- Incommensurability and the Natural Sciences -- Incommensurability and the Social Disciplines -- PART THREE FROM HERMENEUTICS TO PRAXIS -- The Cartesian Legacy -- Truth and the Experience of Art -- Understanding and Prejudice -- The Hermeneutical Circle -- Temporal Distance, Effective-Historical Consciousness, and the Fusion of Horizons -- Application: The Rediscovery of the Fundamental Hermeneutical Problem -- The Movement Beyond Philosophic Hermeneutics -- Philosophic Hermeneutics and the Cartesian Anxiety -- PART FOUR PRAXIS, PRACTICAL DISCOURSE, AND JUDGMENT -- A Historical Interlude -- Practical Discourse: Habermas -- Rorty's Metacritique -- Judgment: Arendt -- Beyond Objectivism and Relativism: The Practical Task -- Notes -- Appendix: A Letter by Professor Hans-Georg Gadamer -- Bibliography -- Subject Index -- Index of Names.