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Product details:
- Publisher Edinburgh University Press
- Date of Publication 31 May 2026
- ISBN 9781399544337
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages336 pages
- Size 234x156 mm
- Language English 700
Categories
Short description:
Rediscovers the 19th century insight that human freedom is impossible without the Absolute.
MoreLong description:
By exposing and critiquing the hegemony of otherness and difference in 20th century philosophy, Gregory S. Moss liberates philosophy from the fetishization of incompleteness that dominates much of the history of the analytic and continental traditions.
Inspired by German Idealism and the Kyoto School, Moss defends the view that the Absolute exists and can only be known as a true contradiction. Corresponding to its dialetheic theory of existence, he also offers a new theory of truth according to which only contradictions can be true. By thinking through the rational and mystical varieties of Absolute Dialetheism, the book argues for philosophical religion, a vision of the Absolute that unifies both philosophy and religion into a dialetheic conception of absolute knowledge.
Table of Contents:
Foreword by Brook Ziporyn
Preface: The Theocene
- Introduction: Philosophy as Absolute Thinking
- Purification and Absolute Dialectics
- Hegel’s Rational Dialetheism
- Schelling’s Metaphysical Empiricism
- Mystical Dialetheism
- Philosophical Religion
- The Ontological Genesis of the Absolute
- Absolute Nothingness and The Principle of Sufficient Reason
- Beyond Dialetheism: The Trans-Consistent Theory of Truth
- Conclusion: Alethic Singularity