Inheritance and Originality
Wittgenstein, Heidegger, Kierkegaard
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 14 June 2001
- ISBN 9780199243907
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages460 pages
- Size 242x161x29 mm
- Weight 790 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
Inheritance and Originality is an innovative study of Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and Kierkegaard which argues that they find themselves unable simply to inherit the prevailing conventions definitive of philosophy. By placing these conventions in question, they reconceive the form of philosophical writing, and of philosophy itself, together with prevailing notions of language, scepticism, morality, and the self; and in so doing, they confront certain fundamentally theological preoccupations.
MoreLong description:
What might it mean to think of philosophy as being in the condition of modernism -- in which its relation to its own past, and hence its sense of its own future, has become an undismissable problem? If philosophy's hitherto-defining conventions can neither be taken for granted nor rejected, they must be put in question -- which menans re-evealuating the relation between the form and content of philosophical writing, rethinking the demands that such writing must place on its readers, and reconceiving the nature of philosophy itself. Inheritance and Originality argues that the writings of Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and Kierkegaard are best understood as responsive (each in their own way) to such questions, and as driven in consequence to strikingly similar reconceptions of language, reason, and understanding, doubt and scepticism, morality, and the structure of selfhood. Through detailed re-readings of these authors' most influential texts, as attentive to their specificity as to their family resemblances, Stephen Mulhall reorients our sense of the philosophical work each text aims to accomplish, to engender a critical dialogue betweeen them from which the elements of a new conception of philosophy might emerge, and to uncover that conception's indebtedness to certain fundamental theological preoccupations.
Inheritance and Originality is worth reading for anyone interested in a close and nuanced reading of Wittgenstein, Heidegger, and Kierkegaard.
Table of Contents:
Introduction
Modernist Origins: Reading Stanley Cavell's The Claim of Reason
Part One
Wittgenstein's Vision of Language: Reading the Philosophical Investigations
Part Two
Heidegger's Vision of Scepticism: Reading Being and Time and What is Called Thinking?
Part Three
Kierkegaard's Vision of Religion: Reading Philosophical Fragments, Fear and Trembling, and Repetition
Acknowledgements
Bibliography