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Titre : | Spimoza and Other Heretics. Vol 2: The Adventures of Immanence |
Auteurs : | Yirmiyahu Yovel, Auteur |
Type de document : | texte imprimé |
Editeur : | Princeton [USA] : Princeton University Press, 1989 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-691-07346-0 |
Format : | xv + 225 p. |
Langues: | Anglais |
Index. décimale : | QW/C (Etudes sur des philosophes: Renaissance et Lumières (15e-17e s.)) |
Résumé : |
This ambitious and original study presents Baruch Spinoza (1632-1677) as the most outstanding thinker of modernity. Anticipating secularization, the rise of natural science, Bible criticism, the Enlightenment, the liberal-democratic state (and, for his fellow Jews, the disintegration of ghetto life), Spinoza grounded his philosophical revolution in a radically new principle called in this book “the philosophy of immanence”: according to this principle, this-worldly existence is all there is. and is thus the only source of ethical worth and political obligation. Drawing materials from history and literature as well as philosophy, Yirmiyahu Yovel follows Spinoza’s ideas in two complementary books—The Marrano of Reason and The Adventures of Immanence—sold.
** The Adventures of Immanence unveils the presence of Spinoza’s philosophical revolution in the work of later thinker: who helped shape the modern mind Yovel claims it is no accident that some of the most unorthodox and innovative figures in the past two centuries—including Goethe, Kant, Hegel, Heine, Marx Nietzsche, Freud, and Einstein—were profoundly (if sometimes implicitly) influenced by Spinoza and shared the essentials of his philosophy of immanence: immanent reality is all there is, it is the only source of valid social and political norms and absorbing this recognition is a precondition to whatever liberation or redemption is in store for humans. But what is immanent reality, and how is liberation to be construed? In a world that constitutes a retelling of much of Western intellectual history, Yovel analyzes the rival answers given to these questions from Kant to Freud and, in so doing throws new light on a number of thinker: from the perspective of this common Spinozistic problem. |
Note de contenu : |
- Preface - Note on sources - 1. Spinoza and Kant: Critique of Religion and Biblical Hermeneutics - 2. Spinoza and Hegel: The Immanent God— Substance or Spirit? - 3. Spinoza in Heine, Hess, Feuerbach: The Naturalization of Man - 4. Spinoza and Marx: Man-in-Nature and the Science of Redemption - 5. Spinoza and Nietzsche: Amor dei and Amor fati - 6. Spinoza and Freud: Self-Knowledge as Emancipation - 7. Epilogue: Immanence and Finitude - Notes - Index |
Exemplaires (1)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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QW/C Spin 005b | QW/C Spin 005b | Livre | Compactus | Livres empruntables | Prêt possible Disponible |