In this chapter, Kristian Larsen tackles Jacob Klein’s philosophical reinterpretation of Platonic dialectic and his diagnosis of modernity as a second Platonic “cave,” alienating us from ourselves and the world. Larsen seeks to circumscribe characteristic features of Klein’s view of the difference between ancient and modern science and philosophy by comparing his understanding of modernity with those of Martin Heidegger and Leo Strauss. The “return to ancient philosophy” associated with Klein and Strauss, Larsen argues, must be seen as critical responses to Heidegger’s “destructive” reading of Greek philosophy. Like Strauss, Klein agrees with Husserl and Heidegger that the modern conception of rationality is deeply flawed and that the twent...
In the last quarter of the twentieth century the concept of postmodernism, and the associated notion...
Introduction When, in 1936, Heidegger states that a new beginning for western philosophy can only de...
This paper pursues the lsquo;thinking dialoguersquo; between Hegel and Heidegger, a dialogue centred...
One of the distinctive features of Modernity is that Modernity represents in itself a problem for ph...
In the current article I discuss the different ways in which Leo Strauss and Jacob Klein interpret t...
Tackling important philosophical questions on modernity - what it is, where it begins and when it en...
This essay compares how four important figures in German philosophy have reacted in important ways t...
A discussion of the logical role of particular concepts in Robert Pippin's reading Hegel as a theori...
This article aims to bring to light the unpolitical nature of the philosophical investigation. To p...
I begin by arguing that Hegel’s general project of the selffulfilment of philosophy is to be read a...
Hegel's influence on post-Hegelian philosophy is as profound as it is ambiguous. Modern philosophy i...
Modernity and What Has Been Lost comes out of a conference held at the Jagiellonian University in Kr...
The debate surrounding the way in which Heidegger and Blumenberg understand the modern age is an opp...
<p>Martin Heidegger is generally regarded as one of the most significant—if also the most controvers...
Hegel's Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences can be read as an interpretation and critique of ...
In the last quarter of the twentieth century the concept of postmodernism, and the associated notion...
Introduction When, in 1936, Heidegger states that a new beginning for western philosophy can only de...
This paper pursues the lsquo;thinking dialoguersquo; between Hegel and Heidegger, a dialogue centred...
One of the distinctive features of Modernity is that Modernity represents in itself a problem for ph...
In the current article I discuss the different ways in which Leo Strauss and Jacob Klein interpret t...
Tackling important philosophical questions on modernity - what it is, where it begins and when it en...
This essay compares how four important figures in German philosophy have reacted in important ways t...
A discussion of the logical role of particular concepts in Robert Pippin's reading Hegel as a theori...
This article aims to bring to light the unpolitical nature of the philosophical investigation. To p...
I begin by arguing that Hegel’s general project of the selffulfilment of philosophy is to be read a...
Hegel's influence on post-Hegelian philosophy is as profound as it is ambiguous. Modern philosophy i...
Modernity and What Has Been Lost comes out of a conference held at the Jagiellonian University in Kr...
The debate surrounding the way in which Heidegger and Blumenberg understand the modern age is an opp...
<p>Martin Heidegger is generally regarded as one of the most significant—if also the most controvers...
Hegel's Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences can be read as an interpretation and critique of ...
In the last quarter of the twentieth century the concept of postmodernism, and the associated notion...
Introduction When, in 1936, Heidegger states that a new beginning for western philosophy can only de...
This paper pursues the lsquo;thinking dialoguersquo; between Hegel and Heidegger, a dialogue centred...