Prix bas
CHF139.20
Impression sur demande - l'exemplaire sera recherché pour vous.
This set of original collected essays investigates the correlation between Nietzsches philosophy of time and his philosophy of history. Nietzsches attempt to rethink time affects the task of recording history. History can no longer be a discipline that merely registers the constellations of entities and objects that remain identical over time. While philosophy requires the corrective of history, the latter will have to be improved through a new conception of time.
In 1885 Nietzsche insisted that from now on philosophy was only acceptable 'as the most general form of history, as an attempt somehow to describe Heraclitean becoming and to abbreviate it into signs.' Taking this remark as a starting point, the aim of this volume is to examine the intricate relationship between Nietzsche's philosophy of time and his philosophy of history. The questions that arise include: What are the new conceptions of time that Nietzsche has to offer? What kind of historian was Nietzsche himself? What kinds of temporalized histories and historicized philosophies did he write or fail to write? This collection of essays, written by fourteen academics including eminent figures such as John Richardson, Raymond Geuss, Lawrence J. Hatab, and Andrea Orsucci, constitute essential reading for specialists of Nietzsche, and will also appeal to a larger audience of intellectual historians, philosophers and others who are interested in the development of modern thought.
Auteur
Manuel Dries, University of Cambridge, UK.
Texte du rabat
In 1885 Nietzsche insisted that from now on philosophy was only acceptable as the most general form of history, as an attempt somehow to describe Heraclitean becoming and to abbreviate it into signs. Taking this remark as a starting point, the aim of this volume is to examine the intricate relationship between Nietzsche s philosophy of time and his philosophy of history. The questions that arise include: What are the new conceptions of time that Nietzsche has to offer? What kind of historian was Nietzsche himself? What kinds of temporalized histories and historicized philosophies did he write or fail to write? This collection of essays, written by fourteen academics including eminent figures such as John Richardson, Raymond Geuss, Lawrence J. Hatab, and Andrea Orsucci, constitute essential reading for specialists of Nietzsche, and will also appeal to a larger audience of intellectual historians, philosophers and others who are interested in the development of modern thought.
Contenu
Manuel Dries: IntroductionPart I: Time, History, MethodAndrea Orsucci; Raymond Geuss; Thomas BrobjerPart II: Genealogy, Time, Becoming Tinneke Beeckman; R. Kevin Hill; John Richardson; Manuel DriesPart III: Eternal Recurrence, Meaning, Agency Lawrence J. Hatab; Paul S. Loeb; H. W. SiemensPart IV: Nietzsche's Contemporaries Anthony K. Jensen; Martin A. RühlPart V: Tragic and Musical TimeKatherine Harloe; Jonathan R. CohenGeneral BibliographyIndex