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Many philosophical accounts of reason are geared toward providing rational justifications ex post facto rather than accounting for the role reason plays in actu in the process of creative work. Moreover, when in actu accounts of reason are given, they are usually too narrow to describe the sort of high-level creative work that is involved in the composition of poetry or the creation of a scientific theory. This book suggests that the rudiments of a broader account are found in various German Idealist figures, most notably the philosopher-novelist-critic Friedrich Schlegel and the philosophical poet and novelist Friedrich Hölderlin. However, German Idealism generally is subject to Hans Blumenberg 's secularization critique which provides a strong prima facie argument that the accounts of poetic reason suggested by Schlegel and Hölderlin are indefensible. This book argues that confronting Blumenberg's secularization critique and his associated legitimation of modernity with a romantic conception of poetic reason requires revisions on both sides, and that the work of Lacan is especially well-suited to provide the conditions upon which a legitimation of poetic reason can be provided.
Provides a broad account of poetic reason Draws on the insights of Friedrich Schlegel and Friedrich Hölderlin Incorporates Hans Blumenberg 's secularization critique
Auteur
O. Bradley Bassler is Associate Professor, Emeritus at the University of Georgia, Athens, USA. He has published five previous books, including two with Palgrave Macmillan: Diagnosing Contemporary Philosophy with the Matrix Movies (2017) and Kant, Shelley and the Visionary Critique of Metaphysics (2018).
Contenu
PART I: A Limited Legitimation for Romantic Poetics.- 1. Reason, Poiesis and Paraphysics.- 2. Benjamin/Schlegel: Cavell/Wittgenstein.- PART II: The Poetic Subject.- 3. Lacan's Freudian Subject in the Écrits.- 4. Looking Back: A Genealogy of the Subject-(dis)-continuum from Pascal to Lacan.- 5. Analysis as Opposed to What?.- 6. Between Psychoanalysis and Structuralism.- PART III: The Logic of Lyric and Poetic Legitimation.- 7. The Logic of Lyric (Part One).- 8. The Logic of Lyric (Part Two).- PART IV: The Legitimacy of Poetic Reason.- 9. Priming the Deduction: The Medium of Reflection and The Poetic Subject.- 10. Modernity and the Transcendental Deduction of Poetic Reason.- 11. The Esoteric Geometry of Poetic Reason.