Art, Origins, Otherness: Between Philosophy and ArtState University of New York Press, 2012 M02 1 - 318 páginas Though our time is often said to be post-religious and post-metaphysical, many continue to seek some encounter with otherness and transcendence in art. This book deals diversely with the issues of art, origins, and otherness, both in themselves and in philosophical engagements with the works of Plato, Kant, Hegel, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche, and Heidegger. Addressing themes such as eros and mania, genius and the sublime, transcendence and the saving power of art, William Desmond tries to make sense of the paradox that too much has been asked of art that now almost nothing is asked of it. He argues that there is more to be said philosophically of art, and claims that art has the power to open up mindfulness beyond objectifying knowledge, as well as beyond thinking that claims to be entirely self-determining. |
Contenido
1 | |
On Platonic Originals | 19 |
On Kant and the Transcendental Origin | 53 |
Hegel and the Dialectical Origin | 87 |
On Architecture and the Finer Enchantments of Transcendence | 115 |
Schopenhauer and the Eros Turannos of Origin | 131 |
Nietzsche and the Dionysian Origin | 165 |
Heideggers Equivocity and the Still Unthought Between | 209 |
On the End of Art and the Task of Metaphysics | 265 |
295 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
absolute aesthetic agapeic agapeic origin art’s articulation artist autonomy beauty becomes Birth of Tragedy chapter claim communication conatus concept counterfeit creation creative Critique Critique of Judgment dark origin Demiurge determinate dialectical self-mediation difference Dionysian Dionysus divine divine madness dualism earth Enlightenment equivocal eros and mania erotic origin ethos evil excess finesse finite finitude genius giving Gothic Greek Hegel Hegelian Heidegger Heidegger’s hence human hyperbolic Idea idealism immanent intelligibility intimate inwardness Kant Kant’s Kantian logic mean mediation metaphysics metaxological metaxu mimesis mind modern moral nature Niet Nietzsche Nietzsche’s ontological ourselves passio essendi perhaps perplexity philosophy Plato plurivocal poet polemos porosity possible post-Kantian primal question radical reason relation release religion religious Romantic Romanticism scendence Schelling Schopenhauer Schopenhauer’s seems self-determination self-transcendence sense sensuous Socrates speak spirit sublime thing thinkers thought tion trans transcendence transcendental true truth Übermensch ultimate univocal zsche