The Philosophy of SchopenhauerMcGill-Queen's Press - MQUP, 2005 - 305 páginas Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860) crafted one of the most unified philosophical systems by synthesizing Plato, Kant, and Asian religious traditions such as Buddhism and Hinduism into an encyclopedic worldview that combines the empirical science of his day with Eastern mysticism in a radically idealist metaphysics and epistemology. In "The Philosophy of Schopenhauer," Dale Jacquette assesses Schopenhauer's philosophical enterprise and the astonishing implications it has for metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, political philosophy, aesthetics, logic, science, and religion. Jacquette analyses the central topics in Schopenhauer's philosophy, including his so-called pessimistic appraisal of the human condition, his examination of the concept of death, his dualistic analysis of free will, and his simplified non-Kantian theory of morality. His metaphysics of the world as representation and Will--his most important and controversial contribution--is discussed in depth. The legacy of Schopenhauer's ideas, in particular his influence on Nietzsche, who was first a follower and then an arch opponent, and the early Wittgenstein, is explored in the final chapter. This introduction makes even the most difficult of Schopenhauer's ideas accessible without sacrificing any of their complexity. |
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Contenido
Schopenhauers idealism | 11 |
from | 40 |
Willing and the world as Will | 71 |
Suffering salvation death and renunciation of the will to life | 108 |
Art and aesthetics of the beautiful and sublime | 145 |
Transcendental freedom of Will | 180 |
Compassion as the philosophical foundation of morality | 203 |
Schopenhauers legacy in the philosophy of Nietzsche | 234 |
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Términos y frases comunes
according to Schopenhauer actions aesthetic genius appears argument Arthur Schopenhauer artistic ascetic basis beauty body Buddhism categorical imperative causal compassion concept consciousness critical death desire distinction egoistic empirical epistemology essay existence of thing-in-itself experience explanation expression fact fourfold root freedom G. H. von Wright hauer Heidegger human in-itself inner nature intelligible character intuitive knowledge Janaway judgement Kant Kant's Kantian laws logical mathematical merely metaphysics moral philosophy motivation motivational laws natural science Nietzsche Nietzsche's noumenon perceived perception person phenomenal world physical Platonic Ideas possible presupposed principium individuationis principle of sufficient proof proposition psychological pure rational reality recognize relation representationally Schopen Schopenhauer argues Schopenhauer believes Schopenhauer regards Schopenhauer's aesthetics Schopenhauer's philosophy Schopenhauerian sense space subjective idealism sublime suffering sufficient reason suicide supposed thing-in thing-in-itself things thinkers thinking subject thought tion Tractatus transcendent transcendental idealism true truth understanding Will's objectification Wittgenstein world as representation