Anthropology's Interrogation of Philosophy from the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Century

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A01=Jerome Fanning Marsden Carroll
aesthetics
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agency
animism
anthropology
Author_Jerome Fanning Marsden Carroll
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being
body
Cassirer
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Charles Taylor
continental philosophy
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dualism
eighteenth-century studies
empiricism
epistemology
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Ernst Platner
ethics
Foucault
Gehlen
German history
German studies
Hans Blumenberg
Hegel
Heidegger
Herder
historicism
holism
human nature
Husserl
infinite
Kant
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life-world
mechanism
Merleau-Ponty
metaphysics
naturalism
ontology
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phenomenology
philosophical anthropology
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psychology
Scheler
Schiller
self
softlaunch
subjectivity
Uexkull
vitalism

Product details

  • ISBN 9781498558006
  • Weight: 503g
  • Dimensions: 160 x 238mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Dec 2017
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Anthropology's Interrogation of Philosophy from the Eighteenth to the Twentieth Century presents and discusses key aspects of the German tradition of philosophical anthropology from the eighteenth to the twentieth century, centering on the concept of anthropology as a study of the ‘whole, concrete man’ (Heinrich Weber, 1810). Philosophical anthropology appears during the last decades of the eighteenth century in the often practically-oriented writings of men
such as Ernst Platner, Karl Wezel, and Johann Herder, and is then taken up in the twentieth century by thinkers including Max Scheler, Helmut Plessner, Arnold Gehlen, and Hans Blumenberg.

In presenting this tradition, the book serves two primary purposes. Firstly, it introduces English readers in a coherent manner to key aspects of a two-hundred year tradition in German thought. Secondly, the book analyzes in an unprecedented manner, even in German scholarship, the connections between the philosophical debates associated with anthropology at the end of the eighteenth century and ongoing philosophical issues in the twentieth century. Specifically, author Jerome Carroll argues that late eighteenth century anthropology diverges pointedly from traditional, "foundational" approaches to philosophy, for instance rejecting philosophy’s quest for absolute foundations for knowledge or a priori categories and turning to a more descriptive account of man’s "being in the world." Notably, by drawing on the epistemological, ontological, and methodological aspects and implications of anthropological holism, this book reads the philosophical significance of classical twentieth century anthropology through the lens of eighteenth century writings on anthropology.

Jerome Fanning Marsden Carroll is lecturer at the University of Nottingham.

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