Paperback, 824 pages

English language

Published Oct. 15, 2003 by Indiana University Press.

ISBN:
978-0-253-21547-5
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
50441719

View on OpenLibrary

View on Inventaire

No rating (0 reviews)

In Broken Hegemonies, the late distinguished philosopher Reiner Schürmann offers a radical rethinking of the history of Western philosophy from the Greeks through Heidegger. Schürmann interprets the history of Western thought and action as a series of eras governed by the rise and fall of certain dominating philosophical ideas that contained the seeds of their own destruction. These eras coincided with their dominant languages: Greek, Latin, and vernacular tongues. Analyzing philosophical texts from Parmenides, Plotinus, and Cicero, through Augustine, Meister Eckhardt, and Kant, to Heidegger, Schürmann traces the arguments by which these ideas gained hegemony and by which their credibility was ultimately demolished. Recognizing the failure of ultimate norms, Broken Hegemonies questions how humanity today is to think and act in the absence of principles.

(Source: Project MUSE)

1 edition

Subjects

  • History of specific subjects
  • Western philosophy
  • Philosophy
  • Criticism
  • History & Surveys - General
  • History & Surveys - Ancient & Classical
  • History & Surveys - Modern
  • History
  • Knowledge, Theory of
  • Norm (Philosophy)
  • Phenomenology