Search without idols

Bibliographic Information

Search without idols

by William Horosz

(Martinus Nijhoff philosophy library, v. 17)

M. Nijhoff, 1987

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Search Without Idols is a study of human transcendence in the context of human striving, projecting, surpassing, overcoming. This power is central to man's search for wholeness. Such transcendence makes reality tolerable. It provides us with ~m impressive array of human responses which enable us to cope. But it also provides the excesses that go beyond human striving. Nothing seems to be off-limits to this ubiquitous power. Such a state of surpassing limits is what we find in the relation between the human search for wholeness and the quest for external totalities which lies beyond the human context. Such soaring flights beyond the capacity of human striving are hard to control, impossible to show responsibility-for and beyond the reach of criteria. The reach exceeds both our grasp and our control. Transcendence, then, is a greatly used and much abuse~ human power. Its activities have never ceased to amaze me, its excesses have always troubled me even from the beginning of my studies. This book is not an exercise in self-clarification. I have some thoughts on the matter which I wish to share with the reader. Perhaps we can mutually appreciate the great gift without compromising our sanity. Part I will provide a new look at the meaning of transcendence.

Table of Contents

I Toward a New Perspective on Totalities.- 1 The dimensions and language of transcendence.- 2 Reification and the birth of totalities.- 3 The nature and the meaning of the totalist.- 4 Projectivism and the finite search for wholeness.- 5 Projectivism and the dismantling of totalities.- II A Critical Look at Modern Totalities.- Section one: Marxist literature.- 6 Marx and history.- 7 Sociology, ontology and totality in Georg Lukacs.- 8 The critique of domination in the Frankfurt School.- Section two: Totalisms in phenomenology and phenomenological ontology.- 9 Husserl’s world of infinite transcendence.- 10 From Dasein to Being in Heidegger’s totality.- 11 Totalism versus subjectivism in Gadamer’s hermeneutics.- 12 Finite transcendence and its idol: infinite transcendence.

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