Modernity and what has been lost : considerations on the legacy of Leo Strauss

著者

    • Armada, Pawel
    • Górnisiewicz, Arkadiusz

書誌事項

Modernity and what has been lost : considerations on the legacy of Leo Strauss

edited by Pawel Armada and Arkadiusz Górnisiewicz

St. Augustine's Press, [2011]

  • : pbk. : alk. paper

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and indexes

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Modernity and What Has Been Lost comes out of a conference held at the Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland, on June 4-5, 2009 that sought to identify Leo Strauss's intellectual background in re: the repudiation of a modern idea of homogenous, universal state (considered as an illegitimate synthesis of Jerusalem and Athens, i.e., the claims of Reason and Revelation). The world we live in, molded by science and historical relativism, may be described as hostile to human dignity or perfection, or abhorrent to those who love the search for wisdom. Straussian teaching consisted in the steady effort to reopen "the quarrel between the Ancients and the Moderns," and refers to the esoteric way of writing practiced by the most profound thinkers of the past which has been apparently forgotten in the last three centuries. Strauss binds the concept of natural right with the question of maintenance of conditions for philosophizing, and it probably seems to him that such defense of philosophy is the highest task in our times. However, one must be well aware that philosophizing always means a perilous way of life. Indeed, it may be destructive of the city (polis) itself as far as the city exists due to some crucial beliefs the philosopher might put in doubt. Reflecting on those issues, Strauss engaged in several highly important debates with his contemporaries, in an open way with, e.g., Carl Schmitt, Karl Loewith and Alexandre Kojeve, and more tacitly with Martin Heidegger.

目次

Heinrich Meier, Why Leo Strauss? Four Answers and One Consideration concerning the Uses and Disadvantages of the School for the Philosophical Life Daniel Tanguay, Leo Strauss and the Contemporary Return to Political Philosophy Nathan Tarcov, Philosophy as the Right Way of Life in Natural Right and History David Janssens, The Philosopher's Ancient Clothes: Leo Strauss on Philosophy and Poetry Pawel Armada, Leo Strauss as Erzieher: The Defense of the Philosophical Life or the Defense of Life against Philosophy Jurgen Gebhardt, Modern Challenges - Platonic Responses: Strauss, Arendt, Voegelin Arkadiusz Gornisiewicz, Karl Loewith and Leo Strauss on Modernity, Secularization, and Nihilism Emmanuel Patard, Remarks on the Strauss-Kojeve Dialogue and Its Presuppositions Piotr Nowak, Carl Schmitt and His Critic Till Kinzel, Postmodernism and the Art of Writing: The Importance of Leo Strauss for the 21st Century Laurence Lampert, Leo Strauss's Gynaikologia

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