Recovering reason : essays in honor of Thomas L. Pangle

書誌事項

Recovering reason : essays in honor of Thomas L. Pangle

edited by Timothy Burns

Lexington Books, c2010

  • : pbk

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注記

Includes bibliographical references (p. 465-474) and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

Recovering Reason: Essays in Honor of Thomas L. Pangle is a collection of essays composed by students and friends of Thomas L. Pangle to honor his seminal work and outstanding guidance in the study of political philosophy. The contributors write in awareness that a loss of confidence in reason similar to the one we are witnessing today- when the desirability and possibility of guiding our lives by the enduring, normative truths that reason attempts to discover -had occurred at the time of Socrates, who realized that the existence of genuine limits to what is knowable by reason opened up the possibility that our world, instead of having the kind of intelligible necessities that science seeks to uncover, could be the work of mysterious, creative gods or god-as devoutly religious citizens claimed it to be. His grasp of this great difficulty led him and his students-ancient and medieval-to attempt to ground the life of reason by means of a pre-philosophic, preliminary investigation of political-moral questions. Modern political philosophers later attempted to ground the life of reason in a considerably different, 'enlightening' way. These essays examine both of these attempts to answer the question of the right life for human beings, as those attempts are introduced and elaborated in the work of thinkers from Homer and Thucydides to Nietzsche and Charles Taylor. The volume is divided into five parts. The essays in Part I examine the moral-political problems through which Socrates came to ground the philosophic life as those problems first appeared in earlier, pre-Socratic writers. Part II explores those problems in their Platonic and Aristotelian presentations, and in the work of two medieval thinkers. Part III addresses the thought of Leo Strauss, the thinker upon whose work the recovery of both ancient and modern political philosophy in our day has been made possible. Part IV explicates the writings of modern political philosophers and thinkers with a view to uncovering their alternative approach to science and political life. The volume concludes in Part V with essays addressing contemporary problems enlightened by the study of political philosophy.

目次

  • 1 Acknowledgements 2 Introduction Part 3 I: Pre-Socratic Thought Chapter 4 1. Homer and the Foundation of Classical Civilization Chapter 5 2. Prometheus and Oedipus: The Arrogance and Limits of Art and Reason Chapter 6 3. What War Discloses Chapter 7 4. The Classical Rationalism of Thucydides Chapter 8 5. The Aristophanic Question Chapter 9 6. On the Power of Rhetoric: Gorgias and the Philosophic Foundation of Sophistry Part 10 Part II: Socratic Rationalism Chapter 11 7. Socrates and the Sophists Chapter 12 8. Thrasymachus' Blush Chapter 13 9. Civic or Human Virtue in Aristotle's Politics Chapter 14 10. Happiness in the Perspective of Philosophy Chapter 15 11. The Problem of Providence in Maimonides' Guide of the Perplexed Chapter 16 12. A Slingshot Recoils: The Critique of Philosophy in Halevi's Kuzari Part 17 III: On Leo Strauss Chapter 18 13. Thinking Nietzsche Through and Strauss's Recovery of Classical Political Philosophy Chapter 19 14. John Toland and Leo Strauss on Esoteric Writing Chapter 20 15. Did Plato Believe in his own Metaphysics? And Did Strauss? Chapter 21 16. Leo Strauss on Machiavelli and the Origins of Modernity Part 22 IV: Modern Political Philosophy Chapter 23 17. Aristotelian Kingship and Lockean Prerogative Chapter 24 18. "For Which Human Nature Can Never Be Too Grateful": Montesquieu as the Heir of Christianity Chapter 25 19. "They Flock Into Cities
  • Their Situation is Less Precarious": David Hume and the Intellectual Origins of the American Founding Chapter 26 20. Rousseau on the Philosophic Life Les reveries du Promeneur Solitaire Chapter 27 21. Schiller on Aesthetic Education: Radicalization by Return Chapter 28 22. Stendhal and the Promise of Happiness: An Introduction to the Charterhouse of Parma Chapter 29 23. Tocqueville's Burke, or Story as History Part 30 V: Contemporary Issues and political philosophy Chapter 31 24. Corrupting or Edifying? Cato the Elder and Cicero on the Role of Philosophy in Roman Civic Education Chapter 32 25. Abstract Painting and the Rule of Doubt Chapter 33 26. Kissinger and Thucydides Chapter 34 27. Charles Taylor as a Theorist of MulticulturalismRecognition/Authenticity Chapter 35 28. Neuroplasticity, Perfectibility, and Three Ideas of Nature 36 Bibliography of the Published Work of Thomas L. Pangle 37 Index 38 About the Contributors

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