Don't forget to live : Goethe and the tradition of spiritual exercises

Bibliographic Information

Don't forget to live : Goethe and the tradition of spiritual exercises

Pierre Hadot ; translated by Michael Chase ; with a foreword by Arnold I. Davidson and Daniele Lorenzini

(The France Chicago collection)

University of Chicago Press, c2023

  • : cloth

Other Title

N'oublie pas de vivre : Goethe et la tradition des exercices spirituels

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Note

"Editions Albin Michel - Paris 2008"--T.p. verso

Includes bibliographical references and index

Contents of Works

  • "The present is the only goddess I adore"
  • The view from above and the cosmic journey
  • The wings of hope : the Urworte
  • The yes to life and the world

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The esteemed French philosopher Pierre Hadot's final work, now available in English. With a foreword by Arnold I. Davidson and Daniele Lorenzini. In his final book, renowned philosopher Pierre Hadot explores Goethe's relationship with ancient spiritual exercises-transformative acts of intellect, imagination, or will. Goethe sought both an intense experience of the present moment as well as a kind of cosmic consciousness, both of which are rooted in ancient philosophical practices. These practices shaped Goethe's audacious contrast to the traditional maxim memento mori (Don't forget that you will die) with the aim of transforming our ordinary consciousness. Ultimately, Hadot reveals how Goethe cultivated a deep love for life that brings to the forefront a new maxim: Don't forget to live.

Table of Contents

Translator's Introduction Preface 1. "The Present Is the Only Goddess I Adore" Faust and Helen The Present, the Trivial, and the Ideal Idyllic Arcadia Unconscious Health or Conquered Serenity? The Philosophical Experience of the Present The Tradition of Ancient Philosophy in Goethe The Present, the Instant, and Being-There in Goethe 2. The View from Above and the Cosmic Journey The Instant and the View from Above The View from Above in Antiquity: Peaks and Flight of the Imagination The Philosophical Meaning of the View from Above among Ancient Philosophers The Medieval and Modern Tradition The Various Forms of the View from Above in Goethe The View from Above after Goethe Aeronauts and Cosmonauts 3. The Wings of Hope: The Urworte Daimon, Tukhe Daimon, Tukhe, Eros, Ananke, and Elpis Human Destiny Autobiographical Aspects? The Caduceus Elpis, Hope 4. The Yes to Life and the World Great Is the Joy of Being-There (Freude des Daseins) Greater Still Is the Joy One Feels in Existence Itself (Freude am Dasein) The Yes to Becoming and the Terrifying Goethe and Nietzsche Conclusion Translator's Note Notes Bibliography Index

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