What is at stake in that form of inquiry that the western
philosophical tradition has called “first philosophy” or
“metaphysics”? Is it an abstract, now outmoded branch of
philosophy, or does it address a problem that is still of great
interest - namely the unity of western knowledge?
In fact, metaphysics is “first” only in relation to the other two
sciences that Aristotle called “theoretical”: the study of nature
(_phusik_x0013__) and mathematics. It is the strategic sense of this
“primacy” that needs to be examined, because what is at issue here
is nothing less than the relationship - of domination or subservience,
conflict or harmony - between philosophy and science. The hypothesis
of this book is that philosophy’s attempt to use metaphysics as a
way of securing primacy among the sciences has resulted instead in its
subservience: philosophy, once handmaiden to theology (ancilla
theologiae), has now become more or less consciously handmaiden to the
sciences (ancilla scientiarum). So it is all the more urgent to
explore the nature and limits of this primacy and subservience, which
is what the present book does through an archaeological investigation
of metaphysics.
This important rereading of the western philosophical tradition by a
leading thinker will be of interest to students and scholars in
philosophy, critical theory and the humanities more generally, and to
anyone interested in contemporary philosophy and European thought.
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Western Knowledge between Metaphysics and the Sciences
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781509560530
Publisert
2024
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Polity
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter