The third in Vandeverlde and Iyer’s excellent series, this volume makes accessible in English a selection of essays from the <i>Gesammelte Werke </i>that foreground Gadamer’s engagement with the history of philosophy providing new insights into his reading of Plato and Hegel, as well as of Parmenides, Heraclitus, Oetinger, Herder and Schleiermacher. The translated texts are supplemented by a glossary and an extensive introductory essay. Thanks are due to Vandevelde and Iyer for yet another important addition to the growing body of Gadamer’s work available in English.
Jeff Malpas, Distinguished Professor, University of Tasmania, Australia
Translated for the first time, these essays on Plato, Hegel, and the Romantics remind us Gadamer still has much to teach us. The introductions by Vandevelde and Ayer to this volume, and to the first two, are some of the most important secondary sources on Gadamer’s thought from the last 25 years.
David Vessey, Professor of Philosophy, Grand Valley State University, USA
Throughout his long career, Gadamer wrote and taught widely on the philosophy of the ancient world and on the connection between thinking and history. This volume exposes us to Gadamer’s late views on ancient philosophy, written between 1982 and 1990, his rehabilitation of certain eighteenth- and nineteenth-century thinkers (Oetinger, Herder and Schleiermacher) and his life-long contribution to our understanding of the significance of Hegel (from 1939 to 1990). They thus show us the transformation of his thinking on the history of philosophy over the different periods of his academic career.
Ancient Sources, Modern Appropriations is a remarkable demonstration and illustration of how the study of the history of philosophy contributes to the task of doing philosophy by keeping a tradition alive and offering a future to the thinkers of the past. This third volume also includes a substantial critical introduction, a critical apparatus of notes, and several glossaries.
Acknowledgements
Translators’ Preface
Translators’ Introduction
I What Do We Do When We Interpret? (by Pol Vandevelde)
II On the Art of Reading (by Arun Iyer)
Part I: Ancient Philosophy
1. Parmenides or Why Being Pertains to This World (1988)
2. Plato’s Thinking through Utopias: A Lecture Addressed to Philologists (1983)
3. Mathematics and Dialectic in Plato (1982)
4. Dialectic Is not What Sophists Do: What Theaetetus Learns in the Sophist (1990)
Part II: Modern Philosophy
5. Oetinger as Philosopher (1964)
6. Herder and the Historical World (1967)
7. Schleiermacher as Platonist (1969)
8. Hegel and Heraclitus (1990)
9. Hegel and the Historical Spirit (1939)
10. Hegel and Heidelberg Romanticism (1961)
Notes
Appendix: Glossary of German Terms
Glossary of Ancient Greek Terms and Expressions
Glossary of Other Foreign Terms and Expressions
Works Cited by Gadamer
Index of Names
Index of subjects
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Hans-Georg Gadamer was born on 11 February 1900 and died on 13 March 2002. He was the author, most notably, of Truth and Method, and, more recently, of The Beginning of Philosophy and The Beginning of Knowledge.
Arun Iyer is an instructor in Philosophy at Seattle University, USA. He is the author of Towards an Epistemology of Ruptures: The Case of Heidegger and Foucault (2014).
Pol Vandevelde is Professor of Philosophy at Marquette University, USA. His previous publications include Être et Discours: La Question du Langage dans L'itinéraire de Heidegger (1927-1938) (1994) The Task of the Interpreter: Text, Meaning, and Negotiation (2005) and Heidegger and the Romantics: the Literary Invention of Meaning (2012).