Eric Voegelin`s Late Meditations and Essays – Critical Commentary Companions
Autor Michael Franzen Limba Engleză Paperback – 11 mar 2024
Voegelin’s books gave rise to a vast secondary literature that continues to grow, yet the exceptionally impactful late essays and meditative works have never received the scholarly commentaries they deserve because they were published originally as journal articles or chapters in edited collections. This volume remedies that shortcoming with 14 critical analyses that elucidate the late essays while also addressing their implications for the entirety of Voegelin’s thought. The commentaries will prove invaluable to students and scholars in political science, philosophy, history, theology, and other disciplines, serving as a companion piece to the singularly important Vol. 12 of Voegelin’s Collected Works, Published Essays 1966–1985.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781587312366
ISBN-10: 1587312360
Pagini: 376
Dimensiuni: 152 x 228 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10: 1587312360
Pagini: 376
Dimensiuni: 152 x 228 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Recenzii
Eric Voegelin’s life work is best understood as a “zetema,” a philosopher’s life-long quest for truth, one that underwent substantial changes during the final phase of his quest. As Michael Franz explains in his Introduction, Voegelin’s last essays have not received the critical attention they deserve, yet they contain the most refined formulations of his thought. Franz has succeeded in enlisting scholars thoroughly aquatinted with Voegelin’s voluminous publications who are well qualified to analyze the theoretical advances in these last essays and relate them to the better-known, previous stages of his exploration of orders and disorders of the soul and of society.
—Stephen A. McKnight, Professor Emeritus of European Intellectual and Cultural History, University of Florida
Eric Voegelin was the most important political philosopher of the twentieth century. He not only stood up for liberal democracy and common sense against both Hitler and Stalin, working to understand the experiences that gave rise to their followings. Although his fully mature writings moved on from an early tendency to attribute many modern political and spiritual ills to a pattern of thinking he called “gnosticism,” many readers still tend to interpret his thought as centered on this outdated concept, which Voegelin himself later left behind. The analyses in this volume focus on essays representing his most developed and profound thought, offering us a more rounded understanding and enabling us to see how Voegelin can help us address the political and spiritual challenges of our present time.
—Eugene Webb, Professor Emeritus, The Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington
—Stephen A. McKnight, Professor Emeritus of European Intellectual and Cultural History, University of Florida
Eric Voegelin was the most important political philosopher of the twentieth century. He not only stood up for liberal democracy and common sense against both Hitler and Stalin, working to understand the experiences that gave rise to their followings. Although his fully mature writings moved on from an early tendency to attribute many modern political and spiritual ills to a pattern of thinking he called “gnosticism,” many readers still tend to interpret his thought as centered on this outdated concept, which Voegelin himself later left behind. The analyses in this volume focus on essays representing his most developed and profound thought, offering us a more rounded understanding and enabling us to see how Voegelin can help us address the political and spiritual challenges of our present time.
—Eugene Webb, Professor Emeritus, The Henry M. Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington
Notă biografică
Michael Franz is Professor of Political Science at Loyola University Maryland. He is the author of Eric Voegelin and the Politics of Spiritual Revolt: The Roots of Modern Ideology, and editor of The Ecumenic Age, Vol. IV of Voegelin’s Order and History, Vol. 17 in The Collected Works of Eric Voegelin. His research and teaching focus on political theory and the philosophy of history, with special emphasis on political violence and terrorism engendered by disordered spirituality and ideological consciousness.
Cuprins
Introduction: Michael Franz
Chapter 1: Voegelin’s “The German University and the Order of German Society: A Reconsideration of the Nazi Era" – Barry Cooper
Chapter 2: Voegelin’s On Debate and Existence” – Steven F. McGuire
Chapter 3: Voegelin’s "Immortality: Experience and Symbol" – Henrik Syse
Chapter 4: Voegelin’s “Configurations of History” – Paul Kidder
Chapter 5: Voegelin’s “Equivalences of Experience and Symbolization in History” – Glenn Hughes
Chapter 6: Voegelin‘s “On Henry James’s Turn of the Screw” – Charles R. Embry
Chapter 7: Voegelin’s “The Gospel and Culture” – Thomas Heilke
Chapter 8: Voegelin’s “On Hegel: A Study in Sorcery” – David Walsh
Chapter 9: Voegelin’s “On Classical Studies” – Julianne M. Romanello
Chapter 10: Voegelin’s “Reason: The Classic Experience” – William Petropulos
Chapter 11: Voegelin’s “Response to Professor Altizer” – Paulette Kidder
Chapter 12: Voegelin’s “Remembrance of Things Past” – Paul Kidder
Chapter 13: Voegelin’s "Wisdom and the Magic of the Extreme: A Meditation” – Michael Franz
Chapter 14: Voegelin’s “Quod Deus Dicitur” — Thomas Heilke with Paul Caringella
Index
Chapter 1: Voegelin’s “The German University and the Order of German Society: A Reconsideration of the Nazi Era" – Barry Cooper
Chapter 2: Voegelin’s On Debate and Existence” – Steven F. McGuire
Chapter 3: Voegelin’s "Immortality: Experience and Symbol" – Henrik Syse
Chapter 4: Voegelin’s “Configurations of History” – Paul Kidder
Chapter 5: Voegelin’s “Equivalences of Experience and Symbolization in History” – Glenn Hughes
Chapter 6: Voegelin‘s “On Henry James’s Turn of the Screw” – Charles R. Embry
Chapter 7: Voegelin’s “The Gospel and Culture” – Thomas Heilke
Chapter 8: Voegelin’s “On Hegel: A Study in Sorcery” – David Walsh
Chapter 9: Voegelin’s “On Classical Studies” – Julianne M. Romanello
Chapter 10: Voegelin’s “Reason: The Classic Experience” – William Petropulos
Chapter 11: Voegelin’s “Response to Professor Altizer” – Paulette Kidder
Chapter 12: Voegelin’s “Remembrance of Things Past” – Paul Kidder
Chapter 13: Voegelin’s "Wisdom and the Magic of the Extreme: A Meditation” – Michael Franz
Chapter 14: Voegelin’s “Quod Deus Dicitur” — Thomas Heilke with Paul Caringella
Index