34 Notes 265 Bibliography and Recommended Reading 281 Index 291

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

34 Notes 265 Bibliography and Recommended Reading 281 Index 291 The Philosophy of Schopenhauer Continental European Philosophy This series provides accessible and stimulating introductions to the ideas of continental thinkers who have shaped the fundamentals of European philo- sophical thought. Powerful and radical, the ideas of these philosophers have often been contested, but they remain key to understanding current philo- sophical thinking as well as the current direction of disciplines such as political science, literary theory, comparative literature, art history, and cultural studies. Each book seeks to combine clarity with depth, introducing fresh insights and wider perspectives while also providing a comprehensive survey of each thinkers philosophical ideas. Published titles The Philosophy of Gadamer Jean Grondin The Philosophy of Merleau-Ponty Eric Matthews The Philosophy of Nietzsche Rex Welshon The Philosophy of Schopenhauer Dale Jacquette Forthcoming titles include The Philosophy of Deleuze The Philosophy of Husserl Peter Sedgwick Burt Hopkins The Philosophy of Derrida The Philosophy of Kant Mark Dooley and Liam Kavanagh Jim OShea The Philosophy of Foucault The Philosophy of Kierkegaard Todd May George Pattison The Philosophy of Habermas The Philosophy of Marx Andrew Edgar Mark Neocleous The Philosophy of Hegel The Philosophy of Rousseau Allen Speight Patrick Riley, Sr and Patrick Riley, Jr The Philosophy of Heidegger The Philosophy of Sartre Jeff Malpas Anthony Hatzimoysis The Philosophy of Schopenhauer Dale Jacquette © Dale Jacquette, 2005 This book is copyright under the Berne Convention. No reproduction without permission. All rights reserved. First published in 2005 by Acumen Acumen Publishing Limited 15a Lewins Yard East Street Chesham Bucks HP5 1HQ www.acumenpublishing.co.uk ISBN: 1-84465-008-1 (hardcover) ISBN: 1-84465-009-X (paperback) British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. Designed and typeset in Classical Garamond by Kate Williams, Swansea. Printed and bound by Biddles Limited, Kings Lynn. Contents Preface vii Acknowledgements x A note on texts and terminology xi Abbreviations xiii Introduction: Schopenhauers life and times 1 1 Schopenhauers idealism 11 2 Empirical knowledge of the world as representation: from natural science to transcendental metaphysics 40 3 Willing and the world as Will 71 4 Suffering, salvation, death, and renunciation of the will to life 108 5 Art and aesthetics of the beautiful and sublime 145 6 Transcendental freedom of Will 180 7 Compassion as the philosophical foundation of morality 203 8 Schopenhauers legacy in the philosophy of Nietzsche, Heidegger and the early Wittgenstein 234 Notes 265 Bibliography and recommended reading 281 Index 291 v For Tina, as always, with love Preface I came to Schopenhauer indirectly through a prior interest in the philosophy of Wittgenstein. In particular, I wanted to understand what Wittgenstein means in Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus 6.4211, when he says that Ethics is transcendent. Ethics and aesthetics are one. The secondary literature hinted that Schopenhauers philosophy might provide the key. While this was a tantalizing clue, it did not by itself resolve my uncertainty, but only led to more and more careful reading and rereading of Schopenhauers works. It was not long in this process before my original motives for studying Schopenhauer ripened into a lasting involvement with all aspects of his thought on its own terms and for its own sake. As an undergraduate I read Schopenhauers Fourfold Root of the Princi- ple of Sufficient Reason and both volumes of The World as Will and Repre- sentation in translation. This first exposure to Schopenhauer gave me a rough idea of his philosophy and its relation to the philosophies of Plato and Kant, just as at the time I had only a rough idea of the philosophies of Plato and Kant. It was insufficient background later on to help me clarify what I now see as the early Wittgensteins debt to Schopenhauers transcendental- ism, not only in the identification of ethics with aesthetics and his concept of the metaphysical subject or philosophical I, but in every aspect of his philosophical semantics and its applications in the Tractatus, including the signsymbol distinction and picture theory of meaning. What I discovered in reacquainting myself with Schopenhauer is the explanatory power of his dual aspect conception of the world as Will and representation. However useful the study of Schopenhauer has been to my understanding of later episodes in the history of philosophy, it is his philo- sophical system standing on its own that has meant increasingly more to my own reflections in metaphysics, ethics and aesthetics, and in my efforts to come to terms with all the comedy and tragedy of the human condition. Schopenhauer combines mid-nineteenth-century scientific philosophy with vii THE PHILOSOPHY OF SCHOPENHAUER Eastern mysticism and a penetrating if grotesque insight into the problems of life. The authors captivating philosophical prose, the extraordinary rancour and passion that shine through on every page, and the ingenious fitting together of so many diverse kinds of knowledge from so many differ- ent branches of study, contribute to making Schopenhauers thought a most audacious philosophical enterprise, with an astonishing array of implications for metaphysics, epistemology, ethics, political philosophy, aesthetics, philosophy of logic, mathematics, science and religion. We delve into Schopenhauers life work not merely as indispensable to a complete under- standing of the Western tradition, or of nineteenth-century German ideal- ism, but because Schopenhauers reflections, if true, no matter how abstruse, offer something that philosophy in our more cynical and still positivistic age has abandoned as beyond the reach of responsible enquiry: a single key to unlock all the philosophical difficulties and religious and psychological mysteries surrounding the facts of life and death. I approach Schopenhauer critically, as a logician and dyed-in-the-wool analytic philosopher. I do so, however, I believe, with more genuine sympa- thy for his project and its conclusions than most scientifically trained scholars typically take away from his pages. While there are numerous excellent introductions to Schopenhauers thought, and new studies on special topics in his philosophy appear every several years, I devote more attention than I have seen in other expositions to Schopenhauers main and most controver- sial contribution to metaphysics the arguments by which he hopes to prove that thing-in-itself is Will. My reason for examining Schopenhauers reason- ing in such detail is that it is specifically by these considerations that he claims to have surpassed Kant as the greatest of all his philosophical precursors. Schopenhauer enthusiastically adopts Kants distinction between phenomena and thing-in-itself. He nevertheless rejects Kants attempt to demonstrate the existence of thing-in-itself, and, in the process, more significantly, he denies Kants conclusion that thing-in-itself is unknowable, merely conceivable, noumenon. By offering a glimpse of the hidden nature of thing-in-itself as Will, Schopenhauer goes far, perhaps too far, beyond his teacher. He thereby sets in motion a cascade of implications for other fields of philosophy in the understanding of science, natural history, religion, art and every phenomenal and transcendental aspect of social and political reality. Schopenhauer pur- sues many of these finer points in his later writings and revised editions of his major works, all of which can be understood as supplements to The World as Will and Representation. The unified synthesis of so many different lines of thought and their sweeping consequences makes Schopenhauers philosophy, if correct in its principal assertions, one of the most groundshaking, all-encompassing worldviews ever to appear in the history of ideas. It is this elephantine if, viii PREFACE however, that repeatedly draws readers back to Schopenhauers writings, to understand more clearly the remarkable chain of inferences by which he proposes to identify thing-in-itself as Will. Dale Jacquette ix Acknowledgements I am grateful to the series editor, John Shand, for inviting me to contribute this volume on Schopenhauer to Acumens series on Continental European Philosophy. The material for this book was first presented in seminar lectures on Schopenhauers philosophy at The Pennsylvania State University in spring 2003. The chapters were drafted in the summer immediately thereafter dur- ing the course of a bicycle trip through southern Germany along the Romantische Straße from Würzburg to Fuessen, and completed in the win- ter of 2004 while serving as Director for Penn States Athens Abroad Program in Greece. I am indebted to David Cartwright for perceptive suggestions for improvement of an earlier draft of the book, and to Dana Van Kooy and the Center for British and Irish Studies at the University of Colorado, Boulder, for assistance in tracking down elusive sources. I thank my wife and cycling partner Tina for her boundless patience and wise loving counsel. A note on texts and terminology Schopenhauers masterwork, Die Welt als Wille und Vorstellung, was pub- lished as a single volume in 1818, and reissued in a revised and expanded two-volume second edition in 1844, followed by a third edition the year before his death in 1859. In its English translation as The World as Will and Idea or The World as Will and Representation, the books
Recommended publications
  • Jean-Luc Nancy and the Deconstruction of Christianity By
    Jean-Luc Nancy and the Deconstruction of Christianity by Tenzan Eaghll A thesis submitted in conformity with the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department for the Study of Religion University of Toronto ©Copyright by Tenzan Eaghll 2016 Jean-Luc Nancy and the Deconstruction of Christianity Tenzan Eaghll Doctor of Philosophy Department for the Study of Religion University of Toronto 2016 Abstract This dissertation is a study of the origins and development of the French philosopher Jean- Luc Nancy’s work on the “deconstruction of Christianity.” By situating Nancy's work in light of the broader Continental philosophical analysis of religion in the 20th Century, it argues that what Nancy calls the "deconstruction of Christianity" and the "exit from religion" is his unique intervention into the problem of metaphysical nihilism in Western thought. The author explains that Nancy’s work on religion does not provide a new “theory” for the study of religion or Christianity, but shows how Western metaphysical foundations are caught up in a process of decomposition that has been brought about by Christianity. For Nancy, the only way out of nihilism is to think of the world as an infinite opening unto itself, for this dis- encloses any transcendent principle of value or immanent notion of meaninglessness in the finite spacing of sense, and he finds the resources to think this opening within Christianity. By reading Christian notions like "God" and "creation ex nihilo" along deconstructive lines and connecting them with the rise and fall of this civilization that once called itself "Christendom," he attempts to expose "the sense of an absenting" that is both the condition of possibility for the West and what precedes, succeeds, and exceeds it.
    [Show full text]
  • Cultural Naturalism and the Market God David Timothy Denenny Southern Illinois University Carbondale, [email protected]
    Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC Theses Theses and Dissertations 12-1-2018 Cultural Naturalism and the Market God David Timothy Denenny Southern Illinois University Carbondale, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses Recommended Citation Denenny, David Timothy, "Cultural Naturalism and the Market God" (2018). Theses. 2464. https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/2464 This Open Access Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses and Dissertations at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CULTURAL NATURALISM AND THE MARKET GOD by David Denenny B.A. Eastern Washington University, 2015 A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Master of Arts Degree Department of Philosophy in the Graduate School Southern Illinois University Carbondale December 2018 Copyright by David Denenny, 2018 All Rights Reserved THESIS APPROVAL CULTURAL NATURALISM AND THE MARKET GOD by David Denenny A Thesis Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in the field of Philosophy Approved by: Kenneth William Stikkers, Chair Randall Auxier Alfred Frankowski Graduate School Southern Illinois University Carbondale November 8, 2018 AN ABSTRACT OF THE THESIS OF David Denenny, for the Master of Arts degree in Philosophy, presented on November 8, 2018, at Southern Illinois University Carbondale. TITLE: CULTURAL NATURALISM AND THE MARKET GOD MAJOR PROFESSOR: Dr. Kenneth William Stikkers This work employs John Dewey's cultural naturalism to explore how and why the orthodox economic tradition functions as a religious faith.
    [Show full text]
  • Albert Camus' Dialogue with Nietzsche and Dostoevsky Sean Derek Illing Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected]
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Doctoral Dissertations Graduate School 2014 Between nihilism and transcendence : Albert Camus' dialogue with Nietzsche and Dostoevsky Sean Derek Illing Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations Part of the Political Science Commons Recommended Citation Illing, Sean Derek, "Between nihilism and transcendence : Albert Camus' dialogue with Nietzsche and Dostoevsky" (2014). LSU Doctoral Dissertations. 1393. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_dissertations/1393 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Doctoral Dissertations by an authorized graduate school editor of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please [email protected]. BETWEEN NIHILISM AND TRANSCENDENCE: ALBERT CAMUS’ DIALOGUE WITH NIETZSCHE AND DOSTOEVSKY A Dissertation Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in The Department of Political Science by Sean D. Illing B.A., Louisiana State University, 2007 M.A., University of West Florida, 2009 May 2014 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This dissertation is the product of many supportive individuals. I am especially grateful for Dr. Cecil Eubank’s guidance. As a teacher, one can do no better than Professor Eubanks. Although his Socratic glare can be terrifying, there is always love and wisdom in his instruction. It is no exaggeration to say that this work would not exist without his support. At every step, he helped me along as I struggled to articulate my thoughts.
    [Show full text]
  • Nihilism After Nietzsche Nietzsche Imagined That the Advent of Nihilism
    MICHAEL A. GILLESPIE Nihilism After Nietzsche Nietzsche imagined that the advent of nihilism would be coterminous with the beginning of a new tragic age. He realized that the death of God and the nihilism that followed in its wake would be catastrophic, undermining European morality and unleashing a monstrous logic of terror, but despite this he welcomed its arrival in large part because he believed it would open up the possibility for the development of a harder and higher super-humanity that could overcome the decadence and degeneration that characterized nineteenth century European civilization. While Nietzsche is often thought to have formulated the concept of nihilism, it actually has a much longer history. The term was first used in the late eighteenth century to describe Fichte’s absolute egoism and the thought of his followers, many of whom constituted the core of Jena Romanticism. During this period the term was generally connected with atheism and with a rejection of all existing sources of authority by critics such as Jacobi and Jean Paul, and later by Turgenev, and Dostoevsky. They were all convinced that if the I was posited as absolute, God was nothing, and that without God all authority could have no other basis than shifting human will and opinion 1 . The problem presented by nihilism for its early critics thus arises out of an exaggeration and exaltation of human beings in place of God. Nietzsche turned this concept on its head, arguing that the death of God was the result not of a Promethean exaltation of man but of the diminution of man brought about by the slave revolt against the master morality of antiquity.
    [Show full text]
  • Filomena Workshop Philosophy, Logic and Analytic Metaphysics S BOOK
    4th Filomena Workshop Philosophy, Logic and Analytic Metaphysics s BOOK OF ABSTRACTS S Bergen Logic Group, Universitetet i Bergen Grupo de Estudos em Lógica “Carolina Blasio”, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte October 15-16, 2019, UiB Contents Schedule1 Invited talks2 No Metaphysical Disagreement Without Logical Incompatibility (Daniel Durante)..................................2 Anti-Exceptionalism and Metaphysics (Michaela Mcsweeney)........2 Beliefs Supporting Other Beliefs: Truthmaker Semantics for Logic-neutral Inference in Hyperintensional Webs of Belief (Peter Verdée).....3 Contributed talks5 Logical Nihilism (Eno Agolli).........................5 Metaphysical Grounding in Scientific Weak Structuralism (WS): a Non- Foundationalist Perspective (Silvia Bianchi)..............7 Metaphysical Assumptions in Russell’s Paradox (Ludovica Conti).....9 Could the Geach-Kaplan Sentence be Expressed in a First-Order Lan- guage? (João Daniel Dantas)...................... 11 Logic as a Research Program (Evelyn Erickson)............... 12 Beyond Logical Revision: Logical Fixed Points, Theoretical Indispensabil- ity and Explanatory Value (Christos Kyriacou)............ 14 Much Ado About the Many (Jonathan Mai)................. 16 Logical Revision from an Anti-exceptionalist Point of View (Sanderson Molick).................................. 17 A Philosophical Juxtaposition of Aristotle’s Principle of Non-contradiction and Asouzu’s Ibuanyidanda Logic (Nelson Amaobi Osuala)...... 18 Logical Realism and Logical Reliability (Brett Topey)...........
    [Show full text]
  • Geraldine Coggins, Could There Have Been Nothing? Against Metaphysical Nihilism (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), Xii + 171 Pp
    Geraldine Coggins, Could There Have been Nothing? Against Metaphysical Nihilism (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), xii + 171 pp. Geraldine Coggins’s book is the first book on the issue of metaphysical nihilism. It is an interesting and challenging opinionated introduction to this topic. Sometimes the very existence of the world we are in appears mysterious to us. And it is not uncommon to wonder why there is some - thing rather than nothing in such circumstances. But the question “why is there something rather than nothing?” does make sense only if it is as - sumed that there could have been nothing. Metaphysical nihilism is the view that there could have been nothing, and this is the view Coggins is challenging in this book. Coggins’s book is divided into seven chapters. Chapter 1 is an intro - duction in which Coggins displays her methodology and clarifies the de - bate between metaphysical nihilism and its anti-nihilist opponents. There Coggins undermines necessitarianism, the view that things could not have been different, and she understands metaphysical nihilism as the view that there could have been nothing concrete, while anti-nihilism turns out to be the view that there has to be something concrete. Chapter 2 introduces the reader to the main argument in favour of metaphysical nihilism, the so-called subtraction argument. The original subtraction argument for ni - hilism relies on the following premises: (A1) There might be a world with a finite domain of concrete objects. (A2) These concrete objects are, each of them, things which might not exist. (A3) The non-existence of any one of these things does not necessitate the existence of any other such thing.
    [Show full text]
  • Perspectives on Nihilism & Nietzsche's Overcoming Of
    PERSPECTIVES ON NIIIILISM Per Agnese PERSPECTIVES ON NIIIILlSM & NIETZSCHE'S OVERCOMING OF IIEIDEGGER'S NIETZSCHE By TOM ANDREOPOULOS, B.A. A Thesis Submitted to the School of Graduate Studies in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Arts McMaster University June 1988 (c) Copyright by Tom Andreopoulos 1988. MASTER OF ARTS (1988) McMASTER UNIVERSITY (Philosophy) Hamilton, Ontario TITLE: Perspectives on Nihilism & Nietzsche's Overcoming of Heidegger's Nietzsche AUTHOR: Tom Andreopoulos, B.A. (York University) SUPERVISOR: Dr. Gary B. Madison NUMBER OF PAGES: vii,83 ii ABSTRACT This study is an attempt to challenge the hermeneutical soundness of Heidegger's reading Nietzsche as a nihilist. Nietzsche finds nihilism to be the logical result of the moral and metaphysical postulations of the Western philosophical tradition. Nietzsche's task is to revaluate this tradition and seek a way of overcoming its effects. My thesis lays out an interpretative framework within which Nietzsche can be seen to have succeeded by pursuing fundamental questions neglected in Heidegger's reading of him as the last metaphysician of the Western tradition. By following Nietzsche's lead as thinker from the direction of Dionysos, my thesis displays the untenability of Heidegger's interpretation of Nietzschean thought as the culmination of metaphysics' subjectivistic tendencies. iii ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I am most indebted to Dr. Gary B. Madison, my first reader, for the guidance and ongoing support which I have needed to complete this work. iv CONTENTS Introduction 1 Part One. Heidegger On Nietzsche On Nihilism I. Preliminary Diagnosis 9 II. Nihilism's Metaphysical Morphology 11 III. Beyond Metaphysical Nihilism 23 IV.
    [Show full text]
  • 1) I Am a Moral Nihilist, 2) So Was Nietzsche
    1 NIHILISM, NIETZSCHE AND THE DOPPELGANGER PROBLEM 1. Introduction Let me start with two claims: 1) I am a moral nihilist, 2) so was Nietzsche. The first claim is not particularly controversial. Absent brain injury or massive self-deception, I am the best authority on what I believe, and I can assure you that I believe something that can reasonably be described as ‘moral nihilism’, namely a minor variant of the error theory of J.L. Mackie. It is otherwise with the second claim. Some say Nietzsche was a nihilist, indeed a perfect, complete or uninhibited nihilist1. Some say that this is all a horrible misunderstanding and that Nietzsche was nothing of the kind2. I shall argue that he was a nihilist in much the same sense as I am, but variously a diagnostician, an opponent and a survivor of certain other kinds of nihilism3. Then, with Nietzsche’s aid, I shall defend the moral nihilism that we both believe (meta-ethical nihilism or the error theory) against a common line of criticism that nihilism can’t be true because if it were we would have to give up morality or, at least, moralizing. I then raise a problem (the Doppelganger Problem) for meta-ethical nihilism, reinforce the problem, and solve it by reformulating the doctrine. Thus although I think that trying to get Nietzsche right is a worthwhile intellectual enterprise, the real point of the paper is to vindicate the error theory (of which Mackie was the foremost defender) against certain kinds of criticism. For the record, I agree with (what I take to be) Nietzsche’s metaethic but disagree with his ethic of Calliclean self-assertion.
    [Show full text]
  • Phil 2303 Intro to Worldviews Philosophy Department Dallas Baptist University Dr
    Phil 2303 Intro to Worldviews Philosophy Department Dallas Baptist University Dr. David Naugle James Sire, The Universe Next Door: A Basic Worldview Catalog Zero Point: Nihilism Check out nihilism online: http://www.nodogs.org/nihilism.html http://www.geocities.com/liudegast/nihilism.html Introduction: Today, many students, as well as people in general—despite a middle class (or higher) background, education, friends, the prospect of a good job and fulfilling career, advances in medicine and technology, access to the riches of culture past and present, opportunities for travel and other leisure activities, a democratic society with its abundant liberties—still seemed to be possessed by a spirit of dark disquiet and extreme discouragement. They feel as if the end of the age is at hand and there is no future; they are cynical about the motives and competence of the leaders and decision makers of the day (politicians and business leaders, etc.); they feel impotent to make any real difference in today's overpowering society; they feel swept along by forces outside of their control; they see moral failure, lack of direction, or indifference when it comes to the fundamental issues of our times; they see economic, political, and environmental crises of gargantuan proportions; they see the wholesale bureaucratization and dehumanization of life, political corruption, famine, terrorism, natural disasters (earthquakes, tornadoes, hurricanes), violence and crime, the population glut, the specter of nuclear holocaust and disaster; they observe the loss of religious faith, pluralism, complexity, skepticism, fragmentation, irrationalism, MTV, drugs, alcoholism (and other substance abuse), disorientation, rootless, etc., etc. This is nihilism which is one of the most important trends in recent times; the nihilistic mood is part of the air we breathe.
    [Show full text]
  • Postmodern Nihilism: Theory and Literature
    Postmodern Nihilism: Theory and Literature Will Slocombe What follows was originally presented to the University of Wales, Aberystwyth for the qualification of PhD in English in September 2003. A revised version has subsequently been published, with major changes primarily to the ―Literature‖ section, as Nihilism and the Sublime Postmodern: The (Hi) Story of a Difficult Relationship (Routledge, 2006). ii Table of Contents Table of Contents ii List of Tables and Diagrams iv Acknowledgements v Abstract vi ‘The Preface’ 1 Part I: Theory 1. Ex nihilo: Constructing Nihilism 5 Generating Nihilism 10 Humanist Nihilism (1799-1851) 16 Anti-Authoritarian Nihilism (1852-1871) 20 Anti-Humanist Nihilism (1872-1888) 26 Authoritarian Nihilism (1889-1945) 31 2. Stylising the Sublime 40 Sublime Texts and their Contexts 42 The Burkean Formulation of the Sublime 47 The Kantian Formulation of the Sublime 55 The Romantic Sublime 67 3. Nihilism and the Sublime Postmodern 75 A Postmodern Enlightenment? 77 The Sublime Postmodern I: Lyotard and the Unpresentable 84 Nihilism and the Lyotardian Sublime 94 The Sublime Postmodern II: Baudrillard and the Hyperreal 101 Nihilism and the Baudrillardian Sublime 109 4. Postmodern Nihilism 114 ‗Truth is untrue‘: N ihilism ,R elativism ,and Pluralism 116 ‗N othing w as w hat it is‘: N ihilism and Poststructuralism 122 ‗E verything looked and sounded unreal‘: N ihilism and Postm odernism 134 Postmodern Nihilism 147 Part II: Literature 5. ‘Welcome to the Fall’: Nihilism and Apocalypse 157 (Post)Modern Apocalypses 160 iii The Writing of the (Postmodern) Disaster 171 Nuclear Criticism and Nuclear Writing 180 The Apocalyptic Desert 186 6.
    [Show full text]
  • Geraldine. Coggins,.Could There Have Been Nothing?
    recenzije • book reviews 75 Geraldine. Coggins,. Could There Have been Nothing? Against Metaphysical Nihilism.(Palgrave.Macmillan,.2010),.xii.+.171.pp . Geraldine.Coggins’s.book.is.the.first.book.on.the.issue.of.metaphysical. nihilism ..It.is.an.interesting.and.challenging.opinionated.introduction.to. this.topic ..Sometimes.the.very.existence.of.the.world.we.are.in.appears. mysterious.to.us ..And.it.is.not.uncommon.to.wonder.why.there.is.some- thing.rather.than.nothing.in.such.circumstances ..But.the.question.“why. is.there.something.rather.than.nothing?”.does.make.sense.only.if.it.is.as- sumed.that.there.could.have.been.nothing ..Metaphysical.nihilism.is.the. view.that.there.could.have.been.nothing,.and.this.is.the.view.Coggins.is. challenging.in.this.book . Coggins’s.book.is.divided.into.seven.chapters ..Chapter.1.is.an.intro- duction.in.which.Coggins.displays.her.methodology.and.clarifies.the.de- bate.between.metaphysical.nihilism.and.its.anti-nihilist.opponents ..There. Coggins.undermines.necessitarianism,.the.view.that.things.could.not.have. been.different,.and.she.understands.metaphysical.nihilism.as.the.view.that. there.could.have.been.nothing.concrete,.while.anti-nihilism.turns.out.to. be.the.view.that.there.has.to.be.something.concrete ..Chapter.2.introduces. the.reader.to.the.main.argument.in.favour.of.metaphysical.nihilism,.the. so-called.subtraction.argument ..The.original.subtraction.argument.for.ni- hilism.relies.on.the.following.premises: (A1). There.might.be.a.world.with.a.finite.domain.of.concrete.objects . (A2). These.concrete.objects.are,.each.of.them,.things.which.might.not.exist . (A3). The.non-existence.of.any.one.of.these.things.does.not.necessitate.the.
    [Show full text]
  • The Self-Overcoming of Nihilism by Keiji Nishitani
    THE SELF-OVERCOMING OF NIHILISM SUNY Series in MODERN JAPANESE PHILOSOPHY Peter J. McCormick, Editor THE SELF-OVERCOMING OF NIHILISM • NISHITANI Keiji Translated by Graham Parkes with Setsuko Aihara STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW YORK PRESS The preparation of this volume was made possible in part by a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities, an independent federal agency. Published by State University of New York Press, Albany © 1990 State University of New York All rights reserved Printed in the United States of America No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For information, address State University of New York Press, State University Plaza, Albany, N.Y. 12246 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Nishitani, Keiji, 1900- [Nihirizumu. English] The self-overcoming of nihilism / Nishitani Keiji : translated by Graham Parkes with Setsuko Aihara. p. cm. - (SUNY series in modern Japanese philosophy ) ISBN 0-7914-0437-4 (alk. paper). - ISBN 0-7914-0438-2 (pbk. : alk paper) 1. Nihilism (Philosophy ) 2. Philosophy, Modern-19th century. 3. Philosophy, Modern-20th century. 4. Philosophy, European. 5. Nietzsche, Friedrich Wilhelm, 1844-1900-Contributions in concept of nihilism. 6. Heidegger, Martin, 1889-1976-Contributions in concept of nihilism. 7. Philosophy, Japanese-20th century. I. Title. II. Series. B828.3.NS13 1990 149'.8-dc20 90-31631 CIP 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Nanzan Studies in Religion and Culture James W. Heisig, General Editor Heinrich DUMOULIN, Zen Buddhism: A History.
    [Show full text]