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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Les Temps modernes et le tournant transcendantal. Blumenberg, Kant et la question du monde
Michaël Fœsselsubject
Radicalizationmedia_common.quotation_subjectPhilosophy[SHS.PHIL]Humanities and Social Sciences/PhilosophyEnlightenmentMetaphysicsHans Blumenberg16. Peace & justiceEpistemologyPhenomenology (philosophy)Kant[SHS.PHIL] Humanities and Social Sciences/PhilosophyPhilosophy[ SHS.PHIL ] Humanities and Social Sciences/PhilosophyConceptual historyThe Modern ProjectTranscendental numberTranscendental philosophymedia_commondescription
International audience; Blumenberg’s phenomenology of the history of concepts couldn’t overlook Kantian inventions to escape the dead ends of metaphysics. Kant constitutes a decisive help in mapping the ruptures of Modern Age. On the one hand, the cosmogonical essays of the precritical period illustrate reason’s typically modern self-assertion. On the other hand, the transcendental turn stands for a radicalization of Modern Age towards the Enlightenment. But Blumenberg also pays attention to what, in Kant, disturbs the modern project of reason’s self-authorization. Transcendental philosophy always calls for a new beginning, because it anticipates its possible failure.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-01-01 |