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Автор KROIS, JOHN MICHAEL
Дата выпуска 2005
dc.description ‘Philosophical anthropology’ was initiated in the late 1920s as an alternative to abstract philosophical definitions of human nature (‘animal rationale’) and to the exclusively empirical, physical study of anthropology. Philosophical anthropology focused upon what it meant to be a human being. Its founders concentrated upon the situated existence of human beings and their ability to think beyond and to deny even what was actually vitally important to them. For Cassirer, these efforts remained too abstract because they failed to take the breadth of human cultural activity into account. The decisive feature of human life is neither reason nor language. These are derivative from symbolism, not the other way around. Human beings are best described as ‘animal symbolicum’. The error of earlier anthropological conceptions was not that they venerated reason, but that they ignored the body and so separated reason from emotion. The concept of symbolism, as Cassirer conceived it, overcame this dualism. His philosophical anthropology has been vindicated today in many areas of empirical research, but replacing the concept of ‘reason’ with that of ‘symbolism’ was no minor revision to the Western philosophical tradition, and the amplification and application of this new outlook has barely begun.
Издатель Cambridge University Press
Название ‘A passion can only be overcome by a stronger passion’: Philosophical Anthropology before and after Ernst Cassirer
DOI 10.1017/S1062798705000803
Electronic ISSN 1474-0575
Print ISSN 1062-7987
Журнал European Review
Том 13
Первая страница 557
Последняя страница 575
Аффилиация KROIS JOHN MICHAEL; Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Institut für Philosophie
Выпуск 4

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