Search results for ""Author Quentin Lauer""
Fordham University Press A Reading of Hegel's "Phenomenology of Spirit"
The first edition of this title was much acclaimed as the leading interpretation and exposition of Hegel's "Phenomenology of Spirit." This revision, based on continuing research, keeps this book in the forefront of Hegelian scholarship. The author has made additions and corrections to his reading of this, Hegel's most important work, and he provides an excellent interpretation of Hegel's language, in all of its complexity. To scholars it will remain an indispensable study and students new to Hegelian philosophy will find it approachable and clear.
£35.10
Fordham University Press Essays in Hegelian Dialectic
This volume, with an updated Introduction, includes Professor Lauer’s shorter works depicting how Hegel approached various philosophical issues. This book explores how Hegel constantly worked to overcome the rationalist intellectualism in a healthy regard for experience, to combat romantic intuitionism by focusing on a rational standard to objectivity, to avoid an empirical interpretation of experience through including spirituality of man. This book is a supporting follow-up to Professor Lauer’s previous two major Hegelian publications.
£31.50
Fordham University Press The Triumph of Subjectivity: An Introduction to Transcendental Phenomenology
A clear summary of Husserl's often obscure and always complex writings...very instructive.-Ethics
£25.19
Fordham University Press G. K. Chesterton: Philosopher Without Portfolio
It is an indisputable fact that the credentials of Gilbert Keith Chesterton (1874–1936) were by no means those of a professional philosopher. He had no degree in the subject and he never attended a university. Nor was he widely or deeply read in the tradition of Western philosophy. He was, nonetheless, a truly philosophical thinker: convincing, persuasive, provocative, controversial. Despite all this, no one has, up to the present, devoted an entire book to the examination and analysis of his properly philosophical thinking and writing. This book attempts to range far and wide in the writings of Chesterton, perhaps even to betray him slightly by trying to systematize his thought. It is, however, not betraying Chesterton to claim that there is one central theme around which all his thinking and writing can be ordered: the theme of the grandeur of the reality of human, created in the image of God and participating in the beauty of divine creativity. His philosophy, if we want to characterize it in any one way, is a philosophy of life, of human living, with all that implies of rationality and freedom, of truth and paradox, of religion and morality, or faith and hope and love—in short, of all that makes human living spectacularly worthwhile.
£31.50
Fordham University Press Hegel's Idea of Philosophy
In his Introduction to the History of Philosophy, Hegel undertook to say what philosophy is; that it can be said to have a history. He treated philosophy as an organic unity, a process, to which philosophers down through the ages have made contributions. Thus in Hegel's view, the history of philosophy is inseparable from doing philosophy, and philosophy can be done only historically. Hegel engaged in a critique both of "philosophies" and of the ways of treating philosophy's history. The author's analysis, combined with his translation of a version of the Introduction not previously available, makes intelligible a mode of philosophical thinking which is highly complex and which has had an extraordinarily formative influence on contemporary thought. The result is a treatment more readily understandable to the educated reader than would be Hegel's own technical vocabulary.
£26.99