|
St. Augustine's Press |
Rosen
addresses a wide range of topics from eros, poetry, and freedom to
problems like negation and the epistemological status of sense perception.
Though diverse in subject, Rosens essays share two unifying principles:
there can be no legitimate separation of textual hermeneutics from philosophical
analysis, and philosophical investigation must be oriented in terms of everyday
language and experience, although it cannot simply remain within these confines.
Ordinary experience provides a minimal criterion for the assessment of extraordinary
discourses, Rosen argues, and without such a criterion we would have no
basis for evaluating conflicting discourses: philosophy would give way to
poetry. Philosophical problems are not so deeply embedded in a specific historical context that they cannot be restated in terms as valid for us today as they were for those who formulated them, Rosen maintains. He shows that the history of philosophy a story of conflicting interpretations of human life and the structure of intelligibility is a story that comes to life only when it is rethought in terms of the philosophical problems of our own personal and historical situation. Rosen is the author of many books, including Platos Symposium, Platos Sophist, G.W.F. Hegel, Nihilism, The Limits of Analysis, The Ancients and the Moderns, and The Question of Being, all from St. Augustines Press. |
||||
![]() |
|||||
|
|
|||||
| Metaphysics
in Ordinary Language Stanley Rosen 302 pages, notes, index 6" x 9" Paper (reprint; 1st time in paper) ISBN: 978-1-58731-500-8 $24.00 |