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St. Augustine's Press |
Known
in the English-speaking world mainly as the author of Main Currents of
Marxism (1976), and in France as the author of the monumental study
Chrétiens sans Eglise (1966), in his Two Eyes of Spinoza
and Other Essays on Philosophers Leszek Kolakowski offers the English-speaking
reader for the first time a significant selection of his early writings.
Originally written in Polish, German, and French, this collection is his
first book ever in English on seventeenth-century thought, which subject
he has been writing on since Individual and Infinity: Freedom and
Antinomies of Freedom in the Philosophy of Spinoza was published in
1957. Included in Two Eyes of Spinoza are essays on The Philosophical
Role of the Reformation and the Mystical Heresy, on Uriel
da Costa, Spinoza, Gassendi, and Pierre Bayle, but also on Freud, Marx,
Avenarius, and Heidegger. Also included is Kolakowskis well-known
essay The Priest and the Jester, in which he considers the question
of the theological heritage in contemporary thought. Kolakowskis style is lucid, and he has a gift for translating often highly technical philosophical jargon into language that shows the enduring pertinence of philosophy to Western culture. This book is the long-awaited collection by an expert on Spinoza and seventeenth-century thought. Leszek Kolakowski, Senior Research Fellow, All Souls College, Oxford, formerly Professor of Philosophy at the University of Chicago, is the author of God Owes us Nothing: On Pascals Religion and on the Spirit of Jansenism, The Presence of Myth, Modernity on Endless Trial, On Freedom, Lying and Betrayal, Husserl and the Search for Certitude, Religion: If There is No God . . . , and Bergson (the last three books are available from St. Augustines Press). |
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Two Eyes of Spinoza and Other Essays on Philosophers Translation by Agnieszka Kolakowska and others; edited by Zbigniew Janowski 250 pages, 6 x 9, clothbound, notes ISBN: 1-58731-875-X $25.00 (£17.50) |