The Philosophical Dialogue

The Philosophical Dialogue
Title The Philosophical Dialogue PDF eBook
Author Vittorio Hösle
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2012
Genre Dialogue
ISBN 9780268030971

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Hosle covers the development of the philosophical dialogue beginning with Plato to the late twentieth century, providing a taxonomy and doctrine of categories.

Literature and Philosophy in Dialogue

Literature and Philosophy in Dialogue
Title Literature and Philosophy in Dialogue PDF eBook
Author Hans-Georg Gadamer
Publisher State University of New York Press
Pages 214
Release 1993-11-18
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 1438403569

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Hans-Georg Gadamer, the major proponent of philosophical hermeneutics, reveals himself here as a highly sensitive reader and critic of the German literary tradition. This is not the work of a specialist as narrowly defined in the typical literary study. Although he is a master of the techniques of criticism, Gadamer always sees the study of literature as a fundamentally human activity where human beings, generation after generation, pose their questions to an encroaching darkness that threatens to rob them of their confidence in the meaning of life and death. Never pedantic or antiquarian, these studies show such literary giants of the German past as Goethe and Hölderlin as our contemporaries. Gadamer demonstrates his ability to achieve the creative interplay of literature and philosophy which, in isolation, easily degenerate into sterile academic games. Typical of this dialogue are essays on Rainer Maria Rilke, including an examination of a problem of punctuation in one of his poems. What would be, in less capable hands, one more solution to a literary problem, turns out to be one of Gadamer's creative approaches to the mystery of man's relation to time and death.

Philosophical Dialogue in the British Enlightenment

Philosophical Dialogue in the British Enlightenment
Title Philosophical Dialogue in the British Enlightenment PDF eBook
Author Michael Prince
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 316
Release 1996
Genre History
ISBN 9780521550628

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This book offers the first full-length study of philosophical dialogue during the English Enlightenment. It explains why important philosophers - Shaftesbury, Mandeville, Berkeley and Hume - and innumerable minor translators, imitators and critics wrote in and about dialogue during the eighteenth century; and why, after Hume, philosophical dialogue either falls out of use or undergoes radical transformation. Philosophical Dialogue in the British Enlightenment describes the extended, heavily coded, and often belligerent debate about the nature and proper management of dialogue; and it shows how the writing of philosophical fictions relates to the rise of the novel and the emergence of philosophical aesthetics. Novelists such as Fielding, Sterne, Johnson and Austen are placed in a philosophical context, and philosophers of the empiricist tradition in the context of English literary history.

Plato and the Socratic Dialogue

Plato and the Socratic Dialogue
Title Plato and the Socratic Dialogue PDF eBook
Author Charles H. Kahn
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 150
Release 1997-01-09
Genre Philosophy
ISBN 9780521433259

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This book offers a new interpretation of Plato's early and middle dialogues as the expression of a unified philosophical vision. Whereas the traditional view sees the dialogues as marking successive stages in Plato's philosophical development, we may more legitimately read them as reflecting an artistic plan for the gradual, indirect and partial exposition of Platonic philosophy. The magnificent literary achievement of the dialogues can be fully appreciated only from the viewpoint of a unitarian reading of the philosophical content.

The Dialogue in English Literature

The Dialogue in English Literature
Title The Dialogue in English Literature PDF eBook
Author Elizabeth Merrill
Publisher
Pages 152
Release 1911
Genre Dialogue
ISBN

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Genres in Dialogue

Genres in Dialogue
Title Genres in Dialogue PDF eBook
Author Andrea Wilson Nightingale
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Pages 244
Release 2000-04-13
Genre Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN 9780521774338

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This 1995 book takes as its starting point Plato's incorporation of specific genres of poetry and rhetoric into his dialogues. The author argues that Plato's 'dialogues' with traditional genres are part and parcel of his effort to define 'philosophy'. Before Plato, 'philosophy' designated 'intellectual cultivation' in the broadest sense. When Plato appropriated the term for his own intellectual project, he created a new and specialised discipline. In order to define and legitimise 'philosophy', Plato had to match it against genres of discourse that had authority and currency in democratic Athens. By incorporating the text or discourse of another genre, Plato 'defines' his new brand of wisdom in opposition to traditional modes of thinking and speaking. By targeting individual genres of discourse Plato marks the boundaries of 'philosophy' as a discursive and as a social practice.

Turning Toward Philosophy

Turning Toward Philosophy
Title Turning Toward Philosophy PDF eBook
Author Jill Gordon
Publisher Penn State Press
Pages 196
Release 1999
Genre Drama
ISBN

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Acknowledging the powerful impact that Plato's dialogues have had on readers, Jill Gordon shows how the literary techniques Plato used function philosophically to engage readers in doing philosophy and attracting them toward the philosophical life. The picture of philosophical activity emerging from the dialogues, as thus interpreted, is a complex process involving vision, insight, and emotion basic to the human condition rather than a resort to pure reason as an escape from it. Since the literary features of Plato's writing are what draw the reader into philosophy, the book becomes an argument for the union of philosophy and literature--and against their disciplinary bifurcation--in the dialogues. Gordon construes the relationship of Plato's text to its audience as an analogue of Socrates' relationship with his interlocutors in the dialogues, seeing both as fundamentally dialectic. On this insight she builds her detailed analysis of specific literary devices in chapters on dramatic form, character development, irony, and image-making (which includes myth, metaphor, and analogy). In this way Gordon views Plato as not at all the enemy of the poets and image-makers that previous interpreters have depicted. Rather, Gordon concludes that Plato understands the power of words and images quite well. Since they, and not logico-deductive argumentation, are the appropriate means for engaging human beings, he uses them to great effect and with a sensitive understanding of human psychology, wary of their possible corrupting influences but ultimately willing to harness their power for philosophical ends.