
A Convex Mirror
Schopenhauer's Philosophy and the Sciences
Marco Segala(Author)
Oxford University Press Inc
Published on 7. March 2024
Book
Hardback
384 pages
978-0-19-759915-0 (ISBN)
Description
Schopenhauer is most recognizable as "the philosopher of pessimism," the author of a system that teaches how art and morality can help human beings navigate life in "the worst of all possible worlds." This dominant image of Schopenhauer has cut off an important branch of his tree of philosophy: the metaphysics of nature and its dialogue with the sciences of the time.
A Convex Mirror sheds new light on the development of Schopenhauer's philosophy and his ongoing engagement with the natural sciences. Understanding Schopenhauer's metaphysics requires both an insight into his relationship with science and an appreciation of the role of the natural sciences in his philosophical project. In the first edition of The World as Will and Representation (1819), Schopenhauer dealt with science within the framework of Kant and Schelling's philosophies of nature, but his growing perplexity with them led him to an original, more complex conception of the relationship between science and metaphysics. He therefore embarked on a revision of his metaphysics of nature, which ultimately affected its core concepts--namely, the will and ideas--and influenced his decision to publish a volume of Supplements (1844) rather than a revised edition of his main work.
The evolving relationship of Schopenhauer's philosophy to the natural sciences is a powerful interpretative tool: a "convex diffusing mirror" that reflects the totality and complexity of his system and sheds light on the core concepts of his philosophy, such as the systematic structure of his philosophy, reality and representation, idealism and realism, the polysemic nature of ideas, and the will as the thing in itself.
A Convex Mirror sheds new light on the development of Schopenhauer's philosophy and his ongoing engagement with the natural sciences. Understanding Schopenhauer's metaphysics requires both an insight into his relationship with science and an appreciation of the role of the natural sciences in his philosophical project. In the first edition of The World as Will and Representation (1819), Schopenhauer dealt with science within the framework of Kant and Schelling's philosophies of nature, but his growing perplexity with them led him to an original, more complex conception of the relationship between science and metaphysics. He therefore embarked on a revision of his metaphysics of nature, which ultimately affected its core concepts--namely, the will and ideas--and influenced his decision to publish a volume of Supplements (1844) rather than a revised edition of his main work.
The evolving relationship of Schopenhauer's philosophy to the natural sciences is a powerful interpretative tool: a "convex diffusing mirror" that reflects the totality and complexity of his system and sheds light on the core concepts of his philosophy, such as the systematic structure of his philosophy, reality and representation, idealism and realism, the polysemic nature of ideas, and the will as the thing in itself.
Reviews / Votes
Segala offers us a renewed and highly relevant reading of the constitution of the metaphysics of nature in Schopenhauer, filling a significant gap in the relationship between science and metaphysics.By departing from more classical interpretations, he offers a more nuanced vision, notably by reconsidering the place of the will as a thing in itself. The historical perspective adopted by Segala thus allows us to identify a third interpretative path, which, while posing new questions, also responds to several difficulties raised by commentators. The result is a rigorous, accessible and didactic work, which provides a real key to understanding Schopenhauer's thought through the prism of his constant dialogue with the sciences and the reconfiguration of his metaphysics of nature. * Fabien Ferri, Philosophy of Science Information System *More details
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Product notice
sewn/stitched
Cloth over boards
Dimensions
Height: 226 mm
Width: 163 mm
Thickness: 48 mm
Weight
703 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-759915-0 (9780197599150)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
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01/2024
OUP eBook
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E-Book
01/2024
OUP eBook
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Person
Marco Segala is Professor of History of Philosophy at the University of L'Aquila (Italy). He studied at the Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa and obtained his Ph.D. at the University of Florence. He was fellow of the Humboldt-Foundation at Frankfurt am Main and of the EU programme Marie Sklodowska-Curie at the Ecole Normale Superieure in Paris. His research concerns post-Kantian philosophy focusing on Schopenhauer, history of science (1750-1950), and philosophy of music (1800-1900).
Author
Professor of History of PhilosophyProfessor of History of Philosophy, University of L'Aquila
Content
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Single Thought
0. Introduction
1. Philosophy as a System
2. What is the Single Thought?
3. The Unity and Its Parts
4. Science and Philosophy of Nature in the System
5. The Second Book of the World as Will and Representation
6. Philosophy of Nature
Chapter 2: An Early and Abiding Engagement with the Sciences
0. Introduction
1. A Taste for the Sciences
2. The Choice of Goettingen
3. Scientific Education at Goettingen and Berlin
4. From Physiology to Philosophy
5. Berlin and the Animal Magnetism Affaire
Chapter 3: Metaphysician and Naturforscher at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century
0. Introduction
1. Kielmeyer, Schelling, and Naturphilosophie
2. Will and Evolution
3. The Romantic Legacy
4. Spiritism and Physiology
5. Goethe, Master and Adversary
6. Colors as Specific Sensations in the Eye
Chapter 4: Metaphysics of Nature in The World as Will and Representation
0. Introduction
1. The Will Between Metaphysics and Science
2. Analogy
3. Ideas and Forces
4. Stufenfolge, Teleology, and Temporality
5. Philosophy of Nature
Chapter 5: In Dialogue with Kant and Schelling
0. Introduction
1. On Kant's Metaphysics of Nature
2. The Fascination of Schelling's Naturphilosophie
3. Appreciation and Criticism of Naturphilosophie
4. Distinguishing Science from Philosophy
5. The Conundrum of the Philosophy of Nature
6. Toward a Philosophy of Science
Chapter 6: A New Season
0. Introduction
1. Great Hopes, Hard Times
2. A Second Edition of The World as Will and Representation?
3. The Supplements and the System
4. The Rediscovery of Kant and Schelling's Ghost
5. A New Status for the Sciences: Professionalism and Disciplines
Chapter 7: Philosophy of the Sciences
0. Introduction
1. The Vorlesungen and the System
2. Turning Points
3. Foliant ? 37
4. Philosophizing Scientists
5. Philosophizing on the Sciences
6. Physiology and Philosophy
Chapter 8: On Will in Nature: A Philosophical Work
0. Introduction
1. A new appreciation of On Will in Nature
2. Confirmation and the scientists' insight into the will
3. Relinquishing the Ideas
4. Will and causality
5. The crucial role of On Will in Nature
Chapter 9: Grappling with the Sciences
0. Introduction
1. The Chemical Syllogism
2. A New Approach to Teleology
3. Creative Drives
4. Intellect and Brain, Representation and Reality
5. Matter, Forces, and Scientific Realism
Chapter 10: Essences, Emergence, and Ground
0. Introduction
1. Ideas, Or Explaining the Phenomenal World
2. Ideas and Aesthetic Experience
3. Ideas as Essences
4. Teleology as An Emergent Property
5. Will and Metaphysics
6. Definitions of Will
7. Will and Metaphysical Grounding
Concluding Remarks
Bibliography
Index
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Chapter 1: The Single Thought
0. Introduction
1. Philosophy as a System
2. What is the Single Thought?
3. The Unity and Its Parts
4. Science and Philosophy of Nature in the System
5. The Second Book of the World as Will and Representation
6. Philosophy of Nature
Chapter 2: An Early and Abiding Engagement with the Sciences
0. Introduction
1. A Taste for the Sciences
2. The Choice of Goettingen
3. Scientific Education at Goettingen and Berlin
4. From Physiology to Philosophy
5. Berlin and the Animal Magnetism Affaire
Chapter 3: Metaphysician and Naturforscher at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century
0. Introduction
1. Kielmeyer, Schelling, and Naturphilosophie
2. Will and Evolution
3. The Romantic Legacy
4. Spiritism and Physiology
5. Goethe, Master and Adversary
6. Colors as Specific Sensations in the Eye
Chapter 4: Metaphysics of Nature in The World as Will and Representation
0. Introduction
1. The Will Between Metaphysics and Science
2. Analogy
3. Ideas and Forces
4. Stufenfolge, Teleology, and Temporality
5. Philosophy of Nature
Chapter 5: In Dialogue with Kant and Schelling
0. Introduction
1. On Kant's Metaphysics of Nature
2. The Fascination of Schelling's Naturphilosophie
3. Appreciation and Criticism of Naturphilosophie
4. Distinguishing Science from Philosophy
5. The Conundrum of the Philosophy of Nature
6. Toward a Philosophy of Science
Chapter 6: A New Season
0. Introduction
1. Great Hopes, Hard Times
2. A Second Edition of The World as Will and Representation?
3. The Supplements and the System
4. The Rediscovery of Kant and Schelling's Ghost
5. A New Status for the Sciences: Professionalism and Disciplines
Chapter 7: Philosophy of the Sciences
0. Introduction
1. The Vorlesungen and the System
2. Turning Points
3. Foliant ? 37
4. Philosophizing Scientists
5. Philosophizing on the Sciences
6. Physiology and Philosophy
Chapter 8: On Will in Nature: A Philosophical Work
0. Introduction
1. A new appreciation of On Will in Nature
2. Confirmation and the scientists' insight into the will
3. Relinquishing the Ideas
4. Will and causality
5. The crucial role of On Will in Nature
Chapter 9: Grappling with the Sciences
0. Introduction
1. The Chemical Syllogism
2. A New Approach to Teleology
3. Creative Drives
4. Intellect and Brain, Representation and Reality
5. Matter, Forces, and Scientific Realism
Chapter 10: Essences, Emergence, and Ground
0. Introduction
1. Ideas, Or Explaining the Phenomenal World
2. Ideas and Aesthetic Experience
3. Ideas as Essences
4. Teleology as An Emergent Property
5. Will and Metaphysics
6. Definitions of Will
7. Will and Metaphysical Grounding
Concluding Remarks
Bibliography
Index