
Schopenhauer
Robert J. Wicks(Author)
Wiley (Publisher)
Published on 28. March 2008
Book
Paperback/Softback
216 pages
978-1-4051-3480-4 (ISBN)
Description
Arthur Schopenhauer's reputation as a cynic and a misanthrope often obscures the complexity and humanity of his philosophy. In this innovative volume, Robert Wicks breaks away from the accepted oversimplification of Schopenhauer as an incurable pessimist, to present an insightful portrait of his life and work.
Beginning with a look at his early life and the people and circumstances that shaped his thinking, the book situates Schopenhauer's philosophical work within the context of these formative years. It examines Schopenhauer's aesthetic and moral theories, his affinity toward Asian mysticism and Christianity, as well as his ideas about the sublime, consciousness, empathy, humanity, and "Will". The volume focuses on the composition and structure of Schopenhauer's philosophy and explores his intellectual links to Hegel, Nietzsche, and Wittgenstein.
An essential resource for students and scholars of aesthetics and nineteenth-century philosophy, this is an important introduction to a unique and influential thinker.
Reviews / Votes
"Robert Wicks offers a highly accessible introduction to Schopenhauer's philosophy, giving prominence to the central ethical notions of tranquility and wanting less, which he compares in illuminating fashion with Buddhism."- Chris Janaway, University of Southampton
"Robert Wicks' Schopenhauer is a perspicacious and perspicuous elucidation of the great pessimist's thoughts. This is a fine work of philosophical scholarship, valuable for those approaching Schopenhauer for the first time and for those who have been with him for years."
- David Cartwright, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater
More details
Series
Edition
1. Auflage
Language
English
Place of publication
Hoboken
United Kingdom
Publishing group
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Target group
Professional and scholarly
undergraduates and graduates studying nineteenth century philosophy or aesthetics
Product notice
Paperback (trade)
Unsewn / adhesive bound
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
Thickness: 12 mm
Weight
321 gr
ISBN-13
978-1-4051-3480-4 (9781405134804)
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions


Person
Robert Wicks is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Auckland. He is the author of Modern French Philosophy: From Existentialism to Postmodernism (2003), Nietzsche (2002), and Hegel's Theory of Aesthetic Judgment (1994). He is also the author of the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy entry on Schopenhauer.
Content
Preface.
Introduction.
Chapter One: The Philosophy of a Nonconformist (1788-1860).
I. The Unsettled Years: 1788-1831.
II. The Stable Years: 1833-1860.
Part I: Schopenhauer's Theoretical Philosophy.
Chapter Two: Historical Background.
I. Mind-Dependent Qualities vs. Mind-Independent Qualities.
II. Space and Time.
Chapter Three: The Principle of Sufficient Reason.
I. The Root of All Explanation.
II The Four Basic Forms of Explanation.
Chapter Four: Schopenhauer's Idealism and his Criticism of Kant.
I. The Rejection of a Mind-Independent Reality.
II. Kant's Theory of Perception.
III. Kant's Use of the Term "Object".
IV. The Logic of Manifestation.
Chapter Five: The World in Itself as a Meaningless and Almighty Will.
I. Universal Subjectivity.
II. The World as Will.
III. The Two-Tiered Objectification of the Will: Platonic Ideas and Spatio-Temporal Individuals.
Chapter Six: Critical Interpretations of the World as Will.
I. Scientific Knowledge, Philosophical Knowledge and Mystical Knowledge.
II. Regular Time Versus the Eternal Present.
Part II: Schopenhauer's Practical Philosophy.
Chapter Seven: Endless Suffering in the Daily World.
I. A Universal Will Without Purpose.
II. The Purposelessness of Schopenhauer's Thing-in-Itself.
III. Life as Embittering: Schopenhauer and Buddhism.
Chapter Eight: Tranquillity I: Sublimity, Genius and Aesthetic Experience.
I. Platonic Ideas and Aesthetic Experience.
II. Artistic Genius and the Communication Theory of Art.
III. The Hierarchy of the Visual and Verbal Arts.
IV. Tragedy and Sublimity.
V. Music and Metaphysical Experience.
Chapter Nine: Tranquillity II: Christlike Virtue and Moral Awareness.
I. Empathy as the Foundation of Moral Awareness.
II. Intelligible, Empirical and Acquired Character.
III. Humanity's Sublime Anguish.
Chapter Ten: Tranquillity III: Asceticism, Mysticism and Buddhism.
I. The Possibility of the Denial-of-the-Will.
II. Christian Quietism, Yogic Ecstasy, and Buddhist Enlightenment.
III. Asceticism and Spiritual Purification.
Part III: Schopenhauer in Perspective.
Chapter Eleven: Schopenhauer, Nietzsche and Eternal Life.
I. The Question of Life's Value.
II. Funereal Imagery and Nietzsche's Theory of Tragedy.
III. Schopenhauer's Moral Awareness and Eternal Recurrence.
IV. The Eternalistic Illusion of Supreme Health.
V. Nietzsche's Madness and Eternalistic Consciousness.
Chapter Twelve: Schopenhauer, Hegel and Alienated Labor.
I. The World's Essence: Rational or Irrational?.
II. Labor, Imprisonment and Christianity.
III. The World as Will and Representation and "Self-Consciousness" in Hegel's.
Phenomenology.
Part IV: Schopenhauer, Wittgenstein and the Unspeakable.
I. The Quest for Absolute Value.
II. What the Philosophical Investigations Cannot Say.
Conclusion: Idealism and the Will to Peace.
I. The Plausibility of Schopenhauer's Idealism.
II. The Explanatory Weakness of a Blind and Senseless Will.
III. The Prospect of Peace.
Bibliography