Buch, Englisch, Band 6, 218 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 440 g
Buch, Englisch, Band 6, 218 Seiten, Format (B × H): 157 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 440 g
Reihe: Contemporary Russian Philosophy
ISBN: 978-90-04-70875-4
Verlag: Brill
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Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 What Is Florensky’s Philosophy?
2 Conceptualizing Discontinuity: A Perfect Oxymoron
3 Continuity: The Mainstay of the Western Scientific View
4 Florensky’s Discontinuity: Antinomy and Symbol
1 Searching for Discontinuity: Florensky’s Pythagorean Mathematics
1 The Moscow School of the Theory of Functions
2 Between Function and Form: Florensky’s “Speculative Mathematics”
3 Back to Pythagoras: Toward a “Mathematics Outside Mathematics”
2 Truth as Self-Contradiction: Platonic Influences and Philosophy of Knowledge
1 From Mathematics to Theology: Florensky’s “Magic” Plato
2 Plato’s “Idealism,” or the Antinomic Nature of Reason
3 The Quest for “Praeambula Rationis”: The Fundamental Antinomy of Knowledge
3 The World of Antinomies: Between Theology and Logic
1 Discovering the Kantian Antinomies
2 “Tertium Datur”: The Way of Theological Reason
3 The Ground of the Paradox: The Logic of Florensky’s Antinomies
4 Plato and Kant in Florensky’s Philosophy of History
1 The Philosophical Foundation of History
2 Plato vs. Kant: Resetting History
3 The Middle Ages and the Renaissance as Categories of Thought
4 Plato, Kant, and the Discontinuous Sense of the World
5 Concrete Metaphysics and the Philosophy of Nature
1 Ways and Centers: The Concretization of Metaphysics
2 From Antinomy to Symbol: The Boundary as a Philosophical Problem
3 Symbolarium: True Knowledge as Form
6 Nature, Art, and Perspective: Pavel Florensky’s Aesthetic “Realism”
1 Art in Reverse: A Theory of Multiple Spaces and Times
2 The Symbolic Paradigm of Knowledge and True Realism
3 The Role of the Symbol: Examples from Arts and Literature
4 Conclusion: Art as a “Living Organism”
7 The Philosophy of Discontinuity as a Philosophy of the Name
1 Language, Word, and Identity: Florensky’s Philosophy of Literature
2 The Original Power of the Word
3 The Palamitic Logic and Onomatodoxy
Conclusion: Toward a “Scientific Neoplatonism”
Bibliography
Index