Engaging post- and trans-humanist critiques, Carravetta searches the tradition to recover the key notions of free will, judgment, and emblematic projections of the ideal society. From Dante through Vico, compelling existential, ethical, and sociopolitical perspectives are applied to our modern society.
Engaging post- and trans-humanist critiques, Carravetta searches the tradition to recover the key notions of free will, judgment, and emblematic projections of the ideal society. From Dante through Vico, compelling existential, ethical, and sociopolitical perspectives are applied to our modern society.
Peter Carravetta is professor of philosophy at SUNY Stony Brook.
Inhaltsangabe
Preface Acknowledgments Introduction: Humanism at the End of the "Human" Chapter One: Dante: Poetics of Judgment and Birth of Humanism Chapter Two: Boccaccio: Contingency, Myth, History Chapter Three: Pico: The Hermeneutics of the Human Project Chapter Four: Machiavelli: Discourse, Will, Social Change Chapter Five: Agricola to Ramus: Rhetoric of Method Chapter Six: Campanella: The Human Project Between Utopia and Realpolitik Chapter Seven: Vico: The Resilience of the Human Conclusion
Preface Acknowledgments Introduction: Humanism at the End of the "Human" Chapter One: Dante: Poetics of Judgment and Birth of Humanism Chapter Two: Boccaccio: Contingency, Myth, History Chapter Three: Pico: The Hermeneutics of the Human Project Chapter Four: Machiavelli: Discourse, Will, Social Change Chapter Five: Agricola to Ramus: Rhetoric of Method Chapter Six: Campanella: The Human Project Between Utopia and Realpolitik Chapter Seven: Vico: The Resilience of the Human Conclusion
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