This thought-provoking study explores the philosophical resources provided by Hegel and Heidegger to grasp the nature of the "I" and combines those resources in a theoretical analysis of "I-hood" in its connection with nature and history, experience and myth.
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"In this well-researched, well-argued study, Bubbio addresses an exceedingly important but frequently neglected topic in continental philosophy: the relation between the Hegelian and Heideggerian attempts to conceive of the "the I" or "the self" in a way that escapes the problematic dichotomizing of objectivity and subjectivity, nature and history, truth and freedom. Bubbio's contribution is not only erudite and historically informed, but also philosophically original and insightful. Bubbio shows how we might better appreciate Hegel and Heidegger on their own terms, and also learn from their similarities and differences, in order to gain resources for developing our own non-dichotomizing account of the self, nature, freedom, history and experience."
Michael Baur, Fordham University, USA
"Marked by careful scholarship, clarity of style, and a rigorous philosophical imagination, Bubbio takes up the riddle that each of us lives as a constant question: the enigma of the self. He addresses this question through innovative readings of Hegel and Heidegger that open up a new paradigm for understanding the I. An original contribution."
Dennis Schmidt, Western Sydney University, Australia
"An important addition to the literature on Hegel and Heidegger, Bubbio's book is a stimulating and insightful exploration of a topic that has received relatively little direct philosophical attention. Going beyond mere exegesis or comparative critique, it constitutes a significant and original contribution to contemporary thought."
Jeff Malpas, University of Tasmania, Australia
"Despite recent scientific approaches to the mind, genuine answers to the question "who am I?" remain elusive. Building on transformations of Kantian ideas by Hegel and Heidegger, Paolo Diego Bubbio points towards a satisfying answer that evades the opposition of "subjective" to "objective" that has hitherto stymied thought."
Paul Redding, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, The University of Sydney
Michael Baur, Fordham University, USA
"Marked by careful scholarship, clarity of style, and a rigorous philosophical imagination, Bubbio takes up the riddle that each of us lives as a constant question: the enigma of the self. He addresses this question through innovative readings of Hegel and Heidegger that open up a new paradigm for understanding the I. An original contribution."
Dennis Schmidt, Western Sydney University, Australia
"An important addition to the literature on Hegel and Heidegger, Bubbio's book is a stimulating and insightful exploration of a topic that has received relatively little direct philosophical attention. Going beyond mere exegesis or comparative critique, it constitutes a significant and original contribution to contemporary thought."
Jeff Malpas, University of Tasmania, Australia
"Despite recent scientific approaches to the mind, genuine answers to the question "who am I?" remain elusive. Building on transformations of Kantian ideas by Hegel and Heidegger, Paolo Diego Bubbio points towards a satisfying answer that evades the opposition of "subjective" to "objective" that has hitherto stymied thought."
Paul Redding, Emeritus Professor of Philosophy, The University of Sydney