In this Book
- On Germans and Other Greeks: Tragedy and Ethical Life
- Book
- 2001
- Published by: Indiana University Press
- Series: Studies in Continental Thought
On Germans and Other Greeks
Tragedy and Ethical
Life
Dennis J. Schmidt
What Greek tragedy and German philosophy reveal about the meaning of art for ethical life.
"Schmidt's investigation of tragedy is a highly
significant, powerful work, one with far-reaching consequences. It bears on our
understanding of the role of the arts and of philosophical thinking in our
culture."
-- Rodolphe Gasché
In this illuminating work, Dennis J. Schmidt examines tragedy as one of the highest forms of human expression for both the ancients and the moderns. While uncovering the specifically Greek nature of tragedy as an exploration of how to live an ethical life, Schmidt's elegant and penetrating readings of Greek texts show that it was the beauty of Greek tragic art that led Kant and other German thinkers to appreciate the relationship between tragedy and ethics. The Germans, however, gave this relationship a distinctly German interpretation. Through the Greeks, the Germans reflected on the enigmas of ethical life and asked innovative questions about how to live an ethical life outside of the typical assumptions and restrictions of traditional Western metaphysics. Schmidt's engagements with Schelling, Hegel, Hölderlin, Nietzsche, and Heidegger show how German philosophical appropriations of Greek tragedy conceived of ethics as moving beyond the struggle between good and evil toward the discovery of community truths. Enlisting a wide range of literary and philosophical texts, some translated into English for the first time, Schmidt reveals that contemporary notions of tragedy, art, ethics, and truth are intimately linked to the Greeks.
Dennis J. Schmidt is Professor of Philosophy at Villanova University. He is author of The Ubiquity of the Finite and translator of Ernst Bloch's Natural Law and Human Dignity.
Studies in Continental
Thought -- John Sallis, general editor May 2001
432 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4,
bibl., index
cloth 0-253-33868-9 $49.95 L /
Table of Contents
- IN LIEU OF A PREFACE
- pp. xi-xvi
- KEY TO FREQUENTLY CITED WORKS
- pp. xvii-xviii
- 2. ARISTOTLE
- pp. 46-72
- Interlude. Kant and Schelling
- pp. 73-88
- 5. NIETZSCHE
- pp. 191-224
- 6. HEIDEGGER
- pp. 225-270
- Convictions and Suspicions
- pp. 271-284
- BIBLIOGRAPHY
- pp. 323-330