Critique of Religion and Philosophy

Capa
Princeton University Press, 1978 - 453 páginas

From one of the major figures of twentieth-century intellectual life, an incisive critique of faith and reason in the secular age

Originally published in 1958, Critique of Religion and Philosophy is Walter Kaufmann's luminous appraisal of the orthodoxies of his day. Although he was a philosopher first and foremost, Kaufmann was not immune to the wellsprings from which religion originates, considering it to be among the most vital and radical expressions of the human intellect. In this panoramic and uniquely personal book, he tests the limits of faith and reason in our secular age. Kaufmann discusses topics ranging from positivism and existentialism to language, scripture, and Eros, and shares his views on thinkers such as Plato, Aquinas, Kant, Bultmann, Niebuhr, and Freud. Challenging, playful, and disarmingly honest, Critique of Religion and Philosophy is as bold and provocative as when it was first published.

 

Conteúdo

THE PHILOSOPHIC FLIGHT
1
POSITIVISM AND EXISTENTIALISM
20
TRUTH LANGUAGE AND EXPERIENCE
62
RELIGION FAITH AND EVIDENCE
100
THE GOD OF THE PHILOSOPHERS
137
GOD AMBIGUITY AND THEOLOGY
173
SATANIC INTERLUDE OR HOW TO GO TO HELL
228
TRUTH IN THREE RELIGIONS
260
THE CORE OF RELIGION
314
SCRIPTURES AND POETRY OR HOW TO READ THE BIBLE
369
REASON AND EROS
409
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Sobre o autor (1978)

Walter Kaufmann (1921-1980) was the Stuart Professor of Philosophy at Princeton University, where he taught for more than thirty years. His many books include Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist and The Faith of a Heretic (both Princeton).

Informações bibliográficas