Journey of the dialectic
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Journey of the dialectic

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402 pages 2010

About This Book

No discipline has been more uniformly derided for a longer period than metaphysics. Attack on metaphysics has come from thinkers like Kierkegaard, Nietzche, Heidegger, Arendt, Levinas, Derrida, and Milbank, who have argued that metaphysics is the root of modern nihilism and totalitarianism. The author puts this claim to the test, developing a historical sociology of metaphysics that analyzes the social basis and political valence of metaphysical systems. He does this globally and cross-culturally, engaging not only the Hellenic tradition and its extension into medieval Christendom and Dar-al-Islam, but also the Indian and Chinese traditions. The author argues that, far from representing the roots of nihilism or modern state terror, metaphysics emerges (and continues to be necessary) as a way to ground meaning and value in societies - especially in market societies in which these have become problematic. Metaphysics tends to restrain exploitation and to encourage the redirection of surplus toward activities that promote development of human capacities. This book concludes with an outline of a new dialectical metaphysics that reconciles a Buddhist metaphysics of interdependence in the Hua-yen tradition with a historicized metaphysics of Esse, yielding results that looks startlingly like the dao xue, or neo-Confucianism of Song China. The author shows how such a metaphysics can ground meaning and value while answering postmodern concerns to safeguard difference.

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