Weakening Philosophy Essays in Honour of Gianni Vattimo Edited by Santiago Zabala Montreal: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 2006, pagine 512 Leading philosophers, including Umberto Eco and Charles Taylor, explore the work of important contemporary thinker Gianni Vattimo
Gianni Vattimo is one of the world's most important philosophers, yet he has received scant attention in the English-speaking world. The essays in Weakening Philosophy, from leading figures such as Umberto Eco and Charles Taylor, introduce his ideas to a wider audience.
Moving away from Jacques Derrida's deconstructionism and Paul
Ricoeur's hermeneutics, and building on his experiences as a politician,
Vattimo asks if it is still possible to speak of moral imperatives,
individual rights, and political freedom. Acknowledging the force of
Nietzsche's "God is dead," Vattimo argues for a philosophy of pensiero
debole or "weak thinking" that shows how moral values can exist without
being guaranteed by an external authority. His secularising interpretation
stresses anti-metaphysical elements and puts philosophy into a relationship
with postmodern culture. Contributors include Rüdiger Bubner (Heidelberg), Carmelo Dotolo (Pontifical Urbaniana), Paolo Flores d'Arcais (Rome "La Sapienza"), Umberto Eco (Bologna), Manfred Frank (Eberhard Karls, Tübingen), Jean Grondin (Montreal), Nancy Frankenberry (Dartmouth College), Giacomo Marramao (Rome "Tre"), Jack Miles (Getty Trust), Jean-Luc Nancy (Marc Bloch, Strasbourg), Teresa Oñate (Universidad Nacional de Educación a Distancia), Jeffrey Perl (Bar-Ilan University), James Risser (Seattle), Richard Rorty (Stanford), Pier Aldo Rovatti (Trieste), Fernando Savater (Complutense, Madrid), Reiner Schürmann (Duquesne), Hugh J. Silverman (Stony Brook), Charles Taylor (McGill), Gianni Vattimo (Turin), Wolfgang Welsch (Friedrich-Schiller University Jena), and Santiago Zabala (Pontifical Lateran, Rome). Santiago Zabala is researcher in philosophy, Pontifical Lateran University of Rome, and the author of numerous books, including Tugendhat: The Hermeneutical Nature of Analytic Philosophy.
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