Filosofía de la ilustración

Portada
Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1972 - 405 páginas
Cuando se habla del Siglo de las Luces se ha rebasado toda indicación secular o centenaria, y se ha caracterizado con precisión una época histórica del pensamiento y la acción occidental. Kant, en sus últimos años, le coloca el colofón con su ensayo ¿Qué es la Ilustración?,descubriendo la raíz de la época en el ¡Sapere aude! (¡Atrévete a saber!) Es la historia de este atrevimiento la que nos cuenta Ernst Cassirer.

Acerca del autor (1972)

Ernst Cassirer, a German neo-Kantian philosopher, taught at several European universities before moving to the United States and teaching at Yale (1941-1944) and Columbia universities. A prolific historian of philosophy, Cassirer was influenced by Immanuel Kant and Georg Hegel but originated his own distinctive doctrine. The centerpiece of Cassirer's thought is his theory of symbolic forms. He construed representation, the ground of symbolic form, to be essentially symbolic, fusing perceptual materials with conceptual meanings. The human species, he taught, is essentially a symbolizing animal. He maintained that symbolic forms are manifest in different modes-languages, myth, art, science, and religion. Cassirer utilized his theory of symbolic forms in the elaboration of a flexible philosophy of culture.

Información bibliográfica