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Reviews for The Triumph of Subjectivity: An Introduction to Transcendental Phenomenology

 The Triumph of Subjectivity magazine reviews

The average rating for The Triumph of Subjectivity: An Introduction to Transcendental Phenomenology based on 2 reviews is 3.5 stars.has a rating of 3.5 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2015-02-04 00:00:00
1978was given a rating of 3 stars Joseph Dispoto
I read this book during a break from seminary at the Hungarian Pastry Shop across the street from the Cathedral Church of St. John the Divine, the place where I did most of my work during the last two years at Union Theological Seminary in New York City. The book had been recommended back in college by a member of Grinnell's philosophy faculty during a heated discussion in the student forum about the Nietzsche's hypothesis of an eternal return. I approached Danto with caution, having heard that he was a parser of propositions, that is, an analytical and not a continental philosopher. It wasn't anywhere as bad as I had feared. Danto's concern is with reconstructing Nietzsche's thought coherently, albeit recognizing distinct phases of it such as his flirtation with contemporary physics in the notion of the eternal return. Later, much to my surprise, Danto became the art critic for 'The Nation'. His essays were generally so good that I would read them even if I knew nothing of the show he was describing or the artist he was discussing.
Review # 2 was written on 2020-05-29 00:00:00
1978was given a rating of 4 stars Calvin Cruz
Another book by my late professor discusses a continental European philosopher, Friedrich Nietzsche, using the Anglo-American style of analytic philosophy. I love this sort of book, which is similar to his treatment of Jean-Paul Sartre, for several reasons. First, it establishes the kinship between the two main currents of contemporary philosophy in a way which is rarely discussed except in the most global terms. Second, it illustrates some of the tools of analytic philosophy used outside of their usual domain. And thirdly, it shows the mind of a broadly educated man at work. As with Danto's book on Sartre, Danto shows particular parallels between the continental philosopher and the analytic philosopher. To give just one example, Danto holds that one of Nietzsche's unique positions was that consciousness is not the defining possession of the individual human being, as Descartes might have argued, but that it is a product of man's being a social animal and having to interact with and to explain himself to his fellow human beings. Danto remarks the resemblance of this position to that of P.F. Strawson, a British philosopher who followed Wittgenstein, and who argued that to understand an emotion is not only to have experienced it subjectively, but also to know its identity with the behavior that our fellow human beings observe. I wish that I had read this in graduate school, because it would have helped me with a particular paper that I wrote for Danto, and with a particular topic that I was trying to understand. Danto covers the usual topics that people know in connection with Nietzsche, such as the death of God, the superman and the eternal return, but he draws his own conclusions as to what is most important. For example: "And if there is any single moral/metaphysical teaching I would ascribe to him, it would be this: suffering really is meaningless, there is no point to it, and the amount of suffering caused by giving it a meaning chills the blood to contemplate." Danto takes care to see what is unique in Nietzsche and to distinguish him from the unfounded stereotypes of him as a libertine or as a proto-Nazi. He distinguishes between Nietzsche the aphorist, and Nietzsche the philosopher. Danto shows how an accomplished contemporary philosopher can come to terms with a radical thinker of the 19th century, so that we are drawn into appreciating (not uncritically) his philosophical vision.


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