Care Crosses the River
In this collection of short meditations on various topics, Hans Blumenberg eschews academic ponderousness and writes in a genre evocative of Montaigne's Essais, Walter Benjamin's Denkbilder, or Adorno's Minima Moralia. Drawing upon an intellectual tradition that ranges from Aesop to Wittgenstein and from medieval theology to astrophysics, he works as a detective of ideas scouring the periphery of intellectual and philosophical history for clues—metaphors, gestures, anecdotes—essential to grasping human finitude. Images of shipwrecks, attempts at ordering the world, and questions of foundations are traced through the work of Goethe, Schopenhauer, Simmel, Husserl, Thomas Mann, and others. The book's reflections culminate in a rereading of the fable "Care Crosses the River" that lies at the center of Heidegger's analysis of Dasein in which the fable's elided Gnostic center is recovered: Care creates the human in its own image, as a reflection of its narcissism.

At stake throughout are two inextricable elements of Blumenberg's thought: a theory of nonconceptuality as essential to philosophizing and an exploration of culture understood as humanity's unceasing attempts to relieve itself of the weight of the absolutism of reality.

1116946023
Care Crosses the River
In this collection of short meditations on various topics, Hans Blumenberg eschews academic ponderousness and writes in a genre evocative of Montaigne's Essais, Walter Benjamin's Denkbilder, or Adorno's Minima Moralia. Drawing upon an intellectual tradition that ranges from Aesop to Wittgenstein and from medieval theology to astrophysics, he works as a detective of ideas scouring the periphery of intellectual and philosophical history for clues—metaphors, gestures, anecdotes—essential to grasping human finitude. Images of shipwrecks, attempts at ordering the world, and questions of foundations are traced through the work of Goethe, Schopenhauer, Simmel, Husserl, Thomas Mann, and others. The book's reflections culminate in a rereading of the fable "Care Crosses the River" that lies at the center of Heidegger's analysis of Dasein in which the fable's elided Gnostic center is recovered: Care creates the human in its own image, as a reflection of its narcissism.

At stake throughout are two inextricable elements of Blumenberg's thought: a theory of nonconceptuality as essential to philosophizing and an exploration of culture understood as humanity's unceasing attempts to relieve itself of the weight of the absolutism of reality.

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Care Crosses the River

Care Crosses the River

Care Crosses the River

Care Crosses the River

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Overview

In this collection of short meditations on various topics, Hans Blumenberg eschews academic ponderousness and writes in a genre evocative of Montaigne's Essais, Walter Benjamin's Denkbilder, or Adorno's Minima Moralia. Drawing upon an intellectual tradition that ranges from Aesop to Wittgenstein and from medieval theology to astrophysics, he works as a detective of ideas scouring the periphery of intellectual and philosophical history for clues—metaphors, gestures, anecdotes—essential to grasping human finitude. Images of shipwrecks, attempts at ordering the world, and questions of foundations are traced through the work of Goethe, Schopenhauer, Simmel, Husserl, Thomas Mann, and others. The book's reflections culminate in a rereading of the fable "Care Crosses the River" that lies at the center of Heidegger's analysis of Dasein in which the fable's elided Gnostic center is recovered: Care creates the human in its own image, as a reflection of its narcissism.

At stake throughout are two inextricable elements of Blumenberg's thought: a theory of nonconceptuality as essential to philosophizing and an exploration of culture understood as humanity's unceasing attempts to relieve itself of the weight of the absolutism of reality.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780804735803
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Publication date: 08/16/2010
Series: Meridian: Crossing Aesthetics Series
Pages: 176
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.90(h) x 0.50(d)

About the Author

Hans Blumenberg (1920–1996) was one of Germany's most important postwar philosophers. Among his works available in English are: The Legitimacy of the Modern Age (1985), Work on Myth (1986), The Genesis of the Copernican World (1989), and Shipwreck with Spectator (1996).

Table of Contents

Maritime Emergencies

Cursing the Sea 3

Suffering Shipwreck Professionally 3

Enemies 4

Remaining Inconspicuous 5

A Heretic on Board, on the Adriatic and the Danube 6

The Heightened Casuistry of the Maritime Emergency 9

Shipwrecked and Unable to Swim 12

The Promise of Rescue Taken at Its Word 13

Renouncing Rescue Right on Time 15

Hungry for Figs Again 16

The Deadly Calm of the Sea 24

What is Perhaps Lost

Rescue by Sinking 31

Darwin's Ship Bible 32

Gestures of a Loss of Reality 33

The Suspicion of Meaninglessness 39

The Restlessness of the Spirits 43

A Loss of the Last Judgment 44

Aversion to Knowledge 49

Side Effects of the Need for Meaning 53

Remnants of the Unattainable 56

The Last of All Cult Victims: Boredom 60

Names Prescribe Burdens and Losses 61

Rescues Without Sinking 64

Fundamental Differences

Foundation and Soil, Bottom and Ground: Hitting Bottom, Getting to the Bottom of Things, Standing on the Ground 67

Standing and Constancy 70

The Building Site 71

Farmland 74

The Swamp 75

"Asphalt" and "Swamp"-A Dualism 78

Beneath the Foundations 80

Terra Inviolata 82

On Board · Transformations of a Metaphor 85

Something Like a World Order

The Secrecy of All-too-easy Formulas 93

Missing Timeliness 94

A Talent for Guilt 94

Visibility 95

Detours 95

King Pyrrhus · Life as a Detour 97

Systematics of Fate 98

A Case of Melancholy 100

Border Post and Gravestone · A Daemon's World Orders 101

Three Degrees Above Nothingness · On the Symbolism of Theoretical Insults and Consolations 106

The Arbitration of the World 109

A Proviso for the Beatified · Lead-Up to an Auxiliary Thought of Malte Laurids Brigge 110

Unexpected Congruence 113

Missed Encounters

Parable of the Unmissable Missed Encounters 117

In Many Places 118

On Rhodes 118

In Rome 119

In Rome, Somewhat Later 121

In Vienna 122

In Frankfurt 123

In an Alpine Pasture 124

In Jena 126

In the East 127

Summit Talks 128

Hebbel at Schopenhauer's 128

Proust and Joyce 133

Dasein's Care

The Narcissism of Care: The Creature of a Fleeting Reflection 139

The Fundamental Concern of Being 141

Concern for a Final Unmistakability 143

Concern for the Worthiness of Being 145

Concern for Reason 148

Taking Care of Happiness 149

If Care Is Objective, Happiness Must Be Subjective 152

Tense World Relations 153

A Still Unconfirmed Last Word 157

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