The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms: Volume 1: Language / Edition 1

The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms: Volume 1: Language / Edition 1

ISBN-10:
0300000375
ISBN-13:
9780300000375
Pub. Date:
09/10/1965
Publisher:
Yale University Press
ISBN-10:
0300000375
ISBN-13:
9780300000375
Pub. Date:
09/10/1965
Publisher:
Yale University Press
The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms: Volume 1: Language / Edition 1

The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms: Volume 1: Language / Edition 1

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Overview

“An outstanding contribution to epistemology and to the human power of abstraction.”—F.I.G. Rawlins, Nature

The Symbolic Forms has long been considered by many who knew it in the original German as the greatest of Ernst Cassirer's works. Into it, he poured all the resources of his vast learning about language and myth, religion, art, and science—the various creative symbolizing activities and constructions through which mankind has expressed itself and given intelligible objective form to the human experience.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780300000375
Publisher: Yale University Press
Publication date: 09/10/1965
Series: Philosophy of Symbolic Forms Series , #1
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 342
Product dimensions: 5.00(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.77(d)

About the Author

Ernst Cassirer was born in 1874 in the German city of Breslau (now Wroclaw, Poland). He entered the University of Berlin in 1892, taking a course with the sociologist Georg Simmel. Simmel introduced Cassirer to the writings of the Neo-Kantian school, particularly Hermann Cohen. Cassirer became deeply interested in Neo-Kantianism, reading Kant primarily as an epistemologist and methodologist of science against the prevailing German idealist legacy of Kant as a metaphysician. In 1894 he moved to Marburg University to study with Cohen, completing his doctorate in 1899 with a dissertation on Descartes’s analysis of mathematics and science. He returned to Berlin in 1903, where he continued to work on Descartes and Leibniz whilst developing his much larger interpretation of the development of modern philosophy and science from the Renaissance to Kant. The first volume of this work served as his habilitation at the University of Berlin, where he taught as an instructor or Privatdozent from 1906 to 1919.

In 1919 Cassirer was offered a professorship at the newly founded University of Hamburg, at the time under the Weimar Republic. He taught at Hamburg from 1919 to 1933. During these years Cassirer completed his three-volume Philosophy of Symbolic Forms, his major work. It went far beyond the neo-Kantianism of the Marburg School, attempting to unite scientific and non-scientific modes of thought - "symbolic forms" - within a single philosophical vision. In 1929 he took part in a famous debate with Martin Heidegger in Davos, Switzerland, where Cassirer defended his brand of neo-Kantian symbolic forms in the face of Heidegger’s existentialist and phenomenological critique of neo-Kantianism.

In 1933, Cassirer emigrated from Germany and spent two years lecturing at Oxford and then six years at the University of Gothenburg in Sweden. He developed his theories of morality and the philosophy of law through the study of the Swedish legal philosopher Axel Hägerström. He also continued to work on the relationship between the natural sciences and the "cultural sciences, rejecting Rudolf Carnap’s physicalism and challenging the drift towards what he regarded a scientific reductionism in philosophy. Cassirer finally settled in the United States, where he taught at Yale University from 1941 to 1944 and at Columbia in 1944–45. During these years he wrote An Essay on Man, which expresses some of the core themes of The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms, and the Myth of the State, which examines rise of fascism on the basis of Cassirer’s conception of mythical thought. He died suddenly as a result of a heart attack while walking in New York in 1945.

Table of Contents

Foreword Peter E. Gordon

Translator’s Preface S. G. Lofts

Translator’s Introduction: The Question Concerning the Human – Life, Form, and Freedom: On the Way to an Open Cosmopolitanism S. G. Lofts

Translator’s Acknowledgements S. G. Lofts

Preface

Introduction and the Framing of the Problem

1. The Problem of Language in the History of Philosophy

2. Language in the Phase of Sensible Expression

3. Language in the Phase of Intuitive Expression

4. Language as the Expression of Conceptual Thinking – The Form of the Linguistic Formation of Concept and Class

5. Language and the Expression of the Pure Forms of Relation – The Sphere of Judgment and the Concepts of Relation [Relation].

Glossary of Terms

Index of Proper Names

General Index

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