Philosophy from the outside in: Rosenzweig’s critical project
pages: 65-76
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2298/FID1202065GApstrakt
This paper examines Rosenzweig’s philosophic project in the context of his time as a critical intervention in the discussion of the place of Jewish thought in the university and in society. If Hermann Cohen represented the first generation of Jewish philosophers claiming that participation in the university is constitutive for the institution’s claim to universalism, the second generation-represented by Martin Buber - was more diffident about the university and its openness. For Buber, literary modernism offered what the university would refuse. Disappointed about the failure of the recognition of the efforts of the previous two generations, Rosenzweig represents the third generation. He turns the situation into a creative response anchoring philosophy as a project that calls for a resolute move outside the university. Keywords: university, philosophy, new thinking, speech thinking, “we”/“you”.##submission.downloads##
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Articles published in Philosophy and Society are open-access in accordance with the CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 License.