Imagen del autor
26+ Obras 646 Miembros 5 Reseñas

Sobre El Autor

Robert B. Pippin is the Evelyn Stefansson Nef Distinguished Service Professor at the University of Chicago. He is the author of Henry James and Modern Moral Life. After the Beautiful, several books on modern German philosophy, and five books on film and philosophy, most recently, Filmed Thought: mostrar más Cinema as Reflective Form, also published by the University of Chicago Press. mostrar menos
Créditos de la imagen: Photo courtesy the University of Chicago Experts Exchange (link)

Series

Obras de Robert B. Pippin

Introductions to Nietzsche (2012) — Editor — 21 copias

Obras relacionadas

The Practice of Value (2003) — Contribuidor — 32 copias
Technology and the Politics of Knowledge (1995) — Contribuidor — 28 copias
Erotikon: Essays on Eros, Ancient and Modern (2005) — Contribuidor — 23 copias
Tragedy and the Idea of Modernity (Classical Presences) (2015) — Contribuidor — 5 copias
B-Side Modernism (2015) — Editor — 1 copia

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Nombre canónico
Pippin, Robert B.
Nombre legal
Pippin, Robert Buford
Fecha de nacimiento
1948-09-14
Género
male
Nacionalidad
USA
Lugar de nacimiento
Portsmouth, Virginia, USA
Lugares de residencia
Chicago, Illinois, USA
Educación
Pennsylvania State University (MA|1972|Ph.D|1974)
Trinity College (BA|1970)
Ocupaciones
philosopher
professor
Organizaciones
University of Chicago
University of California, San Diego
Premios y honores
German National Academy of Sciences Leopoldina (2016)
American Philosophical Society (2008)
American Academy of Arts and Sciences (2007)
Fellow, Wissenschaftskolleg zu Berlin (2003)
Biografía breve
Robert B. Pippin is an American philosopher best known for his work on Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel. He has also researched Immanuel Kant, Friedrich Nietzsche, Marcel Proust, Hannah Arendt, Leo Strauss, Henry James and the philosophy of film.

Robert Pippin is one of the best-known researchers in the field of German idealism, especially Kant and Hegel. His research interests lie in the history of philosophy, epistemology and ethics. In recent years he has also paid intensive attention to research into theories of modernity.

Pippin has a range of interdisciplinary interests, particularly the relationship between philosophy and literature. He has written a book on Henry James and articles on Proust, modern art and contemporary film. Among other things, he dealt with the fatalism in American film noir and the importance of the western directors Howard Hawks and John Ford for political philosophy.

Miembros

Reseñas

Hegel makes the key and disarming arguments that "self-consciousness is desire itself" and that it achieves its "satisfaction" only in another self-consciousness in the most famous chapter of his most important philosophical work, the Phenomenology of Spirit. Hegel on Self-Consciousness offers a ground-breaking new understanding of these revolutionary assertions, tracing their origins to Kant's philosophy and establishing their continuing significance for modern thought.
½
 
Denunciada
jwhenderson | Feb 5, 2022 |

Quite a conundrum with this one, since it won't be much use to you if you haven't read Hegel, but if you've read Hegel you've probably read it with the exact opposite assumptions to those claims with which Pippin convincingly claims you should be reading. In short: Hegel should be read as a Kantian. The Phenomenology of Spirit shows that self-consciousness is needed for any form of knowledge, and discusses a variety of forms of self-consciousness, most of which fail in the goal of providing us with the opportunity to know anything. Only one doesn't: modern, absolute knowledge. This is, in a sense, what is then laid out in the Science of Logic, which is not about crazy metaphysical monism of the mind, nor a mere category theory (that is, a theory of the concepts *we* use). It's something in between: both an account of the concepts we use, and a defense of the claim that they are also really determinate of the possibility of knowledge.

That's all pretty convincing, actually. The obvious flaw in the book is it's failure to look beyond Hegel at all: it's all well and good to claim that 'modern' Absolute Knowledge provides us with knowledge, but that's not actually a defense of modernity. That would require a defense of capitalism, amongst other unfortunate social features, or, alternatively, a critique of those features. But Pippin's dismissive attitude towards later Hegelians (e.g., the Frankfurt School) makes it impossible for him to take this next step. His book does, however, allow for the possibility of taking it.
… (más)
 
Denunciada
stillatim | 2 reseñas más. | Dec 29, 2013 |
This is like the book I've been hoping for so long! Except not quite.
 
Denunciada
LizaHa | Mar 30, 2013 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
26
También por
7
Miembros
646
Popularidad
#39,073
Valoración
3.8
Reseñas
5
ISBNs
82
Idiomas
2

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