ARTICLES No
Man Is an Island: Nature and Neo-Platonic
Ethics in Hayy Ibn Yaqzān Taneli
Kukkonen
[abstract]
Religion
in Hutcheson’s Moral Philosophy James
Harris [abstract] Enlightenment
and Freedom Jonathan
Peterson [abstract] Race,
Difference, and Anthropology in Kant’s Cosmopolitanism Todd
Hedrick [abstract] Romantic
Cosmopolitanism: Novalis’s “Christianity or Europe” Pauline
Kleingeld [abstract] Between
Enlightenment and Romanticism: Some Problems and Challenges
in Gadamer’s Hermeneutics Kristin
Gjesdal [abstract] The essay takes as its point of departure
the way in which the work of Hans-Georg Gadamer has recently been
adopted by philosophers such as Richard Rorty, John McDowell, and
Robert Brandom. While appreciating the way in which Truth and Method has gained new
relevance within an Anglo-American context, I ask whether sufficient
attention has been paid to Gadamer’s romantic heritage. In particular I
question the way in which his notion of tradition and historical truth,
designed as it is to overcome the ramifications of Descartes and the
Kantian enlightenment, is modeled on the example of art and aesthetic
experience.
NOTES AND DISCUSSION Glasgow’s Conception of
Kantian Humanity Richard Dean [abstract]