Ermanno Bencivenga: 5 books

Book cover of Ethics Vindicated

Ethics Vindicated

Kant's Transcendental Legitimation of Moral Discourse

by Ermanno Bencivenga
Language: English
Release Date: November 16, 2006

Can we regard ourselves as having free will? What is the place of values in a world of facts? What grounds the authority of moral injunctions, and why should we care about them? Unless we provide satisfactory answers to these questions, ethics has no credible status and is likely to be subsumed by...
Book cover of Return From Exile

Return From Exile

A Theory of Possibility

by Ermanno Bencivenga
Language: English
Release Date: October 29, 2013

In modern thought, possibility has been exiled to other worlds, in a move best typified by Leibniz. And the move has obvious repercussions in popular culture, where possibility is lived mostly as an exotic evasion, whose outcome--consistently with the Leibnizian model--reinforces the hold of conventional...
Book cover of Hegel's Dialectical Logic
by Ermanno Bencivenga
Language: English
Release Date: October 19, 2000

This clear, accessible account of Hegelian logic makes a case for its enormous seductiveness, its surprising presence in the collective consciousness, and the dangers associated therewith. Offering comprehensive coverage of Hegel's important works, Bencivenga avoids getting bogged down in short-lived scholarly debates to provide a work of permanent significance and usefulness.
Book cover of Theories of the Logos
by Ermanno Bencivenga
Language: English
Release Date: August 10, 2017

This book offers insight into the nature of meaningful discourse. It presents an argument of great intellectual scope written by an author with more than four decades of experience. Readers will gain a deeper understanding into three theories of the logos: analytic, dialectical, and oceanic. The author...
Book cover of Exercises in Constructive Imagination
by Ermanno Bencivenga
Language: English
Release Date: December 6, 2012

Philosophy in this century has often self-consciously presented itself as aiming at the destruction or deconstruction of the philosophical tradition or even of theorizing as such. The basis for such self-description may well be a deep-seated anxiety about death; but whatever its grounds, the procession...
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