
Contents
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Analogy, Plurivocity, and the Fate of Reason Analogy, Plurivocity, and the Fate of Reason
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Analogy, Reason, and Religious Figuring Analogy, Reason, and Religious Figuring
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Modern Reason, Geometrical Figuring, Weakening Analogy Modern Reason, Geometrical Figuring, Weakening Analogy
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Moralizing Analogy: The ‘As if’ of Kantian Practical Reason Moralizing Analogy: The ‘As if’ of Kantian Practical Reason
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Sublating Analogy Speculatively: The Hegelian ‘is’ Sublating Analogy Speculatively: The Hegelian ‘is’
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Analogy and Reason’s Desublation: Post-Hegelian Postulations Analogy and Reason’s Desublation: Post-Hegelian Postulations
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The Vocation of Trans-dialectical Reason: Analogy on the Verge of the Hyperbolic The Vocation of Trans-dialectical Reason: Analogy on the Verge of the Hyperbolic
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Bibliography Bibliography
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4 Analogy and the Fate of Reason
Get accessWilliam Desmond holds the David R. Cook Chair in Philosophy at Villanova University, Thoms A. F. Kelly Visiting Professor of Philosophy at Maynooth University, Ireland, and is Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at the Institute of Philosophy, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. He has written widely on metaphysics, ethics, aesthetics, and religion. In addition to being the author of the trilogy Being and the Between (1995), Ethics and the Between (2001), and God and the Between (2008), his books include Desire, Dialectic and Otherness: An Essay on Origins (1987), Philosophy and its Others: Ways of Being and Mind (1990), Beyond Hegel and Dialectic (1992), Hegel’s God: A Counterfeit Double (2003), Art, Origins, Otherness: Between Art and Philosophy (2003), Is There a Sabbath for Thought? Between Religion and Philosophy (2005), and The Intimate Universal: The Hidden Porosity among Religion, Art, Philosophy, and Politics (2016). He has served as the President of the Hegel Society of America, the Metaphysical Society of America, and the American Catholic Philosophical Association. In 2012 The William Desmond Reader was published.
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Published:03 August 2016
Cite
Abstract
This chapter explores a plurivocity in the meaning(s) of reason and analogy, and suggests a vocation for analogy if it is to redeem its plurivocal promise. Reason is understood differently depending on which sense of being is in the ascendant. If univocity is in the ascendant, as in modern rationalism, a philosophical and theological feel for what analogy means tends to be weakened. If equivocity comes back, reason goes to school with finesse and is more attentive to figurations of being that elude precise determinations and is more hospitable to the analogical way. Analogy is explored in modern rationalism and empiricism, in Kant’s critical reason, in Hegel’s speculative reason, and in a number of post-dialectical forms. Finally, the chapter suggests there is something metaxological about analogy in trying to be true to the between-space of communication between the finite and the divine.
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