Number of the records: 1
“Philosophy and Anthropology”
- 1.0579607 - FLÚ 2024 RIV eng A - Abstract
Feinberg, Joseph Grim
“Philosophy and Anthropology”.
[6. bienální konference CASA 2021 (Česká asociace pro sociální antropologii). Online, 17.04.2021-18.04.2021]
Method of presentation: Zvaná přednáška
Event organizer: CASA
Institutional support: RVO:67985955
Keywords : Anthropological method * philosophical anthropology * history of philosophy * history of anthropology * alternative rationalities * humanism * universalism
OECD category: Antropology, ethnology
http://www.casaonline.cz/wp-content/uploads/Program_abstrakty_6_bienalni_konference_CASA_2021.pdf
There is rich tradition of interaction between anthropology and philosophy. This article reflects on the character of this interaction, arguing that it is not a case of two separate, parallel traditions that mutually influence one another, but rather of two interconnected disciplines that have become necessary to one another’s development. Both disciplines aim at a universalistic understanding of the human being, but each does so by different means. Philosophy allows the autonomous work of reason to criticize established categories of thought, positing new concepts of the human: but it risks becoming too autonomous – too self-sufficient and self-referential – thus allowing its categories to become resistant to criticism, established as marks of “civilization” that distinguish philosophical ideas from ideas that are non-philosophical, irrational, and barbarous. Anthropology, for its part, reveals the limitations of premature universalism, pointing to forms of reason excluded from dominant systems of thought. Philosophy can turn to anthropology in order to expand and bring in new concepts. Anthropology can turn to philosophy in order recall its original impulse toward conceptualizing the universal, in an expansive form that I call “barbarous universalism”.
Permanent Link: https://hdl.handle.net/11104/0348707
Number of the records: 1