Description
Northwestern University Press Mortality and Morality Search for the Good After Auschwitz 1996 Edition by Hans Jonas, Lawrence Vogel
Hans Jonas, a pupil of Heidegger and a colleague of Hannah Arendt at the New School for Social Research, was one of the most prominent phenomenologists of his generation. This carefully chosen anthology of Jonas's shorter writings - on topics from Jewish philosophy to philosophy of religion to philosophy of biology and social philosophy - reveals their range without obscuring their central unifying thread: that as living, biological beings, we are also beings who die, and who must consider the implications for current and future ethical and social relations. Grounded in Jonas's belief in the inseparability of ethics and metaphysics - the reality of values at the centre of being - and shaped by his experience as a Holocaust survivor, the deeply personal essays ""Mortality and morality"" arise from a Jewish thinker's attempt to make sense of the Jewish experience in the twentieth century. Lawrence Vogel's insightful introduction provides both historical and philosophical contexts in which to understand the importance and gravity of Jonas's thought. Table of contents :- Part 1 The need of reason - grounding an imperative of responsibility in the phenomenon of life: evolution and freedom - on the continuity among life-forms; tool, image and grave - on what is beyond the animal in man; the burden and blessing of mortality; toward an ontological grounding of an ethics for the future. Part 2 A luxury of reason - theological speculations after Auschwitz: immortality and the modern temper; the concept of God after Auschwitz - a Jewish voice; is faith still possible? Memories of Rudolf Bultmann and reflections on the philosophical aspects of his work; matter, mind and creation - cosmological evidence and cosmogonic speculation.