Skepticism, sublimity and transcendence
Rudd, Anthony
(2008)
Skepticism, sublimity and transcendence.
International Philosophical Quarterly (3).
pp. 289-304.
ISSN 0019-0365
Stanley Cavell has suggested that the deepest roots of skepticism lie in a sense of alienation between the subject and the world, and this has led him to reassess the philosophical importance of the Romantic project of “re-enchanting” the world. One way to pursue this project is by starting from Kant’s reflections on the sublime. I consider Julian Young’s recent discussion of this topic and the Heideggeran pantheism to which it leads him. I conclude that, while there is much insight in Young’s reflections, there are crucial weaknesses in his position that point towards the plausibility of re-configuring it in more theistic and / or Platonic terms
Item Type | Article |
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Date Deposited | 29 May 2025 09:06 |
Last Modified | 29 May 2025 09:06 |