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Being and Nothing: The Primordial Question of Philosophy [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 544 pages, height x width x depth: 248x176x34 mm, weight: 1020 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Jun-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1350503452
  • ISBN-13: 9781350503458
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 544 pages, height x width x depth: 248x176x34 mm, weight: 1020 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 12-Jun-2025
  • Izdevniecība: Bloomsbury Academic
  • ISBN-10: 1350503452
  • ISBN-13: 9781350503458

In this masterful work, leading German philosopher Lorenz B. Puntel answers the primordial question of philosophy: "Why is there Being at all and not absolutely nothing?"

Considering the history of philosophy from Parmenides through to Heidegger and beyond, Puntel charges philosophy with persistently failing to adequately confront the question of Being. In response, Puntel sets out a systematic philosophy to rival Hegel's Science of Logic and Whitehead's Process and Reality.

In two parts, the book first surveys the history of Western philosophy through the theoretical framework of Structural-Systematic Philosophy (SSP), which unites continental philosophy's comprehensiveness with the precision and linguistic rigor of the analytic tradition. Analysing all of the major stages in the “forgetfulness of Being” in Western philosophy, Puntel establishes a dialogue with a vast number of thinkers and movements in the history of philosophy, including Plato, Aquinas, Duns Scotus, Francisco Suarez, Christian Wolff, Leibniz, Hegel, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Sartre, W.O. Quine, Peter van Inwagen, Kit Fine, Alexius Meinong, and Jean-Luc Marion. The second part develops the methodical question of a systematic theory of Being. Puntel sets out a universal metaphysics, introducing concepts of world, existence, and types of beings. Moreover, he examines the plurality of possible worlds, the disclosure of Being, and modern philosophies of subjectivity since Kant, including the analytic philosophies of Robert Brandom and Ernst Tugendhat. The book culminates in a theory of Being and explains the relation of Being to the concept of God.

Being and Nothing is the third in Puntel's trilogy comprising Structure and Being (2008) and Being and God (2011), and is a book that will appeal to all those with an interest in the history of philosophy, continental philosophy, theology, and analytic philosophy.

Recenzijas

Absolute nothingness is unthinkable. This apparently innocuous philosophical insight is the structuring point in Lorenz Puntels seminal Being and Nothingness. From this principle, Puntel shows how fundamentally flawed key philosophers from Parmenides to Heidegger have addressed the question of being. Its an intriguing exercise in history of philosophy that is critical yet constructive, leading to Puntels own alternative proposal that has both broad scope and deep insights -- Michael Agerbo Mųrch, Assistant professor in systematic theology, Dansk Bibel-Institut, Denmark In this rigorously argued, impressively erudite tour of the history of philosophy, Lorenz Puntel makes a compelling case for the claim that traditional philosophy, from Parmenides to the present, has overlooked the primordial question of philosophy: the question of Being. This is historically-informed systematic philosophy at its very best. -- Michael Baur, Associate Professor of Philosophy and Adjunct Professor of Law, Fordham University, USA

Papildus informācija

In this masterful work, leading German philosopher Lorenz B. Puntel answers the primordial question of philosophy: "Why at all is there Being and not absolutely nothing?"
PART I

Chapter
1. First metaphysical approaches: the development of ancient Greek
philosophy: from Being itself to metaphysics as the science of beings as
beings and to the dimension beyond beingness
Chapter
2. Christian-metaphysical approaches in high- and late-scholasticism;
from an inchoative Being-theoretical to a purely onto-theo-logical
determination of Being and nothing
Chapter
3. Leibniz and the question Why is there anything at all rather than
nothing?
Chapter
4. Nihilism, critique of metaphysics, and the topic Being and
nothing: Nietzsche and Heidegger
Chapter
5. Sartres The Being and the Nothing: a purely subjective
phenomenological conception
Chapter
6. The fading-out and absence of the question about Being itself and
absolute nothing in the main stream of analytic philosophy
Chapter
7. Relative nothing

PART II

Preliminary remarks
Chapter
1. Essential components of the theoretical framework of the
structural-systematic philosophy (SSP)
Chapter 2: Systematic onto-logy as theory of beingness/beings
Chapter
3. Possible worlds
Chapter 4: Disclosure of the dimension of Being: a systematic approach
Chapter 5: Making explicit the dimension of Being as the result of the
overcoming of the modern philosophy of subjectivity I: Kant and Hegel
Chapter
6. Disclosure of the dimension of Being as result of the overcoming
of modern subjectivity II: Husserl and the transformation of phenomenology
Chapter 7: Disclosure of the dimension of Being as the result of the
overcoming of analytic philosophy interpreted as philosophy of subjectivity
Chapter 8: Theory of Being I: basic features of a theory of Being as such
Chapter 9: Theory of Being II: theory of modal status of the dimension of
Being as the ultimate systematic clarification of the topic Being and
nothing
Chapter 10: Theory of Being III: systematic explication of the modal
two-dimensionality of the dimension of Being

Afterword: A look back and a look ahead
Bibliography
Index of names
Index of subjects
Lorenz B. Puntel was Professor Emeritus in the Department of Philosophy at Ludwig-Maximillians University, Germany.

Alan White is Mark Hopkins Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at Williams College, USA.