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Review Quotes:
The two volumes of
The Norton Anthology of Western Philosophy: After Kant combine the two central virtues for such a major project: they are edited by leading specialists in their fields and, accordingly, they contain the most important and pathbreaking texts from both the analytic and the interpretive tradition. What is more, their General Introductions shed substantial philosophical light on the distinctions at play when looking at the two major traditions of philosophy after Kant. The approach laid out in them is highly innovative and absolutely corresponds to the state of the art. The two volumes are indispensable for any student and professor of philosophy.--Markus Gabriel "Bonn University (Germany)"
Publisher Marketing:
The Norton Anthology of Western Philosophy: After Kant provides a comprehensive introduction to the predominantly European ("Continental") interpretive tradition of philosophy after Kant in one volume, and to the now predominantly Anglo-American analytic tradition in the other. It features the extensive editorial apparatus for which Norton Anthologies have been known and trusted by professors and students alike for more than 50 years. Ideal for courses at all levels in the history of philosophy after Kant, these volumes also belong on every philosopher's (and philosophy student's) bookshelf.
Contributor Bio:Conant, James
James Conant is Co-Editor of the second of T
he Norton Anthology of Western Philosophy's two
After Kant volumes,
The Analytic Tradition. He is Chester D. Tripp Professor of Humanities and Professor of Philosophy at the University of Chicago. His books include
Nietzsche: Perfektionismus and
Perspektivismus (2014),
Orwell ou le Pouvoir de la Verité(2012) and (with Cora Diamond)
Rileggere Wittgenstein (2010). He has edited two volumes of Hilary Putnam's papers (
Realism with a Human Face, 1992;
Words and Life, 1995) and co-edited (with John Haugeland) one volume of Thomas Kuhn's papers (
The Road Since Structure, 2000).
Contributor Bio:Elliott, Jay R
J
ay R. Elliott is Co-Editor of the second of
The Norton Anthology of Western Philosophy's two
After Kant volumes,
The Analytic Tradition. He is Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Classical Studies at Bard College.
Contributor Bio:Schacht, Richard
Richard Schacht is General Editor of
The Norton Anthology of Western Philosophy and Editor of the first of its two
After Kant volumes,
The Interpretive Tradition. He is Professor of Philosophy and Jubilee Professor of Liberal Arts and Sciences (Emeritus) at the University of Illinois. His books include
Nietzsche (1983);
Making Sense of Nietzsche (1995);
Hegel and After (1975);
Alienation (1970);
The Future of Alienation (1994); and
Finding an Ending: Reflections on Wagner's Ring (2004, with Philip Kitcher). He is editor of
Nietzsche: Selections (1993);
Nietzsche, Genealogy, Morality (1994); and
Nietzsche's Postmoralism (2001).
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