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The Self's Place: Approach of Saint Augustine
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Barnes and Noble
The Self's Place: Approach of Saint Augustine
Current price: $120.00
Barnes and Noble
The Self's Place: Approach of Saint Augustine
Current price: $120.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
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In the Self's Place
is an original phenomenological reading of Augustine that considers his engagement with notions of identity in
Confessions
. Using the Augustinian experience of
confessio
, Jean-Luc Marion develops a model of selfhood that examines this experience in light of the whole of the Augustinian corpus. Towards this end, Marion engages with noteworthy modern and postmodern analyses of Augustine's most "experiential" work, including the critical commentaries of Jacques Derrida, Martin Heidegger, and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Marion ultimately concludes that Augustine has preceded postmodernity in exploring an excess of the self over and beyond itself, and in using this alterity of the self to itself, as a driving force for creative relations with God, the world, and others. This reading establishes striking connections between accounts of selfhood across the fields of contemporary philosophy, literary studies, and Augustine's early Christianity.
is an original phenomenological reading of Augustine that considers his engagement with notions of identity in
Confessions
. Using the Augustinian experience of
confessio
, Jean-Luc Marion develops a model of selfhood that examines this experience in light of the whole of the Augustinian corpus. Towards this end, Marion engages with noteworthy modern and postmodern analyses of Augustine's most "experiential" work, including the critical commentaries of Jacques Derrida, Martin Heidegger, and Ludwig Wittgenstein. Marion ultimately concludes that Augustine has preceded postmodernity in exploring an excess of the self over and beyond itself, and in using this alterity of the self to itself, as a driving force for creative relations with God, the world, and others. This reading establishes striking connections between accounts of selfhood across the fields of contemporary philosophy, literary studies, and Augustine's early Christianity.