Ivan Karamazov’s rebellion in Albert Camus’ and Karl Jaspers’ interpretations

The aim of this study is to present Albert Camus’ and Karl Jaspers’ interpretations of Ivan Karamazov’s rebellion as the diagnoses of the weakness of the human intellect in confrontation with the world and the criticism of rationalism. Therefore, in the introduction I will present those fragments of...

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Main Author: Urszula Lisowska
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Foundation Pro Scientia Publica 2010-12-01
Series:Journal of Education Culture and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nowadays.home.pl/JECS/data/documents/JECS=202=282010=29=205-14.pdf
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spelling doaj-080ea8f0d32f49e29c662bef2c0d28222020-11-25T02:08:03ZengFoundation Pro Scientia PublicaJournal of Education Culture and Society2081-16402081-16402010-12-012010251410.15503/jecs20102-5-14Ivan Karamazov’s rebellion in Albert Camus’ and Karl Jaspers’ interpretationsUrszula LisowskaThe aim of this study is to present Albert Camus’ and Karl Jaspers’ interpretations of Ivan Karamazov’s rebellion as the diagnoses of the weakness of the human intellect in confrontation with the world and the criticism of rationalism. Therefore, in the introduction I will present those fragments of the novel that characterize Ivan’s rebellion as highly abstract and theoretical. At the same time, this common literary context serves as the ground for reconstruction and comparison of the basic philosophical assumptions of each author. The intention of the remaining part of the paper is, firstly, to reconstruct A. Camus’ and K. Jaspers’ epistemology and, secondly, to analyse the arguments against Ivan’s attitude formulated by the writers. Their criticisms of the protagonist’s excessive trust in intellect is based on their own concepts of human epistemic capacity, which are related to the problems of the absurd in A. Camus’ and transcendence in K. Jaspers’ writings. The question of nihilism demands analysis of A. Camus’ idea of the nature of rebellion as both affirmative and negative, and of K. Jaspers’ notion of faith as pre-intellectual trust. Finally, their criticisms of the slogan “If there is no God, then anything is allowed” introduces the problem of freedom, which allows the comparison of the concepts of solidarity (A. Camus) and communication (K. Jaspers). In the conclusion these two philosophical attitudes are discussed together. Keywords: ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ; http://nowadays.home.pl/JECS/data/documents/JECS=202=282010=29=205-14.pdfrebellionrationalismabsurdsolidarityfreedomintellectfaithsuffering
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Urszula Lisowska
spellingShingle Urszula Lisowska
Ivan Karamazov’s rebellion in Albert Camus’ and Karl Jaspers’ interpretations
Journal of Education Culture and Society
rebellion
rationalism
absurd
solidarity
freedom
intellect
faith
suffering
author_facet Urszula Lisowska
author_sort Urszula Lisowska
title Ivan Karamazov’s rebellion in Albert Camus’ and Karl Jaspers’ interpretations
title_short Ivan Karamazov’s rebellion in Albert Camus’ and Karl Jaspers’ interpretations
title_full Ivan Karamazov’s rebellion in Albert Camus’ and Karl Jaspers’ interpretations
title_fullStr Ivan Karamazov’s rebellion in Albert Camus’ and Karl Jaspers’ interpretations
title_full_unstemmed Ivan Karamazov’s rebellion in Albert Camus’ and Karl Jaspers’ interpretations
title_sort ivan karamazov’s rebellion in albert camus’ and karl jaspers’ interpretations
publisher Foundation Pro Scientia Publica
series Journal of Education Culture and Society
issn 2081-1640
2081-1640
publishDate 2010-12-01
description The aim of this study is to present Albert Camus’ and Karl Jaspers’ interpretations of Ivan Karamazov’s rebellion as the diagnoses of the weakness of the human intellect in confrontation with the world and the criticism of rationalism. Therefore, in the introduction I will present those fragments of the novel that characterize Ivan’s rebellion as highly abstract and theoretical. At the same time, this common literary context serves as the ground for reconstruction and comparison of the basic philosophical assumptions of each author. The intention of the remaining part of the paper is, firstly, to reconstruct A. Camus’ and K. Jaspers’ epistemology and, secondly, to analyse the arguments against Ivan’s attitude formulated by the writers. Their criticisms of the protagonist’s excessive trust in intellect is based on their own concepts of human epistemic capacity, which are related to the problems of the absurd in A. Camus’ and transcendence in K. Jaspers’ writings. The question of nihilism demands analysis of A. Camus’ idea of the nature of rebellion as both affirmative and negative, and of K. Jaspers’ notion of faith as pre-intellectual trust. Finally, their criticisms of the slogan “If there is no God, then anything is allowed” introduces the problem of freedom, which allows the comparison of the concepts of solidarity (A. Camus) and communication (K. Jaspers). In the conclusion these two philosophical attitudes are discussed together. Keywords: ; ; ; ; ; ; ; ;
topic rebellion
rationalism
absurd
solidarity
freedom
intellect
faith
suffering
url http://nowadays.home.pl/JECS/data/documents/JECS=202=282010=29=205-14.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT urszulalisowska ivankaramazovsrebellioninalbertcamusandkarljaspersinterpretations
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