Gilson on Philosophy and Civilization
In his essay “The Role of Philosophy in the History of Civilization” presented at the 6th International Philosophical Congress at Harvard in 1926, Gilson outlined three general trends among historians of philosophy. Some reduce the history of philosophy to study sources and find explanations of the...
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International Étienne Gilson Society
2019-06-01
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doaj-3950001047fd490eba35ca210e7e151f2020-11-25T00:56:40ZengInternational Étienne Gilson SocietyStudia Gilsoniana2300-00662577-03142019-06-018221322710.26385/SG.080210Gilson on Philosophy and CivilizationRichard J. Fafara0Adler-Aquinas Institute, Manitou Springs, CO, USAIn his essay “The Role of Philosophy in the History of Civilization” presented at the 6th International Philosophical Congress at Harvard in 1926, Gilson outlined three general trends among historians of philosophy. Some reduce the history of philosophy to study sources and find explanations of the philosophy beyond itself. Others try to go beyond the source of a given philosophy to find the original intuition that generates it. A third position, which Gilson espoused, is ahistorical. It depends neither on society nor on the creative genius of philosophers; it is simply truth. Systems of philosophy are uniquely conditioned by the necessary relations that link the ideas. If philosophies are expressions of an eternal truth, dominating men and societies, which discovers itself progressively by the mediation of philosophers, philosophy is transcendent with regard to every given state of civilization and the worth of a civilization depends upon the extent it participates in truth. Gilson’s conception of philosophy can go far in restoring Western civilization’s loss of confidence in human reason with its resulting pathologies and threats to human freedom today.http://cejsh.icm.edu.pl/cejsh/element/bwmeta1.element.desklight-c41fda18-13af-41c2-adfe-bcbf0d30a276?q=bwmeta1.element.cejsh-d0560f71-6b1d-4a8d-aaa0-d2cb08b69094;0&qt=CHILDREN-STATELESSGilsoncivilizationphilosophyhistory of philosophy |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Richard J. Fafara |
spellingShingle |
Richard J. Fafara Gilson on Philosophy and Civilization Studia Gilsoniana Gilson civilization philosophy history of philosophy |
author_facet |
Richard J. Fafara |
author_sort |
Richard J. Fafara |
title |
Gilson on Philosophy and Civilization |
title_short |
Gilson on Philosophy and Civilization |
title_full |
Gilson on Philosophy and Civilization |
title_fullStr |
Gilson on Philosophy and Civilization |
title_full_unstemmed |
Gilson on Philosophy and Civilization |
title_sort |
gilson on philosophy and civilization |
publisher |
International Étienne Gilson Society |
series |
Studia Gilsoniana |
issn |
2300-0066 2577-0314 |
publishDate |
2019-06-01 |
description |
In his essay “The Role of Philosophy in the History of Civilization” presented at the 6th International Philosophical Congress at Harvard in 1926, Gilson outlined three general trends among historians of philosophy. Some reduce the history of philosophy to study sources and find explanations of the philosophy beyond itself. Others try to go beyond the source of a given philosophy to find the original intuition that generates it. A third position, which Gilson espoused, is ahistorical. It depends neither on society nor on the creative genius of philosophers; it is simply truth. Systems of philosophy are uniquely conditioned by the necessary relations that link the ideas. If philosophies are expressions of an eternal truth, dominating men and societies, which discovers itself progressively by the mediation of philosophers, philosophy is transcendent with regard to every given state of civilization and the worth of a civilization depends upon the extent it participates in truth. Gilson’s conception of philosophy can go far in restoring Western civilization’s loss of confidence in human reason with its resulting pathologies and threats to human freedom today. |
topic |
Gilson civilization philosophy history of philosophy |
url |
http://cejsh.icm.edu.pl/cejsh/element/bwmeta1.element.desklight-c41fda18-13af-41c2-adfe-bcbf0d30a276?q=bwmeta1.element.cejsh-d0560f71-6b1d-4a8d-aaa0-d2cb08b69094;0&qt=CHILDREN-STATELESS |
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