Back in Plato’s Cave with Michael Oakeshott

Although not always included among his intellectual sources, there is a notorious platonism in the philosophical reflection of Oakeshott, attributable to the influence of British neohegelianism. However, through his essays, Oakeshott will not fail to critically pronounce on the rationalist and intel...

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Main Author: Juan Antonio González de Requena Farré
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: CENALTES 2017-11-01
Series:HYBRIS: Revista de Filosofía
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistas.cenaltes.cl/index.php/hybris/article/view/193
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spelling doaj-8d208ed002824f68aaf7a28236252eae2020-11-25T03:50:19ZspaCENALTESHYBRIS: Revista de Filosofía0718-83822017-11-0182134010.5281/zenodo.1092674186Back in Plato’s Cave with Michael OakeshottJuan Antonio González de Requena Farré0Universidad Austral de ChileAlthough not always included among his intellectual sources, there is a notorious platonism in the philosophical reflection of Oakeshott, attributable to the influence of British neohegelianism. However, through his essays, Oakeshott will not fail to critically pronounce on the rationalist and intellectualist assumptions of the platonic political conception. In this article, Oakeshott's ambivalent relation to platonism is explored, as is recognized in the particular reinterpretation of the cave allegory contained in On human conduct. In the return to the cave, our interpretation of Oakeshott not only recognizes a critique of the rationalist's claims in politics, but also an invitation to explore the meeting of the different modes of the human imagination and a defense of the relevance of “the voice of poetry in the conversation of mankind”http://revistas.cenaltes.cl/index.php/hybris/article/view/193platonismo, racionalismo político, imagen, imaginación, poesía
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Juan Antonio González de Requena Farré
spellingShingle Juan Antonio González de Requena Farré
Back in Plato’s Cave with Michael Oakeshott
HYBRIS: Revista de Filosofía
platonismo, racionalismo político, imagen, imaginación, poesía
author_facet Juan Antonio González de Requena Farré
author_sort Juan Antonio González de Requena Farré
title Back in Plato’s Cave with Michael Oakeshott
title_short Back in Plato’s Cave with Michael Oakeshott
title_full Back in Plato’s Cave with Michael Oakeshott
title_fullStr Back in Plato’s Cave with Michael Oakeshott
title_full_unstemmed Back in Plato’s Cave with Michael Oakeshott
title_sort back in plato’s cave with michael oakeshott
publisher CENALTES
series HYBRIS: Revista de Filosofía
issn 0718-8382
publishDate 2017-11-01
description Although not always included among his intellectual sources, there is a notorious platonism in the philosophical reflection of Oakeshott, attributable to the influence of British neohegelianism. However, through his essays, Oakeshott will not fail to critically pronounce on the rationalist and intellectualist assumptions of the platonic political conception. In this article, Oakeshott's ambivalent relation to platonism is explored, as is recognized in the particular reinterpretation of the cave allegory contained in On human conduct. In the return to the cave, our interpretation of Oakeshott not only recognizes a critique of the rationalist's claims in politics, but also an invitation to explore the meeting of the different modes of the human imagination and a defense of the relevance of “the voice of poetry in the conversation of mankind”
topic platonismo, racionalismo político, imagen, imaginación, poesía
url http://revistas.cenaltes.cl/index.php/hybris/article/view/193
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