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Closereads: Philosophy with Mark and Wes
Evergreen Podcasts
62 episodes
6 days ago
Reading through difficult philosophy texts line-by-line to try to figure out what’s really being said.
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Philosophy
Society & Culture
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Reading through difficult philosophy texts line-by-line to try to figure out what’s really being said.
Show more...
Philosophy
Society & Culture
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts211/v4/e6/fb/1d/e6fb1d1c-f355-3d56-473f-610a08c4a482/mza_14641789180507841026.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Scheler on Personhood (Part One)
Closereads: Philosophy with Mark and Wes
1 hour 2 minutes
6 months ago
Scheler on Personhood (Part One)
On Ch. 6 "Formalism and Person," in Max Scheler's most famous work, Formalism in Ethics and Non-Formal Ethics of Values (1916). Ethical Formalism is Kant: What makes something ethically correct is just something about the type of act and willing involved. Non-formalism pays attention to the content, e.g. our sentiments (a la Hume). As we've been studying on The Partially Examined Life, phenomenologists starting with Brentano sought to merge the two: Things in our experience just present themselves as intuitively praiseworthy, and this is sufficient to establish ethical obligations. We have been reading about how Scheler relies in his ethical theorizing on our experiences of sympathy and love, but we wanted to learn more about what it is about particular people that we love and respect: What is it to be a "person" in the moral sense? This book moves very slowly, so in this part he's still just distinguishing himself from Kant when it comes to saying some basic things about your relation to your own selfhood. Read along with us, starting on p. 370 (PDF p. 403). You can choose to watch this on video. To get future parts, subscribe at patreon.com/closereadsphilosophy. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Closereads: Philosophy with Mark and Wes
Reading through difficult philosophy texts line-by-line to try to figure out what’s really being said.