Ebook
The culmination of a lifetime’s preoccupation with crucial human concerns too often curiously marginalized by the history of philosophy, The Expansion of Metaphysics sheds new light on freedom and the will by making the phenomenon of novelty philosophically intelligible. The a priori synthesis of Kant is joined to Judeo-Christian themes (the kenosis of Christ in the incarnation and the tzimtzum of God in the creation) in order to develop a doctrine of “superabundance” (freedom and love) and “singularity” (with the Work of Art and the Child as paradigms). Space and time are reanalyzed as structural forms of human existence as Vető guides the reader into the depths and heights of reality, climaxing in a metaphysics of good and evil.
“From one of the foremost scholars of German Idealism in our day
there comes a book that gives us his personal vision of
metaphysics. Miklos Vető’s The Expansion of
Metaphysics presents a Christian metaphysics, one
broadened from classical and romantic models to take proper account
of the image, the new, and the singular, and finished with a
capacious and engaging understanding of essence. Among other
things, this is a book of wisdom. No one who reads it can remain
unchanged by its teachings.”
—Kevin Hart, The University of Virginia
“Miklos Vető has been well known for decades as an illuminating
interpreter of Bérulle, Jonathan Edwards, Schelling and Simone
Weil—to name a few. It is high time to discover that he could read
them because he is a philosopher in his own right. . . . As a book,
everyone will find it thoroughly enjoyable. And one must thank
Chris Hackett for a fine translation of Vető’s always elegant
text.”
—Jean-Yves Lacoste, Clare Hall, Australian Catholic University,
Cambridge
“In its trans-epochal reach, Miklos Vető’s Expansion of
Metaphysics . . . enables students of philosophy to ask
the big questions once again: about self, will, evil, the good,
love, creation, and God. The agent of this expansion is a renewal
of Kant’s transcendental phenomenology and of its premodern
sources: recovering the agency of will beyond being, of self and
other, which is the agency of the good, agency of the loving
creator whose gifts perpetually renewed, are being and
existence.”
—Peter Ochs, Professor, Department of Religious Studies, University
of Virginia
Miklos Vető is a Hungarian-born French philosopher who taught
successively at Marquette, Yale, Abidjan, Rennes, and Poitiers
universities. Widely known as a historian of German Idealism, his
works have been translated into many languages. He is the author of
The Religious Metaphysics of Simone Weil.
William C. Hackett is Adjunct Professor of Philosophy and the
Honors Program at Belmont University. He is the translator of
several works from French to English, including Jean Wahl’s
Human Existence and Transcendence.
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