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An Atheism that Is Not Humanist Emerges in French Thought
Stefanos GeroulanosSeries: Cultural Memory in the Present5
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About
French philosophy changed dramatically in the second quarter of the twentieth century. In the wake of World War I and, later, the Nazi and Soviet disasters, major philosophers such as Kojève, Levinas, Heidegger, Koyré, Sartre, Merleau-Ponty, and Hyppolite argued that man could no longer fill the void left by the "death of God" without also calling up the worst in human history and denigrating the dignity of the human subject. In response, they contributed to a new belief that man should no longer be viewed as the basis for existence, thought, and ethics; rather, human nature became dependent on other concepts and structures, including Being, language, thought, and culture. This argument, which was to be paramount for existentialism and structuralism, came to dominate postwar thought. This intellectual history of these developments argues that at their heart lay a new atheism that rejected humanism as insufficient and ultimately violent.
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Reviews
"This book introduces a terrifically learned new intellectual historian who has provided a strikingly novel and philosophically interesting genealogy of the anti-humanism that most observers associate with too recent an era of thought. Of interest to anyone concerned with the rich traditions of Continental philosophy, Stefanos Geroulanos's investigation gives the French scene in the 1930's its due
Columbia University
"Rarely do I learn more from a scholarly book than I have from Stefanos Geroulanos's An Atheism that Is Not Humanist Emerges in French Thought. Geroulanos's central thesis is compelling but simple…We have here a last man, heir to those negations of the world named freedom, history, and individuality, whose historical realization reveals that humanness is ultimately based upon a relation to death.
The Immanent Frame