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The conversation imagination: from Pascal through Rousseau to Tocqueville

Autor Matthew W. Maguire

Editorial HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS

The conversation imagination: from Pascal through Rousseau to Tocqueville
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From romanticism through postmodernism, the imagination has become an indispensable reference point for thinking about the self, culture, philosophy and politics. How has imagination so thoroughly influenced our understanding of experience and its po...

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  • Editorial HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS
  • ISBN13 9780674021884
  • ISBN10 0674021886
  • Tipo LIBRO
  • Páginas 285
  • Año de Edición 2006
  • Encuadernación Tela

The conversation imagination: from Pascal through Rousseau to Tocqueville

Autor Matthew W. Maguire

Editorial HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS

From romanticism through postmodernism, the imagination has become an indispensable reference point for thinking about the self, culture, philosophy and politics. How has imagination so thoroughly influenced our understanding of experience and its po...

-5% dto.    64,86€
61,62€
Ahorra 3,24€
No disponible, consulte disponibilidad
Envío gratis
España peninsular

Detalles del libro

From romanticism through postmodernism, the imagination has become an indispensable reference point for thinking about the self, culture, philosophy and politics. How has imagination so thoroughly influenced our understanding of experience and its possibilities? In a bold reinterpretation of a crucial development in modern European intellectual history, Matthew W. Maguire uncovers a history of French thought that casts the imagination as a dominant faculty in our experience of the world. Pascal, turning Augustinianism inside out, radically expanded the powers of imagination implicit in the work of Montaigne and Descartes, and made imagination the determinative faculty of everything from meaning and beauty to political legitimacy and happiness. Maguire traces the ways that others, including Montesquieu and Voltaire, developed and assigned limits to this exalted imagination. But, it is above all Rousseau's diverse writings that engage with an expansive imagination. And, in the writings of Rousseau's careful readers, particularly Alexis de Tocqueville, imagination is increasingly understood as the medium for an ineffable human freedom against the constrictive power of a new order in politics and culture. Original and thought-provoking, "The Conversion of Imagination" will interest a range of readers across intellectual history, political theory, literary and cultural studies, and the history of religious thought.