Passion in Philosophy
Essays in Honor of Alphonso Lingis
Contributions by Randolph Wheeler, Anne Ashbaugh Colgate University, Wolfgang W. Fuchs, Graham Harman Southern California Institute of Architecture, Alexander E. Hooke, Alphonso Lingis, John Murungi Towson University, Emily Anne Parker, Tom Sparrow, Richard I. Sugarman Edited by Randolph Wheeler

Publication date:
26 October 2016Length of book:
184 pagesPublisher
Lexington BooksDimensions:
239x158mm6x9"
ISBN-13: 9781498534673
Among the first and foremost of American continental philosophers, Alphonso Lingis refines his own thought through a topic usually deemed unworthy of philosophical examination—passion. Lingis criticizes traditional scientific accounts of the emotions as dividing or disrupting our lives and argues for passion as a unifying force, a concept which invites philosophical exploration. The book’s structure is twofold. First, it offers an examination of Lingis’s most recent developments through the topic of passion with essays from some of the most established commentators on the work of Lingis. Second, it offers a substantial retrospective on Lingis’s thought in relation to some of the major figures in continental philosophy, namely Levinas, Kant, Heidegger, Butler, Foucault, and Nietzsche, all interweaving the theme of passion. Written to celebrate the eightieth anniversary of Lingis’s birth, these essays show how Lingis’s thought has not only endured over so many productive decades but also remains vital and even continues to grow.
Lingis offers ideas, erudition, criticism, stories, but much more as well, nourishment from a life lived in depth, intensity, suffering and wonder. His writings render into a crackling American idiom the fascinating and provocative philosophies of Nietzsche, Heidegger, Merleau-Ponty, Levinas, Bataille, Foucault, and Deleuze, among others.