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El espacio de la muerte en Schopenhauer

  • Autores: Félix Duque
  • Localización: Contextos, ISSN 0212-6192, Nº 17-18, 1991, págs. 7-30
  • Idioma: español
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  • Resumen
    • This paper aims to disclose the mythical roots of Schopenhauer's concept of matter, whose proof follows two ways: 1) an onto-a-theological argument, through the coincidence of matter's essence -actuosity- and existence -activity-, which is based on the the belief in the law of causality; and 2) an immediate awareness of my own body, and at once of the Will and of its mark: matter as the ground of man's characteristics. The identification of both of them should be sought in Schopenhauer's fright of death and his reverie of the Earth as a mater rerum (and accordingly, fear of technical progress). Matter would be so considered by him as a representative of a post-mortem state of immutable, unmingled light. The Schopenhauerian "technical' attacks on Kantian transcendental deduction are thus retrospectively explained as a wishful and imaginary omission of world's and man's time. A deceitful antidote against death, because it has beforehand death's flavour.


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