Presented as a series of conversations, Evolution and Conversion is a
thorough discussion of the major tenets of Girard's thought. René
Girard is one of the most brilliant and striking intellectuals of the
20th century. His theory on the imitative nature of desire and on the
violent origin of culture has been at the centre of the philosophical
and theoretical debate since the publication in 1971 of his seminal
book: Violence and the Sacred. His reflection on the relationship
between violence and religion is one of the most original and
persuasive and, given the urgency of this issue in our contemporary
world, demands a reappraisal. Girard, who has been hailed by Michel
Serres as "the Charles Darwin" of human sciences, is in fact one of
the few thinkers in the humanities and social sciences that takes into
full consideration an evolutionary perspective to explain the
emergence of culture and institutions. The authors draw out this
aspect of his thought by foregrounding ethological, anthropological
and evolutionary theories. Methodological and epistemological
systematization has also been lacking in Girard's previous books, and
by questioning him on the issue of evidence and truth, the authors
provide a convincing framework for further inquiries. In the last
chapters, Girard proposes a provocative re-reading of the Biblical
texts, seen as the culmination of an enduring process of historical
awareness of the presence and function of collective violence in our
world. In fact, Girard's long argument is a historical spiral in which
the origin of culture and archaic religion is reunited with the
contemporary world by means of a reinterpretation of Christianity and
its revelation of the intrinsic violent nature of the human being.
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Dialogues on the Origins of Culture
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781441151841
Publisert
2015
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury UK
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter