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The Crisis of Philosophy in the 1930's

Grant number:24/04618-3
Support Opportunities:Regular Research Grants
Start date: November 01, 2024
End date: October 31, 2028
Field of knowledge:Humanities - Philosophy - History of Philosophy
Agreement: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)
Principal Investigator:Mário Ariel González Porta
Grantee:Mário Ariel González Porta
Principal researcher abroad:Guillaume Fréchette
Institution abroad: Université de Genève , Switzerland
Host Institution: Faculdade de Filosofia, Comunicação, Letras e Artes. Pontifícia Universidade Católica de São Paulo (PUC-SP). São Paulo , SP, Brazil
City of the host institution:São Paulo
Associated scholarship(s):25/03041-7 - The Identity Crisis of Philosophy and Subjectivity: Edmund Husserl, Ernst Cassirer and Bertrand Russell (Rudolf Carnap), BP.PD

Abstract

The "identity crisis" of philosophy is a large-scale phenomenon beginning in the 19th century and extending throughout the entire 20th century, following us even today: many of the questions that were raised in the 19th century are still relevant today: is there a place for philosophy in the development of science? What is the relationship between philosophy and science? To assess such a large-scale phenomenon and its effects on contemporary thought, we need to investigate first its main turning points. Perhaps the most decisive turning point of this phenomenon is the crisis that affected philosophy in the 1930s, especially in Germany, as the result of a conjunction of various political, intellectual and historical factors: the end of the Weimarer Republic and the beginning of Nazi Germany with Hitler as Reichskanzler, the book burning of May 1933, highly symbolic for the fall of culture that came with the Machtergreifung of the NSDAP, and the deprivation of rights of many citizens that came with it. Such factors have had a direct impact on the development of philosophy, which can be measured particularly well based on four cases: Husserl, Heidegger, Carnap and Cassirer. This project proposes a unified account of the identity crisis of philosophy in the 1930s through the lens of these four philosophers and of the four philosophical movements they created, shaped, or influenced: phenomenology, hermeneutics, neopositivism and neokantianism. (AU)

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