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294 pages
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Dostoevsky's Conception Of Man
Its Impact on Philosophical Anthropology
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| Institution: | The Pennsylvania State University |
|---|---|
| Advisor(s): | Joseph Kockelmans |
| Degree: | Ph.D., Literature and Philosophy |
| Year: | 1997 |
| Volume: | 294 pages |
| ISBN-10: | 1581120060 |
| ISBN-13: | 9781581120066 |
| Purchase options | |
Dostoevsky's novels have contributed to a conception of man that reverberates in the conclusions of prominent twentieth-century philosophical anthropologists.
Max Scheler, Martin Heidegger, Jean-Paul Sartre, Maurice Merleau-Ponty,
and Albert Camus, among others, have admitted that the works of Dostoevsky
had an influence on the manner in which they learned to conceive of human
nature and the world in which humans live. Our aim in this dissertation
is to ask: what is there in the novels of Dostoevsky concerning the nature
of man, of which certain philosophers could claim that in their philosophical
conceptions of man they were positively influenced by him?
The main thesis is substantiated with a careful analysis of four novels:
Notes From the House of the Dead (Zapiski iz mertvogo doma), Notes From
the Underground (Zapiski iz podpol'ia), Crime and Punishment (Prestuplenie
i nakazanie), and The Brothers Karamazov (Brat'ia Karamazovy). These novels
were chosen partly because I have come to the conclusion that these novels,
more than others, concretely show in what sense the leading characters
appear to have made themselves be what they had freely chosen to be under
the circumstances in which they had to live, and that they were fully aware
of the responsibility they had to bear for the implications and consequences
of what they had thus decided. Based upon a close reading, four interpretive
chapters employ the most significant criticism from English, Russian and
French literary scholarship. Dostoevsky's philosophical conception of man
is compared and contrasted with the conception that Scheler and Heidegger
hold, i.e., that freedom is man's essence, Sartre's atheistic humanism
and Camus' thought.
The following conclusions are consonant with Dostoevsky's work: freedom
is constitutive for the being (or the mode of being; essence) of man, it
is an inalienable duty--one must become oneself. Man strives to overcome
himself and to exceed his freedom but in so doing invariably loses it.
Man exceeds himself only in the sense that he realizes an ideal human possibility.
The Dostoevskian man reveals not only the absence of human nature but also
the enormous power which man possesses for achieving his ideal human possibility.
294 pages
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Size: 522k
Download a sample of the first 25 pages