Availability: In Stock

Hans Jonas Life, Technology and the Horizons of Responsibility 1st Edition

SKU: 9781350102408

Original price was: $36.85.Current price is: $11.05.

Access Hans Jonas Life, Technology and the Horizons of Responsibility 1st Edition Now. Discount up to 90%

Additional information

Full Title

Hans Jonas Life, Technology and the Horizons of Responsibility 1st Edition

Author(s)

Lewis Coyne

Edition

1st Edition

ISBN

9781350102408, 9781350102392, 9781350216662

Publisher

Bloomsbury Academic

Format

PDF and EPUB

Description

Hans Jonas (1903–1993) was one of the most important German-Jewish philosophers of the 20th century. A student of Martin Heidegger and close friend of Hannah Arendt, Jonas advanced the fields of phenomenology and practical ethics in ways that are just beginning to be appreciated in the English-speaking world. Drawing here on unpublished and newly translated material, Lewis Coyne brings together for the first time in English Jonas’s philosophy of life, ethic of responsibility, political theory, philosophy of technology and bioethics. In Hans Jonas: Life, Technology and the Horizons of Responsibility, Coyne argues that the aim of Jonas’s philosophy is to confront three critical issues inherent to modernity: nihilism, the ecological crisis and the transhumanist drive to biotechnologically enhance human beings. While these might at first appear disparate, for Jonas all follow from the materialist turn taken by Western thought from the 17th century onwards, and he therefore seeks to tackle all three issues at their collective point of origin. This book explores how Jonas develops a new categorical imperative of responsibility on the basis of an ontology that does justice to the purposefulness and dignity of life: to act in a way that does not compromise the future of humanity on earth. Reflecting on this, as we face a potential future of ecological and societal collapse, Coyne forcefully demonstrates the urgency of Jonas’s demand that humanity accept its newfound responsibility as the ‘shepherd of beings’.

Availability: In Stock

Hans Jonas Life, Technology and the Horizons of Responsibility 1st Edition

SKU: 9781350102415

Original price was: $36.85.Current price is: $11.05.

Access Hans Jonas Life, Technology and the Horizons of Responsibility 1st Edition Now. Discount up to 90%

Additional information

Full Title

Hans Jonas Life, Technology and the Horizons of Responsibility 1st Edition

Author(s)

Lewis Coyne

Edition

1st Edition

ISBN

9781350102415, 9781350102392, 9781350216662

Publisher

Bloomsbury Academic

Format

PDF and EPUB

Description

Hans Jonas (1903–1993) was one of the most important German-Jewish philosophers of the 20th century. A student of Martin Heidegger and close friend of Hannah Arendt, Jonas advanced the fields of phenomenology and practical ethics in ways that are just beginning to be appreciated in the English-speaking world. Drawing here on unpublished and newly translated material, Lewis Coyne brings together for the first time in English Jonas’s philosophy of life, ethic of responsibility, political theory, philosophy of technology and bioethics. In Hans Jonas: Life, Technology and the Horizons of Responsibility, Coyne argues that the aim of Jonas’s philosophy is to confront three critical issues inherent to modernity: nihilism, the ecological crisis and the transhumanist drive to biotechnologically enhance human beings. While these might at first appear disparate, for Jonas all follow from the materialist turn taken by Western thought from the 17th century onwards, and he therefore seeks to tackle all three issues at their collective point of origin. This book explores how Jonas develops a new categorical imperative of responsibility on the basis of an ontology that does justice to the purposefulness and dignity of life: to act in a way that does not compromise the future of humanity on earth. Reflecting on this, as we face a potential future of ecological and societal collapse, Coyne forcefully demonstrates the urgency of Jonas’s demand that humanity accept its newfound responsibility as the ‘shepherd of beings’.