Jan Patočka’s Transcendence to the World

Authors

  • Michael Gubser Interdisciplinary Coalition of North American Phenomenologists / James Madison University, Virginia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.4-II.2013.29791

Keywords:

Patočka, phenomenology, freedom, dissidence

Abstract

This essay examines Czech philosopher Jan Patočka’s phenomenology as a philosophy of freedom. It shows how Patočka’s phenomenological concept of worldliness, initially cast within a largely philosophical framework as the domain of human action and transcendence, turned toward a philosophical history of the modern age, viewed as increasingly post-European. Patočka hoped for the moral renewal of a fallen modernity, led first by non-Europeans after the era of decolonization and then by a “solidarity of the shaken” during the dark 1970s of Czechoslovak normalization. The essay starts and concludes by considering the relation between his thought and his dissi-dence, a link that is more tenuous and indirect than some commentators suggest.

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Published

2021-02-11

How to Cite

Gubser, M. (2021). Jan Patočka’s Transcendence to the World. Investigaciones Fenomenológicas, (4-II), 155–175. https://doi.org/10.5944/rif.4-II.2013.29791

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