Reading Heidegger against the grain: Hans Jonas on existentialism, gnosticism, and modern science
This article argues that the link Hans Jonas drew between Martin Heidegger’s philosophy and Gnosticism cannot be properly understood without taking into consideration his philosophical interpretation of modern science. It claims that Jonas saw Heideggerian existentialism not as a modern instantiation of Gnosticism but as a specific experiential reaction to the new cosmological outlook that emerged from the seventeenth-century scientific revolution, which negated the conceptual world that made Gnosticism possible. Jonas’s interpretation is “against the grain”: by claiming that Heidegger’s thought is a product of the reduction of nature to measurable, manipulable, and calculable extension governing the modern scientific mind, Jonas attributed to Heidegger the very flaws Heidegger critiqued in others. It is further claimed that Jonas’s original contribution to Heidegger’s reception history is not in proposing the link to Gnosticism but in reading him as the philosophical outcome of the instrumental reasoning of modern science.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- 5002 History and philosophy of specific fields
- 4408 Political science
- 4303 Historical studies
- 2202 History and Philosophy of Specific Fields
- 2103 Historical Studies
- 1606 Political Science
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- 5002 History and philosophy of specific fields
- 4408 Political science
- 4303 Historical studies
- 2202 History and Philosophy of Specific Fields
- 2103 Historical Studies
- 1606 Political Science