Aristotle and Tragic Temporality

Sean D Kirkland author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:28th Feb '25

Should be back in stock very soon

Aristotle and Tragic Temporality cover

Aristotle and Tragic Temporality treats a theme that has drawn scholarly attention for millennia: Aristotle on time and our experience of it. It does so, however, in a wholly unprecedented way, grounding its interpretation in his Poetics and Ethics, rather than the natural philosophy of the Physics. Sean D. Kirkland first takes up Aristotle's discussion of our tragic temporal situatedness—our having to act, think, and live always between a determining past we can never fully master and a projected future we can never fully anticipate. It is this condition that comes powerfully to light for Aristotle on stage in the performance of a tragic drama. The familiar Aristotelian ‘virtue ethics’ then becomes something radically new in the transforming light of the Poetics’ temporality - an outline of how humans can inhabit that irremediably tragic condition, never overcoming or suspending it, and arrive nonetheless at something like happiness and excellence.

In Aristotle and Tragic Temporality, Sean D. Kirkland offers a fresh interpretation of Aristotle’s ethics following an unexpected but fruitful path through his Poetics and Physics. Taking aim at those who would too readily impute a metaphysics of presence and a modern division of subject and object to Aristotle, this book upsets now-canonical truisms of Aristotelian philosophy-- the reduced status of dialectic, time as objective or subjective, the separation of epistemological and metaphysical principles—and affirms the fundamental importance of appearance for how we initially engage and understand the world. It is a book for scholars of Aristotle and it is a book for humans concerned to live and act in the face of an uncertain future. -- Adriel M. Trott, Wabash College

ISBN: 9781399536455

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

264 pages