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(1979) Transcendence and hermeneutics, Dordrecht, Springer.

Jaspers and Platonic idealism

Alan Olson

pp. 58-71

The bond between Jaspers and Plato is deep and fascinating. Indeed, it is impossible to survey and adjudicate the significance of transcending-thinking as a primary motif in Jaspers' thought without a consideration of Plato who, together with Augustine and Kant, Jaspers regards as the "greatest" of the "great philosophers."1 In this chapter I will attempt to clarify this relationship by exploring three conceptual features of "transcending-thinking" directly influenced by Plato and Platonism generally. First we will focus on Platonic class="EmphasisTypeItalic ">dialectic in relation to Jaspers' possible Existenz; secondly, on Platonic chorismos and the Jaspersian boundary situation; and thirdly, on the eidetic One of Plato and Plotinus and Jaspers' Transcendence-Itself or the Encompassing.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-94-009-9270-2_5

Full citation:

Olson, A. (1979). Jaspers and Platonic idealism, in Transcendence and hermeneutics, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 58-71.

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