Author(s)
Svenungsson, JayneKeywords
ReligionsvetenskapKarl Löwith
Hans Blumenberg
Jewish thought
utopianism
secularization
progress
messianism
Metadata
Perlihat publikasi penuhOnline Access
http://lup.lub.lu.se/record/8626617Abstract
The article discusses the philosophical debate between Karl Löwith and Hans Blumenberg. Contrary to figures such as Landauer and Buber – but also to a number of other figures discussed in this volume – these two thinkers were united in their hesitance about the purportedly constructive impact of the biblical theological legacy on modern political thought. Significant to both philosophers, in spite of their opposed positions in the debate, is also the tendency to blur the boundaries between Jewish and Christian theological inheritances, and indeed between variants within each theological system. The author is critical of these tendencies, arguing that “both, in the end, fail to do justice to the complexity of the relation between modern political ideology and its theological past.” She maintains that it is only when we recognize this complexity that we can fully engage in a critical assessment of the relation between modern political thought and various strands of the biblical inheritance. Finally, the author suggests a specifically Jewish form of messianism as a necessary critical corrective to the failure of both Löwith’s and Blumenberg’s systems to offer a constructive way of being in the world.Date
2014Type
contributiontobookanthology/chapterIdentifier
oai:lup.lub.lu.se:918ce841-770a-4808-8b3e-36aeceb246f7http://lup.lub.lu.se/record/8626617