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Platonic Legacies

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Demonstrates how archaic Platonism has a profound significance for contemporary thought.

In Platonic Legacies John Sallis addresses certain archaic or exorbitant moments in Platonism. His concern is to expose such moments as those expressed in the Platonic phrase "beyond being" and in the enigmatic word chora. Thus he ventures to renew chorology and to bring it to bear, most directly, on Platonic political discourse and Plotinian hyperontology. More broadly, he shows what profound significance these most archaic moments of Platonism, which remained largely unheeded in the history of philosophy, have for contemporary discussions of spacings, of utopian politics, of the nature of nature, and of the relation between philosophy and tragedy. Thus addressing Platonism in its bearing on contemporary philosophy, Platonic Legacie s engages, in turn, a series of philosophers ranging from Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Arendt to certain contemporary American Continental philosophers. These engagements focus on the way in which these recent and contemporary philosophers take up the Platonic legacies in their own thought and on the way in which the exposure of an archaic Platonism can redirect or supplement what they have accomplished.

“The book is written in Sallis’ characteristic reflectively expressive style. It is a pleasure to read. As this review suggests, it also provokes thought in numerous directions.” — Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology

"Platonic Legacies develops in new, important, and sometimes unpredictable ways the unparalleled reading of Plato that Sallis has been articulating for over a quarter of a century. His work is incomparable." — Michael Naas, author of Taking on the Jacques Derrida and the Legacies of Deconstruction

"Sallis demonstrates that he has learned enormously from his engagement with these thinkers. His work is a model for us all." — Drew A. Hyland, author of Questioning Continental Interpretations of Plato

Paperback

First published October 14, 2004

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About the author

John Sallis

102 books8 followers
John Sallis was an American philosopher well known for his work in the tradition of phenomenology. From 2005 until his death, he was the Frederick J. Adelmann Professor of Philosophy at Boston College. He previously taught at Pennsylvania State University (1996–2005), Vanderbilt University (1990–1995), Loyola University of Chicago (1983–1990), Duquesne University (1966–1983) and the University of the South (1964–1966).

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February 20, 2013
Sallis' insistence on the nonconvertability of topos and khora seems as tactically unnecessary as it is hermeneutically strained. Of course, my objection is not that khora is any less paradoxical than Sallis would have it - quite the reverse - but that topos and the others, including deceptively familiar "place", reveal the same productive difficulties, when approached metalogically, and therefore, restricting khora within the boundaries of a "proper name" may actually be to diminish it in the attempt to honor its specificity. Perhaps we do it justice by noting its wandering through ordinary language - for ubiquitous and paradoxical "place" is at least as strange in its logical function as any reserved word could be.
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