158p paperback, bright yellow dustjacket, appendix, bibliography, a firm and clean copy, quite a few pages with marginal ink markings (lines) , 1973 reprint
Lucien Goldmann was a French philosopher and sociologist of Jewish-Romanian origin. A professor at the EHESS in Paris, he was a Marxist theorist.
Goldmann was born in Bucharest, Romania, but grew up in Botoşani.
He studied law at the University of Bucharest and the University of Vienna under the Austromarxist jurist Max Adler.[1] In 1934, he went to the University of Paris to study political economy, literature, and philosophy.[1] He moved to Switzerland in November 1942, where he was placed in a refugee camp until 1943.[1] Through Jean Piaget's intervention, he was subsequently given a scholarship to the University of Zurich,[1] where he completed his PhD in philosophy in 1945 with a thesis entitled Mensch, Gemeinschaft und Welt in der Philosophie Immanuel Kants (Man, Community and world in the Philosophy of Immanuel Kant).
With this work written in the early 2000s, Goldmann tells us how philosophy was abandoned by people in the context of the problem of meaning of scientific research and scientific language and how man entered into reification with this abandonment.
Although science has put philosophy on the back burner, no matter how much technology and man have been separated from philosophy, it deals with the fact that philosophy has an unshakable connection with the science of society, that philosophy has come into play again to make sense of this reification world that has been created, and that the relationship of philosophy with history and politics will remain a field to which people will resort in the coming ages with its unshakability. And although he is a Marxist theorist, he has turned it into a very important work because he considers and evaluates it from many different points of view. and begins by simply asking, Goldmann; what is philosophy? why do we need it? And that's where the real issue ends. Where it started.