Hans Blumenberg's philosophical project

metaphorology as anthropology

Pini Ifergan

pp. 359-377

Philosophical anthropology emerges, partly at least, by dissatisfied and critical followers of Husserl's phenomenology, such as Max Scheler and the young Martin Heidegger. They were dissatisfied with what they saw as a disregard of the concrete human being as an essential part of phenomenological analysis. They tried instead to claim that philosophy must search for, and anchor, its foundations exclusively in the human being, not as an abstract entity, but as an existential, concrete, physical being. In this specific philosophical, as well as historical, context this paper suggests to locate Hans Blumenberg's philosophical project by reconstructing his unique version of philosophical anthropology. The main aim of the paper is to describe and understand the way Blumenberg combines his theory of metaphors (metaphorology) together with his anthropological considerations regarding the origin and emergence of human culture into his own version of philosophical anthropology. A version that can be seen as joining the original attempt of philosophical anthropology to overcome the deficiency in Husserl's phenomenological project.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/s11007-015-9342-4

Full citation:

Ifergan, P. (2015). Hans Blumenberg's philosophical project: metaphorology as anthropology. Continental Philosophy Review 48 (3), pp. 359-377.

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