Descartes to Derrida: An Introduction to European PhilosophyISBN: 978-0-631-20143-4
Paperback
328 pages
February 2001, Wiley-Blackwell
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"In general, American students find "continental" thought
somewhat less accessible than its analytic counterpart. ...In light
of this, such an introductory work on European thought is a welcome
aid to the reading of the relevant primary sources. But the value
of such a text.rests on the clarity of its own presentation.
Sedgwick's writing is clear, elegant, well organised and perfectly
attuned to the concerns outlined above. I cannot help but mention
another perfect audience for this book: faculty, such as myself.I
confess to learning an enormous amount of philosophy from
Sedgwick." Patrick Mooney, John Carroll University, in the Times
Higher Education Supplement <!--end-->
"This book should take a place as one of the key texts in
humanities programs throughout the English-speaking world." R
Shumaker, Choice, June 2002
"With a reliable lucidity, Peter Sedgwick connects central
questions in contemporary continental thought - the limits of
knowledge, and the question of the subject - with the traditional
history of modern philosophy from Descartes to Kant. This book
demonstrates beyond doubt that no student of philosophy today can
claim to be educated unless they have come to terms with the issues
and figures it deals with so freshly and helpfully." David Wood,
Vanderbilt University
"This will be the first book I recommend to students and
non-philosophers looking for a guide into European philosophy, and
academic philosophers - whether 'analytic' or 'continental'- will
also profit from its clear and jargon-free explications of some
notoriously complicated philosophical thinkers." Alan D.
Schrift, Grinnell College
"Peter Sedgwick has produced a remarkably lucid introduction to
the dominant trends in European philosophy. Even the challenging
projects of contemporary, postmodern philosophy are rendered
accessible to an audience of non-specialists. This is a welcome,
engaging resource for both students and teachers of the history of
philosophy." Daniel W. Conway, Pennsylvania State
University
"If ... you find most philosophical commentaries on the work of such thinkers as Derrida, Deleuze and Levinas scarecely less obscure and jargon-saturated than the originals, then this is the book for you. Peter Sedgwick has given us a remarkably lucid account of the major trends in the history of European thought, from the early seventeenth century to the late twentieth." Philosophy in Review