@fmct:Contents @toc4:Introduction iii @toc2:1 Tied to the Apron Strings of the Church 000 2 Researcher, Teacher, Philosopher 000 3 Philosophical Discourse 000 4 Interpretation, Objectivity and Nonsense 000 5 Unitary Experience and Philosophical Life 000 6 Philosophical Discourse as Spiritual Exercise 000 7 Philosophy as Life and as a Quest for Wisdom 000 8 From Socrates to Foucault. A Long Tradition 000 9 Inacceptable? 000 10 The Present Alone is Our Happiness 000 @toc4:Postface 000 Notes 000 Index 000
Pierre Hadot is Professor Emeritus at the Collège de France, where
he held the Chair of the History of Hellenistic and Roman Thought.
Most of his major works have been translated into English,
including Philosophy as a Way of Life, What is Ancient Philosophy?
(1995), and The Veil of Isis (2006). His most recent book is
N'oublie pas de vivre. Goethe et la tradition des exercices
spirituels (2008).
Arnold I. Davidson is Robert O. Anderson Distinguished Service
Professor at the University of Chicago and Professor of the History
of Political Philosophy at the University of Pisa. He has written
widely on contemporary French philosophy, is the English language
series editor of Michel Foucault's courses at the Collège de
France, and is the author of The Emergence of Sexuality (2001).
Jeannie Carlier is Professor at the École des Hautes Études en
Sciences Sociales. She has published essays on philosophy and
religious practices in late antiquity and is a specialist in
Neoplatonism.
"There is much here that could affirm and inform a philosophical counseling practice, both in attitude and content. There is much here to remind ourselves of the importance of spiritual or philosophical exercises in our own trying times." - Helen Douglas, Philosophical Practice "Hadot's refreshing efforts to free philosophy and its history from the sterile constraints of abstract theorizing and academic specialization find a lively and productive outlet in the interviews collected here. Introduced by Jeannie Carlier, a French scholar of Neo-platonic religious thought and friend of Hadot, and conducted in turns by Carlier and Arnold Davidson, the American philosopher and intellectual historian most responsible for the introduction and dissemination of Hadot's work in English-speaking contexts, these conversations explore in depth and varied detail both the personal and the intellectual development of a scholar whose own work insists above all that the personal or existential cannot rightly or fruitfully be separated from the intellectual or philosophical. Enacting the kind of dialogue that Hadot believes essential to any philosophy that would constitute a living relation between persons rather than an abstract relation to ideas, these interviews could not find a more suitable subject." - Thomas A. Carlson, University of California, Santa Barbara "If your own experience of 'Philosophy 101' way back when was just shy of miserable, disconnected from the daily or generally incoherent - gridlocked, for instance, in self-serving terms - here, in The Present Alone Is Our Happiness: Conversations with Jeannie Cartier and Arnold I. Davidson, a good-souled man - Hadot himself - winks. He seems to say, 'Here's what happened, and here's why philosophy really is for you.' And if you are a teacher or a pedagogue, it's for you all the more." - Teachers College Record
"There is much here that could affirm and inform a philosophical counseling practice, both in attitude and content. There is much here to remind ourselves of the importance of spiritual or philosophical exercises in our own trying times." - Helen Douglas, Philosophical Practice "Hadot's refreshing efforts to free philosophy and its history from the sterile constraints of abstract theorizing and academic specialization find a lively and productive outlet in the interviews collected here. Introduced by Jeannie Carlier, a French scholar of Neo-platonic religious thought and friend of Hadot, and conducted in turns by Carlier and Arnold Davidson, the American philosopher and intellectual historian most responsible for the introduction and dissemination of Hadot's work in English-speaking contexts, these conversations explore in depth and varied detail both the personal and the intellectual development of a scholar whose own work insists above all that the personal or existential cannot rightly or fruitfully be separated from the intellectual or philosophical. Enacting the kind of dialogue that Hadot believes essential to any philosophy that would constitute a living relation between persons rather than an abstract relation to ideas, these interviews could not find a more suitable subject." - Thomas A. Carlson, University of California, Santa Barbara "If your own experience of 'Philosophy 101' way back when was just shy of miserable, disconnected from the daily or generally incoherent - gridlocked, for instance, in self-serving terms - here, in The Present Alone Is Our Happiness: Conversations with Jeannie Cartier and Arnold I. Davidson, a good-souled man - Hadot himself - winks. He seems to say, 'Here's what happened, and here's why philosophy really is for you.' And if you are a teacher or a pedagogue, it's for you all the more." - Teachers College Record
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