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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the medieval origin of the modern age
The issue concerning the legitimacy of the modern age was more pressing for the Europeans than for the Americans, largely because of the latter's historic distancing from Catholicism and the tradition of scholarship funded by the catholic church. Thus for the American reader the very notion that the modern age may be "illegitimate" somehow may ring hollow, if not outright...
Published on June 15, 2001 by Saul Boulschett

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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Awful binding
The book itself is interesting and quite difficult. But the problem is with binding. Practically all the papers fell out. I will have to bind the book again. I can't believe they sell book with such an awful binding.
Published 13 months ago by Sebastijan1982


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24 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars the medieval origin of the modern age, June 15, 2001
This review is from: The Legitimacy of the Modern Age (Studies in Contemporary German Social Thought) (Paperback)
The issue concerning the legitimacy of the modern age was more pressing for the Europeans than for the Americans, largely because of the latter's historic distancing from Catholicism and the tradition of scholarship funded by the catholic church. Thus for the American reader the very notion that the modern age may be "illegitimate" somehow may ring hollow, if not outright absurd. This book defends the status of the modern age against any suggestion that somehow it may be an aberration, a condition gone awry. The modern age, in all its seeming anti-religious tendencies fueled especially by the scientific drive for the truth, is the 'legitimate' heir to the tradition of taking literally to heart,"Ye shall know the Truth, and the Truth shall set you free". This book focuses on the philosophical foundations of Medieval theology and Nominalism that paved the way for secularization in the modern age. Blumenberg, with his astonishing scholarship and intellectual prowess makes it clear that, intentionally or not, much of what passed for pious and official christian theology during the middle ages actually had very little to do with "religion" per se (Christ's ethical teaching), and everything to do with Greek philosophy, especially Aristotle's, under the guise of church dogma. In serving theology, attributes of God in His omnipotence and omniscience were framed around the notion of absolutes, leading to unresolvable contradictions and paradoxes. For example, the idea that God should be omnipotent necessarily meant He ought to be capable of creating a rock so heavy that even He cound not lift it. This book is simply the most facinating and in-depth account of the strange doings of the Church Fathers in their relentless quest for the Truth. Blumenberg shows that it was ultimately the Church, in allowing astronomy as one of the topics to be studied, while forbidding others (curiosity itself was considered a sin, an 'extra-vagance', meaning, 'going outside the path'), provided the very possibility that led to secularization of the modern age. According to the author, the Church formulated its dogma primarily in response to and against Gnosticism, but failed in completely eradicating all the Gnostic elements, thus laying itself open to "infection" later on. The return of Gnosticism takes on the form of science, which makes a virtue of being clear about what it does not and cannot know, and questions the ground of any claim that arrogates omniscience. This work makes a compelling case for our age: For better or for worse, the fate of the modern age was decided a long time ago when the West became Christendom. ....
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29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Neglected masterpiece, August 9, 1999
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This review is from: The Legitimacy of the Modern Age (Studies in Contemporary German Social Thought) (Paperback)
A masterpiece that defies summaries and labels. While MIT Press has, thankfully, translated four of Blumenberg's books, he is not "seeping" into the culture in spite of laudatory reviews by philosophers like Richard Rorty. This can't be because he's "difficult" (and he is difficult - an eloquent) - difficult writers like Derrida or Habermas have large (and largely academic) followings. Blumenberg rather resists "positions" around which flags can be planted, battle cries formulated. Amazingly empathetic, Blumenberg "thinks with" and through the Western philosophical tradition. His account of Late Medieval Nominalism as an irreparable rupture of Ancient and Christian cosmologies, presaging Descartes' "founding" of a distinctively modern epoch is worth the read - as is so much else. I can only hope Blumenberg's translator, Robert Wallace will bring us more from this author, who died in 1996.
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1 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Awful binding, December 19, 2010
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This review is from: The Legitimacy of the Modern Age (Studies in Contemporary German Social Thought) (Paperback)
The book itself is interesting and quite difficult. But the problem is with binding. Practically all the papers fell out. I will have to bind the book again. I can't believe they sell book with such an awful binding.
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The Legitimacy of the Modern Age (Studies in Contemporary German Social Thought)
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