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Towards a phenomenology of Sagesse: uncovering the unique philosophical problematic of Pierre hadot

journal contribution
posted on 2018-04-10, 00:00 authored by Matthew Sharpe
This paper starts from the contention that Pierre Hadot’s unusually divided reception reflects the different dimensions of Hadot’s own scholarly profile. Hadot’s largely favourable reception amongst historians of ideas responds to the philological dimension of his work, but misses the implicit normativity involved in his recovery of the sense of ancient philosophy as a way of life. Analytic critics have registered but contested this normativity in ways that arguably also misrepresent his work. This paper contends that both receptions of Hadot have missed what can be called Hadot’s unique philosophical problematic: uncovering through the ancient sources a kind of phenomenology of how a person would perceive and evaluate the world who had, counter-factually, attained a wholly enlightened, wholly “sage” mode of living. This phenomenology of sagesse, which is predicated on a metaphysical agnosticism, proves closer to the last Foucault than Hadot sometimes suggested: albeit embodying an aesthetics of “the whole,” over against Foucault’s aesthetics of (human) existence.

History

Journal

Angelaki: journal of the theoretical humanities

Volume

23

Issue

2

Season

Spring

Pagination

125 - 138

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Location

Abingdon, Eng.

ISSN

0969-725X

Language

eng

Grant ID

ARC DP140101981

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Informa UK