Zachary Isrow (Series Editor), Alberto I. Vargas (Series Editor)
Philosophical anthropology is at once the most common philosophical inquiry and the most overlooked. Most major thinkers, even in the 20th century, have held some form of anthropology at the core of their philosophy, but with few focusing on it as a major theme, it has often been left to the reader to draw out their own interpretations. This series finally provides an outlet for philosophical anthropology, moving it back into a focal point of inquiry and generating insights into other subfields of philosophy.
The high complexity of our historical situation has put human existence in a dead end. The deep study of humanity has become indispensable today in order to face the fragmentation in which we live. This is why Philosophical Anthropology explores:
- The ontological foundations of human existence, including a philosophy of the person and its metaphysical status;
- The embodiment of action and (inter-)subjectivity, addressing freedom at the contemporary interdisciplinary challenge and the performance of philosophical anthropology in practice;
- The flourishing of the human person within social and political spheres seizing historical philosophical anthropological traditions.
Each book in this series is a step towards the unification of human knowledge through the path of philosophical anthropology.
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