
released 9/27/2019
One of the many insights of philosopher Robert Spaemann (1927-2018) was that we can only understand the world properly if we recognize in the things of the world some kind of similarity with ourselves. Spaemann defended this “anthropomorphic” stance as an alternative to the “anthropocentric” stance of modern philosophy and science, in which a thing is only understood if we know (in the words of Hobbes) “what we can do with it when we have it.” On this Friday Feature, Ken Myers talks with philosopher D. C. Schindler about Spaemann’s work in general and this defense of anthropomorphism in particular.
14 minutes
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