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William Egginton

    William Egginton est un critique littéraire et philosophe dont le travail couvre un large éventail de sujets, y compris la théâtralité, la fictionalité, la critique littéraire, la psychanalyse et l'éthique. Il explore également la modération religieuse et les théories de la médiation. Sa carrière universitaire l'a conduit à la Johns Hopkins University, où il enseigne la littérature espagnole et latino-américaine ainsi que la relation entre littérature et philosophie. L'approche d'Egginton combine une analyse littéraire approfondie avec une réflexion philosophique, offrant aux lecteurs des perspectives perspicaces sur la nature de la fiction et son rôle dans la société.

    The Man Who Invented Fiction
    Thinking with Borges
    The Rigor of Angels
    The Rigor of Angels
    • The Rigor of Angels

      Borges, Heisenberg, Kant, and the Ultimate Nature of Reality

      • 368pages
      • 13 heures de lecture

      Exploring the intersection of love, science, and philosophy, this book delves into the insights of poet Jorge Luis Borges, physicist Werner Heisenberg, and philosopher Immanuel Kant. Each figure grapples with the complexities of human experience and knowledge, revealing that love inherently involves loss, reality is never fully describable, and human understanding has its limits. Through their reflections, the author highlights the profound mystery of existence and our relationship to it, offering a captivating examination of how these themes intertwine across disciplines.

      The Rigor of Angels
      4,0
    • Thinking With Borges engages the most pressing and persistent questions of the philosophical tradition—including those of time, eternity, politics, law, justice, language, reality, identity and memory—through original and often brilliant readings of the Borgesian archive. Going beyond Borges’s self-deprecating claim that he deployed the philosophical canon only for aesthetic purposes, the contributors to Thinking With Borges demonstrate that he seeks to answer the most enduring philosophical questions in ways that both contest and extend the philosophical tradition.

      Thinking with Borges
      4,0
    • The Man Who Invented Fiction

      • 272pages
      • 10 heures de lecture

      400 years after the publication of Don Quixote (1605-15), William Egginton reveals how Cervantes came to invent what we now call fiction, and how fiction changed the world

      The Man Who Invented Fiction
      3,7