Absolute Freedom: An Interdisciplinary Study
By (Author) Paul Gordon
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
13th September 2022
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Philosophy
Biography, Literature and Literary studies
323.44
Hardback
150
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
At a time when the term freedom is looselyand dangerouslybandied about, this work makes the important distinction between positive and negative freedom, and examines the various zones of positive freedom (art, religion, academia, politics, speech, etc.)
Paul Gordon has provided a wonderfully broad and deep exploration of the highest sense of freedom. Ranging from Plato to Thelma and Louise, via Nietzsche and Isaiah Berlin, Gordon creates an engaging web of cross-associations revealing freedom, in its most positive sense, as a potential condition of transcendence, a field of creativeenergy Stephen Barker, PhD, UCI Claire Trevor School of the Arts, USA
After his groundbreaking Art and the Absolute, which explored art as a privileged domain of freedom from the conceptual, Paul Gordons Positive Freedom turns to freedom itself: freedom not merely from, but for. In a dizzying and dire series of reflections on freedom from Kant to Camus, from free speech to friendship, Gordon posits positive freedom as the very foundation of our liberal democracy" Dr Matthew Gumpert, Department of Western Languages and Literature, Boazii University, Turkey.
In subject and mode, Gordons Positive Freedom: An Interdisciplinary Study is a vindication of comparative workin all its creativity and potential originalityas a route to absolute freedom: that domain where thinking about thinking becomes possible Dr Chiara Alfano, Assistant Professor in English and Education, New College ofthe Humanities at Northeastern, UK.
Paul Gordons Positive Freedom makes a timely philosophical intervention in our present-day political and epidemiological controversies about freedom. Gordon reveals the limitations of defining freedom simply negatively, as immunity from restrictions. And he compellingly posits what he calls positive freedom as the pursuit or experience of a higher absolute Thomas Albrecht, Professor of English, Tulane University, USA.
Paul Gordon is a professor of comparative literature/humanities at the University ofColorado, Boulder. He received his PhD in comparative literature from Yale.
Previous books: The Critical Double; Rapturous Superabundance: Tragedy after Nietzsche; Dial M for Mother: A Freudian Hitchcock; Art as the Absolute; Synaesthetics.