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Walter Kaufmann (philosopher)

Walter Arnold Kaufmann (July 1, 1921 – September 4, 1980) was a German-American philosopher, translator, and poet. A prolific author, he wrote extensively on a broad range of subjects, such as authenticity and death, moral philosophy and existentialism, theism and atheism, Christianity and Judaism, as well as philosophy and literature. He served more than 30 years as a professor at Princeton University.

Walter Kaufmann
Walter Kaufmann, undated
Born(1921-07-01)July 1, 1921
DiedSeptember 4, 1980(1980-09-04) (aged 59)
EducationWilliams College
Harvard University (MA, PhD)
Era20th-century philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy
InstitutionsPrinceton University
Main interests
Existentialism, philosophy of religion, tragedy

He is renowned as a scholar and translator of Friedrich Nietzsche. He also wrote a 1965 book on Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and published a translation of Goethe's Faust, and Martin Buber's I and Thou.

Biography Edit

Walter Kaufmann was born in Freiburg im Breisgau, Germany, on 1 July 1921.[2][3]

Kaufmann was raised a Lutheran.[4] At age 11, finding that he believed neither in the Trinity nor in the divinity of Jesus, he converted to Judaism.[4] Kaufmann subsequently discovered that his grandparents were all Jewish.[4] Being both descended from Jews and a convert to Judaism placed Kaufmann in real danger in Nazi Germany. In 1939 Kaufmann emigrated to the United States and began studying at Williams College.[2][4] Stanley Corngold records that there he "abandoned his commitment to Jewish ritual while developing a deeply critical attitude toward all established religions."[2]

Kaufmann graduated from Williams College in 1941, then went to Harvard University, receiving an MA degree in Philosophy in 1942.[3] His studies were, however, interrupted by the war.[5] He enlisted with the US Army Air Force, was placed at Camp Ritchie and is one of many Ritchie Boys who would go on to serve as interrogators for the Military Intelligence Service in Europe. Kaufmann specifically performed interrogations in Germany.[2]

Kaufmann became a citizen of the United States in 1944.[5]

In 1947 he was awarded his PhD by Harvard.[2][3] His dissertation, written in under a year, was titled "Nietzsche's Theory of Values."[2] That same year he joined the Philosophy Department at Princeton University.[3] Although he would hold visiting appointments in both the US and abroad, he would remain based at Princeton for the rest of his academic career.[5][3] His students over the years included Nietzsche scholars Frithjof Bergmann,[6] Richard Schacht,[7] Ivan Soll[8] and Alexander Nehamas.[2]

Kaufmann died, aged 59, on 4 September 1980.[2][3]

Philosophical work Edit

In a 1959 article in Harper's Magazine, he summarily rejected all religious values and practice, especially the liberal Protestantism of continental Europe that began with Schleiermacher and culminated in the writings of Paul Tillich and Rudolf Bultmann.[9] In their place, he praised moralists such as the biblical prophets, the Buddha, and Socrates. He argued that critical analysis and the acquisition of knowledge were liberating and empowering forces. He forcefully criticized the fashionable liberal Protestantism of the 20th century as filled with contradictions and evasions, preferring the austerity of the book of Job and the Jewish existentialism of Martin Buber. Kaufmann discussed many of these issues in his 1958 Critique of Religion and Philosophy.

Kaufmann wrote a good deal on the existentialism of Søren Kierkegaard and Karl Jaspers. Kaufmann had great admiration for Kierkegaard's passion and his insights on freedom, anxiety, and individualism.[10] Kaufmann wrote: "Nobody before Kierkegaard had seen so clearly that the freedom to make a fateful decision that may change our character and future breeds anxiety."[11] Although Kaufmann did not share Kierkegaard's religious outlook and was critical of his Protestant theology, Kaufmann was nevertheless sympathetic and impressed with the depth of Kierkegaard's thinking:

I know of no other great writer in the whole nineteenth century, perhaps even in the whole of world literature, to whom I respond with less happiness and with a more profound sense that I am on trial and found wanting, unless it were Søren Kierkegaard.[12]

Kaufmann edited the anthology Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre. Kaufmann disliked Martin Heidegger's thinking, along with his unclear writing.[13]

Kaufmann is renowned for his translations and exegesis of Nietzsche, whom he saw as gravely misunderstood by English speakers, as a major early existentialist, and as an unwitting precursor, in some respects, to Anglo-American analytic philosophy. Michael Tanner called Kaufmann's commentaries on Nietzsche "obtrusive, self-referential, and lacking insight",[14] but Llewellyn Jones wrote that Kaufmann's "fresh insights into ... Nietzsche ... can deepen the insights of every discriminating student of literature,"[15] and The New Yorker wrote that Kaufmann "has produced what may be the definitive study of Nietzsche's ... thought—an informed, scholarly, and lustrous work."[16]

In his Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist (1950) Kaufmann wrote that

It is evident at once that Nietzsche is far superior to Kant and Hegel as a stylist; but it also seems that as a philosopher he represents a very sharp decline — and men have not been lacking who have not considered him a philosopher at all — because he had no “system.” Yet this argument is hardly cogent. Schelling and Hegel, Spinoza and Aquinas had their systems; in Kant’s and Plato’s case the word is far less applicable; and of the many important philosophers who very definitely did not have systems one need only mention Socrates and many of the pre-Socratics. Not only can one defend Nietzsche on this score — how many philosophers today have systems? — but one must add that he had strong philosophic reasons for not having a system.[17]

Kaufmann also sympathized with Nietzsche's acerbic criticisms of Christianity. However, Kaufmann faulted much in Nietzsche, writing that "my disagreements with [Nietzsche] are legion."[18] Regarding style, Kaufmann argued that Nietzsche's Thus Spoke Zarathustra, for example, is in parts badly written, melodramatic, or verbose, yet concluded that the book "is not only a mine of ideas, but also a major work of literature and a personal triumph."[19]

Kaufmann described his own ethic and his own philosophy of living in his books, including The Faith of a Heretic (1961) and Without Guilt and Justice: From Decidophobia to Autonomy (1973). In the former work he advocated living in accordance with what he proposed as the four cardinal virtues: "humbition" (a fusion of humility and ambition), love, courage, and honesty.[20]

Partial bibliography Edit

Original works Edit

  • (1950) Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist
  • (1958) Critique of Religion and Philosophy
  • (1959) From Shakespeare to Existentialism
  • (1961) The Faith of a Heretic
  • (1962) Cain and Other Poems
  • (1965) Hegel: A Reinterpretation
  • (1968) Tragedy and Philosophy
  • (1973) Without Guilt and Justice: From Decidophobia to Autonomy
  • (1976) Existentialism, Religion, and Death: Thirteen Essays
  • (1976) Religions in Four Dimensions
  • (1977) The Future of the Humanities[21]
  • (1978) Man's Lot: A Trilogy, consisting of
  • Discovering the Mind. New York. 1980. ISBN 0-07-033311-4. OCLC 5264699.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
    • vol. 1 Goethe, Kant, and Hegel
    • vol. 2 Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Buber
    • vol. 3 Freud Versus Adler and Jung

Translations Edit

As written or published by Friedrich Nietzsche in chronological order:

Anthologies/edited works Edit

Articles, book chapters, and introductions Edit

  • 'Nietzsche's Admiration for Socrates", Journal of the History of Ideas, v. 9, October 1948, pp. 472–491. Earlier version: "Nietzsche's Admiration for Socrates" (Bowdoin Prize, 1947; pseud. David Dennis)
  • "Goethe and the History of Ideas", Journal of the History of Ideas, v. 10, October 1949, pp. 503–516.
  • "The Hegel Myth and Its Method", Philosophical Review v.60, No. 4 (October 1951), pp. 459–486.
  • Review of Nietzsche and Christian Ethics by R. Motson Thompson, Philosophical Review v. 61, no. 4 (October 1952), pp. 595–599.
  • "Hegel's Early Antitheological Phase", Philosophical Review v. 63, no. 1 (January 1954), pp. 3–18.
  • "Nietzsche and Rilke", Kenyon Review, XVII (1955), pp. 1–23.
  • "Toynbee and Superhistory", Partisan Review, vol. 22, no. 4, Fall 1955, pp. 531–541. Reprinted in Ashley Montagu, ed. (1956). Toynbee and History: Critical Essays and Reviews (1956 Cloth ed.). Boston: Extending Horizons, Porter Sargent. ISBN 0-87558-026-2.
  • "A Hundred Years after Kierkegaard", Kenyon Review, XVIII, pp. 182–211.
  • "Jaspers' Relation to Nietzsche", in Paul Schilpps, ed., The Philosophy of Karl Jaspers (New York: Tudor, 1957), pp. 407–436.
  • "", Harper's Magazine, February 1959, pp. 33–39. Reprinted in Existentialism, Religion, and Death (New York: New American Library, 1976).
  • "Existentialism and Death", Chicago Review, XIII, 1959, pp. 73–93, also in Herman Feifel (ed.) The Meaning of Death, New York: The Blakiston Division / McGraw-Hill, 1959, Revised version printed in Existentialism, Religion, and Death (New York: New American Library, 1976).
  • Preface to Europe and the Jews: The Pressure of Christendom on the People of Israel for 1900 Years, 2d ed, by Malcolm Hay. Boston: Beacon Press, 1961.
  • "A Philosopher's View", in Ethics and Business: Three Lectures. University Park, Pa., 1962, pp. 35–54. Originally presented at a seminar sponsored by the College of Business Administration of the Pennsylvania State University on March 19, 1962.
  • "Nietzsche Between Homer and Sartre: Five Treatments of the Orestes Story", Revue Internationale de Philosophie v. 18, 1964, pp. 50–73.
  • "Nietzsche in the Light of his Suppressed Manuscripts", Journal of the History of Philosophy v. 2, October 1964, pp. 205–226.
  • "Buber's Religious Significance", from The Philosophy of Martin Buber, ed. P. A. Schilpp and Maurice Friedman (London: Cambridge University Press, 1967) Reprinted in Existentialism, Religion, and Death (New York: New American Library, 1976).
  • "The Reception of Existentialism in the United States", Midway, vol. 9 (1) (Summer 1968), pp. 97–126. Reprinted in Existentialism, Religion, and Death (New York: New American Library, 1976).
  • Foreword to Frau Lou: Nietzsche's Wayward Disciple, by Rudolph Binion. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press, 1969.
  • Introductory essay, Alienation Richard Schacht, Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday, 1970
  • "The Future of Jewish Identity", The Jerusalem Post Magazine August 1, 1969, pp. 607. Reprinted in Congressional Bi-Weekly, April 3, 1970; in Conservative Judaism, Summer 1970; in New Theology no. 9, 1972, pp. 41–58, and in Existentialism, Religion, and Death (New York: New American Library, 1976.)
  • Foreword to An Introduction to Hegel's Metaphysics, by Ivan Soll. Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1969.
  • "The Origin of Justice", Review of Metaphysics v. 23, December 1969, pp. 209–239.
  • "Beyond Black and White", Midway, v. 10(3) (Winter 1970), pp. 49–79. Also Survey no. 73 (Autumn 1969), pp. 22–46. Reprinted in Existentialism, Religion, and Death (New York: New American Library, 1976).
  • "Hegel's Ideas about Tragedy" in New Studies in Hegel's Philosophy, ed. Warren E. Steinkraus (New York: Holt, Rinehart and Winston, Inc., 1971), pp. 201–220.
  • "The Death of God and the Revaluation", in Robert Solomon, ed., Nietzsche: A Collection of Critical Essays (New York: Anchor Press, 1973), pp. 9–28.
  • "The Discovery of the Will to Power", in Robert Solomon, ed., Nietzsche: A Collection of Critical Essays (New York: Anchor Press, 1973), pp. 226–242.
  • Foreword in Truth and Value in Nietzsche: A Study of His Metaethics and Epistemology by John T. Wilcox. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1974
  • "Nietzsche and Existentialism", Symposium: A Quarterly Journal in Modern Foreign Literatures, v. 28(1) (Spring 1974), pp. 7–16. Reprinted in Existentialism, Religion, and Death (New York: New American Library, 1976).
  • "Hegel's Conception of Phenomenology" in Phenomenology and Philosophical Understanding, Edo Pivcevič, ed., pp. 211–230 (1975).
  • "Unknown Feuerbach Autobiography", Times Literary Supplement 1976 (3887): 1123–1124.
  • "A Preface to Kierkegaard", in Søren Kierkegaard, The Present Age and Of the Difference Between a Genius and an Apostle, trans. Alexander Dru, Harper Torchbooks, pp. 9–29. Reprinted in Existentialism, Religion, and Death (New York: New American Library, 1976).
  • "On Death and Lying", Reprinted in Existentialism, Religion, and Death (New York: New American Library, 1976).
  • "Letter on Nietzsche", Times Literary Supplement 1978 (3960): 203.
  • "Buber's Failures and Triumph", Revue Internationale de Philosophie v. 32, 1978, pp. 441–459.
  • "Buber: Of His Failures and Triumph", Encounter 52(5): 31–38 1979.
  • Reply to letter, Encounter 55(4): 95 1980.
  • "Art, Tradition, and Truth", Partisan Review, XVII, pp. 9–28.

Sound recordings Edit

  • "Prof. Kaufmann discusses Sartre, Jaspers, Heidegger, Kierkegaard"
  • "Kierkegaard and the Crisis in Religion" Part 1 of 3 Lectures
  • "Nietzsche and the Crisis in Philosophy" Part 2 of 3 Lectures
  • "Sartre and the Crisis in Morality" Part 3 of 3 Lectures
  • "Oedipus Rex"[22]
  • "Homer and the Birth of Tragedy"[22]
  • "Aeschylus and the Death of Tragedy"[22]
  • "The Power of the Single Will"
  • "Three Satanic Interludes, Or, 'How To Go To Hell'"[23]
  • "The Will to Power Reexamined"

See also Edit

Notes and references Edit

  1. ^ "Walter Kaufmann". Walter Kaufmann Web Site Project. Grand Valley State University. Retrieved July 16, 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Corngold, Stanley “Introduction" in: Walter Kaufmann: Philosopher, Humanist, Heretic, by STANLEY CORNGOLD, Princeton University Press, 2019, pp. 1–10.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Schacht, Richard (2015). "Kaufmann, Walter Arnold (1921–1980)". Encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2019-09-04.
  4. ^ a b c d Kaufmann, Walter A. (2015-06-09). "Prologue" (PDF). The Faith of a Heretic: Updated Edition. Princeton University Press. pp. 4, 6. ISBN 9780691165486.
  5. ^ a b c "Walter A. Kaufmann | Department of Philosophy". philosophy.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2019-09-04.
  6. ^ "Doctoral Dissertations, 1959". The Review of Metaphysics. 13 (1): 197. 1959. ISSN 0034-6632. JSTOR 20123751. FRITHJOF H. BERGMANN , " Harmony and Reason , An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hegel . " Adviser : W. Kaufmann
  7. ^ Schacht, Richard (1970). Alienation. Garden City, N.Y., Doubleday. pp. xi – via Internet Archive.
  8. ^ "Doctoral Dissertations, 1966". The Review of Metaphysics. 20 (1): 206. 1966. ISSN 0034-6632. JSTOR 20124224. A. Ivan Soll, "Hegel's Search for Absolute Knowledge." Adviser: Walter. Kaufmann.
  9. ^ Kaufmann, Walter (February 1959). "Faith of a Heretic" (PDF). Harper's Magazine. Retrieved July 9, 2015.
  10. ^ Kaufmann, W (1980).Discovering the Mind: Goethe, Kant, and Hegel. New York: McGraw-Hill Co., p.26
  11. ^ Kaufmann, Walter (2017-09-29). "Kierkegaard as Psychologist". In Kaufmann, Walter (ed.). Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Buber. Routledge. doi:10.4324/9781315125312. ISBN 9781351502955.
  12. ^ Kaufmann, W. (1961). Religion From Tolstoy To Camus. Harper and Brothers. p. 3.
  13. ^ Denis Dutton, "Kaufmann, Heidegger, and Nazism 2006-04-04 at the Wayback Machine" Philosophy and Literature 12 (1988): 325–36
  14. ^ Tanner, Michael (1994). Nietzsche. Oxford University Press. p. 84. ISBN 0-19-287680-5.
  15. ^ Jones, Llewellyn, The Humanist, Volume 21 (1961) quoted on the back cover of Kaufmann, Walter Arnold, From Shakespeare to Existentialism (Princeton University Press 1979),
  16. ^ Kaufman, Walter Arnold, Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist (Princeton University Press 1974), on back cover, ISBN 0-691-01983-5, accessed 2012-Jul-29
  17. ^ Kaufman, Walter (1974). Nietzsche: Philosopher, Psychologist, Antichrist. Princeton University Press. p. 79. ISBN 0-691-01983-5. Retrieved December 17, 2008.
  18. ^ Kaufman, Walter (1980). Nietzsche, Heidegger, and Buber: Discovering the Mind, Volume 2. Princeton University Press. p. 6. ISBN 0-88738-394-7. Retrieved December 20, 2008.
  19. ^ Kaufmann, Walter (1976), "Editor's Preface" to Thus Spoke Zarathustra, in The Portable Nietzsche, New York: Penguin Books, pp. 120–124. ISBN 0-14-015062-5
  20. ^ Kaufmann, Walter Arnold (1963). The Faith of a Heretic. Garden City: Doubleday. pp. 304–305, 304–329. OL 13574757M. My own ethic is not absolute but a morality of openness. It is not a morality of rules but an ethic of virtues... The first lacks any single name but is a fusion of humility and aspiration. Humility consists in realizing one's stark limitations and remembering that one may be wrong. But humility fused with smugness, with complacency, with resignation is no virtue to my mind. What I praise is not the meekness that squats in the dust, content to be lowly, eager not to stand out, but humility winged by ambition. There is no teacher of humility like great ambition. Petty aspirations can be satisfied and may be hostile to humility. Hence, ambition and humility are not two virtues: taken separately, they are not admirable. Fused, they represent the first cardinal virtue. Since there is no name for it we shall have to coin one-at the risk of sounding humorous: humbition.
  21. ^ Pickus, David (2009). "Walter Kaufmann and the future of the humanities" (PDF). Filozofija I Drustvo. 20 (3): 125–142. doi:10.2298/FID0903125P. ISSN 0353-5738.
  22. ^ a b c Bender, Henry V. (1997). "Survey of Audio-Visual Materials in the Classics". The Classical World. 91 (2/3): 133. ISSN 0009-8418. JSTOR 4352056.
  23. ^ Pacifica Tape Library (1971). Pacifica Programs Catalog. Pacifica Radio Archives. p. 27. Walter Kaufmann, with the assistance of Dennis O'Brian, reads three satanic excerpts from his book "Critique of Religion and Philosophy." The sections are titled "Satan and a Theologian," "Satan and a Christian," and "Satan and an Atheist." 77 min.

Further reading Edit

Biographies Edit

  • Corngold, Stanley (2019). Walter Kaufmann: Philosopher, Humanist, Heretic. Princeton (N. J.): Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-16501-1.

Critical assessments Edit

  • Pickus, David. "The Walter Kaufmann Myth: A Study in Academic Judgment", Nietzsche-Studien 32 (2003), 226–58.
  • Ratner-Rosenhagen, Jennifer. "'Dionysian Enlightenment': Walter Kaufmann's Nietzsche in Historical Perspective", Modern Intellectual History 3 (2006), 239–269.
  • Sokel, Walter. "Political Uses and Abuses of Nietzsche in Walter Kaufmann's Image of Nietzsche", Nietzsche-Studien 12 (1983), 436–42.

External links Edit

  • Walter Kaufmann Web Project with useful links to his work and life.
  • Selected works of Walter Kaufmann.
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived December 19, 2007),
  • Grateful student adds a memorial for Kaufmann to Chapel wall Princeton Alumni Weekly, 2013
  • Works by and about Walter Kaufmann.

walter, kaufmann, philosopher, walter, arnold, kaufmann, july, 1921, september, 1980, german, american, philosopher, translator, poet, prolific, author, wrote, extensively, broad, range, subjects, such, authenticity, death, moral, philosophy, existentialism, t. Walter Arnold Kaufmann July 1 1921 September 4 1980 was a German American philosopher translator and poet A prolific author he wrote extensively on a broad range of subjects such as authenticity and death moral philosophy and existentialism theism and atheism Christianity and Judaism as well as philosophy and literature He served more than 30 years as a professor at Princeton University Walter KaufmannWalter Kaufmann undatedBorn 1921 07 01 July 1 1921Freiburg GermanyDiedSeptember 4 1980 1980 09 04 aged 59 Princeton New Jersey United States 1 EducationWilliams CollegeHarvard University MA PhD Era20th century philosophyRegionWestern philosophySchoolContinental philosophyInstitutionsPrinceton UniversityMain interestsExistentialism philosophy of religion tragedyHe is renowned as a scholar and translator of Friedrich Nietzsche He also wrote a 1965 book on Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and published a translation of Goethe s Faust and Martin Buber s I and Thou Contents 1 Biography 2 Philosophical work 3 Partial bibliography 3 1 Original works 3 2 Translations 3 3 Anthologies edited works 3 4 Articles book chapters and introductions 3 5 Sound recordings 4 See also 5 Notes and references 6 Further reading 6 1 Biographies 6 2 Critical assessments 7 External linksBiography EditWalter Kaufmann was born in Freiburg im Breisgau Germany on 1 July 1921 2 3 Kaufmann was raised a Lutheran 4 At age 11 finding that he believed neither in the Trinity nor in the divinity of Jesus he converted to Judaism 4 Kaufmann subsequently discovered that his grandparents were all Jewish 4 Being both descended from Jews and a convert to Judaism placed Kaufmann in real danger in Nazi Germany In 1939 Kaufmann emigrated to the United States and began studying at Williams College 2 4 Stanley Corngold records that there he abandoned his commitment to Jewish ritual while developing a deeply critical attitude toward all established religions 2 Kaufmann graduated from Williams College in 1941 then went to Harvard University receiving an MA degree in Philosophy in 1942 3 His studies were however interrupted by the war 5 He enlisted with the US Army Air Force was placed at Camp Ritchie and is one of many Ritchie Boys who would go on to serve as interrogators for the Military Intelligence Service in Europe Kaufmann specifically performed interrogations in Germany 2 Kaufmann became a citizen of the United States in 1944 5 In 1947 he was awarded his PhD by Harvard 2 3 His dissertation written in under a year was titled Nietzsche s Theory of Values 2 That same year he joined the Philosophy Department at Princeton University 3 Although he would hold visiting appointments in both the US and abroad he would remain based at Princeton for the rest of his academic career 5 3 His students over the years included Nietzsche scholars Frithjof Bergmann 6 Richard Schacht 7 Ivan Soll 8 and Alexander Nehamas 2 Kaufmann died aged 59 on 4 September 1980 2 3 Philosophical work EditIn a 1959 article in Harper s Magazine he summarily rejected all religious values and practice especially the liberal Protestantism of continental Europe that began with Schleiermacher and culminated in the writings of Paul Tillich and Rudolf Bultmann 9 In their place he praised moralists such as the biblical prophets the Buddha and Socrates He argued that critical analysis and the acquisition of knowledge were liberating and empowering forces He forcefully criticized the fashionable liberal Protestantism of the 20th century as filled with contradictions and evasions preferring the austerity of the book of Job and the Jewish existentialism of Martin Buber Kaufmann discussed many of these issues in his 1958 Critique of Religion and Philosophy Kaufmann wrote a good deal on the existentialism of Soren Kierkegaard and Karl Jaspers Kaufmann had great admiration for Kierkegaard s passion and his insights on freedom anxiety and individualism 10 Kaufmann wrote Nobody before Kierkegaard had seen so clearly that the freedom to make a fateful decision that may change our character and future breeds anxiety 11 Although Kaufmann did not share Kierkegaard s religious outlook and was critical of his Protestant theology Kaufmann was nevertheless sympathetic and impressed with the depth of Kierkegaard s thinking I know of no other great writer in the whole nineteenth century perhaps even in the whole of world literature to whom I respond with less happiness and with a more profound sense that I am on trial and found wanting unless it were Soren Kierkegaard 12 Kaufmann edited the anthology Existentialism from Dostoevsky to Sartre Kaufmann disliked Martin Heidegger s thinking along with his unclear writing 13 Kaufmann is renowned for his translations and exegesis of Nietzsche whom he saw as gravely misunderstood by English speakers as a major early existentialist and as an unwitting precursor in some respects to Anglo American analytic philosophy Michael Tanner called Kaufmann s commentaries on Nietzsche obtrusive self referential and lacking insight 14 but Llewellyn Jones wrote that Kaufmann s fresh insights into Nietzsche can deepen the insights of every discriminating student of literature 15 and The New Yorker wrote that Kaufmann has produced what may be the definitive study of Nietzsche s thought an informed scholarly and lustrous work 16 In his Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist 1950 Kaufmann wrote that It is evident at once that Nietzsche is far superior to Kant and Hegel as a stylist but it also seems that as a philosopher he represents a very sharp decline and men have not been lacking who have not considered him a philosopher at all because he had no system Yet this argument is hardly cogent Schelling and Hegel Spinoza and Aquinas had their systems in Kant s and Plato s case the word is far less applicable and of the many important philosophers who very definitely did not have systems one need only mention Socrates and many of the pre Socratics Not only can one defend Nietzsche on this score how many philosophers today have systems but one must add that he had strong philosophic reasons for not having a system 17 Kaufmann also sympathized with Nietzsche s acerbic criticisms of Christianity However Kaufmann faulted much in Nietzsche writing that my disagreements with Nietzsche are legion 18 Regarding style Kaufmann argued that Nietzsche s Thus Spoke Zarathustra for example is in parts badly written melodramatic or verbose yet concluded that the book is not only a mine of ideas but also a major work of literature and a personal triumph 19 Kaufmann described his own ethic and his own philosophy of living in his books including The Faith of a Heretic 1961 and Without Guilt and Justice From Decidophobia to Autonomy 1973 In the former work he advocated living in accordance with what he proposed as the four cardinal virtues humbition a fusion of humility and ambition love courage and honesty 20 Partial bibliography EditOriginal works Edit 1950 Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist 1958 Critique of Religion and Philosophy 1959 From Shakespeare to Existentialism 1961 The Faith of a Heretic 1962 Cain and Other Poems 1965 Hegel A Reinterpretation 1968 Tragedy and Philosophy 1973 Without Guilt and Justice From Decidophobia to Autonomy 1976 Existentialism Religion and Death Thirteen Essays 1976 Religions in Four Dimensions 1977 The Future of the Humanities 21 1978 Man s Lot A Trilogy consisting of Life at the Limits Time is an Artist What is Man Discovering the Mind New York 1980 ISBN 0 07 033311 4 OCLC 5264699 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link vol 1 Goethe Kant and Hegel vol 2 Nietzsche Heidegger and Buber vol 3 Freud Versus Adler and JungTranslations Edit 1958 Judaism and Christianity essays by Leo Baeck 1963 Goethe s Faust Part One and selections from Part Two 1965 Hegel Texts and Commentary 1970 I and Thou by Martin Buber 1975 Twenty Five German poets an extended version of Twenty German Poets 1962 As written or published by Friedrich Nietzsche in chronological order The Birth of Tragedy Or Hellenism And Pessimism The Gay Science With a Prelude in Rhymes and an Appendix of Songs Thus Spoke Zarathustra A Book for All and None Beyond Good and Evil Prelude to a Philosophy of the Future On the Genealogy of Morals with R J Hollingdale The Case of Wagner A Musician s Problem Twilight of the Idols How One Philosophizes with a Hammer The Antichrist Nietzsche contra Wagner Ecce Homo How One Becomes What One Is The Will to Power with R J Hollingdale Anthologies edited works Edit 1954 The Portable Nietzsche Viking 1961 Religion from Tolstoy to Camus a companion to the preceding 1961 Philosophic Classics in two volumes v I Thales to Ockham v II Bacon to Kant 1968 Basic Writings of Nietzsche 1970 Hegel s Political Philosophy 1975 Existentialism from Dostoevsky to SartreArticles book chapters and introductions Edit Nietzsche s Admiration for Socrates Journal of the History of Ideas v 9 October 1948 pp 472 491 Earlier version Nietzsche s Admiration for Socrates Bowdoin Prize 1947 pseud David Dennis Goethe and the History of Ideas Journal of the History of Ideas v 10 October 1949 pp 503 516 The Hegel Myth and Its Method Philosophical Review v 60 No 4 October 1951 pp 459 486 Review of Nietzsche and Christian Ethics by R Motson Thompson Philosophical Review v 61 no 4 October 1952 pp 595 599 Hegel s Early Antitheological Phase Philosophical Review v 63 no 1 January 1954 pp 3 18 Nietzsche and Rilke Kenyon Review XVII 1955 pp 1 23 Toynbee and Superhistory Partisan Review vol 22 no 4 Fall 1955 pp 531 541 Reprinted in Ashley Montagu ed 1956 Toynbee and History Critical Essays and Reviews 1956 Cloth ed Boston Extending Horizons Porter Sargent ISBN 0 87558 026 2 A Hundred Years after Kierkegaard Kenyon Review XVIII pp 182 211 Jaspers Relation to Nietzsche in Paul Schilpps ed The Philosophy of Karl Jaspers New York Tudor 1957 pp 407 436 The Faith of a Heretic Harper s Magazine February 1959 pp 33 39 Reprinted in Existentialism Religion and Death New York New American Library 1976 Existentialism and Death Chicago Review XIII 1959 pp 73 93 also in Herman Feifel ed The Meaning of Death New York The Blakiston Division McGraw Hill 1959 Revised version printed in Existentialism Religion and Death New York New American Library 1976 Preface to Europe and the Jews The Pressure of Christendom on the People of Israel for 1900 Years 2d ed by Malcolm Hay Boston Beacon Press 1961 A Philosopher s View in Ethics and Business Three Lectures University Park Pa 1962 pp 35 54 Originally presented at a seminar sponsored by the College of Business Administration of the Pennsylvania State University on March 19 1962 Nietzsche Between Homer and Sartre Five Treatments of the Orestes Story Revue Internationale de Philosophie v 18 1964 pp 50 73 Nietzsche in the Light of his Suppressed Manuscripts Journal of the History of Philosophy v 2 October 1964 pp 205 226 Buber s Religious Significance from The Philosophy of Martin Buber ed P A Schilpp and Maurice Friedman London Cambridge University Press 1967 Reprinted in Existentialism Religion and Death New York New American Library 1976 The Reception of Existentialism in the United States Midway vol 9 1 Summer 1968 pp 97 126 Reprinted in Existentialism Religion and Death New York New American Library 1976 Foreword to Frau Lou Nietzsche s Wayward Disciple by Rudolph Binion Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press 1969 Introductory essay Alienation Richard Schacht Garden City N Y Doubleday 1970 The Future of Jewish Identity The Jerusalem Post Magazine August 1 1969 pp 607 Reprinted in Congressional Bi Weekly April 3 1970 in Conservative Judaism Summer 1970 in New Theology no 9 1972 pp 41 58 and in Existentialism Religion and Death New York New American Library 1976 Foreword to An Introduction to Hegel s Metaphysics by Ivan Soll Chicago and London University of Chicago Press 1969 The Origin of Justice Review of Metaphysics v 23 December 1969 pp 209 239 Beyond Black and White Midway v 10 3 Winter 1970 pp 49 79 Also Survey no 73 Autumn 1969 pp 22 46 Reprinted in Existentialism Religion and Death New York New American Library 1976 Hegel s Ideas about Tragedy in New Studies in Hegel s Philosophy ed Warren E Steinkraus New York Holt Rinehart and Winston Inc 1971 pp 201 220 The Death of God and the Revaluation in Robert Solomon ed Nietzsche A Collection of Critical Essays New York Anchor Press 1973 pp 9 28 The Discovery of the Will to Power in Robert Solomon ed Nietzsche A Collection of Critical Essays New York Anchor Press 1973 pp 226 242 Foreword in Truth and Value in Nietzsche A Study of His Metaethics and Epistemology by John T Wilcox Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press 1974 Nietzsche and Existentialism Symposium A Quarterly Journal in Modern Foreign Literatures v 28 1 Spring 1974 pp 7 16 Reprinted in Existentialism Religion and Death New York New American Library 1976 Hegel s Conception of Phenomenology in Phenomenology and Philosophical Understanding Edo Pivcevic ed pp 211 230 1975 Unknown Feuerbach Autobiography Times Literary Supplement 1976 3887 1123 1124 A Preface to Kierkegaard in Soren Kierkegaard The Present Age and Of the Difference Between a Genius and an Apostle trans Alexander Dru Harper Torchbooks pp 9 29 Reprinted in Existentialism Religion and Death New York New American Library 1976 On Death and Lying Reprinted in Existentialism Religion and Death New York New American Library 1976 Letter on Nietzsche Times Literary Supplement 1978 3960 203 Buber s Failures and Triumph Revue Internationale de Philosophie v 32 1978 pp 441 459 Buber Of His Failures and Triumph Encounter 52 5 31 38 1979 Reply to letter Encounter 55 4 95 1980 Art Tradition and Truth Partisan Review XVII pp 9 28 Sound recordings Edit Prof Kaufmann discusses Sartre Jaspers Heidegger Kierkegaard Kierkegaard and the Crisis in Religion Part 1 of 3 Lectures Nietzsche and the Crisis in Philosophy Part 2 of 3 Lectures Sartre and the Crisis in Morality Part 3 of 3 Lectures Oedipus Rex 22 Homer and the Birth of Tragedy 22 Aeschylus and the Death of Tragedy 22 The Power of the Single Will Three Satanic Interludes Or How To Go To Hell 23 The Will to Power Reexamined See also EditAmerican philosophy List of American philosophersNotes and references Edit Walter Kaufmann Walter Kaufmann Web Site Project Grand Valley State University Retrieved July 16 2018 a b c d e f g h Corngold Stanley Introduction in Walter Kaufmann Philosopher Humanist Heretic by STANLEY CORNGOLD Princeton University Press 2019 pp 1 10 a b c d e f Schacht Richard 2015 Kaufmann Walter Arnold 1921 1980 Encyclopedia com Retrieved 2019 09 04 a b c d Kaufmann Walter A 2015 06 09 Prologue PDF The Faith of a Heretic Updated Edition Princeton University Press pp 4 6 ISBN 9780691165486 a b c Walter A Kaufmann Department of Philosophy philosophy princeton edu Retrieved 2019 09 04 Doctoral Dissertations 1959 The Review of Metaphysics 13 1 197 1959 ISSN 0034 6632 JSTOR 20123751 FRITHJOF H BERGMANN Harmony and Reason An Introduction to the Philosophy of Hegel Adviser W Kaufmann Schacht Richard 1970 Alienation Garden City N Y Doubleday pp xi via Internet Archive Doctoral Dissertations 1966 The Review of Metaphysics 20 1 206 1966 ISSN 0034 6632 JSTOR 20124224 A Ivan Soll Hegel s Search for Absolute Knowledge Adviser Walter Kaufmann Kaufmann Walter February 1959 Faith of a Heretic PDF Harper s Magazine Retrieved July 9 2015 Kaufmann W 1980 Discovering the Mind Goethe Kant and Hegel New York McGraw Hill Co p 26 Kaufmann Walter 2017 09 29 Kierkegaard as Psychologist In Kaufmann Walter ed Nietzsche Heidegger and Buber Routledge doi 10 4324 9781315125312 ISBN 9781351502955 Kaufmann W 1961 Religion From Tolstoy To Camus Harper and Brothers p 3 Denis Dutton Kaufmann Heidegger and Nazism Archived 2006 04 04 at the Wayback Machine Philosophy and Literature 12 1988 325 36 Tanner Michael 1994 Nietzsche Oxford University Press p 84 ISBN 0 19 287680 5 Jones Llewellyn The Humanist Volume 21 1961 quoted on the back cover of Kaufmann Walter Arnold From Shakespeare to Existentialism Princeton University Press 1979 Kaufman Walter Arnold Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist Princeton University Press 1974 on back cover ISBN 0 691 01983 5 accessed 2012 Jul 29 Kaufman Walter 1974 Nietzsche Philosopher Psychologist Antichrist Princeton University Press p 79 ISBN 0 691 01983 5 Retrieved December 17 2008 Kaufman Walter 1980 Nietzsche Heidegger and Buber Discovering the Mind Volume 2 Princeton University Press p 6 ISBN 0 88738 394 7 Retrieved December 20 2008 Kaufmann Walter 1976 Editor s Preface to Thus Spoke Zarathustra in The Portable Nietzsche New York Penguin Books pp 120 124 ISBN 0 14 015062 5 Kaufmann Walter Arnold 1963 The Faith of a Heretic Garden City Doubleday pp 304 305 304 329 OL 13574757M My own ethic is not absolute but a morality of openness It is not a morality of rules but an ethic of virtues The first lacks any single name but is a fusion of humility and aspiration Humility consists in realizing one s stark limitations and remembering that one may be wrong But humility fused with smugness with complacency with resignation is no virtue to my mind What I praise is not the meekness that squats in the dust content to be lowly eager not to stand out but humility winged by ambition There is no teacher of humility like great ambition Petty aspirations can be satisfied and may be hostile to humility Hence ambition and humility are not two virtues taken separately they are not admirable Fused they represent the first cardinal virtue Since there is no name for it we shall have to coin one at the risk of sounding humorous humbition Pickus David 2009 Walter Kaufmann and the future of the humanities PDF Filozofija I Drustvo 20 3 125 142 doi 10 2298 FID0903125P ISSN 0353 5738 a b c Bender Henry V 1997 Survey of Audio Visual Materials in the Classics The Classical World 91 2 3 133 ISSN 0009 8418 JSTOR 4352056 Pacifica Tape Library 1971 Pacifica Programs Catalog Pacifica Radio Archives p 27 Walter Kaufmann with the assistance of Dennis O Brian reads three satanic excerpts from his book Critique of Religion and Philosophy The sections are titled Satan and a Theologian Satan and a Christian and Satan and an Atheist 77 min Further reading EditBiographies Edit Corngold Stanley 2019 Walter Kaufmann Philosopher Humanist Heretic Princeton N J Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 16501 1 Critical assessments Edit Pickus David The Walter Kaufmann Myth A Study in Academic Judgment Nietzsche Studien 32 2003 226 58 Ratner Rosenhagen Jennifer Dionysian Enlightenment Walter Kaufmann s Nietzsche in Historical Perspective Modern Intellectual History 3 2006 239 269 Sokel Walter Political Uses and Abuses of Nietzsche in Walter Kaufmann s Image of Nietzsche Nietzsche Studien 12 1983 436 42 External links Edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Walter Kaufmann philosopher nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Walter Kaufmann Walter Kaufmann Web Project with useful links to his work and life Selected works of Walter Kaufmann Manuscripts of Walter Kaufmann at the Wayback Machine archived December 19 2007 Grateful student adds a memorial for Kaufmann to Chapel wall Princeton Alumni Weekly 2013 Works by and about Walter Kaufmann Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walter Kaufmann philosopher amp oldid 1179200263, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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