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Full Description
This volume examines the intertwined meanings of reason, crisis, and Europe against the backdrop of acute political, ethical, and geopolitical instability. Eschewing any singular diagnosis or overarching interpretive frame, it assembles a range of disciplinary, methodological, and normative approaches in productive tension. Through analyses of war and unrest, democratic backsliding, persistent colonial legacies, neoliberal forms of governance, and divergent philosophical lineages, the volume invites readers to reassess the foundations, limits, and possible futures of European thought and institutional life.
Organized into four parts, the volume opens by tracing key moments in the philosophical history of reason and its recurrent crises within modern European intellectual traditions. Parts II and III extend this framing by introducing new theoretical perspectives and intellectual histories. Part II highlights the contradictions, contestations, and negotiations that have shaped the evolution of European philosophy. Part III offers a critical examination of political and legal discourses forged in response to the crises of the twentieth century, interrogating how these normative projects have influenced the trajectory of late modern Europe. Part IV concludes the volume with contemporary theoretical and political reflections on Europe's present and its possible reconfigurations.
Reason, Crisis, and Europe will appeal to scholars and advanced students in European philosophy, European studies, political theory, and the history of legal and political thought, as well as readers seeking a rigorous, interdisciplinary account of European modernity and its enduring crises.
Contents
Introduction: Europe and the Crisis of Reason PART I: Rethinking the Limits of Reason 1 Exceptional Reason: Kant, Husserl, and Derrida 2 Joseph de Maistre on the Dangers of Applying Reason and Theory to Politics 3 Logic and the Crisis of Reason 4 Europe and the Dispute about Reason 5 "A Crisis Such as the Earth Has Never Seen": Reading Nietzsche Is Our Crisis and Our Destiny PART II: Conceptual Geographies and Logics of Exclusion 6 The Afterlives of Europe Nevermore 7 Ex meridie lux: The Geophilosophy of Europe's Crisis and the Retrieval of a Mediterranean Political Space 8 Rereading Anticolonial Imaginaries: Resisting Epistemic Assimilation in the Twentieth Century and Their Echoes in the Present PART III: Historical Regimes of Normativity 9 The Images of Law and Society after the End of Law: Two Cases of Re-Legitimizing Legality 10 European Memory in Crisis: Tracing the Origins of Europe's Official Memory Regime 11 Ordoliberalism and the Crisis of Reason: Scientific Neutrality, Normative Commitment, and the Paradox of Method 12 The "Survival of the Successful": Neoliberalism as a Remedy to Civilizational Collapse PART IV: Futures of Europe 13 "Africa Is a Geopolitical Priority for the European Union": The EU's Geopolitical Turn and Colonial History 14 The Crisis of Pacifism and Nuclear Deterrence 15 Emmanuel Levinas on Europe as Space of Peace 16 The Missing People: On the Co-Originality Thesis and the Future of Democracy



