Categories of the Temporal

An Inquiry into the Forms of the Finite Intellect
Suhrkamp | Insel
Rights sold to:

Previously published in the respective language / territory; rights available again: English world rights (Harvard UP)


Categories of the Temporal / Kategorien des Zeitlichen
An Inquiry into the Forms of the Finite Intellect

The publication of Frege’s Begriffsschrif in 1879 forever altered the landscape for many Western philosophers. Here, Sebastian Rödl traces how the Fregean influence, written all over the development and present state of analytic philosophy, led into an unholy alliance of an empiricist conception of sensibility with an inferentialist conception of thought.

According to Rödl, Wittgenstein responded to the implosion of Frege’s principle that the nature of thought...

Read more

The publication of Frege’s Begriffsschrif in 1879 forever altered the landscape for many Western philosophers. Here, Sebastian Rödl traces how the Fregean influence, written all over the development and present state of analytic philosophy, led into an unholy alliance of an empiricist conception of sensibility with an inferentialist conception of thought.

According to Rödl, Wittgenstein responded to the implosion of Frege’s principle that the nature of thought consists in its inferential order, but his Philosophical Investigations shied away from offering an alternative. Rödl takes up the challenge by turning to Kant and Aristotle as ancestors of this tradition, and in doing so identifies its unacknowledged question: the relation of judgment and truth to time. Rödl finds in the thought of these two men the answer he urges us to consider: the temporal and the sensible, and the atemporal and the intelligible, are aspects of one reality and cannot be understood independently of one another. In demonstrating that an investigation into the categories of the temporal can be undertaken as a contribution to logic, Rödl seeks to transform simultaneously our philosophical understanding of both logic and time.

»Isaiah Berlin once responded to a question about what he thought of a certain philosophical work by saying "it is both good and original. But where it is good it is not original and where it is original it is not good." Categories of the Temporal is that rare work of philosophy which is the one where it is the other. One seldom reads something this substantial by a contemporary philosophical author that manages to be at the same time so remarkably philosophically ambitious and yet so remarkably successful in living up to the very ambitions it sets itself. Success of that form is the mark of a classic.« James Conant, University of Chicago

»Rödl here boldly challenges the most fundamental and simultaneously the most obscure concepts in philosophy. He reexamines in their most abstract form the logical categories deep at the heart of temporal thought, questioning major theses such as Frege's idea that certain deductive calculus is a demonstration of the very form of thought itself. Rödl's major feat is to name directly and thus clear the air of such dangers as the lack of clarity long tolerated in Wittgenstein's substitution of the term 'grammar' for 'logic.' After arduous preparation, Rödl makes his major stand, questioning directly not the 'difference' but the 'connection' between judgment and truth. He then explores the contributions of the categories of temporal thought and logic as they act in league with each other, proposing that philosophy originates along with thought as it comes to recognize its peculiar relation to time. Thought must relate either directly or indirectly to intuition. Philosophical activity thus is prized as a special kind of achievement involving a search for truth endemic to humans as temporal creatures. This volume―a daring undertaking―succeeds through fine-tuned argument, neatly expressed. Kudos to the translator for skillfully maintaining the flow and continuity of such complex argumentation.« J. M. Boyle, Choice
»Isaiah Berlin once responded to a question about what he thought of a certain philosophical work by saying "it is both good and original. But where it is good it is not original and where it is original it is not good." Categories of the Temporal is that rare work of philosophy which is the one where it is the other. One seldom reads something this substantial by a contemporary philosophical author that manages to be at the same time so remarkably philosophically ambitious and yet so...
Read more
2005, 215 pages
Service
Cover (Web)Cover (Print)

Persons

Sebastian Rödl was born in 1967, studied philosophy, musicology, German philology, and history at Goethe University Frankfurt and at the FU Berlin. After completing his PhD in 1997 with the work Selbstbezug und Normativität (Self-Reference and Normativity), he spent a year and a half as a postdoctoral fellow at the University of Pittsburgh. In 2003, he completed his Habilitation with the work Kategorien des Zeitlichen (Categories of Temporality) at Leipzig University. After guest professorships at the University of Chicago and the New School University New York, he received a Heisenberg grant from the DFG and was an associate professor of philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh. From 2005 to 2012, he was a professor of philosophy at the University of Basel, and since...
Sebastian Rödl was born in 1967, studied philosophy, musicology, German philology, and history at Goethe University Frankfurt and at the FU Berlin....

OTHER PUBLICATIONS

Good and Evil
Year of Publication: 2025
Sebastian RödlYear of Publication: 2025
The good has two opposites: the bad and the evil. Badness is that which deviates from its inner measure, while evil is that which negates and resists goodness. Evil is not the deviation from a...
Rights sold to:

English world rights (Harvard UP)