Phenomenology of Immanence. Doxography on the “Idea of God” (Descartes, Kant, Schelling, Levinas)
Religions August 19, 2022 DOI: 10.3390/rel13080755 via Semantic Scholar
Summary
Modern metaphysics is the history of making transcendence immanent, a process visible in the concept of the 'idea of god.' This idea violently separates subjectivity from transcendence, creating a 'psycho-theological' tear: the divine leaves a trace in us through its very distance. The argument is traced through four archives: Descartes' third Meditation, Kant's refutation of the cosmological proof in the Critique of Pure Reason, Schelling's commentary on Kant, and Levinas' work.
Study at a glance
| Characteristics | Theoretical or philosophical paper Peer reviewed |
|---|---|
| Keywords | Philosophy |
| Key finding | Modern metaphysics is the history of the immanentization of transcendence, shown through the concept of the 'idea of god' as a violent separation that leaves a psycho-theological trace. |
Abstract
This article describes the history of modern metaphysics as the history of the immanentization of transcendence. We show this from the concept of the “idea of god”, which is the phenomenon that violently separates subjectivity from transcendence and opens up a tear in it that we call “psycho-theological”: the divine violently leaves a trace in us by its very distance. We describe this phenomenon by means of a study of four archives: Descartes’ third Metaphysical Meditations (1641), the refutation of the cosmological proof of the existence of God in Kant’s Transcendental Dialectic in the Critique of Pure Reason (1781–87), Schelling’s commentary on this Kant’s text in his Introduction to the lectures on Philosophy of Revelation (1841), and the traces of Descartes’ third Meditation in the work of Levinas.