The Genealogy of Poteat’s Philosophical Anthropology
Künye
LAWRENCE, Bruce. "The Genealogy of Poteat’s Philosophical Anthropology". Recovering the Personal: the Philosophical Anthropology of William H. Poteat, (2016): 59-69.Özet
In this chapter, I want to explore the genealogy of Bill Poteat’s reflections
on what he calls “the radix of all meaning and all meaning-discernment,
namely, the tonic and ductile mindbody ingenuously dwelling in its
world.”1
He was brought to this concept of the mindbody via a radical critique
of the dualisms that have long since dominated modern Western intellectual
culture. Poteat’s critique was informed by a number of other critics.
These interlocutors sort out into two overlapping yet discretely separate
lists: 1) philosophers/cultural critics, of whom in addition to Michael Polanyi,
there are Blaise Pascal (the critic and opposite of the animus horribilis,
Descartes, of whom more later), H. Richard Niebuhr, Soren Kierkegaard,
Ludwig Wittgenstein, Maurice Merleau-Ponty, Hannah Arendt,
and Paul Ricoeur, just to cite a few, and 2) several writers/poets, especially
Albert Camus, Elizabeth Sewell, W. H. Auden, T. S. Eliot, William
Faulkner, and Walker Percy.



















