Ernst Cassirers Kritik an der modernen Anthropologie und die Bestimmung des Menschen als animal symbolicum

In Christoph Asmuth & Simon Helling (eds.), Anthropologie in der klassischen Deutschen Philosophie. Würzburg, Germany: Königshausen & Neumann. pp. 301-316 (2021)
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Abstract

The article examines Cassirer's complete works as well as his posthumous writings with regard to Heinz Paetzold's thesis that Cassirer's philosophy undergoes a transformation to anthropology in his late work as well as Guido Kreis' thesis that such a transformation of the philosophy of symbols is not possible because it cannot guarantee its own ground. The author demonstrates a continuity in Cassirer's thinking with regard to the topic of anthropology, according to which Cassirer has been dealing with the problem of a metaphysics of the symbolic since at least 1921 and already in 1928 makes an initial determination of man as a being capable of form. The resumption of the anthropological question occurs in 1939 and is in clear continuity with the previous works. The reconstruction of the genesis of An Essay on Man (1944) that follows on from this finally reveals a hitherto well-kept secret of Cassirer-research, namely an answer to the question of why history first appears as a symbolic form in Cassirer's last published work.

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Tobias Endres
École Normale Supérieure

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