Published Dec 20, 2012



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Luis Fernando Cardona Suárez

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Abstract

This article is the second part of the analysis begun in: The Aesthetic Contemplation as De-Individualization of the Subject in Schopenhauer (Cfr. Universitas Philosophica, 58, Año 29, enero-junio 2012: 217-249). Now, we will examine the paradigmatic figure of asceticism clearly showing the aporetic movement of freedom in the phenomenon that is to reach the radical contradiction of the will itself in an embodied particular individual. However, this attempt is still a limited effort to confront the inescapable fact that all life is essentially suffering, because the search for a possible answer to the malaise of the world remains anchored to the attempt to make the world something completely mine. Through asceticism, Schopenhauer decisively renews selfishness; either to affirm it or even get rid of it. This claim is revealed to us as an aporia, one Schopenhauer could not escape.

Keywords

Schopenhauer, asceticism, freedom, critique to Kantian morality, phenomenology of the bodySchopenhauer, ascetismo, libertad, crítica a la moralidad kantiana, fenomenología del cuerpo

References
How to Cite
Cardona Suárez, L. F. (2012). On Schopenhauer’s Liberating Asceticism as Freedom in the Phenomenon. Universitas Philosophica, 29(59). Retrieved from https://revistas.javeriana.edu.co/index.php/vniphilosophica/article/view/10818
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