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Daniel John Leufer

KU Leuven
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  •  Publications
    4
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 More details
  • KU Leuven
    Institute of Philosophy
    Graduate student
Areas of Interest
20th Century Philosophy
Continental Philosophy
  • All publications (4)
  •  18
    The Dark Night of the Care for the Soul – Politics and Despair in Jan Patočka’s Sixth Heretical Essay
    In Francesco Tava & Darian Meacham (eds.), Thinking After Europe: Jan Patocka and Politics, Rowman & Littlefield International. 2016.
    status: published.
  •  48
    Correction to: The wound which will not close: Jan Patočka’s philosophy and the conditions of politicization
    Studies in East European Thought 70 (4): 289-289. 2018.
    When the author wrote this article, he was working as part of the ERC project The Great War and Modern Philosophy. It has come to his attention that the article should have included the following acknowledgement
    Eastern European Philosophy
  •  50
    The wound which will not close: Jan Patočka’s philosophy and the conditions of politicization
    Studies in East European Thought 69 (1): 29-44. 2017.
    This article investigates the political potentialities of Jan Patočka’s philosophy. It begins by situating Patočka’s philosophy in the context of the history of Czechoslovakia, and poses the question of whether Patočka’s late Kantianism and involvement with the Charter 77 initiative constitutes the sole political potentiality of his philosophy. It then argues that Patočka’s status as a political thinker is best understood by demarcating his pre-political philosophical core from its possible poli…Read more
    This article investigates the political potentialities of Jan Patočka’s philosophy. It begins by situating Patočka’s philosophy in the context of the history of Czechoslovakia, and poses the question of whether Patočka’s late Kantianism and involvement with the Charter 77 initiative constitutes the sole political potentiality of his philosophy. It then argues that Patočka’s status as a political thinker is best understood by demarcating his pre-political philosophical core from its possible political applications. By sketching the essence of his philosophy as a conception of ‘ontological wounding’, the article then investigates how this core of his philosophy can be politicized in certain circumstances. Ultimately, it argues that Patočka should not be considered a political thinker per se, but that his philosophy nevertheless has political potentialities.
    Eastern European Philosophy
  •  123
    The Far Reaches – Phenomenology, Ethics, and Social Renewal in Central Europe
    Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 47 (4): 362-364. 2016.
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