The end of philosophy as the horizon of Bolívar Echeverría’s reflection

In our understanding, one of the fundamental traits of Bolívar Echeverría’s thought lies in his constant attack on limits. His intellectual task took him beyond, both disciplinary topics and any other corset that could constrain or restrict the movement of his stubborn search for new horizons. Bolív...

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第一著者: Llerena Borja, Oscar (author)
フォーマット: article
言語:spa
出版事項: 2020
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オンライン・アクセス:https://revistadigital.uce.edu.ec/index.php/CSOCIALES/article/view/2770
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要約:In our understanding, one of the fundamental traits of Bolívar Echeverría’s thought lies in his constant attack on limits. His intellectual task took him beyond, both disciplinary topics and any other corset that could constrain or restrict the movement of his stubborn search for new horizons. Bolívar Echeverría’s reflection was in permanent movement, his thought was a living entity, which today, as Socrates demands in the Phaedrus, stands on its own feet and defends itself without the help of its father (275e). In Echeverría it was a question of a militancy in the dialectical exercise. Our distinguished thinker was in constant discussion, always in dispute, transcending limits, crossing borders to produce the new, the surprise of illumination, the miracle of birth, of unveiling. Seen this way, there is in Echeverría a Socratic trait, a tireless vocation to question the world in order to force it to rethink itself, to remake itself. The inquiry that we present here attacks the problem of philosophical thought today, it is an interpellation of its function and its destiny, it is therefore once again a confrontation with the limits.