The Kairos of Philosophy

Journal of Speculative Philosophy 27 (1):47-66 (2013)
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Abstract

This essay seeks a philosophical understanding of the nature of kairos that, in turn, discloses the nature of philosophizing. This essay claims that the kairos of philosophy is dialogue, and that dialogue is kairological in two ways: (1) Dialogue is not just a phenomenon that occurs in chronological time but, rather, imposes its own time in order to see how life (or being) itself is disclosed to us; (2) dialogue is kairological because it denotes a moment in which we are pushed into the open, which demands our receptivity and response. Section I explains kairos as “circumstance” in Aristotle, as a required point of view in Heidegger, and as related to the beginning of creation in Schelling. Section II understands dialogue, as the kairos of philosophy, as a crisis—a breaking away from an ordinary understanding of and experience in the world. This destabilizing experience resonates with the untimeliness of philosophizing.

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Author Profiles

Vincent Colapietro
Pennsylvania State University
Donald Phillip Verene
Emory University
Melissa Shew
Marquette University

Citations of this work

Kairos in Isocrates.Robert Sullivan - 2023 - Philosophy and Rhetoric 56 (3-4):303-319.
Utopia as Akairological Rupture.Sunny Dhillon - 2023 - The European Legacy 28 (6):577-594.

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References found in this work

Time and Qualitative Time.John E. Smith - 1986 - Review of Metaphysics 40 (1):3 - 16.
Aristotle.David Ross - 1995 - Routledge.
The Nature of Reason and the Sublimity of First Philosophy.Claudia Baracchi - 2003 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 7 (2):223-249.
Phronesis As Kairological Event.James Risser - 2002 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 7 (1):107-119.

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