The concept of tradition has a long and overdetermined history in the descent of Western thought, articulated first in classical thought from Socrates to Lucretius as a sacred past with which philosophy must rupture in order to gain access to its truth-an account framed, that is, in the 'ancient quarrel' between logos and mythos itself.
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Tradition(s) II: Hermeneutics, Ethics, and the Dispensation of the Good
June 1, 2001, Indiana University Press
Hardcover
in English
0253339006 9780253339003
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"The concept of tradition has a long and overdetermined history in the descent of Western thought, articulated first in classical thought from Socrates to Lucretius as a sacred past with which philosophy must rupture in order to gain access to its truth-an account framed, that is, in the 'ancient quarrel' between logos and mythos itself."
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