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This book examines the relationship between freedom and true knowledge, which is a central part of the hotly debated issue of human freedom.
Is truth necessary for the attainment of freedom? Does a free life require a clear understanding of reality? And if so, to what extent? These questions lead back to a classical philosophical debate, of which the first major chapter was written by Plato. In the dialogues, he describes human life as a peculiar form of imprisonment and calls for a global liberation of human cognition. This work analyses this ambitious project and its unique influence on…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book examines the relationship between freedom and true knowledge, which is a central part of the hotly debated issue of human freedom.

Is truth necessary for the attainment of freedom? Does a free life require a clear understanding of reality? And if so, to what extent? These questions lead back to a classical philosophical debate, of which the first major chapter was written by Plato. In the dialogues, he describes human life as a peculiar form of imprisonment and calls for a global liberation of human cognition. This work analyses this ambitious project and its unique influence on the work of two modern authors, Hegel and Nietzsche, who explicitly linked the notions of ignorance and truth to those of bondage and freedom-or slavery and mastery-and whose philosophies are also centred on the liberation of human consciousness.

Following a historical and systematic approach, this book is of interest to readers who are reasonably acquainted with the history ofancient and modern philosophy, including undergraduate and graduate students, as well as scholars working on Plato, German Idealism, Nietzsche and other related fields.

Autorenporträt
Bernardo Ferro is a postdoctoral researcher as the Institute for Philosophical Studies of the University of Coimbra. He holds a European PhD in Philosophy from the New University of Lisbon and was a visiting researcher at the Humboldt University, in Berlin, a postdoctoral fellow at KU Leuven and a temporary lecturer at the University of Wuppertal. His research focuses mainly on the history of modern European philosophy, and particularly on the post-Kantian tradition. He has written several articles, chapters and book reviews for different academic publications.