In My Kantian Ways , Ermanno Bencivenga, one of the most creative and iconoclastic practitioners of American philosophy, sets out to explore Kant's legacy for contemporary thought. Seeking to extricate the German philosopher's work from the stranglehold of the prevailing analytic tradition, he presents his own defamiliarizing and unique interpretation of Kantianism. Kant emerges as a master thinker whose emphasis on judgment provides the basis for a new approach to the practice of philosophy as a vehicle for learning. Ranging from speculations on the electronic self to a tour-de-force critique of the postmodern thought of Richard Rorty, Bencivenga's book is an inviting blend of styles and genres. Plucky, irritating, and sometimes wickedly funny, My Kantian Ways calls attention to the frequent mediocrity and false piety of much of today's professional philosophy. Through these intensely personal essays, Bencivenga reminds us just how much philosophy can matter.
Ermanno Bencivenga (Reggio Calabria, 1950) è un filosofo e saggista italiano. Dopo la laurea in filosofia alla Statale di Milano, Bencivenga ha lasciato presto l'Italia, trasferendosi prima in Canada per gli studi di dottorato e poi negli Stati Uniti, dove ha intrapreso la sua carriera accademica insegnando, dal 1979, all'Università della California a Irvine.