ABSTRACT

“In his Phenomenology of Cognition, Cassirer provides a comprehensive and systematic account of the dynamic process involved in the whole of human culture as it progresses from the world of myth and its feeling of social belonging to the highest abstractions of mathematics, logic and theoretical physics. Cassirer engages with the most sophisticated and cutting-edge work in fields ranging from ethnology to classics, egyptology and assyriology to ethology, brain science and psychology to logic, mathematics and theoretical physics. His command of philosophy, literature, and the arts is superb.

Echoing his work on Kant, Cassirer begins The Philosophy of Symbolic Forms with the problem posed by the meaning of being for philosophy since Plato. But Cassirer also shows that this problem gains new significance with Kant and with the development of modern culture. Cassirer weaves his conception of the development of knowledge into a broadly Kantian and German idealist dynamic-historical conception of significance and of experience that refuses to accept a fundamental opposition between literary, philosophical and scientific culture. In consequence of his great vision grounded in careful reflection and argument, Cassirer’s systematic conception of the Copernican cosmopolitan-cosmological revolution is still philosophically and scientifically unmatched in contemporary philosophy on both sides of the Atlantic and of the Pacific.”
Pierre Keller, Professor of Philosophy, University of California, Riverside, USA.

This new translation makes Cassirer’s seminal work available to a new generation of scholars. Each volume includes a translator’s introduction by Steve G. Lofts, a foreword by Peter E. Gordon, a glossary of key terms, and an index.

chapter |47 pages

Introduction

part One|74 pages

The Expressive Function and the World of Expression

part Two|206 pages

The Problem of Representation [Repräsentation] and the Construction of the Intuitive World

chapter II|29 pages

Thing and Property

chapter III|24 pages

Space

chapter IV|35 pages

The Intuition of Time

chapter V|17 pages

Symbolic Pregnance

chapter VI|86 pages

On the Pathology of Symbolic Consciousness

part Three|232 pages

The Function of Signification and the Construction of Scientific Cognition

chapter I|38 pages

Toward a Theory of the Concept

chapter II|16 pages

Concept and Object

chapter IV|56 pages

The Object of Mathematics