ABSTRACT

Continental philosophy is the most important intellectual tradition of the past two centuries. Billions – not millions – of people the world over have not only studied it in detail, but have tried to live by it. It has transformed our understanding of God, of society, of art and literature, of minority groups and of human life in general. It has provided much of the vocabulary in which educated people from Buenos Aires to Hanoi, from Moscow to Cairo, from Mexico City to Mauritius, from Shanghai to Brussels, think about their lives and communities. e only intellectual project that can rival it in importance is the “rise of science”, but science is far too huge and diverse to be a single tradition. e representatives of continental philosophy, by contrast, form a relatively cohesive group whose later members read and learnt from the earlier ones, and o en knew them personally.