A "sensus communis" hagyománya a magyar gondolkodásban(NKFI-1 K 135638) Támogató:
OTKA
Szakterületek:
Tudomány
An answer to the change of modern scholarly communication’s structure was the British
common sense school, which received significant reception in Europe. This paper offers
an overview of the key-term of the common sense in different cultural environments,
including Scottish thought, German philosophy, and the history of Hungarian philosophy;
the connection of the anti-Kantians and the Scottish school in the Hungarian Controversy
on Kant (1792–1822); and the school of Hungarian harmonistic philosophy in the middle
of the 19th century. An inevitable element of the continental reception of the common
sense tradition is the interpretation of Hans-Georg Gadamer in the initial chapters
of his Truth and Method. The present paper intends to rethink Gadamer’s analysis,
based on the recent results of the history of philosophy and on the experiences of
the historiography of Hungarian philosophy.