Table of Contents
Introduction
Chapter One: Theology and Subjectivism in Rosenzweig and Kant
I. Kant, Rosenzweig, and the Challenge of Skepticism
A. Kant and the Limits of Practical Reason
B. Rosenzweig and the Subjective Turn
II. Diagnosing the Problem: Kant, Rosenzweig, and the Fact-Value Divide
III. Symptoms of the Fact-Value Divide
Chapter Two: Acceptance and the Theopolitical Problem
I. Acceptance
II. Case Study: Spinoza and Hobbes
Chapter Three: From Redescription to External Critique
I. Redescription or the Turn to the “More”
II. Case Study: Martin Buber and Carl Schmitt
Chapter Four: From External Critique to the Crisis of Skepticism
I. External Critique
II. Case Study: Karl Barth and Leo Strauss
Chapter Five: Beyond the Fact-Value Divide
I. The Philosophical Demands of the Theopolitical Problem
II. Characteristics of a Post-Fact-Value Jewish and Christian Thinking
A. Intelligibility, Justification, and the Who, How, and When of Knowledge
B. Habituation, Disuse, and Rehabituation: The Social Determination of Warranted Assertability
III. Case Study: Peter Ochs and Nicholas Adams
Chapter Six: Science Apprehending Science
I. The Fact-Value Model: From Sense-Certainty to Self-Alienated Culture
A. Pre-Idealism: Epistemology, Self-Consciousness, and the Fact-Value Value Paradigm
B. Transcendental Idealism and Scientific Theory
C. Transcendental Idealism and Practical Freedom
II. External Critique: Pure Insight and the Enlightenment
III. Immanent Critique: From the Moral Law to Communal Justification
A. Immanent Critique: From Moral Consciousness to the Reconciliatory
B. Religious Representation and Philosophical Authority
IV. Conclusion
Bibliography