Free Will and Determinism in Joseph Conrad’s Major Novels

丛编:

著者:
Although it has often been pointed out that the protagonists of Joseph Conrad’s novels frequently fail in what they attempt to achieve, the forces that oppose them have rarely been examined systematically. Furthermore, no sustained attempts have been made to rigorously address the central philosophical issue the characters’ predicament raises: that of the freedom-of-the-will. This interdisciplinary study seeks to remedy this neglect by taking recourse not only to the philosophical debate about free will and determinism but also to the relevant historical, economic, scientific, and literary discourses in the Victorian and Early-Modernist periods. Against this background a paradigmatic analysis of three of Conrad’s most significant novels – Heart of Darkness, Nostromo, and The Secret Agent – investigates the writer’s position in the free will and determinism debate by identifying certain recurring themes in which the freedom-of-the-will problem manifests itself. Light is thereby also thrown on a central Conradian paradox: how Conrad can insist on morality and moral responsibility, which presupposes the existence of free will, in a materialist-deterministic world, which denies it.

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Preliminary Material
页码: 1–6
Introduction
页码: 7–8
Conrad and the Problem of Free Will
页码: 79–106
Heart of Darkness and the Empire Machine
页码: 107–153
Nostromo and the Mechanics of History
页码: 155–197
The Secret Agent and the Urban Jungle
页码: 199–247
Conclusion
页码: 249–260
Works Cited
页码: 261–268
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