This book looks back in order to look forward. It is a sustained reflection on the great disillusion Europe experienced after World War I. Europeans understood that bombs had buried the Enlightenment. They knew that, to avoid catastrophe, they had to think anew. The catastrophe came, but Cohen, Benjamin, Kafka, and Rosenzweig had sounded the warning.
Editorial Foreword
Acknowledgments
PROLOGUE
ONE The Death of Reason, the End of History, and the Decline of Philosophy? Approaching the Present
TWO The Jewish Question
THREE The Theoretical Strategy of Judaism
FOUR A Philosophy of Experience
FIVE Toward an Ethic of Compassion
CONCLUSION
Works Cited
About the Author
Index