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Ian Alexander Moore: On the Rise and Fall of Natural Law in Schürmann’s Broken Hegemonies: For the Love of the Tragic ­Double Bind
On the Rise and Fall of Natural Law in Schürmann’s Broken Hegemonies: For the Love of the Tragic ­Double Bind
(p. 119 – 142)

Ian Alexander Moore

On the Rise and Fall of Natural Law in Schürmann’s Broken Hegemonies: For the Love of the Tragic ­Double Bind

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  • religion
  • history of philosophy
  • anarchy

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Ian Alexander Moore

Ian Alexander Moore is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. His most recent book is Dialogue on the Threshold: Heidegger and Trakl (SUNY 2022), which won the Eighteenth Annual Symposium Book Award. With Francesco Guercio, he also edited Reiner Schürmann’s Ways of Releasement: Writings on God, Eckhart, and Zen (Diaphanes 2024). Vrin, 2025.
Other texts by Ian Alexander Moore for DIAPHANES
Marcia Sá Cavalcante Schuback (ed.), David Payne (ed.): Breaking Grounds

In recent years, academic interest in Reiner Schürmann’s philosophical work has grown significantly. His thoughts on “the principle of anarchy” and “broken hegemonies” have begun to draw greater attention and have inspired recent works. In times of globalization and homogenization, Schürmann’s deconstruction of the concept of the “One,” upon which Western metaphysics and civilization have consolidated their power, is more than contemporary, it is urgent. 
The present volume gathers, for the first time in an anthology, contributions from scholars from different parts of the world who have studied and been engaged with Schürmann’s thought over the years. This anthology is the outcome of the first international conference on Schürmann’s philosophical work, held at Södertörn University in Stockholm, addressing the legacy of his work on broken hegemonies.

With contributions by Claudia Baracchi, Peg Birmingham, Emmanuel Cattin, Marcia Sá Cavalcante Schuback, Astrid Grelz, Francesco Guercio, Peter Hanly, Krystof Kasprzak, Jérôme Lèbre, Reginald Lilly, Michael Marder, Alberto Martinengo, Ian Alexander Moore, David Payne, Ramona Rat, Elisabeth Rigal, Gustav Strandberg.

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