Description: This book examines the evolution of materialism within the continental tradition in philosophy. After building a model of materialism, it shows how the writings of Kant, Marx, Weber, and Nietzsche have contributed to a materialist understanding of culture and history.
Review Quotes:
"Koch (Appalachian State Univ.) provides a productive account of a materialist tradition within Continental philosophy. In lieu of the common narrative regarding Continental philosophy, which highlights the phenomenological tradition, Koch sheds light on an equally valuable tradition of materialist thought. Emphasizing (aspects of) materialism in Kant, Marx, Weber, Nietzsche, and the poststructuralists, he offers a contrast to the empiricist tradition of Hobbes and Hume as well as both positivism and phenomenology. He also takes Darwin to be a contributor to this tradition and gives his reader a concise defense for this. Scholars working in social theory, political theory, sociopolitical philosophy, and Continental philosophy will appreciate Koch's exploration of materialism. More specifically, this book will be worthwhile for those interested in the divide between metaphysics and epistemology, the functions of consciousness, or the conditions for cognition. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty." --Choice Reviews
"Andrew Koch deftly identifies and critically examines the distinctive contributions of Kant, Marx, Darwin, Nietzsche, Weber, and French poststructuralism in the making of a postmetaphysical, social constructionist tradition of materialist social inquiry. Taken together, they yield ten guidelines and operating theses for contemporary materialist thinking. Particularly noteworthy is Koch's elaboration of an evolving cultural materialist analytic stream as well as his elevation of Darwin as a major influence on Western epistemology and social inquiry. The consequences of this materialism, Koch concludes, '"puts the world squarely in human hands." This book represents an important contribution to social and political philosophy." --Wayne Gabardi, Idaho State University "In Materialism and Social Inquiry in the Continental Tradition in Philosophy, Andrew M. Koch explores how materialist understandings of consciousness have emerged historically. His perceptive readings of Kant, Marx, Weber, Nietzsche, and the poststructuralists, Baudrillard, Derrida, and Foucault, trace the ongoing movement toward materialism in Continental philosophy. Eloquently written, Materialism and Social Inquiry continually returns its readers to material reality, and reminds us of the relationships between consciousness and life." --Nancy Love, Appalachian State University "As Andrew Koch so elegantly demonstrates, the divide between epistemology and metaphysics can never be unified into a systematic whole, wherein truth and knowledge are synonymous. Citing Kant's attempt to reconcile Hume and Descartes' empiricism and rationalism respectively, we are left to rely on the primacy of conditions of cognition as our mode of knowledge acquisition. From Koch's impressive foray into Kant's philosophy and his insights into the thought of Marx, Hegel, Nietzsche, Husserl el al., this work falls cogently into place. In the end, we are left with a novel prospective on a topic that has run the historical gamete in philosophy: epistemology, now endowed by Koch and to a lesser extent others, with a political status. Philosophers and political theorists alike will appreciate the insightful nature of this work. Owing to the lucid writing style, it is equally accessible to both the student and professional philosopher." --Jesse Taylor