The One and the Others: Metaphysics, Poetry, and the Antinomies of Plato’s "Parmenides"
The One and the Others: Metaphysics, Poetry, and the Antinomies of Plato’s "Parmenides"
by Andrew Cutrofello
Northwestern University Press, 2026 Cloth: 978-0-8101-4938-0 | eISBN: 978-0-8101-4939-7 Library of Congress Classification PN56.M532C88 2026 Dewey Decimal Classification 809.93384
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC | REQUEST ACCESSIBLE FILE
ABOUT THIS BOOK
An original account of Western metaphysics based on Plato’s Parmenides
At the end of Plato’s Parmenides, Parmenides concludes that “whether ‘the One’ is or is not, it and ‘the Others’ both are and are not, and both appear and do not appear, all things in all ways.” Throughout the history of philosophy various attempts have been made to make sense of Plato’s puzzling dialectical exercise. In this ambitious book Andrew Cutrofello shows how Kant and Hegel extended it, how contemporary philosophers, including Graham Priest and Alain Badiou, have reinterpreted it, and how poets such as Dante, Shakespeare, Blake, Wordsworth, and Susan Howe have channeled it. What emerges is an original conception of the history of metaphysics as a series of antinomies, and of metaphysical poetry as a type of antinomianism.
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY
ANDREW CUTROFELLO is a professor of philosophy at Loyola University Chicago. His previous books include Imagining Otherwise: Metapsychology and the Analytic A Posteriori, published by Northwestern University Press, and All for Nothing: Hamlet’s Negativity.
REVIEWS
“The One and the Others is an impressive, lively retelling of the history of Western philosophy as a series of attempts to resolve the paradoxes identified in Plato’s Parmenides. Cutrofello provides a sympathetic and original examination of an extraordinary range of figures, both philosophical and literary, connecting each figure with one of the hypotheses Parmenides explores with the young Socrates in that dialogue. This book leaves us with an exciting, if dizzying picture of the history of metaphysics as a never-ending oscillation between a fixed number of intrinsically unstable positions.” —Mark Alznauer, Northwestern University— -
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1 On One Side and Other Side, Trojan and Greek: Plato’s Parmenides and Shakespeare’s Troilus and Cressida
Chapter 2 If the One Is: Priest and Dante
Chapter 3 If the One Is Not: Badiou and Howe
Chapter 4 If the Others Are: Kant and Blake
Chapter 5 If the Others Are Not: Hegel and Wordsworth
Chapter 6 On One Side and Other Side, Hegel and Genet: Shakespeare’s Antony and Cleopatra and Derrida’s Glas
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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