Chapter 5 A Contamination of Philosophy by Religion? Reassessing Hadot’s Notion of Spiritual Exercises

In: Hadot and Foucault on Ancient Philosophy
Author:
Marta Faustino
Search for other papers by Marta Faustino in
Current site
Google Scholar
PubMed
Close

Purchase instant access (PDF download and unlimited online access):

$40.00

Abstract

This chapter discusses one of the most frequent criticisms made against Hadot’s notion of spiritual exercises, focusing on one of his most fervent critics, John Cooper. According to the latter, the notion of spiritual exercises is derived from religion and Hadot’s use of it inaccurately blurs the distinction between the philosophical and the religious way of life. After i) clarifying the roots of Hadot’s notion of spiritual exercises, ii) outlining his own direct answers to similar criticisms, and iii) contextualizing the notion in ancient philosophical forms of askēsis, I argue that Cooper’s critical reading of Hadot is essentially determined by a narrower understanding of spirituality and a competing conception of what philosophy is. Although Cooper’s divergence from Hadot seems to be more terminological than philosophical or even hermeneutical in nature, their contrasting accounts bring to light two different metaphilosophies and two competing understandings not only of what philosophy was in antiquity but also of what it should become in contemporary times.

  • Collapse
  • Expand

Metrics

All Time Past 365 days Past 30 Days
Abstract Views 170 129 25
Full Text Views 12 10 3
PDF Views & Downloads 26 21 5