Workshop Workshops

Facticity and the Fate of Reason After Kant

Book Symposium with G. Anthony Bruno

June 20, 2025 University of Potsdam
Haus 8, Foyer

Am Neuen Palais 10, 14469 Potsdam

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In Facticity and the Fate of Reason After Kant, G. Anthony Bruno argues that the coining of the notion “facticity”, its transmission, and repurposing by post-Kantian thinkers leaves a lasting divide concerning the question of whether a science of intelligibility can tolerate brute facts. In the phenomenological tradition, ‘facticity’ denotes undeducibly brute conditions of intelligibility such as sociality, mortality, and temporality. This suggests an affirmative answer to the post-Kantian question. However, the term’s original use in the German idealist tradition is associated with a negative answer: a science of intelligibility must eliminate bruteness in order to be systematic, as Fichte says, or presuppositionless, as Hegel says. Moreover, eliminating bruteness requires a new logic for deducing conditions of intelligibility from reason’s self-contradictions, a dialectical logic that Fichte invents and Hegel develops. In response to the German idealists, Heidegger argues that dialectic ineluctably presupposes brute facts of lived experience, whose interpretation requires a hermeneutics of facticity. The untold history of the concept of facticity thus contains the deepest parting of the ways after Kant, one in which reason is fated to transform from the hand that holds the world to the thrown activity of being-in-the-world. Facticity and the Fate of Reason After Kant explores this transformation while confronting our inheritance of the still-pressing post-Kantian question.

At this book symposium, G. Anthony Bruno will discuss the stakes of his book with Jim Kreines, Johannes-Georg Schülein, and Andrew Werner.

Program

June 20, 2025

Campus Neues Palais, Haus 8, Foyer

  • 10:30 – Welcome
  • 10:40 – G. Anthony Bruno: Précis of Facticity and the Fate of Reason After Kant
  • 11:00 – James Kreines: Comments on FFRAK
  • 12:00 – Lunch Break
  • 13:15 – Johannes-Georg Schülein: Comments on FFRAK
  • 14:15 –  Coffee Break
  • 14:30 – Andrew Werner: Comments on FFRAK

Participants

G. Anthony Bruno, Kyla Bruff, James Kreines, Karen Ng, Jens Pier, Johannes-Georg Schülein, Isabel Sickenberger, Andrew Werner.

Image

Vincent van Gogh, Vissersboten op het strand van Les Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer (1888)