Richard Schacht
Richard Schacht is General Editor of The Norton Anthology of Western Philosophy and Editor of the first of its two After Kant volumes, The Interpretive Tradition. He is Professor of Philosophy and Jubilee Professor of Liberal Arts and Sciences (Emeritus) at the University of Illinois. His books include Nietzsche (1983); Making Sense of Nietzsche (1995); Hegel and After (1975); Alienation (1970); The Future of Alienation (1994); and Finding an Ending: Reflections on Wagner's Ring (2004, with Philip Kitcher). He is editor of Nietzsche: Selections (1993); Nietzsche, Genealogy, Morality (1994); and Nietzsche's Postmoralism (2001).
Richard Schacht
Richard Schacht is General Editor of The Norton Anthology of Western Philosophy and Editor of the first of its two After Kant volumes, The Interpretive Tradition. He is Professor of Philosophy and Jubilee Professor of Liberal Arts and Sciences (Emeritus) at the University of Illinois. His books include Nietzsche (1983); Making Sense of Nietzsche (1995); Hegel and After (1975); Alienation (1970); The Future of Alienation (1994); and Finding an Ending: Reflections on Wagner's Ring (2004, with Philip Kitcher). He is editor of Nietzsche: Selections (1993); Nietzsche, Genealogy, Morality (1994); and Nietzsche's Postmoralism (2001).
Books by Richard Schacht
The Norton Anthology of Western Philosophy: After Kant
Richard Schacht, James Conant, Jay R. Elliott, Richard Schacht
2: The Analytic Tradition, Paperback, 2017
The new standard anthology of nineteenth and twentieth century philosophy.The Norton Anthology of Western Philosophy: After Kant
Richard Schacht, James Conant, Jay R. Elliott, Richard Schacht
1: The Interpretive Tradition, Paperback, 2017
The new standard anthology of nineteenth and twentieth century philosophy.The Norton Anthology of Western Philosophy: After Kant: VOLUME 1: THE INTERPRETIVE TRADITION; VOLUME 2: THE ANALYTIC TRADITION
Richard Schacht, James Conant, Jay R. Elliott, Richard Schacht
Two Volume Set, Paperback, 2017
The new standard anthology of nineteenth and twentieth century philosophy.