This book, in the form of a classical philosophical treatise, presents a large-scale theoretical project: It uses a metaphilosophical perspective to present the framework for postmetaphysical thinking, situating it in the domain of the metaphysics of morality. It offers an innovative defence of scepticism based on a critical and radical analysis of the concepts of knowledge and truth. Metaphysical and transcendental traditions are deconstructed, mainly in relation to the paradoxes of so-called realism and idealism, which are the consequence of dependence on an archaic substance theory. Moreover, the book proposes a certain form of philosophising in spite of everything, i.e. within a sceptical approach. The critique of ethics leads to an
a-ethical concept of the will and the values of life.
Knowledge, Being and the Human: Some of the Major Issues in Philosophy
Contents: Metaphilosophy - Theory of Knowledge - Theory of Truth - Skepticism and its Defence - New Critique of Classical Metaphysics and the Transcendental Tradition - Theory of Good Will - Perspectives of the Metaphysics of Morality.