Additional information
by Corey W. Dyck (Editor), Fabio Malfara (Editor), Ignacio Moya (Editor)
Back Jacket
Is it possible to explain the existence of evil under the supposition of a supremely good creator? Are we ourselves the cause of most of the suffering that befalls us? Is life generally more painful than it is pleasant, and if so is non-existence preferable to existence? Is happiness ever even attainable?
These questions occupied some of the best-known philosophers of the seventeenth to nineteenth centuries--figures such as G. W. Leibniz, Pierre Bayle, David Hume, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Voltaire, Immanuel Kant, Arthur Schopenhauer, and Friedrich Nietzsche. They were also richly discussed by writers often since excluded from the philosophical canon, such as Ottobah Cugoano, Mary Astell, and Olga Plumacher. In this unique and provocative anthology, one will find philosophers bending their intellectual efforts to the darker side of life.
Author Biography
Corey W. Dyck is Professor and Chair of the Philosophy department at the University of Western Ontario and has published a number of books on early modern philosophy, including most recently Wolff and the First Fifty Years of German Metaphysics (Oxford UP, 2024). Fabio Malfara is a doctoral student at the University of Western Ontario. Ignacio L. Moya is an instructor at Sheridan College and the author of several essays on philosophical pessimism.