Walter Benjamin and the (Unfinished) Project of a Doctoral Thesis on the Concept of “Infinite Task” in Kant’s Philosophy of History
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Abstract
In this paper we investigate the reasons which led Benjamin to project his doctoral dissertation on the concept of “infinite task” in Kant’s philosophy of history, as well as the motives behind his subsequent abandonment of that project. We stress both the crucial influence of Hermann Cohen behind Benjamin’s expectations and the differences between their conceptions of messianism. Our aim is to show that the outlines remaining from Benjamin’s frustrated doctoral project contain the seeds of his lasting aspiration to lay the foundation of knowledge in a messianic conception of history. With this intention, we maintain, Benjamin interprets the notion on “infinite task” in connection with a demand of redemption that grounds the cognitive sphere.
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