Topography or topology is a mode of philosophical thinking that combines elements of transcendental and hermeneutic approaches. It is anti-reductionist and relationalist in its ontology, and draws heavily, if sometimes indirectly, on ideas of situation, locality, and place. Such a topography or topology is present in Heidegger and, though less explicitly, in Hegel. It is also evident in many other recent and contemporary post-Kantian thinkers in addition to Kant himself. A key idea within such a topography or topology is that of triangulation—an idea that appears explicitly in the work of Donald Davidson. Triangulation captures the idea of the topographical domain as constituted through the mutual relatedness of the elements within it, and as only to be understood through the mapping out of such relatedness—in the case of the topographical domain that is the world, through the relatedness of self, other, and thing.
History
Publication title
Philosophy Today
Volume
59
Pagination
103-126
ISSN
0031-8256
Department/School
School of Humanities
Publisher
DePaul University Department of Philosophy
Place of publication
United States
Rights statement
Copyright 2015 Philosophy today
Repository Status
Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Expanding knowledge in philosophy and religious studies