Abstract
Stanley Rosen ranks among the two or three most serious philosophers of the last several decades. For more than forty years, Rosen has broken significantly new philosophical ground with his careful considerations of the problem of nihilism and the limits of analysis to his profound treatments of Platonic, Hegelian, Nietzschean, and Heideggerian philosophy. Now, still at the peak of his powers, he philosophizes about the origin and spread of twentieth-century philosophy’s general tendency “to take one’s bearings by, or to place central emphasis on, the correct conceptual treatment of ordinary, everyday, pretheoretical experience”.