German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801^. - edition reliée, livre de poche
2002, ISBN: 9780674007697
[PU: Harvard University Press], 726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: “Germ… Plus…
[PU: Harvard University Press], 726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: “German idealism” is a common phrase in literary, historical, and philo-sophical circles. Broadly, it designates the philosophical doctrines initiated by Kant and then continued by Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. But, beyond this very general definition, it is difficult to give the phrase a more precise meaning. That is not very surprising. What idealism means in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel has been a matter of discussion and dispute for centuries. The present study continues that discussion and dispute. Its chief task is to explain the meaning of idealism in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and the young romantics (Hölderlin, Novalis, and Friedrich Schlegel). My chief excuse for doing so is that, at least in the case of Fichte, Schelling, and the romantics, though less so in the case of Kant and Hegel, the meaning of German idealism has remained comparatively underexplored in the English-speaking world. There have been many studies of Kant’s transcendental idealism and a few of Hegel’s absolute idealism; but there has been very little in English about German idealism as a whole. The greatest Student of German idealism in the Anglo-American world was Josiah Royce, whose Spirit of Modern Phi-losophy and Lectures on Modern Idealism have influenced generations of stu-dents. Yet f hope to show that, for all its merits, Royce’s Interpretation has been profoundly misleading; in any case, Royce wrote without the benefit of much of the material available today. There are good reasons for rethinking the meaning of German idealism. Since the 1960s there has been a remarkable resurgence of interest in the subject. Prima facie this is puzzling, since so much Contemporary philoso-phy—whether in the pragmatic, existentialist, or analytic tradition—has its roots in the reaction against German idealism. There is indeed no going back to the age when the absolute once ruled the philosophical firmament. Yet, paradoxically, the very reasons for the obsolescence of German idealism have also been the reasons for its revival. These modern traditions under-stand themselves only when they appreciate what they grew out of and re-acted against. If pragmatists, existentialists, and analytfc philosophers wish to recover their roots, they must eventually grapple with German idealism itself. The renewed interest in German idealism has as much to do with its abid-ing philosophical relevance as its vast historical significance. Recent episte-mology still struggles to find some middle path between the extremes of skeptical subjectivism and naive realism, foundationalism and relativism, materialism and dualism, Platonism and historicism. But these were essentially the concerns of the German idealists themselves, whose attempts to find that middle path were subtle and sophisticated. Contemporary philosophers seeking to avoid these dilemmas can still find a rieh source of inspira-tion in German idealism. After centuries of intensive scholarship, no work on German idealism can claim great originality or novelty. Of course, this study is no exception. My debts to previous scholarship, which I have tried to acknowledge in many footnotes, are wide and deep. It is probably worthwhile, however, to point out a few respects in which this study differs from past work, especially the grand surveys of the subject in the German tradition. First, I have not at-tempted to do justice to the full scope of German idealism, its contributions to the fields of aesthetics, morals, and metaphysics, as well as to epistemol-ogy. This study is much more limited in focus. It concentrates on one specific theme: the meaning of idealism itself, and more specifically the reaction against subjectivism. I have focused upon this specific theme because it has been fateful for the reception of German idealism, which has so often been dismissed as a grandiose form of subjectivism. My central thesis is that, from its very inception, German idealism was a reaction against subjectivism, an attempt to prove the reality of the external world and to break out of the egocentric predicament. Second, I have made the young romantics— Hölderlin, Schlegel, Novalis—into crucial figures in the development of German idealism. The romantics have usually been placed either outside the idealist tradition entirely or.inside it as mere transitional figures. But neither view is correct: the early romantics were the true founders of absolute idealism. Third, this study of German idealism omits Hegel, and it is indeed a reaction against the Hegelian legacy. Hegel’s history of the period, which interprets it as a progression culminating in his own System, is tendentious philosophically and anachronistic historically. Fourth, there is no teleology to my history. I do not see German idealism either as a progression toward Hegel or as a decline from Kant. If we impartially and thoroughly examine each thinker in his own terms, it is unlikely that the results will show simple progress or decline. Each thinker is more likely to have his unique strengths and weaknesses—a gain here is a loss there—so that the end result is an aporia or invitation to eclecticism. Fifth and finally, I have attempted to inte-grate Kant’s Opus postumum into the general history of German idealism; Kant’s final years mark such an important development in his thought that they cannot be ignored. My methodology has been essentially historical and hermeneutical. As far as possible, my aim has been to reconstruct an author’s work in its individu-ality according to his original intention and context. Since they can be tendentious and anachronistic in application to historical material, I have bracketed Contemporary philosophical concerns and concepts. I have also given primacy to textual exegesis over philosophical criticism, partly be-cause the Interpretation of the texts is so controversial, and partly because the most fair and accurate criticism has to come from the most thorough and sympathetic interpretation. In this work, unlike my previous studies of classical German philosophy, I have not attempted to interpret a text in its cultural and political context. Al-though I regard cultural and political interpretation as essential, I do not think that the time is ripe for it in the case of German idealism. The problem is that the basic philosophical content of the texts is still too indeterminate and controversial. No one who approaches them can afford to ignore the fraught history of their interpretation. Without, however, an understanding of their content, any cultural or political interpretation is a hazardous busi-ness. A scholar who fails to appreciate the precise Status of Fichte’s absolute ego, for example, cannot appraise its political and cultural significance. This study does not pretend to be a contribution to what the Germans call "Konstellationsarbeit” that is, detailed research into the context and interac-tions of German philosophers in Jena in the 1790s. While such research is invaluable, and indeed a necessary basis for work like my own, I have not been able to undertake it in any detailed or concerted manner here. Much of my work has rested on the more detailed research of Dieter Henrich, Manfred Frank, Michael Franz, Violetta Waibel, and others. Given the general state of knowledge of German idealism in the English-speaking worid, it is impossible to presuppose acquaintance with this context, still less philosophical interest in it. Some of the best scholarship on Kant and German idealism was written prior to World War I, and it has been the foundation for much of my own work. I have profound debts to the German historical tradition, especially to the work of Erich Adickes, Benno Erdmann, Wilhelm Dilthey, Rudolf Haym, and Ernst Cassirer, which, I believe, provides a far superior paradigm for do-ing history of philosophy than the analytic tradition. Regarding more Contemporary scholarship, my chief debts have been to Paul Guyer and Henry Allison in Kant studies, and to Dieter Henrich and Manfred Frank in post-Kantian philosophy. Although I often take issue with these scholars, that , DE, [SC: 5.00], gebraucht; sehr gut, gewerbliches Angebot, [GW: 1071g], Banküberweisung, Offene Rechnung, PayPal, Internationaler Versand<
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German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801^. - edition reliée, livre de poche
2002, ISBN: 9780674007697
Harvard, University Press, 726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: ?German idealism… Plus…
Harvard, University Press, 726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: ?German idealism? is a common phrase in literary, historical, and philo-sophical circles. Broadly, it designates the philosophical doctrines initiated by Kant and then continued by Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. But, beyond this very general definition, it is difficult to give the phrase a more precise meaning. That is not very surprising. What idealism means in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel has been a matter of discussion and dispute for centuries. The present study continues that discussion and dispute. Its chief task is to explain the meaning of idealism in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and the young romantics (Hölderlin, Novalis, and Friedrich Schlegel). My chief excuse for doing so is that, at least in the case of Fichte, Schelling, and the romantics, though less so in the case of Kant and Hegel, the meaning of German idealism has remained comparatively underexplored in the English-speaking world. There have been many studies of Kant?s transcendental idealism and a few of Hegel?s absolute idealism; but there has been very little in English about German idealism as a whole. The greatest Student of German idealism in the Anglo-American world was Josiah Royce, whose Spirit of Modern Phi-losophy and Lectures on Modern Idealism have influenced generations of stu-dents. Yet f hope to show that, for all its merits, Royce?s Interpretation has been profoundly misleading; in any case, Royce wrote without the benefit of much of the material available today. There are good reasons for rethinking the meaning of German idealism. Since the 1960s there has been a remarkable resurgence of interest in the subject. Prima facie this is puzzling, since so much Contemporary philoso-phy?whether in the pragmatic, existentialist, or analytic tradition?has its roots in the reaction against German idealism. There is indeed no going back to the age when the absolute once ruled the philosophical firmament. Yet, paradoxically, the very reasons for the obsolescence of German idealism have also been the reasons for its revival. These modern traditions under-stand themselves only when they appreciate what they grew out of and re-acted against. If pragmatists, existentialists, and analytfc philosophers wish to recover their roots, they must eventually grapple with German idealism itself. The renewed interest in German idealism has as much to do with its abid-ing philosophical relevance as its vast historical significance. Recent episte-mology still struggles to find some middle path between the extremes of skeptical subjectivism and naive realism, foundationalism and relativism, materialism and dualism, Platonism and historicism. But these were essentially the concerns of the German idealists themselves, whose attempts to find that middle path were subtle and sophisticated. Contemporary philosophers seeking to avoid these dilemmas can still find a rieh source of inspira-tion in German idealism. After centuries of intensive scholarship, no work on German idealism can claim great originality or novelty. Of course, this study is no exception. My debts to previous scholarship, which I have tried to acknowledge in many footnotes, are wide and deep. It is probably worthwhile, however, to point out a few respects in which this study differs from past work, especially the grand surveys of the subject in the German tradition. First, I have not at-tempted to do justice to the full scope of German idealism, its contributions to the fields of aesthetics, morals, and metaphysics, as well as to epistemol-ogy. This study is much more limited in focus. It concentrates on one specific theme: the meaning of idealism itself, and more specifically the reaction against subjectivism. I have focused upon this specific theme because it has been fateful for the reception of German idealism, which has so often been dismissed as a grandiose form of subjectivism. My central thesis is that, from its very inception, German idealism was a reaction against subjectivism, an attempt to prove the reality of the external world and to break out of the egocentric predicament. Second, I have made the young romantics? Hölderlin, Schlegel, Novalis?into crucial figures in the development of German idealism. The romantics have usually been placed either outside the idealist tradition entirely or.inside it as mere transitional figures. But neither view is correct: the early romantics were the true founders of absolute idealism. Third, this study of German idealism omits Hegel, and it is indeed a reaction against the Hegelian legacy. Hegel?s history of the period, which interprets it as a progression culminating in his own System, is tendentious philosophically and anachronistic historically. Fourth, there is no teleology to my history. I do not see German idealism either as a progression toward Hegel or as a decline from Kant. If we impartially and thoroughly examine each thinker in his own terms, it is unlikely that the results will show simple progress or decline. Each thinker is more likely to have his unique strengths and weaknesses?a gain here is a loss there?so that the end result is an aporia or invitation to eclecticism. Fifth and finally, I have attempted to inte-grate Kant?s Opus postumum into the general history of German idealism; Kant?s final years mark such an important development in his thought that they cannot be ignored. My methodology has been essentially historical and hermeneutical. As far as possible, my aim has been to reconstruct an author?s work in its individu-ality according to his original intention and context. Since they can be tendentious and anachronistic in application to historical material, I have bracketed Contemporary philosophical concerns and concepts. I have also given primacy to textual exegesis over philosophical criticism, partly be-cause the Interpretation of the texts is so controversial, and partly because the most fair and accurate criticism has to come from the most thorough and sympathetic interpretation. In this work, unlike my previous studies of classical German philosophy, I have not attempted to interpret a text in its cultural and political context. Al-though I regard cultural and political interpretation as essential, I do not think that the time is ripe for it in the case of German idealism. The problem is that the basic philosophical content of the texts is still too indeterminate and controversial. No one who approaches them can afford to ignore the fraught history of their interpretation. Without, however, an understanding of their content, any cultural or political interpretation is a hazardous busi-ness. A scholar who fails to appreciate the precise Status of Fichte?s absolute ego, for example, cannot appraise its political and cultural significance. This study does not pretend to be a contribution to what the Germans call "Konstellationsarbeit? that is, detailed research into the context and interac-tions of German philosophers in Jena in the 1790s. While such research is invaluable, and indeed a necessary basis for work like my own, I have not been able to undertake it in any detailed or concerted manner here. Much of my work has rested on the more detailed research of Dieter Henrich, Manfred Frank, Michael Franz, Violetta Waibel, and others. Given the general state of knowledge of German idealism in the English-speaking worid, it is impossible to presuppose acquaintance with this context, still less philosophical interest in it. Some of the best scholarship on Kant and German idealism was written prior to World War I, and it has been the foundation for much of my own work. I have profound debts to the German historical tradition, especially to the work of Erich Adickes, Benno Erdmann, Wilhelm Dilthey, Rudolf Haym, and Ernst Cassirer, which, I believe, provides a far superior paradigm for do-ing history of philosophy than the analytic tradition. Regarding more Contemporary scholarship, my chief debts have been to Paul Guyer and Henry Allison in Kant studies, and to Dieter Henrich and Manfred Frank in post-Kantian philosophy. Although I often take issue with these scholars, that is in direct proportion to my debts to them. ISBN 9780674007697Philosophie 2002, [PU: Harvard University Press]<
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German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801^. - edition reliée, livre de poche
2002, ISBN: 9780674007697
726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: German idealism is a common phrase in liter… Plus…
726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: German idealism is a common phrase in literary, historical, and philo-sophical circles. Broadly, it designates the philosophical doctrines initiated by Kant and then continued by Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. But, beyond this very general definition, it is difficult to give the phrase a more precise meaning. That is not very surprising. What idealism means in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel has been a matter of discussion and dispute for centuries. The present study continues that discussion and dispute. Its chief task is to explain the meaning of idealism in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and the young romantics (Hölderlin, Novalis, and Friedrich Schlegel). My chief excuse for doing so is that, at least in the case of Fichte, Schelling, and the romantics, though less so in the case of Kant and Hegel, the meaning of German idealism has remained comparatively underexplored in the English-speaking world. There have been many studies of Kants transcendental idealism and a few of Hegels absolute idealism; but there has been very little in English about German idealism as a whole. The greatest Student of German idealism in the Anglo-American world was Josiah Royce, whose Spirit of Modern Phi-losophy and Lectures on Modern Idealism have influenced generations of stu-dents. Yet f hope to show that, for all its merits, Royces Interpretation has been profoundly misleading; in any case, Royce wrote without the benefit of much of the material available today. There are good reasons for rethinking the meaning of German idealism. Since the 1960s there has been a remarkable resurgence of interest in the subject. Prima facie this is puzzling, since so much Contemporary philoso-phywhether in the pragmatic, existentialist, or analytic traditionhas its roots in the reaction against German idealism. There is indeed no going back to the age when the absolute once ruled the philosophical firmament. Yet, paradoxically, the very reasons for the obsolescence of German idealism have also been the reasons for its revival. These modern traditions under-stand themselves only when they appreciate what they grew out of and re-acted against. If pragmatists, existentialists, and analytfc philosophers wish to recover their roots, they must eventually grapple with German idealism itself. The renewed interest in German idealism has as much to do with its abid-ing philosophical relevance as its vast historical significance. Recent episte-mology still struggles to find some middle path between the extremes of skeptical subjectivism and naive realism, foundationalism and relativism, materialism and dualism, Platonism and historicism. But these were essentially the concerns of the German idealists themselves, whose attempts to find that middle path were subtle and sophisticated. Contemporary philosophers seeking to avoid these dilemmas can still find a rieh source of inspira-tion in German idealism. After centuries of intensive scholarship, no work on German idealism can claim great originality or novelty. Of course, this study is no exception. My debts to previous scholarship, which I have tried to acknowledge in many footnotes, are wide and deep. It is probably worthwhile, however, to point out a few respects in which this study differs from past work, especially the grand surveys of the subject in the German tradition. First, I have not at-tempted to do justice to the full scope of German idealism, its contributions to the fields of aesthetics, morals, and metaphysics, as well as to epistemol-ogy. This study is much more limited in focus. It concentrates on one specific theme: the meaning of idealism itself, and more specifically the reaction against subjectivism. I have focused upon this specific theme because it has been fateful for the reception of German idealism, which has so often been dismissed as a grandiose form of subjectivism. My central thesis is that, from its very inception, German idealism was a reaction against subjectivism, an attempt to prove the reality of the external world and to break out of the egocentric predicament. Second, I have made the young romantics Hölderlin, Schlegel, Novalisinto crucial figures in the development of German idealism. The romantics have usually been placed either outside the idealist tradition entirely or.inside it as mere transitional figures. But neither view is correct: the early romantics were the true founders of absolute idealism. Third, this study of German idealism omits Hegel, and it is indeed a reaction against the Hegelian legacy. Hegels history of the period, which interprets it as a progression culminating in his own System, is tendentious philosophically and anachronistic historically. Fourth, there is no teleology to my history. I do not see German idealism either as a progression toward Hegel or as a decline from Kant. If we impartially and thoroughly examine each thinker in his own terms, it is unlikely that the results will show simple progress or decline. Each thinker is more likely to have his unique strengths and weaknessesa gain here is a loss thereso that the end result is an aporia or invitation to eclecticism. Fifth and finally, I have attempted to inte-grate Kants Opus postumum into the general history of German idealism; Kants final years mark such an important development in his thought that they cannot be ignored. My methodology has been essentially historical and hermeneutical. As far as possible, my aim has been to reconstruct an authors work in its individu-ality according to his original intention and context. Since they can be tendentious and anachronistic in application to historical material, I have bracketed Contemporary philosophical concerns and concepts. I have also given primacy to textual exegesis over philosophical criticism, partly be-cause the Interpretation of the texts is so controversial, and partly because the most fair and accurate criticism has to come from the most thorough and sympathetic interpretation. In this work, unlike my previous studies of classical German philosophy, I have not attempted to interpret a text in its cultural and political context. Al-though I regard cultural and political interpretation as essential, I do not think that the time is ripe for it in the case of German idealism. The problem is that the basic philosophical content of the texts is still too indeterminate and controversial. No one who approaches them can afford to ignore the fraught history of their interpretation. Without, however, an understanding of their content, any cultural or political interpretation is a hazardous busi-ness. A scholar who fails to appreciate the precise Status of Fichtes absolute ego, for example, cannot appraise its political and cultural significance. This study does not pretend to be a contribution to what the Germans call "Konstellationsarbeit that is, detailed research into the context and interac-tions of German philosophers in Jena in the 1790s. While such research is invaluable, and indeed a necessary basis for work like my own, I have not been able to undertake it in any detailed or concerted manner here. Much of my work has rested on the more detailed research of Dieter Henrich, Manfred Frank, Michael Franz, Violetta Waibel, and others. Given the general state of knowledge of German idealism in the English-speaking worid, it is impossible to presuppose acquaintance with this context, still less philosophical interest in it. Some of the best scholarship on Kant and German idealism was written prior to World War I, and it has been the foundation for much of my own work. I have profound debts to the German historical tradition, especially to the work of Erich Adickes, Benno Erdmann, Wilhelm Dilthey, Rudolf Haym, and Ernst Cassirer, which, I believe, provides a far superior paradigm for do-ing history of philosophy than the analytic tradition. Regarding more Contemporary scholarship, my chief debts have been to Paul Guyer and Henry Allison in Kant studies, and to Dieter Henrich and Manfred Frank in post-Kantian philosophy. Although I often take issue with these scholars, that is in direct proportion to my debts to them. ISBN 9780674007697 Versand D: 5,50 EUR , [PU:Harvard University Press,]<
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German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801^. - exemplaire signée
2002, ISBN: 0674007697
Edition reliée
[EAN: 9780674007697], Gebraucht, guter Zustand, [SC: 4.0], [PU: Harvard University Press], 726 Seiten Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sand… Plus…
[EAN: 9780674007697], Gebraucht, guter Zustand, [SC: 4.0], [PU: Harvard University Press], 726 Seiten Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: "German idealism" is a common phrase in literary, historical, and philo-sophical circles. Broadly, it designates the philosophical doctrines initiated by Kant and then continued by Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. But, beyond this very general definition, it is difficult to give the phrase a more precise meaning. That is not very surprising. What idealism means in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel has been a matter of discussion and dispute for centuries. The present study continues that discussion and dispute. Its chief task is to explain the meaning of idealism in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and the young romantics (Hölderlin, Novalis, and Friedrich Schlegel). My chief excuse for doing so is that, at least in the case of Fichte, Schelling, and the romantics, though less so in the case of Kant and Hegel, the meaning of German idealism has remained comparatively underexplored in the English-speaking world. There have been many studies of Kant’s transcendental idealism and a few of Hegel’s absolute idealism; but there has been very little in English about German idealism as a whole. The greatest Student of German idealism in the Anglo-American world was Josiah Royce, whose Spirit of Modern Phi-losophy and Lectures on Modern Idealism have influenced generations of stu-dents. Yet f hope to show that, for all its merits, Royce’s Interpretation has been profoundly misleading; in any case, Royce wrote without the benefit of much of the material available today. There are good reasons for rethinking the meaning of German idealism. Since the 1960s there has been a remarkable resurgence of interest in the subject. Prima facie this is puzzling, since so much Contemporary philoso-phy—whether in the pragmatic, existentialist, or analytic tradition—has its roots in the reaction against German idealism. There is indeed no going back to the age when the absolute once ruled the philosophical firmament. Yet, paradoxically, the very reasons for the obsolescence of German idealism have also been the reasons for its revival. These modern traditions under-stand themselves only when they appreciate what they grew out of and re-acted against. If pragmatists, existentialists, and analytfc philosophers wish to recover their roots, they must eventually grapple with German idealism itself. The renewed interest in German idealism has as much to do with its abid-ing philosophical relevance as its vast historical significance. Recent episte-mology still struggles to find some middle path between the extremes of skeptical subjectivism and naive realism, foundationalism and relativism, materialism and dualism, Platonism and historicism. But these were essentially the concerns of the German idealists themselves, whose attempts to find that middle path were subtle and sophisticated. Contemporary philosophers seeking to avoid these dilemmas can still find a rieh source of inspira-tion in German idealism. After centuries of intensive scholarship, no work on German idealism can claim great originality or novelty. Of course, this study is no exception. My debts to previous scholarship, which I have tried to acknowledge in many footnotes, are wide and deep. It is probably worthwhile, however, to point out a few respects in which this study differs from past work, especially the grand surveys of the subject in the German tradition. First, I have not at-tempted to do justice to the full scope of German idealism, its contributions to the fields of aesthetics, morals, and metaphysics, as well as to epistemol-ogy. This study is much more limited in focus. It concentrates on one specific theme: the meaning of idealism itself, and more specifically the reaction against subjectivism. I have focused upon this specific theme because it has been fateful for the reception of German idealism, which has so often been dismissed as a grandiose form of subjectivism. My central thesis is that, from its very inception, German idealism was a reaction against subjectivism, an attempt to prove the reality of the external world and to break out of the egocentric predicament. Second, I have made the young romantics— Hölderlin, Schlegel, Novalis—into crucial figures in the development of German idealism. The romantics have usually been placed either outside the idealist tradition entirely or.inside it as mere transitional figures. But neither view is correct: the early romantics were the true founders of absolute idealism. Third, this study of German idealism omits Hegel, and it is indeed a reaction against the Hegelian legacy. Hegel’s history of the period, which interprets it as a progression culminating in his own System, is tendentious philosophically and anachronistic historically. Fourth, there is no teleology to my history. I do not see German idealism either as a progression toward Hegel or as a decline from Kant. If we impartially and thoroughly examine each thinker in his own terms, it is unlikely that the results will show simple progress or decline. Each thinker is more likely to have his unique strengths and weaknesses—a gain here is a loss there—so that the end result is an aporia or invitation to eclecticism. Fifth and finally, I have attempted to inte-grate Kant’s Opus postumum into the general history of German idealism; Kant’s final years mark such an important development in his thought that they cannot be ignored. My methodology has been essentially historical and hermeneutical. As far as possible, my aim has been to reconstruct an author’s work in its individu-ality according to his original intention and context. Since they can be tendentious and anachronistic in application to historical material, I have bracketed Contemporary philosophical concerns and concepts. I have also given primacy to textual exegesis over philosophical criticism, partly be-cause the Interpretation of the texts is so controversial, and partly bec, Books<
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German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801 - livre d'occasion
2002, ISBN: 9780674007697
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German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801^. - edition reliée, livre de poche
2002, ISBN: 9780674007697
[PU: Harvard University Press], 726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: “Germ… Plus…
[PU: Harvard University Press], 726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: “German idealism” is a common phrase in literary, historical, and philo-sophical circles. Broadly, it designates the philosophical doctrines initiated by Kant and then continued by Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. But, beyond this very general definition, it is difficult to give the phrase a more precise meaning. That is not very surprising. What idealism means in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel has been a matter of discussion and dispute for centuries. The present study continues that discussion and dispute. Its chief task is to explain the meaning of idealism in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and the young romantics (Hölderlin, Novalis, and Friedrich Schlegel). My chief excuse for doing so is that, at least in the case of Fichte, Schelling, and the romantics, though less so in the case of Kant and Hegel, the meaning of German idealism has remained comparatively underexplored in the English-speaking world. There have been many studies of Kant’s transcendental idealism and a few of Hegel’s absolute idealism; but there has been very little in English about German idealism as a whole. The greatest Student of German idealism in the Anglo-American world was Josiah Royce, whose Spirit of Modern Phi-losophy and Lectures on Modern Idealism have influenced generations of stu-dents. Yet f hope to show that, for all its merits, Royce’s Interpretation has been profoundly misleading; in any case, Royce wrote without the benefit of much of the material available today. There are good reasons for rethinking the meaning of German idealism. Since the 1960s there has been a remarkable resurgence of interest in the subject. Prima facie this is puzzling, since so much Contemporary philoso-phy—whether in the pragmatic, existentialist, or analytic tradition—has its roots in the reaction against German idealism. There is indeed no going back to the age when the absolute once ruled the philosophical firmament. Yet, paradoxically, the very reasons for the obsolescence of German idealism have also been the reasons for its revival. These modern traditions under-stand themselves only when they appreciate what they grew out of and re-acted against. If pragmatists, existentialists, and analytfc philosophers wish to recover their roots, they must eventually grapple with German idealism itself. The renewed interest in German idealism has as much to do with its abid-ing philosophical relevance as its vast historical significance. Recent episte-mology still struggles to find some middle path between the extremes of skeptical subjectivism and naive realism, foundationalism and relativism, materialism and dualism, Platonism and historicism. But these were essentially the concerns of the German idealists themselves, whose attempts to find that middle path were subtle and sophisticated. Contemporary philosophers seeking to avoid these dilemmas can still find a rieh source of inspira-tion in German idealism. After centuries of intensive scholarship, no work on German idealism can claim great originality or novelty. Of course, this study is no exception. My debts to previous scholarship, which I have tried to acknowledge in many footnotes, are wide and deep. It is probably worthwhile, however, to point out a few respects in which this study differs from past work, especially the grand surveys of the subject in the German tradition. First, I have not at-tempted to do justice to the full scope of German idealism, its contributions to the fields of aesthetics, morals, and metaphysics, as well as to epistemol-ogy. This study is much more limited in focus. It concentrates on one specific theme: the meaning of idealism itself, and more specifically the reaction against subjectivism. I have focused upon this specific theme because it has been fateful for the reception of German idealism, which has so often been dismissed as a grandiose form of subjectivism. My central thesis is that, from its very inception, German idealism was a reaction against subjectivism, an attempt to prove the reality of the external world and to break out of the egocentric predicament. Second, I have made the young romantics— Hölderlin, Schlegel, Novalis—into crucial figures in the development of German idealism. The romantics have usually been placed either outside the idealist tradition entirely or.inside it as mere transitional figures. But neither view is correct: the early romantics were the true founders of absolute idealism. Third, this study of German idealism omits Hegel, and it is indeed a reaction against the Hegelian legacy. Hegel’s history of the period, which interprets it as a progression culminating in his own System, is tendentious philosophically and anachronistic historically. Fourth, there is no teleology to my history. I do not see German idealism either as a progression toward Hegel or as a decline from Kant. If we impartially and thoroughly examine each thinker in his own terms, it is unlikely that the results will show simple progress or decline. Each thinker is more likely to have his unique strengths and weaknesses—a gain here is a loss there—so that the end result is an aporia or invitation to eclecticism. Fifth and finally, I have attempted to inte-grate Kant’s Opus postumum into the general history of German idealism; Kant’s final years mark such an important development in his thought that they cannot be ignored. My methodology has been essentially historical and hermeneutical. As far as possible, my aim has been to reconstruct an author’s work in its individu-ality according to his original intention and context. Since they can be tendentious and anachronistic in application to historical material, I have bracketed Contemporary philosophical concerns and concepts. I have also given primacy to textual exegesis over philosophical criticism, partly be-cause the Interpretation of the texts is so controversial, and partly because the most fair and accurate criticism has to come from the most thorough and sympathetic interpretation. In this work, unlike my previous studies of classical German philosophy, I have not attempted to interpret a text in its cultural and political context. Al-though I regard cultural and political interpretation as essential, I do not think that the time is ripe for it in the case of German idealism. The problem is that the basic philosophical content of the texts is still too indeterminate and controversial. No one who approaches them can afford to ignore the fraught history of their interpretation. Without, however, an understanding of their content, any cultural or political interpretation is a hazardous busi-ness. A scholar who fails to appreciate the precise Status of Fichte’s absolute ego, for example, cannot appraise its political and cultural significance. This study does not pretend to be a contribution to what the Germans call "Konstellationsarbeit” that is, detailed research into the context and interac-tions of German philosophers in Jena in the 1790s. While such research is invaluable, and indeed a necessary basis for work like my own, I have not been able to undertake it in any detailed or concerted manner here. Much of my work has rested on the more detailed research of Dieter Henrich, Manfred Frank, Michael Franz, Violetta Waibel, and others. Given the general state of knowledge of German idealism in the English-speaking worid, it is impossible to presuppose acquaintance with this context, still less philosophical interest in it. Some of the best scholarship on Kant and German idealism was written prior to World War I, and it has been the foundation for much of my own work. I have profound debts to the German historical tradition, especially to the work of Erich Adickes, Benno Erdmann, Wilhelm Dilthey, Rudolf Haym, and Ernst Cassirer, which, I believe, provides a far superior paradigm for do-ing history of philosophy than the analytic tradition. Regarding more Contemporary scholarship, my chief debts have been to Paul Guyer and Henry Allison in Kant studies, and to Dieter Henrich and Manfred Frank in post-Kantian philosophy. Although I often take issue with these scholars, that , DE, [SC: 5.00], gebraucht; sehr gut, gewerbliches Angebot, [GW: 1071g], Banküberweisung, Offene Rechnung, PayPal, Internationaler Versand<
Beiser, Frederick C:
German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801^. - edition reliée, livre de poche2002, ISBN: 9780674007697
Harvard, University Press, 726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: ?German idealism… Plus…
Harvard, University Press, 726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: ?German idealism? is a common phrase in literary, historical, and philo-sophical circles. Broadly, it designates the philosophical doctrines initiated by Kant and then continued by Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. But, beyond this very general definition, it is difficult to give the phrase a more precise meaning. That is not very surprising. What idealism means in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel has been a matter of discussion and dispute for centuries. The present study continues that discussion and dispute. Its chief task is to explain the meaning of idealism in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and the young romantics (Hölderlin, Novalis, and Friedrich Schlegel). My chief excuse for doing so is that, at least in the case of Fichte, Schelling, and the romantics, though less so in the case of Kant and Hegel, the meaning of German idealism has remained comparatively underexplored in the English-speaking world. There have been many studies of Kant?s transcendental idealism and a few of Hegel?s absolute idealism; but there has been very little in English about German idealism as a whole. The greatest Student of German idealism in the Anglo-American world was Josiah Royce, whose Spirit of Modern Phi-losophy and Lectures on Modern Idealism have influenced generations of stu-dents. Yet f hope to show that, for all its merits, Royce?s Interpretation has been profoundly misleading; in any case, Royce wrote without the benefit of much of the material available today. There are good reasons for rethinking the meaning of German idealism. Since the 1960s there has been a remarkable resurgence of interest in the subject. Prima facie this is puzzling, since so much Contemporary philoso-phy?whether in the pragmatic, existentialist, or analytic tradition?has its roots in the reaction against German idealism. There is indeed no going back to the age when the absolute once ruled the philosophical firmament. Yet, paradoxically, the very reasons for the obsolescence of German idealism have also been the reasons for its revival. These modern traditions under-stand themselves only when they appreciate what they grew out of and re-acted against. If pragmatists, existentialists, and analytfc philosophers wish to recover their roots, they must eventually grapple with German idealism itself. The renewed interest in German idealism has as much to do with its abid-ing philosophical relevance as its vast historical significance. Recent episte-mology still struggles to find some middle path between the extremes of skeptical subjectivism and naive realism, foundationalism and relativism, materialism and dualism, Platonism and historicism. But these were essentially the concerns of the German idealists themselves, whose attempts to find that middle path were subtle and sophisticated. Contemporary philosophers seeking to avoid these dilemmas can still find a rieh source of inspira-tion in German idealism. After centuries of intensive scholarship, no work on German idealism can claim great originality or novelty. Of course, this study is no exception. My debts to previous scholarship, which I have tried to acknowledge in many footnotes, are wide and deep. It is probably worthwhile, however, to point out a few respects in which this study differs from past work, especially the grand surveys of the subject in the German tradition. First, I have not at-tempted to do justice to the full scope of German idealism, its contributions to the fields of aesthetics, morals, and metaphysics, as well as to epistemol-ogy. This study is much more limited in focus. It concentrates on one specific theme: the meaning of idealism itself, and more specifically the reaction against subjectivism. I have focused upon this specific theme because it has been fateful for the reception of German idealism, which has so often been dismissed as a grandiose form of subjectivism. My central thesis is that, from its very inception, German idealism was a reaction against subjectivism, an attempt to prove the reality of the external world and to break out of the egocentric predicament. Second, I have made the young romantics? Hölderlin, Schlegel, Novalis?into crucial figures in the development of German idealism. The romantics have usually been placed either outside the idealist tradition entirely or.inside it as mere transitional figures. But neither view is correct: the early romantics were the true founders of absolute idealism. Third, this study of German idealism omits Hegel, and it is indeed a reaction against the Hegelian legacy. Hegel?s history of the period, which interprets it as a progression culminating in his own System, is tendentious philosophically and anachronistic historically. Fourth, there is no teleology to my history. I do not see German idealism either as a progression toward Hegel or as a decline from Kant. If we impartially and thoroughly examine each thinker in his own terms, it is unlikely that the results will show simple progress or decline. Each thinker is more likely to have his unique strengths and weaknesses?a gain here is a loss there?so that the end result is an aporia or invitation to eclecticism. Fifth and finally, I have attempted to inte-grate Kant?s Opus postumum into the general history of German idealism; Kant?s final years mark such an important development in his thought that they cannot be ignored. My methodology has been essentially historical and hermeneutical. As far as possible, my aim has been to reconstruct an author?s work in its individu-ality according to his original intention and context. Since they can be tendentious and anachronistic in application to historical material, I have bracketed Contemporary philosophical concerns and concepts. I have also given primacy to textual exegesis over philosophical criticism, partly be-cause the Interpretation of the texts is so controversial, and partly because the most fair and accurate criticism has to come from the most thorough and sympathetic interpretation. In this work, unlike my previous studies of classical German philosophy, I have not attempted to interpret a text in its cultural and political context. Al-though I regard cultural and political interpretation as essential, I do not think that the time is ripe for it in the case of German idealism. The problem is that the basic philosophical content of the texts is still too indeterminate and controversial. No one who approaches them can afford to ignore the fraught history of their interpretation. Without, however, an understanding of their content, any cultural or political interpretation is a hazardous busi-ness. A scholar who fails to appreciate the precise Status of Fichte?s absolute ego, for example, cannot appraise its political and cultural significance. This study does not pretend to be a contribution to what the Germans call "Konstellationsarbeit? that is, detailed research into the context and interac-tions of German philosophers in Jena in the 1790s. While such research is invaluable, and indeed a necessary basis for work like my own, I have not been able to undertake it in any detailed or concerted manner here. Much of my work has rested on the more detailed research of Dieter Henrich, Manfred Frank, Michael Franz, Violetta Waibel, and others. Given the general state of knowledge of German idealism in the English-speaking worid, it is impossible to presuppose acquaintance with this context, still less philosophical interest in it. Some of the best scholarship on Kant and German idealism was written prior to World War I, and it has been the foundation for much of my own work. I have profound debts to the German historical tradition, especially to the work of Erich Adickes, Benno Erdmann, Wilhelm Dilthey, Rudolf Haym, and Ernst Cassirer, which, I believe, provides a far superior paradigm for do-ing history of philosophy than the analytic tradition. Regarding more Contemporary scholarship, my chief debts have been to Paul Guyer and Henry Allison in Kant studies, and to Dieter Henrich and Manfred Frank in post-Kantian philosophy. Although I often take issue with these scholars, that is in direct proportion to my debts to them. ISBN 9780674007697Philosophie 2002, [PU: Harvard University Press]<
German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801^. - edition reliée, livre de poche
2002
ISBN: 9780674007697
726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: German idealism is a common phrase in liter… Plus…
726 Seiten Hardcover m. Schutzumschlag. Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: German idealism is a common phrase in literary, historical, and philo-sophical circles. Broadly, it designates the philosophical doctrines initiated by Kant and then continued by Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. But, beyond this very general definition, it is difficult to give the phrase a more precise meaning. That is not very surprising. What idealism means in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel has been a matter of discussion and dispute for centuries. The present study continues that discussion and dispute. Its chief task is to explain the meaning of idealism in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and the young romantics (Hölderlin, Novalis, and Friedrich Schlegel). My chief excuse for doing so is that, at least in the case of Fichte, Schelling, and the romantics, though less so in the case of Kant and Hegel, the meaning of German idealism has remained comparatively underexplored in the English-speaking world. There have been many studies of Kants transcendental idealism and a few of Hegels absolute idealism; but there has been very little in English about German idealism as a whole. The greatest Student of German idealism in the Anglo-American world was Josiah Royce, whose Spirit of Modern Phi-losophy and Lectures on Modern Idealism have influenced generations of stu-dents. Yet f hope to show that, for all its merits, Royces Interpretation has been profoundly misleading; in any case, Royce wrote without the benefit of much of the material available today. There are good reasons for rethinking the meaning of German idealism. Since the 1960s there has been a remarkable resurgence of interest in the subject. Prima facie this is puzzling, since so much Contemporary philoso-phywhether in the pragmatic, existentialist, or analytic traditionhas its roots in the reaction against German idealism. There is indeed no going back to the age when the absolute once ruled the philosophical firmament. Yet, paradoxically, the very reasons for the obsolescence of German idealism have also been the reasons for its revival. These modern traditions under-stand themselves only when they appreciate what they grew out of and re-acted against. If pragmatists, existentialists, and analytfc philosophers wish to recover their roots, they must eventually grapple with German idealism itself. The renewed interest in German idealism has as much to do with its abid-ing philosophical relevance as its vast historical significance. Recent episte-mology still struggles to find some middle path between the extremes of skeptical subjectivism and naive realism, foundationalism and relativism, materialism and dualism, Platonism and historicism. But these were essentially the concerns of the German idealists themselves, whose attempts to find that middle path were subtle and sophisticated. Contemporary philosophers seeking to avoid these dilemmas can still find a rieh source of inspira-tion in German idealism. After centuries of intensive scholarship, no work on German idealism can claim great originality or novelty. Of course, this study is no exception. My debts to previous scholarship, which I have tried to acknowledge in many footnotes, are wide and deep. It is probably worthwhile, however, to point out a few respects in which this study differs from past work, especially the grand surveys of the subject in the German tradition. First, I have not at-tempted to do justice to the full scope of German idealism, its contributions to the fields of aesthetics, morals, and metaphysics, as well as to epistemol-ogy. This study is much more limited in focus. It concentrates on one specific theme: the meaning of idealism itself, and more specifically the reaction against subjectivism. I have focused upon this specific theme because it has been fateful for the reception of German idealism, which has so often been dismissed as a grandiose form of subjectivism. My central thesis is that, from its very inception, German idealism was a reaction against subjectivism, an attempt to prove the reality of the external world and to break out of the egocentric predicament. Second, I have made the young romantics Hölderlin, Schlegel, Novalisinto crucial figures in the development of German idealism. The romantics have usually been placed either outside the idealist tradition entirely or.inside it as mere transitional figures. But neither view is correct: the early romantics were the true founders of absolute idealism. Third, this study of German idealism omits Hegel, and it is indeed a reaction against the Hegelian legacy. Hegels history of the period, which interprets it as a progression culminating in his own System, is tendentious philosophically and anachronistic historically. Fourth, there is no teleology to my history. I do not see German idealism either as a progression toward Hegel or as a decline from Kant. If we impartially and thoroughly examine each thinker in his own terms, it is unlikely that the results will show simple progress or decline. Each thinker is more likely to have his unique strengths and weaknessesa gain here is a loss thereso that the end result is an aporia or invitation to eclecticism. Fifth and finally, I have attempted to inte-grate Kants Opus postumum into the general history of German idealism; Kants final years mark such an important development in his thought that they cannot be ignored. My methodology has been essentially historical and hermeneutical. As far as possible, my aim has been to reconstruct an authors work in its individu-ality according to his original intention and context. Since they can be tendentious and anachronistic in application to historical material, I have bracketed Contemporary philosophical concerns and concepts. I have also given primacy to textual exegesis over philosophical criticism, partly be-cause the Interpretation of the texts is so controversial, and partly because the most fair and accurate criticism has to come from the most thorough and sympathetic interpretation. In this work, unlike my previous studies of classical German philosophy, I have not attempted to interpret a text in its cultural and political context. Al-though I regard cultural and political interpretation as essential, I do not think that the time is ripe for it in the case of German idealism. The problem is that the basic philosophical content of the texts is still too indeterminate and controversial. No one who approaches them can afford to ignore the fraught history of their interpretation. Without, however, an understanding of their content, any cultural or political interpretation is a hazardous busi-ness. A scholar who fails to appreciate the precise Status of Fichtes absolute ego, for example, cannot appraise its political and cultural significance. This study does not pretend to be a contribution to what the Germans call "Konstellationsarbeit that is, detailed research into the context and interac-tions of German philosophers in Jena in the 1790s. While such research is invaluable, and indeed a necessary basis for work like my own, I have not been able to undertake it in any detailed or concerted manner here. Much of my work has rested on the more detailed research of Dieter Henrich, Manfred Frank, Michael Franz, Violetta Waibel, and others. Given the general state of knowledge of German idealism in the English-speaking worid, it is impossible to presuppose acquaintance with this context, still less philosophical interest in it. Some of the best scholarship on Kant and German idealism was written prior to World War I, and it has been the foundation for much of my own work. I have profound debts to the German historical tradition, especially to the work of Erich Adickes, Benno Erdmann, Wilhelm Dilthey, Rudolf Haym, and Ernst Cassirer, which, I believe, provides a far superior paradigm for do-ing history of philosophy than the analytic tradition. Regarding more Contemporary scholarship, my chief debts have been to Paul Guyer and Henry Allison in Kant studies, and to Dieter Henrich and Manfred Frank in post-Kantian philosophy. Although I often take issue with these scholars, that is in direct proportion to my debts to them. ISBN 9780674007697 Versand D: 5,50 EUR , [PU:Harvard University Press,]<
German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801^. - exemplaire signée
2002, ISBN: 0674007697
Edition reliée
[EAN: 9780674007697], Gebraucht, guter Zustand, [SC: 4.0], [PU: Harvard University Press], 726 Seiten Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sand… Plus…
[EAN: 9780674007697], Gebraucht, guter Zustand, [SC: 4.0], [PU: Harvard University Press], 726 Seiten Aus der Bibliothek von Hans Jörg Sandkühler. Mit Widmung des Verfassers an H. J. Sandkühler. - Preface: "German idealism" is a common phrase in literary, historical, and philo-sophical circles. Broadly, it designates the philosophical doctrines initiated by Kant and then continued by Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. But, beyond this very general definition, it is difficult to give the phrase a more precise meaning. That is not very surprising. What idealism means in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel has been a matter of discussion and dispute for centuries. The present study continues that discussion and dispute. Its chief task is to explain the meaning of idealism in Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and the young romantics (Hölderlin, Novalis, and Friedrich Schlegel). My chief excuse for doing so is that, at least in the case of Fichte, Schelling, and the romantics, though less so in the case of Kant and Hegel, the meaning of German idealism has remained comparatively underexplored in the English-speaking world. There have been many studies of Kant’s transcendental idealism and a few of Hegel’s absolute idealism; but there has been very little in English about German idealism as a whole. The greatest Student of German idealism in the Anglo-American world was Josiah Royce, whose Spirit of Modern Phi-losophy and Lectures on Modern Idealism have influenced generations of stu-dents. Yet f hope to show that, for all its merits, Royce’s Interpretation has been profoundly misleading; in any case, Royce wrote without the benefit of much of the material available today. There are good reasons for rethinking the meaning of German idealism. Since the 1960s there has been a remarkable resurgence of interest in the subject. Prima facie this is puzzling, since so much Contemporary philoso-phy—whether in the pragmatic, existentialist, or analytic tradition—has its roots in the reaction against German idealism. There is indeed no going back to the age when the absolute once ruled the philosophical firmament. Yet, paradoxically, the very reasons for the obsolescence of German idealism have also been the reasons for its revival. These modern traditions under-stand themselves only when they appreciate what they grew out of and re-acted against. If pragmatists, existentialists, and analytfc philosophers wish to recover their roots, they must eventually grapple with German idealism itself. The renewed interest in German idealism has as much to do with its abid-ing philosophical relevance as its vast historical significance. Recent episte-mology still struggles to find some middle path between the extremes of skeptical subjectivism and naive realism, foundationalism and relativism, materialism and dualism, Platonism and historicism. But these were essentially the concerns of the German idealists themselves, whose attempts to find that middle path were subtle and sophisticated. Contemporary philosophers seeking to avoid these dilemmas can still find a rieh source of inspira-tion in German idealism. After centuries of intensive scholarship, no work on German idealism can claim great originality or novelty. Of course, this study is no exception. My debts to previous scholarship, which I have tried to acknowledge in many footnotes, are wide and deep. It is probably worthwhile, however, to point out a few respects in which this study differs from past work, especially the grand surveys of the subject in the German tradition. First, I have not at-tempted to do justice to the full scope of German idealism, its contributions to the fields of aesthetics, morals, and metaphysics, as well as to epistemol-ogy. This study is much more limited in focus. It concentrates on one specific theme: the meaning of idealism itself, and more specifically the reaction against subjectivism. I have focused upon this specific theme because it has been fateful for the reception of German idealism, which has so often been dismissed as a grandiose form of subjectivism. My central thesis is that, from its very inception, German idealism was a reaction against subjectivism, an attempt to prove the reality of the external world and to break out of the egocentric predicament. Second, I have made the young romantics— Hölderlin, Schlegel, Novalis—into crucial figures in the development of German idealism. The romantics have usually been placed either outside the idealist tradition entirely or.inside it as mere transitional figures. But neither view is correct: the early romantics were the true founders of absolute idealism. Third, this study of German idealism omits Hegel, and it is indeed a reaction against the Hegelian legacy. Hegel’s history of the period, which interprets it as a progression culminating in his own System, is tendentious philosophically and anachronistic historically. Fourth, there is no teleology to my history. I do not see German idealism either as a progression toward Hegel or as a decline from Kant. If we impartially and thoroughly examine each thinker in his own terms, it is unlikely that the results will show simple progress or decline. Each thinker is more likely to have his unique strengths and weaknesses—a gain here is a loss there—so that the end result is an aporia or invitation to eclecticism. Fifth and finally, I have attempted to inte-grate Kant’s Opus postumum into the general history of German idealism; Kant’s final years mark such an important development in his thought that they cannot be ignored. My methodology has been essentially historical and hermeneutical. As far as possible, my aim has been to reconstruct an author’s work in its individu-ality according to his original intention and context. Since they can be tendentious and anachronistic in application to historical material, I have bracketed Contemporary philosophical concerns and concepts. I have also given primacy to textual exegesis over philosophical criticism, partly be-cause the Interpretation of the texts is so controversial, and partly bec, Books<
German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801 - livre d'occasion
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Harvard University Press, Relié, 752 Seiten, Publiziert: 2002-06-10T00:00:01Z, Produktgruppe: Livre, 2.4 kg, Livres en anglais, Chercher au Coeur!, Boutiques, Livres, Livres anglais et étrangers, Histoire de la philosophie, Philosophie, Sciences humaines, Thèmes, Grandes doctrines et courants philosophiques, Harvard University Press, 2002<
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Informations détaillées sur le livre - German Idealism: The Struggle Against Subjectivism, 1781-1801
EAN (ISBN-13): 9780674007697
ISBN (ISBN-10): 0674007697
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Date de parution: 2002
Editeur: Harvard University Press
752 Pages
Poids: 1,200 kg
Langue: eng/Englisch
Livre dans la base de données depuis 2007-04-11T23:54:15+02:00 (Paris)
Page de détail modifiée en dernier sur 2023-12-28T19:26:26+01:00 (Paris)
ISBN/EAN: 9780674007697
ISBN - Autres types d'écriture:
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Autres types d'écriture et termes associés:
Auteur du livre: beiser frederick
Titre du livre: german idealism the struggle against subjectivism
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