The 1790s - Fichte

The 1790s - Fichte

The 1790s - Fichte

... daughters (virgins, as Fichte put it) and therefore under the authority of their fa- thers; or they were wives and therefore under the authority of their husbands (indeed, they could have their “own dignity,” ... con- straining the content of the other’s commitments. Fichte thought of this in a pair-wise way, of two agents mutually recognizing each other such that each agent becom...

Ngày tải lên: 01/11/2013, 08:20

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The 1790s after Fichte - the Romantic appropriation of Kant (I) - H¨olderlin, Novalis, Schleiermacher, Schlegel

The 1790s after Fichte - the Romantic appropriation of Kant (I) - H¨olderlin, Novalis, Schleiermacher, Schlegel

... things-in-themselves; reason cannot show that things must in themselves be spatial or temporal. In the Roman- tics’ thought, Kant’s “things-in-themselves,” however, were transformed into “being-in-itself.” ... expressed their own feelings of estrangement from the world of their parents and their own desire to make their lives anew. On the other hand, they simply could not buy into what...

Ngày tải lên: 01/11/2013, 08:20

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Cambridge.University.Press.The.Crisis.of.Literature.in.the.1790s.Print.Culture.and.the.Public.Sphere.Nov.1999.pdf

Cambridge.University.Press.The.Crisis.of.Literature.in.the.1790s.Print.Culture.and.the.Public.Sphere.Nov.1999.pdf

... fragmentation of the ideal of literature as a public sphere. The excesses gener- ated by the French Revolution, on the one hand, and by the infor- mation revolution, on the other, converged in ... private rather than public terms, relating them to the play of the imagination rather than the exercise of reason. But these shifts cannot erase the important continuities that e...

Ngày tải lên: 21/09/2012, 11:00

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