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Fichte's addresses to the German nation reconsidered / edited by Daniel Breazeale and Tom Rockmore. — 1 online resource — <URL:http://elib.fa.ru/ebsco/1350131.pdf>.Record create date: 6/28/2016 Subject: Education and state — History; National characteristics, German — History; POLITICAL SCIENCE — Essays.; POLITICAL SCIENCE — Government — General.; POLITICAL SCIENCE — Government — National.; POLITICAL SCIENCE — Reference. Collections: EBSCO Allowed Actions: –
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Table of Contents
- Contents
- Abbreviations
- Introduction. On Situating and Interpreting Fichte’s Addresses to the German Nation
- Notes
- 1. From Autonomy to Automata? Fichte on Formal and Material Freedom and Moral Cultivation
- I
- II
- III
- Notes
- 2.
Gedachtes Denken/Wirkliches Denken A Strictly Philosophical Problem in Fichte’s Reden
- Introduction. Life and Thought. Life’s Resistance to Thought
- Some Milestones in the History of this Question
- Why Life’s Resistance to Thought Is a Central Question in Fichte’s Addresses
- Thought, Life, and Action in Fichte’s Addresses
- “One’s real mind and disposition”
- How Thought Can Be Just “a Thought Belonging to a Foreign Life” and “Merely Possible Thought”
- Wirkliches Denken and gedachtes Denken
- Thought and Language (“Living Language” and “Dead Language”). Concluding Remarks
- Notes
- 3. Linguistic Expression in Fichte’s Addresses to the German Nation
- Fichte’s View of Language
- Fichte’s Three Principles
- The Contradiction between Fichte’s View of Language and His Three Principles
- What This Contradiction Entails
- Notes
- 4. Critique of Religion and Critical Religion in Fichte’s Addresses to the German Nation
- Critique of Religion
- Kantian Critique of Religion
- Critical Religion
- Religion as Critical
- Conclusion
- Notes
- 5. Autonomy, Moral Education, and the Carving of a National Identity
- Notes
- 6. Fichte’s Nationalist Rhetoric and the Humanistic Project of Bildung
- I
- II
- III
- Notes
- 7. The Ontological and Epistemological Background of German Nationalism in Fichte’s Addresses
- The Chief German Contradiction
- Language and Nation in Relation to the Chief Contradiction
- The Philosophical Background of the Henological Religion within the Addresses as Root of the Contradiction
- Notes
- 8. Fichte’s Imagined Community and the Problem of Stability
- Fichte and the Problem of Stability
- Fichte’s Imagined Community
- Freedom as an Existential Commitment: A Reconciliation
- Notes
- References
- 9. Rights, Recognition, Nationalism, and Fichte’s Ambivalent Politics:
An Attempt at a Charitable Reading of the Addresses to the German Nation
- Introduction: Overcoming Myth and Embarrassment
- Mutual Recognition as the Necessary Condition for the Existence of Right: Fichte’s Foundations of Natural Right as the Basis for His Later Political Philosophy
- The State as the Necessary Condition for the Protection of Property and Right
- The Role of Recognition and the Security of Property and Right in Fichte’s Closed Commercial State
- Philosophy and the Prophetic Tone of the Addresses to the German Nation
- Between Patriotism and Cosmopolitanism: Fichte’s Ambivalent Politics
- The Three Moments of Recognition: Constitutive/Regulative, Political, Cultural/Linguistic
- Particularism Guided by a Cosmopolitan Logic: Some Twentieth- and Twenty-First-Century Issues
- Notes
- 10. How to Change the World Cultural Critique and the Historical Sublime in the Addresses to the German Nation
- Notes
- 11. Fichte’s Addresses to the German Nation and the Philosopher as Guide
- On the Evolution of Fichte’s Position
- Spirit and Politics in the Addresses
- On the Argument in the Addresses
- Fichte and Nationalism
- Germanness in Question
- Conclusion
- Notes
- 12. World War I, the Two Germanies, and Fichte’s Addresses
- Notes
- 13. Fault Lines in Fichte’s Reden
- Summary
- Notes
- List of Contributors
- Index
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