Spinoza and German idealism

This document was uploaded by one of our users. The uploader already confirmed that they had the permission to publish it. If you are author/publisher or own the copyright of this documents, please report to us by using this DMCA report form.

Simply click on the Download Book button.

Yes, Book downloads on Ebookily are 100% Free.

Sometimes the book is free on Amazon As well, so go ahead and hit "Search on Amazon"

Author(s): Eckart Förster, Yitzhak Y. Melamed
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2012

Language: English
Commentary: More best quality

SPINOZA AND GERMAN IDEALISM
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Contents
Contributors
Abbreviations
Introduction
CHAPTER 1 Rationalism, idealism, monism, and beyond
WHAT KIND OF RATIONALISM?
WHAT KIND OF IDEALISM?
WHAT KIND OF MONISM?
BEYOND MONISM
CHAPTER 2 Kant’s idea of the unconditioned and Spinoza’s: the fourth Antinomy and the Ideal of Pure Reason
CHAPTER 3 “The question is whether a purely apparent person is possible”
A FIRST LOOK AT REACTIONS TO SPINOZA
A SECOND LOOK AT KANT’S RESPONSE TO SPINOZA
SCHLEIERMACHER’S PARALOGISM INTERPRETATION AND A THIRD LOOK AT KANT’S RESPONSE TO SPINOZA
CHAPTER 4 Herder and Spinoza
HERDER AND THE TRACTATUS
HERMENEUTICS
POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY
PHILOSOPHY OF MIND
METAPHYSICAL-RELIGIOUS MONISM AND GLOBAL DETERMINISM
THE FORMATION OF GERMAN ROMANTICISM AND GERMAN IDEALISM
THE INTRINSIC VALUE OF THESE PRINCIPLES
CONCLUDING COMMENT
CHAPTER 5 Goethe’s Spinozism
CHAPTER 6 Fichte on the consciousness of Spinoza’s God
FICHTE ON SELF-CONSCIOUSNESS AS A PROBLEM
THATHANDLUNG AND INTELLECTUAL INTUITION
FICHTE’S CRITICISM OF SPINOZA IN THE GRUNDLAGE (1794)
THE CONSCIOUSNESS OF SPINOZA’S GOD
THE INDISPENSABILITY OF INTELLECTUAL INTUITION
CHAPTER 7 Fichte on freedom: the Spinozistic background
CHAPTER 8 Spinoza in Schelling’s early conception of intellectual intuition
CHAPTER 9 Schelling’s philosophy of identity and Spinoza’s Ethica more geometrico
METHOD IN THE 1801 PRESENTATION OF MY SYSTEM
THE METAPHYSICS OF IDENTITY IN THE 1801 PRESENTATION
Reason and identity
Indifference in the totality, difference in the individual
Individuation: the infinite nature of the finite
Potency, conatus, and the constructed line
Matter and the philosophy of nature
SCHELLING’S APPROPRIATION OF SPINOZA
CHAPTER 10 “Omnis determinatio est negatio”: determination, negation, and self-negation in Spinoza, Kant, and Hegel
INTRODUCTION
A QUARREL OVER A BEWITCHED FORMULA
DETERMINATION AND NEGATION IN SPINOZA
CONCLUSION
CHAPTER 11 Thought and metaphysics: Hegel’s critical reception of Spinoza
THE DEBATE OVER HEGEL AND METAPHYSICS
THOUGHT’S DISTINCTION FROM SUBSTANCE
SPINOZA’S “CAUSE OF ITSELF” AND HEGEL’S CONCEPT
LOGICAL FREEDOM
CHAPTER 12 Two models of metaphysical inferentialism: Spinoza and Hegel
INTRODUCTION
THERAPY
METAPHYSICS
INFERENTIALISM
PHILOSOPHIA ULTIMA
CHAPTER 13 Trendelenburg and Spinoza
SPINOZISM IN THE LONG IDEALIST TRADITION
EARLY VIEW OF SPINOZA
LEIBNIZ ECHT DEUTSCH?
SPINOZA’S BASIC THOUGHT
NEW TEXTS, OLD DISPUTES
CHAPTER 14 A reply on Spinoza’s behalf
GOD
FINITE MODES
THE ATTRIBUTES OF THOUGHT AND EXTENSION
THE HUMAN MIND
CONCLUSION
Bibliography
PRIMARY SOURCES
SECONDARY SOURCESA
Index of references to Spinoza’s Ethics
General index