The Wissenschaftslehre or "doctrine of science" was the great achievement of the German idealist philosopher J. G. Fichte. Daniel Breazeale presents new translations of three works in which Fichte developed this system, alongside a set of lectures previously unpublished in English. The texts are accompanied by an extensive introduction and notes.
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Daniel Breazeale presents a critical study of the early philosophy of J.G. Fichte, and the version of the 'Wissenschaftslehre' or 'doctrine of science' that Fichte developed in Jena between 1794 and 1799. The book is intended to assist serious readers in their efforts to understand Fichte's philosophy within the context of its own era and to orient them in the ongoing scholarly debates concerning the character and significance of the 'Wissenschaftslehre'. Breazeale focuses on explaining what Fichte was (and was not) trying to accomplish and precisely 'how' he proposed to accomplish this, as well as upon the difficulties implicit in his project and his often novel strategies for overcoming them. To this end, the volume addresses a variety of specific themes, issues, and problems that will be familiar to any student of Fichte's early writings and which continue to be fiercely debated by his interpreters
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
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Preliminary Material -- Introduction /Daniel Breazeale -- Fichte, German Idealism and the Thing in Itself /Tom Rockmore -- Fichte and the Problem of Logic Positioning the Wissenschaftslehre in the Development of German Idealism /Nectarios Limnatis -- Doing Philosophy: Fichte vs. Kant on Transcendental Method /Daniel Breazeale -- Form and Colour in Kant's and Fichte's Theory of Beauty /Giorgia Cecchinato -- Critical Epistemology and Idealist Metaphysics in Fichte's Wissenschaftslehre (1794–1800) /Steven Hoeltzel -- Presuppositions of Knowledge versus Immediate Certainty of Being: Fichte's 1804 Wissenschaftslehre as a Critique of Knowledge and a Program of Philosophical Foundation /Ulrich Schlösser -- Falsification: On the Role of the Empirical in J. G. Fichte's Transcendental Method /F. Scott Scribner -- The Self as the World Into Itself. Towards Fichte's Conception of Subjectivity /Marina Bykova -- Schelling's Subversion of Fichtean Monism, 1794–1796 /Richard Fincham -- Intellectual Intuition: Reconsidering Continuity in Kant, Fichte, and Schelling /Yolanda Estes -- From Idealism to Romanticism and Leibniz' Logic /George Seidel -- Fichte's Transcendental Logic of 1812 – Between Kant and Hegel /Angelica Nuzzo -- Practical Rationality and Natural Right: Fichte and Hegel on Self-Conception within a Relation of Natural Right /C. Jeffery Kinlaw -- Political Realism in Idealism: Fichte versus Hegel and their Different Versions of the Foundation of Right /Virginia López-Domínguez -- Fichte's Master/Slave Dialectic: The Untold Story /Arnold Farr -- Fichte, Hegel, and the Senses of »Revelation« /Anthony N. Perovich -- Fichte's Anti-Hegelian Legacy /Matthew C. Altman -- »Philosophy on the Track of Freedom« or »Systematizing Systemlessness«: Novalis's Reflections on the Wissenschaftslehre, 1795–1796 /Michael G. Vater -- »With Respect to the Antinomies, Fichte has a Remarkable Idea.« Three Answers to Kant and Fichte – Hardenberg, Hölderlin, Hegel /Violetta L. Waibel -- Forgetfulness and Foundationalism: Schlegel's Critique of Fichte's Idealism /Elizabeth Millán-Zaibert -- Friedrich Schlegel's Transformation of Fichte's Transcendental into an Early Romantic Idealism /Bärbel Frischmann -- Sound Reasoning: Fichtean Elements in Wilhelm von Humboldt's Philosophy of Language /David Kenosian -- Fichte, Schleiermacher and W. von Humboldt on the Foundation of the University of Berlin /Claude Piché.
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Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- List of Abbreviations -- Toward a Wissenschaftslehre more geometrico (1800-1801) -- Structures of Imagination in Fichte's Wissenschaftslehre 1794-1795 and 1804 -- Thinking and Willing in the Later Fichte -- Toward or Away from Schelling? : On the Thematic Shift in Fichte's Later Philosophy -- Fichte's Reaction to Schelling's Identity Philosophy in 1806 -- The Light That Lights the Seeing of the Light:The Second Wissenschaftslehre of 1804 -- After Jena: Fichte's Religionslehre -- Fichte's Conception of the System of Philosophy in Die Anweisungzum seligen Leben -- How Not to Read Fichte's Anweisung zum seligen Leben (1806): Against the Mystical Reading -- The Notion of Being in Fichte's Late Philosophy -- Fall and Freedom: A Comparison of Fichte's and Saint Paul's Understandings of Original Sin -- Fichte and the Ursprache -- "The Logic of Historical Truth": History and Individuality in Fichte's Later Philosophy of History -- Fichte on Knowledge, Practice, and History -- Contributors
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