The Immanent Word establishes that the philosophical study of
language inaugurated in the 1759 works of Hamann and Lessing marks
a paradigm shift in modern philosophy; it analyzes the
transformation of that shift in works of Herder, Kant, Fichte,
Novalis and Schlegel. It contends that recent studies of early
linguistic philosophy obscure the most relevant commission of its
thinkers, arguing against the theological appropriation of Hamann
by John Milbank; against the "expressive" appropriation of Hamann
and Herder by Christina Lafont and Charles Taylor; and against
Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe and Jean-Luc Nancy's uncritical
championing of Schlegel's ideological position.
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