|
Showing 1 - 21 of
21 matches in All Departments
This translation of Schelling's difficult and densely allusive work
provides extensive annotations and translations of a series of
texts, hard to find or previously unavailable in English, whose
presence in the Philosophical Investigations is unmistakable and
highly significant.
Appearing here in English for the first time, this isF.W.J.
Schelling's vital document of the attempts of German idealism and
Romanticism to recover a deeper relationship between humanity and
nature and to overcome the separation between mind and matter
induced by the modern reductionist program. Written in 1799 and
building upon his earlier work, "First Outline of a System of the
Philosophy of Nature provides the most inclusive exposition of
Schelling's philosophy of the natural world. He presents a
startlingly contemporary model of an expanding and contracting
universe; a unified theory of electricity, gravity magnetism, and
chemical forces; and, perhaps most importantly, a conception of
nature as a living and organic whole.
This is the first English translation of Schelling's novel, most
likely written after the death of his first wife, Caroline, the
former wife of August Wilhelm Schlegel. Although only a fragment,
Clara remains unique. Part novella, part philosophical tome, its
central theme is the connection between this world and the next.
Schelling masterfully weaves together his knowledge of animal
magnetism, literary techniques, and his doctrine of the potencies
to make his philosophy accessible to all.
Steinkamp addresses the main issues concerning the dating of the
work -- many commentators have deemed Clara to be a sketch for
Schelling's The Ages of the World or an outline for the third,
missing book of that work -- and provides a short biography of
Schelling with particular emphasis on events claimed to play a role
in the conception of Clara, such as the deaths of both Caroline and
her daughter, Auguste. She depicts the striking correspondence
between passages in Clara and the content of Schelling's touching
letters mourning Caroline, written to Pauline, the daughter of
Caroline's best friend and the woman who would become his second
wife.
|
The Philosophy of Art (Paperback)
F.W.J. Schelling; Edited by Douglas W. Stott; Foreword by David Simpson
|
R662
R617
Discovery Miles 6 170
Save R45 (7%)
|
Ships in 12 - 17 working days
|
Sets out an ordered system of the arts - music, painting,
sculpture, narrative, poetry and tragedy - based on the precepts of
German Idealism.
|
The Ages of the World (Paperback)
F.W.J. Schelling; Translated by Jason M. Wirth; Introduction by Jason M. Wirth
|
R976
Discovery Miles 9 760
|
Ships in 10 - 15 working days
|
Offering a new translation of the third and most sustained version
of Schelling's magnum opus, Schelling forges a great heroic poem, a
genealogy of time. Anticipating Heidegger, as well as contemporary
debates about postmodernity and the limits of dialectical thinking,
this book struggles with the question of time as the relationship
between poetry and philosophy. Thinking in the wake of Hegel,
although trying to think beyond his grasp, this extraordinary work
is a poetic and philosophical address of difference, of thinking's
relationship to its inscrutable ground.
The Berlin lectures in The Grounding of Positive Philosophy,
appearing here for the first time in English, advance Schelling's
final existential system as an alternative to modernity's reduction
of philosophy to a purely formal science of reason. His account of
the ecstatic nature of existence and reason proved to be decisive
for the work of Paul Tillich and Martin Heidegger. Also,
Schelling's critique of reason's quixotic attempt at self-grounding
anticipates similar criticisms leveled by poststructuralism, but
without sacrificing philosophy's power to provide a positive
account of truth and meaning. The Berlin lectures provide
fascinating insight into the thought processes of one of the most
provocative yet least understood thinkers of nineteenth-century
German philosophy.
Translated here into English for the first time, F. W. J.
Schelling's 1842 lectures on the Philosophy of Mythology are an
early example of interdisciplinary thinking. In seeking to show the
development of the concept of the divine Godhead in and through
various mythological systems (particularly of ancient Greece,
Egypt, and the Near East), Schelling develops the idea that many
philosophical concepts are born of religious-mythological notions.
In so doing, he brings together the essential relatedness of the
development of philosophical systems, human language, history,
ancient art forms, and religious thought. Along the way, he engages
in analyses of modern philosophical views about the origins of
philosophy's conceptual abstractions, as well as literary and
philological analyses of ancient literature and poetry.
System of Transcendental Idealism is probably Schelling's most
important philosophical work. A central text in the history of
German idealism, its original German publication in 1800 came seven
years after Fichte's ""Wissenschaftslehre"" and seven years before
Hegel's ""Phenomenology of Spirit"". Translated into English for
the first time in 1978, it is now being offered in paperback.
Students of English literature should value this translation, since
it was from this work of Schelling's that Coleridge ""borrowed""
extensively in his ""Biographia Literaria"". Schelling's philosophy
of art, which forms the concluding section of the work, is also of
cardinal importance to the intellectual history of the German
Romantic movement.
|
|