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Maimon's Essay on a New Logic or Theory of Thinking - Timothy Franz - Bog - Oxford University Press Inc - Booktok.dk

Maimon's Essay on a New Logic or Theory of Thinking - Timothy Franz - Bog - Oxford University Press Inc - Booktok.dk

This is the first English translation of Salomon Maimon''s Essay on a New Logic or Theory of Thinking, originally published in Berlin in 1794. Maimon came from an impoverished yet culturally rich Lithuanian Jewish background to write brilliantly speculative philosophy in Germany in the immediate wake of Immanuel Kant''s revolutionary Critique of Pure Reason. His passionate search for the truth quickly led him to try to complete Kant''s conceptual system in ways that inspired Fichte''s philosophy of the transcendental self and anticipated Schelling''s and Hegel''s philosophies of the world-soul. However, Maimon grew beyond these initial ideas to develop a sophisticated philosophy of reflection. He argued that philosophical knowledge must arise from reflection on the principles of valid cognition. In the New Logic, he conducts this reflection and develops from it systematic accounts of logic, cognition, scientific methodology, and metaphysics. He presents it as a unified improvement of Kant''s Critique. Maimon also based his mature philosophies of ethics, natural rights, aesthetics, and religion on this work.Timothy Franz translates the New Logic along with the Letters of Philalethes to Aenesidemus, in which Maimon imagined conversations with his contemporaries, two hostile reviews which Maimon vigorously annotated, and relevant letters to Kant, Reinhold, and Fichte. Franz prefaces the text with a new history of Maimon''s intellectual development, an introduction that relates the New Logic to contemporary Kant scholarship, and a detailed philosophical commentary that attempts to reconcile Maimon''s idiosyncratically disjointed writing style with his underlying systematic vision, making the New Logic available for further study.

DKK 830.00
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For the Love of Metaphysics - Karin Nisenbaum - Bog - Oxford University Press Inc - Plusbog.dk

For the Love of Metaphysics - Karin Nisenbaum - Bog - Oxford University Press Inc - Plusbog.dk

In his Critique of Pure Reason, Kant argued that human reason is inherently conflicted, because it demands a form of unconditioned knowledge which is unattainable; his solution to this conflict of reason relies on the idea that reason''s quest for the unconditioned can only be realized practically. Karin Nisenbaum recommends viewing this conflict of reason, and Kant''s solution to this conflict, as the central problem shaping the contours of post-Kantian German Idealism. She contends that the rise and fall of German Idealism is to be told as a story about the different interpretations, appropriations, and radicalization of Kant''s prioritizing of the practical. The first part of the book explains why Kant''s critics and followers came to understand the aim of Kant''s critical philosophy in light of the conflict of reason. According to Nisenbaum, F. H. Jacobi and Salomon Maimon set the stage for the reception of Kant''s critical philosophy by conceiving its aim in terms of meeting reason''s demand for unconditioned knowledge, and by understanding the conflict of reason as a conflict between thinking and acting, or knowing and willing. The manner in which the post-Kantian German Idealists radicalized Kant''s prioritizing of the practical is the central topic of the second part of the book, which focuses on works by J.G. Fichte and F.W.J. Schelling. The third part clarifies why, in order to solve the conflict of reason, Schelling and Rosenzweig developed the view that human experience is grounded in three irreducible elements--God, the natural world, and human beings--which relate in three temporal dimensions: Creation, Revelation, and Redemption.

DKK 848.00
1