Spinoza and the specters of modernity : the hidden enlightenment of diversity from Spinoza to Freud

著者

    • Mack, Michael

書誌事項

Spinoza and the specters of modernity : the hidden enlightenment of diversity from Spinoza to Freud

Michael Mack

Continuum, c2010

  • : pbk
  • : hardcover

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 6

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注記

Includes index

内容説明・目次

巻冊次

: pbk ISBN 9781441118721

内容説明

Spinoza and the Specters of Modernity draws new theoretical conclusions from a study of Spinoza's legacy in the age of Goethe and beyond, largely transmitted through the writings of Herder, that will have implications for the study of German intellectual history and, more broadly, the study of religion and literature. Michael Mack describes how a line of writers and thinkers re-configured Spinoza's ideas and how these ideas thus became effective in society at large. Mack shows that the legacy of Spinoza is important because he was the first thinker to theorize narrative as the constitutive fabric of politics, identity, society, religion and the larger sphere of culture. Indeed, Mack argues for Spinoza's writings on politics and ethics as an alternative to a Kantian conception of modernity.

目次

Acknowledgments Introduction Spinoza' alternative modernity Chapter 1. Descartes, Spinoza or the goal that destroys itself. Chapter 2. Spinoza's conatus or the critique of political self-destruction Chapter 3. Herder's Spinozist understanding of Reflection Chapter 4. From the Dissection theatre to popular philosophy or Herder's Spinozist theology Chapter 5. From the National to the Transnational Chapter 6. Universalism contested: Herder, Kant and Race Chapter 7. Talking Humanly with the Devil: From Rosenzweig via Spinoza to Goethe's hospitality in Faust and Iphigenia on Tauris Chapter 8. The Significance of the Insignificant: George Eliot's Daniel Deronda and the Literature of Weimar Classicism Chapter 9. Conclusion: Freud and Spinoza or how to be mindful of the mind.
巻冊次

: hardcover ISBN 9781441173447

内容説明

Spinoza and the Specters of Modernity draws new theoretical conclusions from a study of Spinoza's legacy in the age of Goethe and beyond, largely transmitted through the writings of Herder, that will have implications for the study of German intellectual history and, more broadly, the study of religion and literature. Michael Mack describes how a line of writers and thinkers re-configured Spinoza's ideas and how these ideas thus became effective in society at large. Mack shows that the legacy of Spinoza is important because he was the first thinker to theorize narrative as the constitutive fabric of politics, identity, society, religion and the larger sphere of culture. Indeed, Mack argues for Spinoza's writings on politics and ethics as an alternative to a Kantian conception of modernity.

目次

Acknowledgments Introduction Spinoza' alternative modernity Chapter 1. Descartes, Spinoza or the goal that destroys itself. Chapter 2. Spinoza's conatus or the critique of political self-destruction Chapter 3. Herder's Spinozist understanding of Reflection Chapter 4. From the Dissection theatre to popular philosophy or Herder's Spinozist theology Chapter 5. From the National to the Transnational Chapter 6. Universalism contested: Herder, Kant and Race Chapter 7. Talking Humanly with the Devil: From Rosenzweig via Spinoza to Goethe's hospitality in Faust and Iphigenia on Tauris Chapter 8. The Significance of the Insignificant: George Eliot's Daniel Deronda and the Literature of Weimar Classicism Chapter 9. Conclusion: Freud and Spinoza or how to be mindful of the mind.

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