Dalia Nassar
Dalia Nassar is a research fellow of the Australian Research Council (ARC) in the philosophy department at the University of Sydney and assistant professor of philosophy at Villanova University. She is the author of The Romantic Absolute: Being and Knowing in Early German Romantic Philosophy 1795-1804 (University of Chicago Press, 2013). Acknowledgements Abbreviations Contributors Introduction PART ONE German Romanticism as a Philosophical Movement 1. What is Early German Romantic Philosophy?...See more
Dalia Nassar is a research fellow of the Australian Research Council (ARC) in the philosophy department at the University of Sydney and assistant professor of philosophy at Villanova University. She is the author of The Romantic Absolute: Being and Knowing in Early German Romantic Philosophy 1795-1804 (University of Chicago Press, 2013). Acknowledgements Abbreviations Contributors Introduction PART ONE German Romanticism as a Philosophical Movement 1. What is Early German Romantic Philosophy? Manfred Frank 2. Romanticism and Idealism Frederick Beiser PART TWO History, Hermeneutics and Sociability 3. History, Succession, and German Romanticism Karl Ameriks 4. Romanticism and Language Michael N. Forster 5. Hermeneutics, Individuality, and Tradition: Schleiermacher's Idea of Bildung in the Landscape of Hegelian Thought Kristin Gjesdal 6. Sociability and the Conduct of Philosophy: What We Can Learn from Early German Romanticism Jane Kneller PART THREE Literature, Art and Mythology 7. "Doch sehnend stehst /Am Ufer du" ("But Longing You Stand On the Shore"): H�lderlin, Philosophy, Subjectivity, and Finitude Richard Eldridge 8. On the Defense of Literary Value: From Early German Romanticism to Analytic Philosophy of Literature Brady Bowman 9. "No Poetry, No Reality" Schlegel, Wittgenstein, Fiction and Reality Keren Gorodeisky 10. The Simplicity of the Sublime: A New Picturing of Nature in Caspar David Friedrich Laure Cahen-Maurel 11. The New Mythology: Romanticism between Religion and Humanism Bruce Matthews PART FOUR Science and Nature 12. Mathematics, Computation, Language and Poetry: The Novalis Paradox Paul Redding 13. Friedrich Schlegel's Romantic Calculus: Reflections on the Mathematical Infinite around 1800 John H. Smith 14. The "Mathematical" Wissenschaftslehre: On a Late Fichtean Reflection of Novalis David W. Wood 15. Irritable Figures: Herder's Poetic Empiricism Amanda Jo Goldstein 16. Romantic Empiricism after the "End of Nature" Contributions to Environmental Philosophy Dalia Nassar Works Cited Index See less
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