This book offers a unique account of the development of thinking about nature from Early German Romanticism into the philosophies of nature of Schelling, Hegel, and beyond. Alison Stone explores the ethical and political implications of German Romantic and Idealist ideas about nature, including for gender, race, and environmentalism.
German Idealism: the Struggle against Subjectivism. ... Kant's Construction of Matter: A Reading of the Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science. ... Nature, Ethics and Gender in German Romanticism and Idealism.
20 In the work of the early German Romantics, we find a revolt against limits, an embrace of infinite longing and ... Alison Stone, Nature, Ethics, and Gender in German Romanticism and Idealism (London: Rowman and Littlefield, 2018).
This collection of essays directly considers the reasons why philosophers have recently become deeply interested in romantic thought.
A Critical Anthology of Early German Romantic Writings, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. Stone, A. 2018, Nature, Ethics, and Gender in German Romanticism and Idealism, London: Rowman & Littlefield.
Concluding Remarks: Nature and the Infinite All Long before Max Weber, the early German Romantics were aware of the ... see Alison Stone, Nature, Ethics, and Gender in German Romanticism and Idealism (London: Rowman & Littlefield, ...
Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 225–42. Spinoza, B. de (1994). Ethics, in A Spinoza Reader. ... Nature, Ethics and Gender in German Romanticism and Idealism. Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield. Stone, A. (2020).
European Romanticism: A Reader. London: Bloomsbury, 2014. Sachar, Louis. Holes. New York: Scholastic Paperbacks, 1998. Stone, Alison. Nature: Ethics and Gender in German Romanticism and Idealism. London: Rowman & Littlefield, 2018.
Receptive Spirit elucidates the ways in which Kant, Fichte, Schlegel, and Hegel envisioned and enacted the conjunction of receptivity and spontaneous activity in the transmission of human-made models of mindedness.
Through careful textual analysis and systematic reconstruction of the work of three major romantics—Novalis, Friedrich Schlegel, and Friedrich Schelling—Nassar shows that neither interpretation is fully satisfying.
This book experiments with Nietzsche and Adorno who are contemporary proponents of early German Romanticism.