🚚 Free Worldwide Shipping on All Orders!Shop Now
$66.55

Original: $221.83

-70%
Fichte's Transcendental Ontology—

$221.83

$66.55

The Story

This book reinterprets Fichte’s thought as a ā€œtranscendental ontology,ā€ arguing that his later Jena Wissenschaftslehre transcends the ā€œHistory of Self-Consciousnessā€ to establish a ā€œHistory of Beingā€, where the I’s genesis aligns with the world’s historical development.

Challenging the dominant interpretive traditions established by Henrich and the Heidelberg School, this book adopts the framework of ā€œTranscendental Ontologyā€ to explicate the pre-conscious, self-generating activity of primordial reality. The narrative traces the roots of the ontological genesis from Kant’s doctrine of self-affection and Reinhold’s theory of representation, through Fichte’s theoretical confrontations with Schelling and Hƶlderlin, to its profound reception in the early twentieth century. By examining the works of Neo-Kantians (Lask and Hirsch), Neo Marxist Georg LukĆ”cs, and Russian philosopher Ivan Ilyin, the book demonstrates how Fichte’s philosophy evolved into a response to the spiritual crisis of European modernity. Its aim was to unite individuality with historical totality in a ā€œconcrete universalā€.

This book is essential for scholars and advanced students of German Idealism, modern European philosophy, and intellectual history, especially those interested in subjectivity, the shift from Kant to Fichte and Schelling, and transcendental philosophy's impact on twentieth-century thought.

Description

This book reinterprets Fichte’s thought as a ā€œtranscendental ontology,ā€ arguing that his later Jena Wissenschaftslehre transcends the ā€œHistory of Self-Consciousnessā€ to establish a ā€œHistory of Beingā€, where the I’s genesis aligns with the world’s historical development.

Challenging the dominant interpretive traditions established by Henrich and the Heidelberg School, this book adopts the framework of ā€œTranscendental Ontologyā€ to explicate the pre-conscious, self-generating activity of primordial reality. The narrative traces the roots of the ontological genesis from Kant’s doctrine of self-affection and Reinhold’s theory of representation, through Fichte’s theoretical confrontations with Schelling and Hƶlderlin, to its profound reception in the early twentieth century. By examining the works of Neo-Kantians (Lask and Hirsch), Neo Marxist Georg LukĆ”cs, and Russian philosopher Ivan Ilyin, the book demonstrates how Fichte’s philosophy evolved into a response to the spiritual crisis of European modernity. Its aim was to unite individuality with historical totality in a ā€œconcrete universalā€.

This book is essential for scholars and advanced students of German Idealism, modern European philosophy, and intellectual history, especially those interested in subjectivity, the shift from Kant to Fichte and Schelling, and transcendental philosophy's impact on twentieth-century thought.