Vico and Herder: Two Studies in the History of IdeasHogarth, 1976 - 228 Seiten In the first section of the book Isaiah Berlin studies the philosophical ideas of Giovanni Battista Vico, a profound and original thinker, who, after being overshadowed by Montesquieu, has been rediscovered at intervals ever since, but has even more to say to the present age than to his own. Johann Gottfried Herder, the subject of the second study, although commonly regarded as the father of European nationalism, originated three perhaps equally influential currents of thought: populism; the idea of artistic commitment and of art as the voice of its time and social milieu; and the idea of the autonomy of cultures and the equal validity of many dissimilar systems of values. |
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Seite 44
... believed that the thundering sky was Jove ' . The sky is a huge and terror - inspiring person — Jove . This is what Virgil means when he says Jovis omnia plena5 ( Eclogues , III , 60 ) . We think in abstractions , but they were immersed ...
... believed that the thundering sky was Jove ' . The sky is a huge and terror - inspiring person — Jove . This is what Virgil means when he says Jovis omnia plena5 ( Eclogues , III , 60 ) . We think in abstractions , but they were immersed ...
Seite 73
... believed that man's nature and potentialities , and the laws which govern him , had been bestowed on him by his Creator to enable him to fulfil goals chosen for , and not by , him , he also believed that we could not know the Creator's ...
... believed that man's nature and potentialities , and the laws which govern him , had been bestowed on him by his Creator to enable him to fulfil goals chosen for , and not by , him , he also believed that we could not know the Creator's ...
Seite 119
... believed in the unity of mind and nature ; of Porzio , who saw man as the ripest fruit of nature , of the single great indwelling Spiritus ; of Borelli's and Caramuel's stress on the role of experiment and hypo- thesis , on the ...
... believed in the unity of mind and nature ; of Porzio , who saw man as the ripest fruit of nature , of the single great indwelling Spiritus ; of Borelli's and Caramuel's stress on the role of experiment and hypo- thesis , on the ...
Inhalt
The Philosophical Ideas of Giambattista Vico I | 1 |
Herder and the Enlightenment | 143 |
Index | 217 |
Urheberrecht | |
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