E-Book, Englisch, 629 Seiten
Waibel Detours
1. Auflage 2015
ISBN: 978-3-8470-0481-3
Verlag: V&R unipress
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
Approaches to Immanuel Kant in Vienna, in Austria, and in Eastern Europe
E-Book, Englisch, 629 Seiten
ISBN: 978-3-8470-0481-3
Verlag: V&R unipress
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: 0 - No protection
Violetta L. Waibel ist Professorin für Europäische Philosophie am Institut für Philosophie der Universität Wien. Ihre Arbeitsschwerpunkte sind Metaphysik, Subjektivität, Raum und Zeit, Freiheit (Spinoza, Kant, Fichte, Hegel, Sartre), Ästhetik im Dialog mit Literatur, Bildender Kunst, Musik (18. bis 21. Jahrhundert).
Fachgebiete
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Geschichte der Westlichen Philosophie Westliche Philosophie: Transzendentalphilosophie, Kritizismus
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Geschichte der Westlichen Philosophie Westliche Philosophie: Aufklärung
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Geschichte der Westlichen Philosophie Westliche Philosophie: 18. Jahrhundert
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Geschichte der Westlichen Philosophie Westliche Philosophie: 20./21. Jahrhundert
- Geisteswissenschaften Philosophie Geschichte der Westlichen Philosophie Westliche Philosophie: 19. Jahrhundert
Weitere Infos & Material
1;Title Page;3
2;Copyright;4
3;Table of Contents;5
4;Body;9
5;Detours – Introduction to the Detours Reader by Violetta L. Waibel;9
6;Body;9
7;Body;9
8;Body;9
9;Kant and Censorship;19
9.1;Kant and “Austrian Philosophy” – An Introduction by Alexander Wilfing;19
9.2;The Early Kant Reception in Austria – From Joseph II to Francis II by Alexander Wilfing;26
9.3;State Censorship of Kant – From Francis II to Count Thun by Alexander Wilfing;32
9.4;Herbartianism – Rembold, von Thun und Hohenstein, Exner, Zimmermann by Kurt Walter Zeidler;39
9.5;Lazarus Bendavid – Teaching Kant's Philosophy in Vienna by Olga Ring;47
9.6;The Reception and Criticism of Kant in Hungary at the End of the 18th Century – The Teaching Activity of Anton Kreil by Eszter Deák;51
9.7;Anton Reyberger and the Reception of Kant at Melk Abbey by Jakob Deibl, Johannes Deibl and Bernadette Kalteis;55
9.8;Kant and the Principality of Salzburg by Werner Sauer;58
9.9;Kant and Pre-1848 Catholic Theology by Franz L. Fillafer;74
9.10;Franz von Zeiller and Kantianism in Jurisprudence by Franz L. Fillafer;82
9.11;Ernst Topitsch and Kant by Franz L. Fillafer;94
9.12;Right, History, Religion – A Report on Two International Kant Symposia in Vienna, 2004 and 2005 by Herta Nagl-Docekal;102
10;Kant and Karl Leonhard Reinhold;109
10.1;The First Kantian – Reinhold, a Citizen of Vienna by Philipp Schaller and Violetta L. Waibel;109
10.2;Karl Leonhard Reinhold (1757–1823) by Martin Bondeli;113
10.3;Preludes for a Kantian-Reinholdian Philosophy in Vienna by Philipp Schaller;118
10.4;Karl Leonhard Reinhold's Weimar Years 1784–1787 by Guido Naschert;127
10.5;Reinhold's Letters on the Kantian Philosophy by Martin Bondeli;130
10.6;Reinhold's Correspondence with Kant by Martin Bondeli;139
10.7;Reinhold as Mediator of Kantian Philosophy by Philipp Schaller;147
10.8;Reinhold and the Reception of Kant among the Herbert Circle in Klagenfurt by Guido Naschert;158
10.9;Elementary Philosophy – Reinhold as an Interpreter of Kant's Critique of Reason and Forerunner of German Idealism by Martin Bondeli;165
11;Kant and Eastern Europe;177
11.1;The Advent of Kant's Philosophy in Eastern European Countries by Olga Ring;177
11.2;The Reform of the Teaching of Philosophy – The Transylvanian Paradigm by Péter Egyed;182
11.3;József Rozgonyi's Critique of Kant by Béla Mester;191
11.4;Károly Böhm – System Building and Value Theory by Imre Ungvári-Zrínyi;202
11.5;Károly Böhm's and Bernát Alexander's Hungarian Neo-Kantianism by László Perecz;206
11.6;The Reception of Kant by Sándor Tavaszy and the Klausenburg School by Márton Tonk;212
11.7;The Reception of Kant in Romania (1818–1989) by Madalina Diaconu and Marin Diaconu;217
11.8;Tomá Garrigue Masaryk’s Critical and Distant Engagement with Kant by Jan Zouhar;224
11.9;The Intellectual Intuition – Kant as Interpreted by the Czech Philosopher Vladimír Hoppe by Jindrich Karásek;230
11.10;Max Steiner – A Pugnacious “Old Kantian” from Prague by Jörg Krappmann;237
11.11;Kant in Slovenia by Jure Simoniti;242
11.12;The Reaction to Kant in South-Slavic Countries by Jure Zovko;249
11.13;The Reception of Kant's Philosophy in Poland by Jakub Kloc-Konko owicz;257
12;Kant and his Poets;265
12.1;Kant and German Romanticism in the Eyes of Austrian 19th Century Writers by Alexander Wilfing;265
12.2;Friedrich Schiller – A Congenial Reader of Kant by Violetta L. Waibel;268
12.3;Franz Grillparzer – Approaches to Kant by Gabriele Geml;291
12.4;Joseph Schreyvogel – Kantian Moral Philosophy as the Art of Living by Gabriele Geml;303
12.5;Ernst Freiherr von Feuchtersleben – Kant and the Prehistory of Psychotherapy in Austria by Gabriele Geml;313
12.6;Friedrich Schlegel's Reception of Kant During his Time in Vienna by Guido Naschert;324
12.7;Adalbert Stifter and the Philosophy of Kant by Max Beck;328
12.8;Kant's Literary Legacy in 20th Century Austria by Christoph Leschanz and Violetta L. Waibel;334
12.9;Kant and Karl Kraus by Max Beck;338
12.10;Kant, Rilke and Spirits Always at the Ready by Christoph Leschanz and Philipp Schaller;350
12.10.1;A Reading of Kant as Announced in Letters (1897);353
12.11;Traces of Immanuel Kant in Friedell's Work by Elisabeth Flucher;365
12.12;Kant in the Work of Robert Musil by Christoph Leschanz;372
12.13;Franz Kafka – The Forgotten Peace by Caroline Scholzen;380
12.14;The “Decline” of the Prague Circle by Caroline Scholzen;386
12.15;Ingeborg Bachmann – The Language of the Heavenly Bodies by Caroline Scholzen;388
12.16;Thomas Bernhard's Immanuel Kant by Sebastian Schneck;395
12.17;Reception of Kant in Klagenfurt as Reflected in Two Contemporary Austrian Novels by Elisabeth Flucher;402
12.18;Franz Schuh – Between Kantstraße and Hegelhof by Elisabeth Flucher;407
12.19;Kehlmann's Measuring the World – The Reinvention of an Era by Elisabeth Flucher;410
13;Kant and the Vienna Circle;415
13.1;Kant and the Vienna Circle – Who's Afraid of the Synthetic A Priori? by Bastian Stoppelk415
13.2;Moritz Schlick – A Critical Stance towards Kant by Olga Ring;428
13.3;Edgar Zilsel – Kant as an Ally by Olga Ring;435
13.4;Otto Neurath – Against Kant and the Special Path of German Philosophy by Bastian Stoppelk442
13.5;Rudolf Carnap (1891–1970) by Bastian Stoppelk454
13.6;Kantianism in 20th Century Vienna by Kurt Walter Zeidler;458
13.7;Kant, Kelsen and the Vienna School of Legal Theory by Sophie Loidolt;468
14;Kant and Phenomenology;477
14.1;Kant and Phenomenology in Austria by Max Brinnich and Georg Heller;477
14.2;Franz Brentano (1838–1917) by Georg Heller;480
14.3;Franz Brentano – Philosophy as an Exact Science by Georg Heller;482
14.4;The Brentano School in Vienna and Graz by Kurt Walter Zeidler;492
14.5;Edmund Husserl (1859–1938) by Marek Bozuk;499
14.6;Mapping Out the Stages of Husserl's Kantianism in Vienna by Marek Bozuk;504
14.7;Heidegger's Metaphysical Interpretation of Kant – Reason and the Hermeneutics of Facticity by Philipp Schmidt;514
14.8;Hönigswald's Attitude to Kant and Phenomenology by Max Brinnich;521
15;Endnotes;527
15.1;Kant and Censorship;527
15.2;Kant and Karl Leonhard Reinhold;549
15.3;Kant and Eastern Europe;558
15.4;Kant and his Poets;567
15.5;Kant and the Vienna Circle;591
15.6;Kant and Phenomenology;604
16;Citations and Key to Abbreviations;613
16.1;List of Abbreviations;614
17;Register of Illustrations;617
17.1;Preface;617
17.2;Kant and Censorship;617
17.3;Kant and Karl Leonhard Reinhold;619
17.4;Kant and Eastern Europe;621
17.5;Kant and his Poets;622
17.6;Kant and the Vienna Circle;624
17.7;Kant and Phenomenology;625
18;Authors;627