Switch to: References

Add citations

You must login to add citations.
  1. (1 other version)18th Century German Philosophy prior to Kant.Corey W. Dyck & Brigitte Sassen - forthcoming - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • The invention of human nature: the intention and reception of Pufendorf’s entia moralia doctrine.Ian Hunter - 2019 - History of European Ideas 45 (7):933-952.
    In treating human nature as a ‘moral entity’, imposed by God for reasons into which man could have no direct insight, Samuel Pufendorf reconfigured the architecture of natural law thought in a fundamental way. For this meant that rather than deducing norms from a nature in which they had been embedded by God and could be discerned by self-reflective reason, man had to derive them by observing the requirements of the exigent condition in which he happened to find himself; and (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   2 citations  
  • Charles Taylor's A Secular Age and secularization in early modern Germany.Ian Hunter - 2011 - Modern Intellectual History 8 (3):621-646.
    In this essay I discuss the historical adequacy of Charles Taylor's philosophical history of secularization, as presented in his A Secular Age . I do so by situating it in relation to the contextual historiography of secularization in early modern Europe, with a particular focus on developments in the German Empire. Considering how profoundly conceptions of secularization have been bound to competing religious and political programmes, we must begin our discussion by entertaining the possibility that modern philosophical and historiographic conceptions (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   3 citations  
  • Wolffianism and Pietism in eighteenth-century German philosophy.Simon Grote - 2023 - Intellectual History Review 33 (4):673-701.
    Broadly defined as adherence to teachings of Christian Wolff (1679–1754), Wolffianism characterized much of the mainstream of German academic philosophy for at least half the eighteenth century. German Pietism, by contrast, defined in its narrowest sense as a late-seventeenth- and eighteenth-century movement for the renewal of the Lutheran Churches of the Holy Roman Empire, has long figured in the history of German “Enlightenment” philosophy as Wolffianism’s anti-philosophical, religious foil. The conventional portrait of Wolffianism and Pietism as antithetical to one another, (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation  
  • Imprisonment, islands, imperialism: Patrician dimensions of the Irish imagination.Thomas Dolan - 2020 - History of European Ideas 46 (7):1027-1046.
    An experimental, conceptually driven foray into the Patrician field, Ireland’s ubiquitous national apostle – a former captive – is utilised as a vehicle through which to explore a trinity of salient and interrelated themes within the Catholic and Protestant hinterlands of the Irish imagination: visions of imprisonment; of the island; and of imperialism. The reader is guided through aspects of Patrician literature, visits the island’s hallowed Patrician shrines, and is thus shown Purgatory. Insights into the imaginations exhibited by a range (...)
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  • (1 other version)18th century German philosophy prior to Kant.Brigitte Sassen - 2008 - Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
    Download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   1 citation