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Rousseau and German Idealism: Freedom, Dependence and Necessity

New York: Cambridge University Press (2013)

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  1. The Affective and the Political: Rousseau and Contemporary Kantianism.Byron Davies - 2020 - Tópicos: Revista de Filosofía 59:301-339.
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau is often associated with a certain political mode of relating to another, where a person (“a Citizen”) is a locus of enforceable demands. I claim that Rousseau also articulated an affective mode of relating to another, where a person is seen as the locus of a kind of value (expressive of their being an independent point of view) that cannot be demanded. These are not isolated sides of a distinction, for the political mode constitutes a solution to certain (...)
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  • Community in Hegel’s Social Philosophy.Simon Lumsden - 2020 - Hegel Bulletin 41 (2):177-201.
    In thePhilosophy of RightHegel argues that modern life has produced an individualized freedom that conflicts with the communal forms of life constitutive of Greek ethical life. This individualized freedom is fundamentally unsatisfactory, but it is in modernity seemingly resolved into a more adequate form of social freedom in the family, aspects of civil society, and ultimately the state. This article examines whether Hegel’s state can function as a community and by so doing satisfy the need for a substantial ethical life (...)
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  • From shipwreck to commodity exchange: Robinson Crusoe, Hegel and Marx.Michael Lazarus - 2022 - Philosophy and Social Criticism 48 (9):1302-1328.
    Philosophy & Social Criticism, Volume 48, Issue 9, Page 1302-1328, November 2022. Robinson Crusoe is a mythic character who lives not only in the popular imaginary but through the history of political and social thought. Defoe’s protagonist lives marooned on his island, isolated and apart from society. The narrative is a perfect naturalisation of the ‘bourgeois’ world, dependent on an ontology of the self-sufficient individual. This article analyses this lineage in the social contract theory of Hobbes, Locke and Rousseau. Later, (...)
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  • Openness, Relativity and the Radical Force of Jean-Jacques Rousseau’s Democratic Theory.Yiorgos Moraitis - 2018 - Journal of Human Values 24 (3):232-237.
    David James, Rousseau and German Idealism: Freedom, Dependence and Necessity, 2013. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 246, $23.27. ISBN: 978-131-66094-84Frederick Neuhouser, Rousseau’s Theodicy of Self-Love: Evil, Rationality and the Drive for Recognition, 2010. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 296, $27.55. ISBN: 978-019-95920-50Frederick Neuhouser, Rousseau’s Critique of Inequality: Reconstructing the Second Discourse, 2015. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 250, $3.55. ISBN: 978-110-76446-63.
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