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  1. Drifting into Dangerous Waters: The Separation of Aesthetic Experience from the Work o Art.Martin Jay - 1999 - Filozofski Vestnik 20 (2).
    The elevation of aesthetic experience in the Enlightenment, most extensively developed in Kant's analysis of disinterested contemplation, to compensate for the loss of putatively objective standards of beauty had several problematic implications. One was the privileging of the subject who had the experience over the object that stimulated it. Another was the potential extension of that experience to objects that were never intended to be works of art, not merely to ones given in nature, but also to political, social and (...)
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  • German Philosophy Today: Between Idealism, Romanticism, and Pragmatism.Andrew Bowie - 1999 - Royal Institute of Philosophy Supplement 44:357-398.
    In his essayOn the History of Religion and Philosophy in Germany, of 1834, Heinrich Heine suggested to his French audience that the German propensity for ‘metaphysical abstractions’ had led many people to condemn philosophy for its failure to have a practical effect, Germany having only had its revolution in thought, while France had its in reality. Heine, albeit somewhat ironically, refuses to join those who condemn philosophy: ‘German philosophy is an important matter, which concerns the whole of humanity, and only (...)
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  • In Defence of Modernity.Hilliard Aronovitch - 1995 - Dialogue 34 (2):321-.
    Is the endeavour to probe the meaning of modernity other than a form of self-obsession, a kind of collective and conceptual narcissism, characteristic of the perhaps peculiarly modern preoccupation with abstract notions and inwardness? And whatever the motivation and origin, is the endeavour likely to issue in something better than doubtful or empty pronouncements, true to the extent that they are platitudes and false or obscure for the rest? Encountering the title Modernism as a Philosophical Problem one can imagine a (...)
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  • Authority and the author: Schiller and the public sphere.Steven D. Martinson - 1998 - The European Legacy 3 (6):87-96.
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  • Hegel and Habermas.Douglas Moggach - 1997 - The European Legacy 2 (3):550-556.
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