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Philosophical Investigations into the Essence of Human Freedom and Related Matters

In Ernst Behler (ed.), Philosophy of German idealism. New York: Continuum (1987)

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  1. Is the late Schelling still doing nature-philosophy?Sean J. McGrath - 2016 - Angelaki 21 (4):121-141.
    I argue against current deflationary trends in Schelling scholarship that positive philosophy is not negative philosophy by other means but exceeds it in content and form. While nature-philosophy gives to positive philosophy the means to think the positive, the latter is not “natural” but revealed. I situate the turn to the positive in Schelling’s 1809 Freedom essay, which introduces the possibility of a real distinction between nature and God for the first time in Schelling’s thought, a possibility which becomes actual (...)
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  • 'The World Must be Romanticised...': The (Environmental) Ethical Implications of Schelling's Organic Worldview.Elaine P. Miller - 2005 - Environmental Values 14 (3):295-316.
    This essay addresses the implications of German Idealism and Romanticism, and in particular the philosophy of Schelling as it is informed by Kant and Goethe, for contemporary environmental philosophy. Schelling's philosophy posits a nature imbued with freedom which gives rise to human beings, which means that any ethics, insofar as ethics is predicated upon freedom, will be an ‘environmental ethic’. At the same time, Schelling's organismic view of nature is distinctive in positing a fundamental gap between nature and human beings. (...)
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  • History or Counter-Tradition? The System of Freedom After Walter Benjamin.Wesley Phillips - 2010 - Critical Horizons 11 (1):99-118.
    I seek to interpret the work of Walter Benjamin in light of the "system programme" of German Idealism, in order to confront an antinomy of contemporary radical thought. Benjamin has been regarded as an anti-Hegelian thinker of the exception. Reading him against the grain, I draw out a concept of counter-tradition that eschews the opposition of intra-historical progress and extra-historical exception. The philological inspiration is a book by Franz Joseph Molitor, student of Schelling and "teacher" of Benjamin: The Philosophy of (...)
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