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Fichte's Foundations of Natural Right
A Critical Guide
This Guide examines Fichte's main political concepts including morality, the summons, social contract, freedom, the body and human rights.
Gabriel Gottlieb (Edited by)
9781107078147, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 15 September 2016
288 pages
23.6 x 16 x 2.2 cm, 0.57 kg
'This excellent collection features consistently illuminating and often groundbreaking work on issues raised by Fichte's philosophy of right. All twelve chapters make new contributions to specialized debates. Most will be accessible to nonspecialists nonetheless, and many will richly repay careful consideration by readers interested in Fichte, post-Kantian political theory, or classic debates about rights and the state.' Steven Hoeltzel, Journal of the History of Philosophy
Fichte's Foundations of Natural Right (1796/97) was one of the most influential books in nineteenth-century philosophy. It was read carefully by Schelling, Hegel, and Marx, and initiated a tradition in German philosophy that considers human subjectivity to be relational and intersubjective, thus requiring relations of recognition between subjects. The essays in this volume highlight this little-understood book's most important ideas and innovations. They offer discussions of Fichte's conception of freedom, self-consciousness, coercion, the summons, the body, and human rights, together with new analyses of his deduction of right, his views on the social contract, and his arguments for the separation of right from morality. The essays expand and deepen ongoing debates in the scholarship and chart new avenues of thought about Fichte's most enduring work of political philosophy. They will be essential reading for students and scholars of German Idealism, nineteenth-century philosophy, and the history of political thought.
Introduction Gabriel Gottlieb
1. Fichte's Foundations of Natural Right and its relation to Kant Angelica Nuzzo
2. Fichte's separation of right from morality Frederick Neuhouser
3. Fichte's independence thesis James A. Clarke
4. Deduction of the summons and the existence of other rational beings Allen W. Wood
5. Fichte's Kabbalistic realism: summons as ?im?um Paul Franks
6. Fichte's developmental view of self-consciousness Gabriel Gottlieb
7. The body as site of action and intersubjectivity in Fichte's Foundations of Natural Right John Russon
8. Fichte's transcendental deduction of private property Wayne Martin
9. Fichte on personal freedom and the freedom of others David James
10. Freedom, coercion, and the relation of right Michael Nance
11. Fichte's organic unification: recognition and the self-overcoming of social contract theory Dean Moyar
12. Fichte and human rights Jean-Christophe Merle.
Subject Areas: Western philosophy: c 1600 to c 1900 [HPCD], Philosophy [HP]