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6. Germans and Britons: Bacon's importance for language-critical philosophy
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Hermann J. Cloeren
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgments VII
- Contents IX
- Introduction 1
- 1. The place of language critique in the history of modern philosophy 10
- 2. Language as factual a priori of thought: J. G. Hamann (1730-1788) 21
- 3. Philosophy as linguistic analysis: G. Chr. Lichtenberg (1742—1799) 27
- 4. Language critique as enlightenment and liberation: August v. Einsiedel (1754—1837) 34
- 5. Critique of language as metacritique of reason: Johann Gottfried Herder (1744—1803) 40
- 6. Germans and Britons: Bacon's importance for language-critical philosophy 53
- 7. Language and thought as identical twins: F. H. Jacobi (1743—1819) 62
- 8. The interdependence of language and thought: K. L. Reinhold (1758—1823) 67
- 9. Analytic empiricism versus metaphysics: Otto Friedrich Gruppe (1804—1876) 78
- 10. Analytic aspects in Marx' attitude towards religion1 110
- 11. The linguistic turn in Kierkegaard's attack on Hegel 125
- 12. Language as condition and limitation of thought: Conrad Hermann (1819—1897) 138
- 13. Thought acts and speech acts: Gustav Gerber (1820—1901) 147
- 14. A German analyst in nineteenth-century Oxford: Friedrich Max Müller (1823—1900) 163
- 15. Language-critical philosophy with a monistic foundation: Ludwig Noiré (1829—1889) 180
- 16. Indebted to Kant and Schopenhauer: Georg Runze (1852—1922) 199
- 17. All philosophy is critique of language — in the sense of Fritz Mauthner (1849—1923) 215
- 18. Review and conclusion 239
- Index of names 259
- Index of subjects 263
- Backmatter 269
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Acknowledgments VII
- Contents IX
- Introduction 1
- 1. The place of language critique in the history of modern philosophy 10
- 2. Language as factual a priori of thought: J. G. Hamann (1730-1788) 21
- 3. Philosophy as linguistic analysis: G. Chr. Lichtenberg (1742—1799) 27
- 4. Language critique as enlightenment and liberation: August v. Einsiedel (1754—1837) 34
- 5. Critique of language as metacritique of reason: Johann Gottfried Herder (1744—1803) 40
- 6. Germans and Britons: Bacon's importance for language-critical philosophy 53
- 7. Language and thought as identical twins: F. H. Jacobi (1743—1819) 62
- 8. The interdependence of language and thought: K. L. Reinhold (1758—1823) 67
- 9. Analytic empiricism versus metaphysics: Otto Friedrich Gruppe (1804—1876) 78
- 10. Analytic aspects in Marx' attitude towards religion1 110
- 11. The linguistic turn in Kierkegaard's attack on Hegel 125
- 12. Language as condition and limitation of thought: Conrad Hermann (1819—1897) 138
- 13. Thought acts and speech acts: Gustav Gerber (1820—1901) 147
- 14. A German analyst in nineteenth-century Oxford: Friedrich Max Müller (1823—1900) 163
- 15. Language-critical philosophy with a monistic foundation: Ludwig Noiré (1829—1889) 180
- 16. Indebted to Kant and Schopenhauer: Georg Runze (1852—1922) 199
- 17. All philosophy is critique of language — in the sense of Fritz Mauthner (1849—1923) 215
- 18. Review and conclusion 239
- Index of names 259
- Index of subjects 263
- Backmatter 269