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11 Nature versus Life: Dialectics and Physiology in Schelling
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Márcio Suzuki
Abstract
This chapter seeks to show how the concepts of nature and life in Schelling are marked by the physiology of his time and how his physiological knowledge is decisive for the understanding of the dialectics between the Absolute and the individual in his philosophy.
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Abstract
This chapter seeks to show how the concepts of nature and life in Schelling are marked by the physiology of his time and how his physiological knowledge is decisive for the understanding of the dialectics between the Absolute and the individual in his philosophy.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Table of Contents V
- 1 Introduction: The Resurgence of Classical German Natural Philosophy 1
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Part I Visions of Nature
- 2 Three Visions of Nature for German Idealism: Kant, Herder, Goethe 21
- 3 Nature as a “You”: Novalis’s Philosophical Extension of Fichte 45
- 4 Schelling on Comprehending Nature as an Absolute Activity: From Intellectual Intuition to Ecstasy of Reason 61
- 5 Hegel and the Rationality of Nature 77
- 6 Ludwig Feuerbach’s Ecological Humanism 91
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Part II Inorganic Nature
- 7 Kant’s Concept of Force and its Application in Physics and Psychology 111
- 8 From Kant to Schelling: Metaphysics of Nature and the Rise of Modern Science 135
- 9 Goethe’s Rational Empiricism 157
- 10 Hegel’s Concept of Inorganic Nature as Umwelt 183
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Part III Organic Nature
- 11 Nature versus Life: Dialectics and Physiology in Schelling 209
- 12 Anatomopathology of Reason: Bichat’s Legacy in Hegel’s Philosophy 229
- 13 The Emergence of Sentience: Hegel’s Conception of Animals 247
- 14 Great Chains of Being in Schelling’s Würzburg System 263
- 15 In What Sense is Nature a Scale of Degrees? Schelling and Hegel on “Degrees” in Nature 283
- Index of Names 295
- Index of Subjects 297
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter I
- Table of Contents V
- 1 Introduction: The Resurgence of Classical German Natural Philosophy 1
-
Part I Visions of Nature
- 2 Three Visions of Nature for German Idealism: Kant, Herder, Goethe 21
- 3 Nature as a “You”: Novalis’s Philosophical Extension of Fichte 45
- 4 Schelling on Comprehending Nature as an Absolute Activity: From Intellectual Intuition to Ecstasy of Reason 61
- 5 Hegel and the Rationality of Nature 77
- 6 Ludwig Feuerbach’s Ecological Humanism 91
-
Part II Inorganic Nature
- 7 Kant’s Concept of Force and its Application in Physics and Psychology 111
- 8 From Kant to Schelling: Metaphysics of Nature and the Rise of Modern Science 135
- 9 Goethe’s Rational Empiricism 157
- 10 Hegel’s Concept of Inorganic Nature as Umwelt 183
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Part III Organic Nature
- 11 Nature versus Life: Dialectics and Physiology in Schelling 209
- 12 Anatomopathology of Reason: Bichat’s Legacy in Hegel’s Philosophy 229
- 13 The Emergence of Sentience: Hegel’s Conception of Animals 247
- 14 Great Chains of Being in Schelling’s Würzburg System 263
- 15 In What Sense is Nature a Scale of Degrees? Schelling and Hegel on “Degrees” in Nature 283
- Index of Names 295
- Index of Subjects 297