Freedom and ground a study of Schelling's Treatise on freedom
"A new interpretation of Schelling's 1809 treatise on freedom, demonstrating how the work is an answer to the problem of ground"--
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Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
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Albany
State University of New York Press
[2023]
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Schriftenreihe: | Suny series in contemporary continental philosophy
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Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
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Inhaltsangabe:
- Introduction
- Chapter 1. Ground and the question of a system of freedom : 1. The concept of system
- 2. The principle of ground and the concept of system
- 3. Jacobi and the conflict between system and freedom
- 4. Two predominant metaphors for system
- 5. Conclusion: Heidegger and the alleged failure of a system of freedom
- Chapter 2. Identity, ground, and the meaning of the copula in judgments : 1. Pantheism and the nature of identity
- 2. Explication of Schelling's four accounts of the copula
- 3. Conclusion: the unity of Schelling's account of the copula?
- Chapter 3. The creative unity of the law of identity : 1. The unity expressed by the law of identity
- 2. The co-originality of the laws of identity and ground
- 3. The transformation of the law of ground
- 4. Divine grounding and the possibility of freedom
- Chapter 4. Schelling's fundamental distinction between ground and what exists : 1. General characterization of the distinction
- 2. The distinction in relation to the doctrine of potencies
- 3. The distinction within the distinction
- 4. The grounding character of the ground of existence
- 5. Grounding relations in a system of freedom
- Chapter 5. Evil and the irrational : 1. The ground of evil
- 2. Evil as a ground of revelation?
- 3. The irrational and the irreducible remainder
- 4. The living character of Schelling's rationalism
- Chapter 6. The ungrund as the ultimate origin : 1. The context of Schelling's treatment of the ungrund
- 2. The ungrund as the wesen of the two principles in God
- 3. Characteristics of the ungrund and its relation to Schelling's previous descriptions of the absolute
- 4. Indifference and the grounding character of the ungrund
- 5. The ungrund and the relationship between essence and form
- Chapter 7. Freedom, necessity, and self-grounding : 1. The formal vs. the real concept of freedom
- 2. The unity of freedom and necessity beyond appearance
- 3. The intelligible deed
- 4. Self-grounding and the concept of causa sui
- Conclusion: Ground in a system of freedom