11055nam 2200481 450 991062929380332120230327180259.09783031138621(electronic bk.)9783031138614(MiAaPQ)EBC7136990(Au-PeEL)EBL7136990(CKB)25314886500041(EXLCZ)992531488650004120230327d2023 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierThe being of negation in post-Kantian philosophy /edited by Gregory S. MossCham, Switzerland :Springer,[2023]©20231 online resource (499 pages)Print version: Moss, Gregory S. The Being of Negation in Post-Kantian Philosophy Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2023 9783031138614 Includes bibliographical references and index.Intro -- Acknowledgments -- Contents -- Chapter 1: Introduction: The Being of Negation in Post-Kantian Philosophy: The Problem of Negation -- 1 The Paradox of Negation in Ancient Greek Philosophy -- 2 Negation in Kant's Critique of Pure Reason -- 3 The Origin of Negation in German Idealism -- 3.1 Fichte -- 3.2 Schelling -- 3.3 Hegel -- References -- Part I: Negation in Kant, Maimon, and Fichte -- Chapter 2: Kant's Negative Noumena as Abstracta -- 1 Noumena as Nothing -- 2 From Lewis's Abstracta to Kant's Noumena -- 3 Concreteness of Noumena? -- 4 Intuition and Instantiation -- 5 Negative Versus Positive Noumena -- 6 Noumena as Ground of Phenomena -- 7 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Chapter 3: Imagination and Transcendental Objects: Kant on the Imaginary Focus of Reason -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Concept of an Object as Such (= X) in the A-Deduction -- 3 Transcendental Illusion and the Ideas of Reason -- 4 Kant's Account of Illusion: The Focus Imaginarius from Dreams to the First Critique -- 5 Reason's Imaginary Focus and the Transcendental Object -- 6 Reason's Regulative Pursuit of Imaginary Ideas -- References -- Chapter 4: Nothing Really Matters: Can Kant's Table of Nothing Secure Metaphysics as Queen of the Sciences? -- 1 Can Nothing Secure Metaphysics as "Queen" of the Sciences? -- 2 The Role of "Something in General" in Kant's Transcendental Philosophy -- 3 Kant's Four Perspectives on "Nothing" -- 4 Kant's Antidote to Despair: Nothing Really Does Matter! -- References -- Chapter 5: Kant's Space and Time as Nothing: Empirical Reality as the Ground of Experience -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Overview of the Table of Nothing -- 3 Transcendental and Empirical -- 4 Empirically Real Space and Time as Pure -- 5 Conclusion -- Appendix -- References -- Chapter 6: The Relation between Reality and Negation in Kant, Maimon, and Fichte -- 1 Introduction.2 Kant: From Real Opposition to Intensive Magnitude -- 3 Maimon: From Intensive Magnitude to Differentials -- 4 Fichte: From Divisibility to Interdetermination -- References -- Chapter 7: Caput Mortuum: Truth, Freedom, and Negation in Fichte's Institutiones Omnis Philosophiae -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Institutiones Omnis Philosophiae -- 3 Transformative Pedagogy -- 4 Freedom as Originary Disjunction -- 5 The Art of Philosophy -- 6 The Philosopher as Eternal Beginner -- 7 Radical Empiricism -- 8 Conclusion -- References -- Untitled -- Chapter 8: Infinite Judgments: The Non-Being of the Idea [Anna Longo -- Translator: Martijn Buijs] -- 1 Kant and Thoroughgoing Determination -- 2 Finite Understanding and Infinite Understanding: The Differential Genesis of Consciousness According to Maimon -- 3 The Wissenschaftslehre as Treatise of Transcendental Logic -- 4 Hegel and the Infinite Judgment as Non-sense -- 5 Deleuze: The Non-being of the Problematic -- References -- Part II: Negation in Schelling, Romanticism, and Pessimism -- Chapter 9: Through Consciousness Parted from Dream: Alternative Knowledge Forms in Karoline von Günderrode -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Günderrode as a Gnostic -- 3 Other Indications of Mysticism in Günderrode's Work -- 4 The Quest for Knowledge as a Search Within -- 5 Knowledge, Consciousness and the Self -- 6 Everyday Knowledge, Deeper Knowledge, and Awareness -- References -- Chapter 10: Herder and Daoism on Touching the Spirit of Sculpture -- 1 Introduction -- 2 What Scultpure Reveals -- 3 Sculpture's Spirit -- 4 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 11: Nothingness, Negativity, and Buddhism in Schopenhauer -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Schopenhauer's Suffering and the Advent of European Buddhism -- 3 Reconsidering Negativity, Nothingness, and Nihilism -- 4 Nothingness, Non-Duality, and the Symbolic.5 Conclusion: The Flute, the Other, and the Idea -- References -- Chapter 12: Against the Flow: Schopenhauer and Schelling on Negative Freedom -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Freedom as Indifference in Kant -- 3 Schopenhauer's Appropriation of Kant's Negative Concept of Freedom -- 4 Schelling's Appropriation of Kant's Negative Concept of Freedom -- 5 Against the Flow: Negative Freedom -- References -- Chapter 13: The Emptiness of Being: Schelling and Nishitani on the Problem of Absolute Negation -- 1 Setting the Stage -- 2 Vacuous Nothingness -- 3 Absolute Negation, Positive Philosophy, and the Field of Emptiness -- 4 The Web of Positivity -- References -- Untitled -- Chapter 14: Negative, Positive, and Complementarity: Remarks on Schelling's Absolute Idealism -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Early Works -- 3 Negative and Positive Philosophy -- 4 Complementarity -- References -- Chapter 15: Positivity and Time in Schelling's Philosophical Development -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Naturphilosophie -- 3 Productive Intuition in System of Transcendental Idealism -- 4 Kant's Productive Imagination -- 5 Ages of the World -- 6 Philosophy of Mythology -- 7 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 16: The Difference Between Hegel and Schelling on Freedom and Negation -- 1 Introduction: Where to Begin? -- 2 And Now for Something Completely Different: Hegel and the Relation Between Freedom and Negativity -- 3 Agree to Disagree: Schelling, Freedom and Evil -- or, Tarrying with the Positive -- 4 Concluding Reflections -- References -- Chapter 17: The Emergence of the Unprethinkable: On Schelling's Methodology in 1821 and His Early Critique of Hegel -- 1 Death and Life: The System and the Absolute -- 2 Hegel and Schelling in the Fall Semester of 1820/1821 -- 3 Schelling's Method, or: The Development of the Unprethinkable -- References.Chapter 18: On Positive Philosophy: Hegel's Retort to Schelling -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Negative and Positive Philosophy -- 3 The Case of Markus Gabriel -- 4 Avoiding the Circle of Reflection on Reflection -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- Part III: Negation in Hegel and Neo-Kantianism -- Chapter 19: Prefacing the Absolute: Two Models of Situating Self-Negating Negativity in Hegel's Wissenschaft der Logik from 1812 and 1832 -- 1 Absolute Knowledge and Being: Prefacing the Absolute Beginning -- 2 The Foaming Chalice of the Phenomenology: Transition as Entäußerung in the 1812 Logic -- 3 The Will to Contemplate Thinking: Transition as Entschluss in the 1832 Logic -- 4 Intermezzo: A Short Excursus to the Encyclopaedia Logic and Hegel's Lectures on Logic and Metaphysics -- 5 Two Models for Prefacing the Absolute: Prologues of Negativity -- 6 Conclusive Remarks: A Philosophy of Prefaces -- Bibliography -- Chapter 20: Nothing [Christoph Asmuth -- Translator: Niels Feuerhahn] -- 1 From Being to Nothing -- 2 From Nothing to Nothing -- References -- Chapter 21: Hegel's "Negation Driven to the Limit" - Reality and Ideality of Finitude [Anne Becker -- Translator: Niels Feuerhahn] -- 1 The Beginning of the Logic of Existence -- 2 The Reality of Finitude -- 3 Excursus: Kant -- 3.1 Back to Hegel -- 4 The Ideality of Finitude -- References -- Chapter 22: Negation, Contradiction, and Hegel's Emancipation of Truth, Right, and Beauty -- 1 Confronting Aristotle on Negation and Contradiction -- 2 The Principle of Contradiction and the Exclusion of Negation from Being -- 3 Negation and Contrastive Determinacy -- 4 The Limits of Determination by Negation -- 5 Negation and Contradiction in the Logic of Determined Determinacy -- 6 The Insufficiency of Sufficient Reason -- 7 The Principle of Contradiction and the Self-Elimination of Determined Determinacy.8 Negation, Contradiction, and Self-Determined Determinacy -- 9 Self-Determination in Right and Beauty -- References -- Chapter 23: Hegel's Logic of Negation -- 1 Skepticism, a Scientific Method, and A Presuppositionless Start: How Negation Emerges from Nothing in the Science of Logic -- 2 Toward a Definition of Negation -- 3 The "Absolute Method" and Sublation of "Absolute Negation": Conclusion of the Logic -- References -- Chapter 24: Discovery through Negation: Hegel's Path in the Phenomenology of Spirit -- 1 Premise -- 2 Negativity of and Through the Subject -- 3 The Dynamics of Negation in the Becoming -- 4 The Meaning of the True and the Relevance of the Wrong -- 5 Negation in the Different Spheres -- 6 Is the Phenomenology a Work of Pure Negativity? -- 7 Negation and the Emergence of Logical Categories -- 8 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 25: Negative Sublimity: Hegel's Description of Jewish Religion -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Hegel's Theory of Symbols -- 3 Positive Sublimity or Pantheism -- 4 The Art of the Sublimity -- 5 The Religion of the Sublimity -- 6 Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 26: From Nichts to Etwas: Transcendental Method and Negation in Hermann Cohen's Idealism -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Transcendental Method and Differential Calculus -- 3 From the Critique of Knowledge to the Logic of Pure Knowledge -- 4 Conclusions -- References -- Chapter 27: Concrete Negation: The Dialectic of Culture's Self-Destruction in Cassirer and Adorno -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Cassirer and the Dialectic of Mythical Consciousness -- 3 Adorno and the Negative Dialectic of Culture and Barbarism -- 4 Instead of a Conclusion -- References -- Chapter 28: Negativity in Cassirer: On the Scope and Limits of a Hegelian Reading of The Philosophy of the Symbolic Forms -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Negativity in Hegel.3 Cassirer's Critique of Hegel in The Problem of Knowledge.Negation (Logic)Negativity (Philosophy)Negation (Logic)Negativity (Philosophy)160Moss Gregory S.MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQ9910629293803321The Being of Negation in Post-Kantian Philosophy2968227UNINA