03776nam 2200481Ia 450 991081024660332120230721010408.01-4411-4730-6(CKB)2550000000045912(EBL)436533(MiAaPQ)EBC436533(Au-PeEL)EBL436533(CaPaEBR)ebr10495249(CaONFJC)MIL129469(OCoLC)893334223(EXLCZ)99255000000004591220090311e20082006 uy 0engur|n|---|||||Philosophies of nature after Schelling[electronic resource] /Iain Hamilton GrantLondon Continuum20081 online resource (247 p.)Transversals : new directions in philosophyOriginally published: 2006.1-84706-432-9 Includes bibliographical references and index.Contents; Preface to the Paperback Edition; Preface; Acknowledgments; 1 Why Schelling? Why Naturephilosophy?; 1.1 Postkantian naturephilosophy; 1.2 The nature of postkantianism; 1.3 The history of philosophy as the comparative extensity of philosophical systems; 2 The Powers Due to Becoming: The Reemergence of Platonic Physics in the Genetic Philosophy; 2.1 Essences and appearances: The dephysicalization of great physics; 2.1.1 The physics of the All and the physics of all things; 2.1.2 Matter, body and substance; 2.1.3 Kosmos noetos2.2 The becoming of Being: 'Gene' and dynamics in Platonic physics2.3 Natural history; 3 Antiphysics and Neo-Fichteanism; 3.1 Late transcendental physics and philosophy: Kant and somatism; 3.1.1 The genetics of transcendentalism; 3.1.2 Transcendental philosophy as relative antiphysics; 3.1.3 Megabodies and superstrata; 3.2 Metaphysics as antiphysics: Fichteanism and the number of worlds; 3.3 Organics as antiphysics: Fichte contra Oken; 3.3.1 Oken's generative history: Mathematics and the animal; 3.3.2 Naturephilosophy without nature: Fichte's 'essence of animals'3.4 Antiphysics and the grounds of science4 The Natural History of the Unthinged; 4.1 'The earliest programme of German comparative zoology'; 4.1.1 The natural history of transcendental anatomy; 4.1.2 Physics and the animal kingdom; 4.1.3 Linear and non-linear usages of the theory of recapitulation; 4.2 The factors of parallelism: The dynamic succession of stages in nature; 5 'What thinks in me is what is outside me': Phenomenality, Physics, and the Idea; 5.1 The subject of nature itself; 5.2 The decomposition of intelligence; 6 Dynamic Philosophy, Transcendental Physics7 Conclusion: Transcendental GeologyBibliography; Index; A; B; C; D; E; F; G; H; I; J; K; L; M; N; O; P; Q; R; S; T; U; V; W''The whole of modern European philosophy'', wrote F.W.J. Schelling in 1809, ''has this common deficiency - that nature does not exist for it.'' Despite repeated echoes of Schelling''s assessment throughout the natural sciences, and despite the philosophy of nature recently proposed but not completed by Gilles Deleuze, Philosophies of Nature After Schelling argues that Schelling''s verdict remains accurate two hundred years later. Presenting a lucid account of Schelling''s major works in the philosophy of nature alongside those of his scientific contemporaries who pursued and furthered that wTransversals.Philosophy of natureHistoryPhilosophy of natureHistory.113.09/034Grant Iain Hamilton1158370MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910810246603321Philosophies of nature after Schelling4062552UNINA