Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Summary. At noon on Sunday, 13 December 1807, Johann Gottlieb Fichte stood before an expectant audience in the amphitheatre of the Berlin Academy of Sciences and began the first of a series of fourteen weekly lectures known as the Addresses to the German Nation. A year before, Prussia, the last German state left standing against Napoleon, had ...

  2. In the winter of 1807, while Berlin was occupied by French troops, the philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte presented fourteen public lectures that have long been studied as a major statement of modern nationalism. Yet Fichte's Addresses to the German Nation have also been interpreted by many as a vision of a cosmopolitan alternative to nationalism. This new edition of the Addresses is designed ...

  3. 5 de jun. de 2012 · Fichte: Addresses to the German Nation - January 2009. The following addresses were delivered as a series of lectures in Berlin during the winter of 1807–8 and are a continuation of my Characteristics of the Present Age, which I presented during the winter of 1804–5 in the same location (and which were printed by this publisher in 1806).

  4. It is a widely held view among the commentators of Fichte’s social and political writings that his Addresses to the German Nation (1807–8) indicate a significant shift in that body of work. This shift is said to apply mainly to the way Fichte conceived of the foundations of social order.

  5. 978-0-521-44873-4 - Fichte: Addresses to the German Nation Excerpt. Cambridge University Press 978-0-521-44873-4 - Fichte: Addresses to the German Nation Excerpt.

  6. 7 de nov. de 2017 · Addresses to the German Nation (German: Reden an die deutsche Nation, 1808) is a political literature book by German philosopher Johann Gottlieb Fichte that advocates German nationalism in reaction to the occupation and subjugation of German territories by Napoleon's French Empire.

    • Paperback
    • Johann Gottlieb Fichte
  7. This is the first translation of Fichte's addresses to the German nation for almost 100 years. The series of 14 speeches, delivered whilst Berlin was under French occupation after Prussia's disastrous defeat at the Battle of Jena in 1806, is widely regarded as a founding document of German nationalism, celebrated and reviled in equal measure.