Historiographies of Philosophy 1800–1950
- 248 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
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Historiographies of Philosophy 1800–1950
About This Book
This volume discusses ways in which the history of philosophy has been written, from 1800 to 1950, and how it has been informed and guided by institutional, cultural, political, philosophical, and non-philosophical factors.
Since its inception as a discipline, histories of philosophy have been written in different ways, depending on author, place, and time; they have varied according to institutional frameworks, cultural settings, and philosophical and non-philosophical contexts. At each stage of the discipline's development and evolution, philosophy has constantly used the history of philosophy for its own purposes by adapting it, transforming it, rejecting it, embracing it, and rewriting it at every step of the way. The chapters in this book examine the methods deployed by historians of philosophy, epistemological foundations laid down for those methods, and the philosophical (or non-philosophical) aims pursued using those methods.
This book will be a great resource for academics, researchers, and advanced students of philosophy and related fields, including political philosophy and history of philosophy. It was originally published as a special issue of the British Journal for the History of Philosophy.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Citation Information
- Notes on Contributors
- Introduction: Historiographies of philosophy 1800–1950
- 1 From a ‘memorable place’ to ‘drops in the ocean’: on the marginalization of women philosophers in German historiography of philosophy
- 2 Making history philosophical: Kant, Maimon, and the evolution of the historiography of philosophy in the critical period
- 3 The interpretation of Locke’s Two Treatises in Britain, 1778–1956
- 4 Hegel and the history of idealism
- 5 Impure temporalities in the history of political philosophy: the historiography of dēmokratia in late eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Britain
- 6 Philosophizing with a historiographical figure: Descartes in Degérando’s Histoire comparée des systèmes de philosophie (1804 and 1847)
- 7 Grote’s analysis of Ancient Greek political thought: its significance to J. S. Mill’s idea about ‘active character’ in a liberal democracy
- 8 “All history is the history of thought”: competing British idealist historiographies
- 9 Two dogmas of analytic historiography
- 10 Husserl on Hume
- 11 Cassirer’s enlightenment: on philosophy and the ‘Denkform’ of reason
- 12 French historiographical Spinozism, 1893–2018. Delbos, Gueroult, Vernière, Moreau
- Index