The Philosophy Book

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In the Romantic period, European
literature, painting, and music
became preoccupied with an
idealized view of nature, in marked
contrast to the sophisticated urban
elegance of the Enlightenment.
Perhaps the key difference was the
way in which the Romantics valued
feeling and intuition above reason.
The movement took hold throughout
Europe, continuing until the end of
the 19th century.

German Idealism
German philosophy came to
dominate the 19th century, largely
due to the work of Immanuel Kant.
His idealist philosophy, which
claimed that we can never know
anything about things that exist
beyond our selves, radically altered
the course of philosophical thought.
Although only a few years younger

than Hume and Rousseau, Kant
belonged to the next generation:
his major philosophical works were
written after their deaths, and his
new explanation of the universe
and our knowledge of it managed
to integrate the approaches of
rationalism and empiricism in a way
more suited both to Romanticism
and to Germanic culture.
Kant’s followers included Fichte,
Schelling, and Hegel, who together
became known as the German
Idealists, but also Schopenhauer,
whose idiosyncratic interpretation
of Kant’s philosophy incorporated
ideas from Eastern philosophy.
Among the followers of Hegel’s
rigid Idealism was Karl Marx, who
brilliantly brought together German
philosophical methods, French
revolutionary political philosophy,
and British economic theory. After

writing the Communist Manifesto
with Friedrich Engels, he wrote Das
Kapital, arguably one of the most
influential philosophical works of all
time. Within decades of his death,
countries across the world had set
up revolutionary states on the
principles that he had proposed.
Meanwhile in the US, which
had overthrown British colonial rule
and established a republic based
on Enlightenment values, an
American culture independent
of its European roots began to
develop. At first Romantic, by the
end of the 19th century it had
produced a homegrown strand
of philosophy, pragmatism, which
examines the nature of truth.
This was in keeping with the
country’s democratic roots and
well suited to the culture of
the new century. ■

THE AGE OF REVOLUTION


1802


1807 1890


1843– 46 188OS


1848


1859


1861


Søren Kierkegaard
writes Either/Or and
Fear and Trembling.

European powers
begin large-scale
colonization of the
African continent.

Karl Marx publishes his
Communist Manifesto.
Revolutionary movements
sweep across Europe.

Charles Darwin
publishes the Origin of
Species, explaining his
theory of evolution.

Georg Hegel publishes
Phenomenology of Spirit.

The leading
pragmatist
William James
publishes The
Principles of
Psychology.

Napoleon
Bonaparte
proclaims himself
Emperor of France.


John Stuart Mill
publishes
Utilitarianism.
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