Jewish Philosophical Politics in Germany, 1789-1848
Notes to Chapter 2 { 29 5 Ucko interprets Moser’s remark as expressing a more modest ambition: “The expression merely sounds ove ...
296 } Notes to Chapter 2 which can be seen to be more or less true to life; its purpose is to provide insight. The only way to a ...
Notes to Chapter 2 { 29 7 edition of the winter 1825 – 26 lectures. It is thus impossible to know from published sources whether ...
298 } Notes to Chapter 2 In PR § 270 , Hegel states that religion is a foundation for the state only insofar as religion has tr ...
Notes to Chapter 2 { 299 and rigid theological doctrine: “As [Hegel’s lectures on the philosophy of history] make perfectly clea ...
300 } Notes to Chapter 2 Ibid., 1 : 88. Friedrich Schleiermacher, Der christliche Glaube 1821 / 22 , 1 : 31. Ibid., 1 : 89. The ...
Notes to Chapter 3 { 301 view of religion against Schleiermacher when he says “precisely to the extent that the reli- gious rela ...
302 } Notes to Chapter 3 Judaism expressed in the 1821 Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion and, mutatis mutandis, in Hegel’s ...
Notes to Chapter 3 { 303 217 ). Ze’ev Levy (Baruch Spinoza, 82 – 83 ) notes this borrowing (and that Friedrich Kuntze already un ...
304 } Notes to Chapter 3 manent substantiality and freedom and renders it essentially passive. In contrast to Spinoza, who could ...
Notes to Chapter 3 { 305 suggest (ibid.) Heine might have in mind seems plausible. Thus, if Heine is remembering a comment by He ...
306 } Notes to Chapter 3 academic appointments was brought about as an immediate consequence of the sheer obsti- nacy (ertrozt w ...
Notes to Chapter 3 { 307 stood as spiritually undifferentiated, seems hasty (“Altertumswissenschaft und Wissenschaft des Judentu ...
308 } Notes to Chapter 3 Gans actually faults the perpetual depravity of the race or line [des Geschlechtes jederzeitige Verderb ...
Notes to Chapter 3 { 3 09 Ibid Ibid. Ibid. Gans would have derived this view from the last section of Hegel’s Philosophy of Rig ...
310 } Notes to Chapter 3 Reisebilder are, therefore, acts of freedom, defiant and decidedly political acts creating cracks for t ...
Notes to Chapter 3 { 3 11 turn Gans slightly against Hegel by detecting a subversive quality in Gans’s use of “Europe” in place ...
312 } Notes to Chapter 3 but also and ultimately to know itself in its noninstrumental essence (VPW, 16 – 17 ). The dia- lectic ...
Notes to Chapter 3 { 313 but quickly saw become more treacherous. The philosopher’s characterization of the rela- tionship betwe ...
314 } Notes to Chapter 3 illuminates the culture clash that ensued when the Berlin Verein tried, via Wohlwill, to send, in Brieg ...
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