This is the first book in English to elucidate the central issues in the work of Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762–1814), a figure crucial to the movement of philosophy from Kant to German idealism. The book explains Fichte's notion of subjectivity and how his particular view developed out of Kant's accounts of theoretical and practical reason. Fichte argued that the subject has a self-positing structure which distinguishes it from a thing or an object. Thus, the subject must be understood as an activity rather than a thing and is self-constituting in a way that an object is not. In the final chapter, Professor Neuhouser considers how this doctrine of the self-positing subject enables us to understand the possibility of the self's autonomy, or self-determination.
ISBN: | 9780521399388 |
Publication date: | 26th October 1990 |
Author: | Frederick Harvard University, Massachusetts Neuhouser |
Publisher: | Cambridge University Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 192 pages |
Series: | Modern European Philosophy |
Genres: |
History of ideas |