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Daniel Wenz

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    3
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Areas of Interest
Philosophy of Language
Continental Philosophy
  • All publications (3)
  •  10
    Index of Names
    with Manja Kisner, Jörg Noller, Sorin Baiasu, Markus Kohl, Halla Kim, Günter Zöller, John Walsh, Amit Kravitz, Tom Giesbers, Ansgar Lyssy, Alex Englander, and Jenny Bunker
    In Manja Kisner & Jörg Noller (eds.), The Concept of Will in Classical German Philosophy: Between Ethics, Politics, and Metaphysics, De Gruyter. pp. 263-264. 2020.
  •  8
    Notes on Contributors
    with Manja Kisner, Jörg Noller, Sorin Baiasu, Markus Kohl, Halla Kim, Günter Zöller, John Walsh, Amit Kravitz, Tom Giesbers, Ansgar Lyssy, Alex Englander, and Jenny Bunker
    In Manja Kisner & Jörg Noller (eds.), The Concept of Will in Classical German Philosophy: Between Ethics, Politics, and Metaphysics, De Gruyter. pp. 269-272. 2020.
  •  45
    System und Systemkritik – Witz und Ironie als philosophische Methode beim frühen Friedrich Schlegel
    with Martin Sticker
    Philosophisches Jahrbuch 120 (1): 64-81. 2013.
    The conceptions of wit and irony of the early Friedrich Schlegel together constitute a philosophically ambitious form of early-romantic dialectic. This dialectic was directed especially against the closed philosophical system of Fichte, and tries to show a third way between the abandonment of a system and a closed system. The result is an open system, which can accommodate historical change and an infinite approach to the absolute. The article discusses the origin of this third way in romantic i…Read more
    The conceptions of wit and irony of the early Friedrich Schlegel together constitute a philosophically ambitious form of early-romantic dialectic. This dialectic was directed especially against the closed philosophical system of Fichte, and tries to show a third way between the abandonment of a system and a closed system. The result is an open system, which can accommodate historical change and an infinite approach to the absolute. The article discusses the origin of this third way in romantic irony, and Schlegel’s critique of Fichte, as well as the role poetry and the fragment as a form of philosophical discourse plays for Schlegel’s dialectic.
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