
| In this book Jane Kneller focuses on the role of imagination as a creative power in Kant's aesthetics and in his overall philosophical enterprise. Her book will be of interest to a wide range of readers in both Kant studies and German philosophy of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. |
| Jane Kneller is Chair of the Department of Philosophy, Colorado State University. She is editor and translator of Novalis: Fichte Studies (2003) in the Cambridge Texts in the History of Philosophy series. |
| Preface and acknowledgments Introduction 1 Kant and Romanticism 2 The power of imaginative freedom 3 The interests of disinterest 4 Aesthetic reflection and the primacy of the practical 5 The failure of Kant’s imagination 6 Imaginative reflections of the self in Novalis and Hölderlin 7 Novalis' Kantianism and Kant’s Romanticism Bibliography Index |
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