Rights, Bodies and Recognition: New Essays on Fichte's Foundations of Natural Right

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Daniel Breazeale, Tom Rockmore
Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 2006 - Philosophy - 255 pages
The German philosopher, Johann Gottlieb Fichte (1762 - 1814), has long been recognized as an important and original figure in the history of philosophy and Western thought and as a seminal influence upon the Romantic tradition. The essays in this book focus on Fichte's contributions in political theory as set out in his Foundations of Natural Right. Fichte was notorious as a political radical and his ideas in political theory proved to be decisive influences upon his contemporaries and of striking relevance to current political dispute. This volume of essays, which examine such issues as Fichte as a social contract theorist, his theory of gender relations, and his theories on punishment and the criminal law among many other topics, remedies what has been a striking lacuna in the existing scholarly literature.
 

Contents

The Conspiracy Theory of Society
13
Of Conspiracy Theories
45
Living with the Conspiracy
61
Conspiracy Theories and Conspiracy Theorizing
77
Malevolent Global Conspiracy
93
Nobody Expects the Spanish Inquisition More Thoughts
107
Was it All
129
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