Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W1967391403> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 74 of
74
with 100 items per page.
- W1967391403 abstract "OHANN GEORG HAMANN (1730-1788) was a layman in both religion and philosophy. He held no ecclesiastical or university post but made his living as a clerk and minor official in the East Prussian bureaucracy of Frederick the Great. This gave him enough time to pursue his real vocation in his books always short essays and in his letters usually long, rambling commentaries which enabled him to play his irascible part in a dialogue with his age. He influenced only a few major figures among his contemporaries, notably Johann Gottfried Herder and possibly Goethe. His criticisms of Kant's pure reason and of Lessing's and Mendelssohn's philosophies of history had no effect on the eighteenth century. A number of theologians of more recent times have acknowledged their debt to Hamann; and Hegel, Wilhelm Dilthey, and Benedetto Croce were intrigued by his thought. There are those who argue for a major influence on Kierkegaard as well as some influence on Schleiermacher, Schelling, and Nietzsche. Kierkegaard was fascinated by Hamann's engagement, subsequently broken, to Katharina Berens and his common-law, marriage of conscience relationship to Anna Regina Schumacher, the mother of his four children. In the twentieth century he is often mentioned as an existentialist, although the variety of Hamann's interests he commented on every subject except the more abstract sciences makes it difficult to classify him. In religion he stresses the incarnation of a God who meets man on his own terms as a historical, flesh-and-blood, sexual being; in philosophy he originates a fresh, provocative linguistic critique of philosophy; in history he develops a new concept of reason as historical; in politics he becomes a critic of the Leviathan state; in esthetics he challenges eighteenth century criteria for literary cogency. The nineteenth century, which in the United States came to an end after World War II, had difficulty understanding Hamann, particularly his sexual writings. Many of his most offensive comments were simply omitted from nineteenth-century editions of his works and letters, and, of the two of his writings specifically devoted to sex,' one was not printed until the twentieth" @default.
- W1967391403 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W1967391403 creator A5059242553 @default.
- W1967391403 date "1969-01-01" @default.
- W1967391403 modified "2023-09-25" @default.
- W1967391403 title "Sex in the Philosophy of Hamann" @default.
- W1967391403 doi "https://doi.org/10.1093/jaarel/xxxvii.4.331" @default.
- W1967391403 hasPublicationYear "1969" @default.
- W1967391403 type Work @default.
- W1967391403 sameAs 1967391403 @default.
- W1967391403 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W1967391403 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W1967391403 hasAuthorship W1967391403A5059242553 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C10180917 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C111472728 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C11171543 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C124952713 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C127882523 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C136197465 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C142362112 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C154945302 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C15744967 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C161191863 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C24667770 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C27206212 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C2777855551 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C2780446828 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C32506930 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConcept C41008148 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C10180917 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C111472728 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C11171543 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C124952713 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C127882523 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C136197465 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C138885662 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C142362112 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C154945302 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C15744967 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C161191863 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C24667770 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C27206212 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C2777855551 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C2780446828 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C32506930 @default.
- W1967391403 hasConceptScore W1967391403C41008148 @default.
- W1967391403 hasLocation W19673914031 @default.
- W1967391403 hasOpenAccess W1967391403 @default.
- W1967391403 hasPrimaryLocation W19673914031 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W14404793 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W1996721470 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2010952974 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2017238407 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2037612002 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2076182166 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W207655016 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2105568056 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2152470313 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2159149312 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2230286750 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2273900028 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2277379389 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2473948319 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2489041356 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W3142835211 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W3149977317 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W654779242 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W847539332 @default.
- W1967391403 hasRelatedWork W2098271662 @default.
- W1967391403 isParatext "false" @default.
- W1967391403 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W1967391403 magId "1967391403" @default.
- W1967391403 workType "article" @default.