FICHTEANA

An Occasional Newsletter of the North American Fichte Society

No. 2, June 1994

A LETTER FROM THE EDITOR AND (DESKTOP) PUBLISHER

Dear friends and colleagues,

This second number of Fichteana continues the project inaugurated last November with no. 1. In addition to a second (and last) call for papers for next spring's third biennial meeting of the North American Fichte Society, this issue also contains information concerning other Fichte societies and conferences, as well as information on new and recent publications and an update of the recently published bibliography of English translations of Fichte's works and of writings about Fichte in English. Suggestions, corrections, comments, and criticism are welcome.

    Daniel Breazeale
Editor and (Desktop) Publisher
Department of Philosophy
University of Kentucky
Lexington, KY 40506 USA
  email: breazeal@uky.edu
telephone: 859 257 4376
fax: 859 257 3286

THE NORTH AMERICAN FICHTE SOCIETY

The North American Fichte Society was founded in 1991 by Daniel Breazeale and Tom Rockmore, who continue to serve as Co-Positers of the Society. To date, the activity of the North American Fichte Society has been limited to sponsoring biennial conferences on Fichte's philosophy. The first such conference was held in the spring of 1991 on the campus of Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, and the second was held in the spring of 1993 on the campus of the University of Denver. The next conference will be held in the spring of 1995 at the Historic Shaker Village of Pleasant Hill, near Harodsburg, Kentucky (see below).

The fourth biennial meeting of the North American Fichte Society will take place in the spring of 1997 at a time and place to be announced. Suggestions and invitations concerning the site of this fourth conference are hereby solicited.

Selected proceedings of past and future meetings of the North American Fichte Society have been and will continue to be published by Humanities Press. The selected proceedings of the Duquesne conference finally appeared this spring (see below) and the selected proceedings of the Denver conference are currently being edited for publication. The latter will appear in 1995, under the title New Perspectives on Fichte, ed. Rockmore and Breazeale.

There are no dues or special membership requirements for the North American Fichte Society, and anyone with an interest in any aspect of the philosophy of J. G. Fichte is welcome to join. In order to have your name added to the mailing list (which currently has approximately 130 addresses), simply send a note to the editor.

THE INTERNATIONAL FICHTE SOCIETY

The Internationale Johann-Gottlieb-Fichte-Gesellschaft was founded in December of 1987 in the Federal Republic of Germany "in partnership with the Japanese Fichte Society." The Society has approximately 200 members from Germany and abroad. The current board of directors consists of Professors Wolfgang Schrader (president), Helmut Girndt, and Edith Düsing. The Internationale Fichte- Gesellschaft sponsors meetings and conferences in Germany and other European countries. Some of these meetings are limited to invited participants and others (e.g., the upcoming Jena conference, see below) are open to anyone. In addition, the Internationale Fichte-Gesellschaft publishes the journal Fichte-Studien, plus a newly inaugurated series of supplemental monographs (Fichte-Studien, Supplementa).

For membership information contact Prof. Helmut Girndt, Dorfstraße 9, 4000 Düsseldorf 12, Federal Republic of Germany.

THE JAPANESE FICHTE SOCIETY

Correction: Prof. Nagasawa has informed the editor that the actual enrollment of the Japanese Fichte Society is 150 rather than 450 (as reported in issue no. 1).

FICHTE-STUDIEN

Fichte-Studien. Beiträge zur Geschichte und Systematik der Transzendentalphilosphie is an irregularly appearing publication sponsored by the Internationale Fichte-Gesellschaft and currently edited by Professors Klaus Hammacher and Wolgang H. Schrader. To date, there have been five issues of Fichte-Studien, beginning with vol. 1 (1990). Vol. 6 is scheduled to appear soon and will be described in the next issue of Fichteana.

For individual and institutional subscriptions, write to Editions Rodopi, 233 Peachtree Street, N.E. Suite 404, Atlanta, GA 30303-1504.

RECENT AND ANNOUNCED PUBLICATIONS

Part I: Text Editions

J. G. Fichte, Gesamtausgabe der bayerischen Adademie der Wissenschaften, Reihe I, Band 9, Werke 1806-807. Ed. Reinhard Lauth und Hans Gliwitzky, unter Mitwerkung von Josef Beeler, Erich Fuchs, Ives Radrizzani, Marco Ivaldo, und Peter K. Schneider. Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt: Frommann-Holzboog [announced for publication in early 1995]. ca. 320 pp. Cloth, 457 DM.

Announced contents include: "Anwiesung zum seligen Leben," "Ueber Machiavelli," and a translation from Dante.

J. G. Fichte, Gesamtausgabe der bayerischen Adademie der Wissenschaften, Reihe II, Band 10, Nachgelassene Schriften 1806-1807. Ed. Reinhard Lauth und Hans Gliwitzky, unter Mitwerkung von Josef Beeler, Erich Fuchs, Marco Ivaldo, und Peter K. Schneider. Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt: Frommann-Holzboog [announced for publication in the fall of 1994]. ca. 450 pp. Cloth, 457 DM.

Announced contents include: The "Königsberg Wissenschaftslehre" (1807); Fichte's diary from this period; and "Bericht über die bisherigen Schichsale der Wissenschaftslehre, worin die Abfertigung Schellings."

Part II: English Translations

Fichte -- Introductions to the Wissenschaftslehre and Other Writings. Ed. and trans. Daniel Breazeale. Indianapolis, IN: Hackett Publishing Co., 1994. xlx + 213 pp. Cloth, ISBN: 0-87220-240-2, $32.50; Paper, ISBN: 0-87220-239-9, $12.50. [Publication delayed until July 1994.]

Contents: Editor's Introduction, German/English Glossary, and Bibliography, plus English translations of the following: I. An Attempt at a New Presentation of the Wissenschaftslehre (1797/98) [First and Second Introductions to the Wissenschaftslehre, plus Ch. I of An Attempt at a New Presentation]; II. "Review of the Journal for Truth" (1797); III. "Note to 'Fichte and Kant, or an Attempted Comparison between the Fichtean and the Kantian Philosophy'" (1798); IV. "Postscript to the Preceding Article and Preface to the Following One" (1798); V. "The Basis of Our Belief in a Divine Governance of the World" (1798); VI. "From a Private Letter" (1800); VII. "Concluding Remark by the Editor" (1800); VIII. "Public Announcement of a New Presentation of the Wissenschaftslehre" (1800).

Part III: Documents

J. G. Fichte in zeitgenössischen Rezensionen. Ed. Erich Fuchs, with Wilhelm G. Jacobs and Walter Schieche. 5 vols. ca. 1800 pp. (Specula 2,1-2,5.) Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt: Frommann-Holzboog [announced for summer of 1994]. Cloth, ISBN: 3-7728-1489-1, DM 200 per volume.

Hinske, Norbert, Erhard Lange, and Horst Schröpfer, editors. Der Frühkantianismus an der Universität Jena 1785-1800 und seine Vorgeschichte. Stuttgart-Bad Cannstatt: Frommann-Holzboog [announced for publication in the fall of 1994]. ca. 250 pp. and 100 plates. Cloth, 84 DM.

Part IV: Bibliographies

Doyé, Sabine, ed. J. G. Fichte-Bibliographie (1969-1991). Amsterdam and Atlanta, GA: Editions Rodopi, 1993 [actually published in the spring of 1994]. viii + 383 pp. Cloth, ISBN: 90-5183-443-8, Hfl 180 / US $ 105.50. [A major supplement to the Baumgartner/Jacobs J. G. Fichte -- Bibliographie published in 1968.]

Part V: Collections of Papers and Special Issues of
Journals and Yearbooks

Fichte: Historical Contexts/Contemporary Controversies. Ed. Daniel Breazeale and Tom Rockmore. Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities Press, 1994. vi + 217 pp. Cloth, ISBN: 0-391-03817-6, $55.00.

Contents: Tom Rockmore, "Introduction"; Rudolf A. Makkreel, "Fichte's Dialectical Imagination"; Thomas M. Seebohm, "Fichte's Discovery of the Dialectical Method"; Daniel Breazeale, "Circles and Grounds in the Jena Wissenschaftslehre"; Alain Perrinjaquet, "Some Remarks Concerning the Circularity of Philosophy and the Evidence of Its First Principle in the Jena Wissenschaftslehre"; Tom Rockmore, "Antifoundationalism, Circularity, and the Spirit of Fichte"; Jere Paul Surber, "The Historical and Systematic Place of Fichte's Reflections on Language"; Anthony N. Perovich, Jr., "Fichte and the Typology of Mysticism"; Robert R. Williams, "The Question of the Other in Fichte's Thought"; Frederick Neuhouser, "Fichte and the Relationship between Right and Morality"; Jean Grondin, "Leibniz and Fichte"; Michael G. Vater, "The Wissenschaftslehre of 1801-1802"; Wilhelm S. Wurzer, "Fichte's Parergonal Visibility"; Klaus Brinkmann, "Tugendhat on Fichte and Self- Consciousness"; Daniel Breazeale, "Bibliography."

Fichte-Kenkyu [Japanese Fichte-Studies], vol. 1 (1993), 150 pp. This is the first issue of this beautifully produced new journal published by the Japanese Fichte Society and edited by Prof. Kunihiko Nagasawa. Except for Prof. Janke's paper, all of the contributions are in Japanese, though a brief German summary of each paper is also provided.

Contents: Jiro Watanabe, "Light and Life in the Wissenschaftslehre of 1804"; Wolfgang Janke, "''Ich bin -- Ich:': thetisches Urteil oder spekulativer Satz, Fichte oder Hegel?"; Helmut Girndt, Akira Omine, and Kunihiko Nagasawa, "An Exchange on Fichte Research in Japan and Germany"; Noriko Abe, "The ''Thereness of Existence' [Das 'Da des Seins'] in the Philosophy of Fichte"; Hiroshi Kimura, "Fichte's and Reinhold's Philosophy of Language"; Mitsuru Shimizu, "The Poetic I: Fichte and Hölderlin"; Kazuo Sekiguchi, "Fichte's Intuition of Man, 1792- 1798"; Toshio Nenohi, "The Problem of Positing Being in the Introductory Lectures into the Wissenschaftslehre (1813)"; Kunihiko Nagasawa, "The Fichte Conference in Rammenau"; Kazuo Kudo, "Activity of the Japanese Fichte Society."

For publication information, write Prof. Dr. Kunihiko Nagasawa, Iwakura-nagatanicho 622-78, Sakyoku, 606 Kyoto, Japan.

Part VI. Update of English-Language Fichte Bibliography

The following should be considered a second addition (following the "Update" in the first issue of Fichteana) to the (more or less) complete English-Language Fichte Bibliography contained in Fichte: Historical Contexts/Contemporary Controversies, pp. 235-63. This update includes some newly published items, as well as others that were omitted from the original bibliography. (Please send any information concerning further omissions, as well as concerning new publication to Daniel Breazeale.)

Barzun, Jacques. Classic, Romantic and Modern. Garden City, NY: Doubleday, 1961. [Rev., 2nd ed. of Romanticism and the Modern Ego, 1943.] Re Fichte: pp. 30-35 and 181-82.

Bloch, Ernst. "Kant and Fichte's Natural Law Without Nature: The A Priori Law of Reason." In Bloch, Natural Law and Human Dignity, trans. Dennis J. Schmidt, pp. 66-75. Cambridge, MA and London: MIT Press, 1986 [orig. German ed., 1961].

Bossenbrook, William J. The German Mind. Detroit, Mich: Wayne State University Press, 1961. [Re Fichte: pp. 250-51 and 263-66.]

Bowie, Andrew. "Absolute Beginnings." Ch. I of Bowie, Schelling and Modern European Philosophy: An Introduction, pp. 15-29. London and New York: Routledge, 1994. x + 211 pp. Cloth, ISBN: 0-415-10346-0; Paper, ISBN: 0- 415-10347-9, $16.95.

Breazeale, Daniel. "Philosophy and the Divided Self: On the 'Existential' and 'Scientific' Tasks of the Jena Wissenschaftslehre," Fichte-Studien 6 (1994): 1-29.

Breazeale, Daniel. "Fichteans in Rammenau." Idealistic Studies 23 (1993): 97-101.

Buhr, Manfred, "The Greatness and the Limitations of Classical Bourgeois Philosophy." Trans. William Mandel. Soviet Studies in Philosophy, vol. 13, no. 4 (1975): 72-87.

Chansky, James. "The Conscious Body: Schopenhauer's Difference from Fichte in Relation to Kant." International Studies in Philosophy 24 (1992): 25-44.

Chodorowski, Jerzy. "J. G. Fichte -- Precursor of the German Doctrine of 'Large-Area Economy'." Polish Western Affairs (Porznan) 11 (1970): 126-53.

Coates, Willson H. and Hayden V. White. "Foundations of Subjective Idealism: Fichte." In Coates and White, The Emergence of Liberal Humanism, Vol. 2, pp. 87-92. New York et al: McGraw-Hill, 1970.

Duncan, Bruce. "Some Correspondences between Arnim's Majoratsherren and Fichte's Conception of the Ich." Monatshefte für deutschen Unterricht, deutsche Sprache und Literature 68 (1976): 51-59.

Edmondson, Nelson. "The Fichte Society: A Chapter in Germany's Conservative Revolution." Journal of Modern History 38 (1966): 161-80.

Ferry, Luc. "Fichte." In A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution, ed. François Furet and Mona Ozouf; trans. Arthur Goldhammer, pp. 933-37. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press, 1989.

Freydberg, Bernard D. "The Precise Origin of the Fichte-Schiller Conflict." In Akten des Siebenten Internationalen Kant-Kongresses. Furfürstliches Schloß zu Mainz, 1990, ed. G. Funke, vol. 2, pp. 523-33. Bonn: Bouvier, 1991.

Gasché, Rodolphe. The Tain of the Mirror: Derrida and the Philosophy of Reflection. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press, 1986. [Re Fichte: pp. 15-34, 56-59, 68-70, and 139-40.]

Gierke, Otto. Natural Law and the Theory of Society 1500-1800, trans. Ernest Barker. Boston: Beacon Press, 1960 (orig. German ed., 1913 ; English trans. first published by Cambridge University Press, 1934). [Re Fichte: pp. 101-107, 151-2, and 168.]

Gopalakrishnaiah, V. A Comparative Study of the Educational Philosophies of J. G. Fichte and J. H. Newman. Waltair: Andhra University Press, 1973, 78 pp. (Andhra University [India] Series no. 110. Originally presented as the author's M.A. thesis, Andhra University, 1961.)

Hallowell, John H. Main Currents in Modern Political Thought. New York: Henry Holt, 1950. [Re Fichte: pp. 366-69.]

Hambloch, Ernest. Germany Rampant: A Study in Economic Militarism. New York: Carrick & Evans, 1939. [Re Fichte: pp. 25-26, 38-46, and 198-99.]

Harris, H.S. "Fichte's New Wine." Dialogue (Canada) 32 (1993): 129-33.

Herr, Friedrich. Europe, Mother of Revolutions. Trans. Charles Kessler and Jennetta Adcock. New York and Washington: Praeger, 1972 [orig. German ed., 1964]. [Re Fichte: pp. 40-47.]

Kandel, I. L.. "The Making of Nazis." In Educational Yearbook of the International Institute of Teachers College, Columbia University 1934, ed. I. L. Kandel, pp. 415-551. New York: Bureau of Publications, Teachers College, Columbia University, 1934. [Re Fichte: pp. 439-46.]

Kneller, George Frederick. The Educational Philosophy of National Socialism. New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press and Oxford University Press, 1941. [Re Fichte: pp. 82-96.]

Koch, H. W. A History of Prussia. New York: Dorset Press, 1978. [Re Fichte: pp. 172-77.]

Koch-Weser, Erich. "Napoleon I and Fichte." In Koch-Weser, Hitler and Beyond: A German Testament, trans. Olga Marx, pp. 2-6. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1945.

Kohn, Hans. "Johann Gottlieb Fichte." Ch. 31 of Kohn, Prelude to Nation-States: The French and German Experience, 1789-1815, pp. 229-46 and 370-76. Princeton, NJ, Toronto, London, Melbourne: D. Van Nostrand Co., 1967.

Lilge, Frederic. "The Idealist Conception of a University." Ch. 2 of Lilge, The Abuse of Learning: The Failure of the German University, pp. 37-56. New York: Macmillan, 1948.

La Vopa, Anthony J. "Radical Visions: Johann Gottlieb Fichte." Ch. 12 of La Vopa, Grace, Talent and Merit: Poor Students, Clerical Careers, and Professional Ideology in Eighteenth Century Germany, pp. 351-85. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988.

La Vopa, Anthony J. "The Revelatory Moment: Fichte and the French Revolution." Central European History 22 (1989): 130-59.

Lukács, Georg. "Moses Hess and the Problems of Idealist Dialectics" (orig. 1926). In Lukács, Political Writings, 1919-1929. The Question of Parliamentarianism and Other Essays, ed. Rodney Livingston; trans. Michael McColgan, pp. 181-223. London: N.L.B., 1972.

Lukács, Georg. "The New Edition of Lassale's Letters" (orig. 1925). In Lukács, Political Writings, pp. 147-77.

Meinecke, Friedrich. "Fichte." Ch. 14 of Meinecke, Machiavellism: The Doctrine of raison d'etat and its Place in Modern History, trans. Douglas Scott, pp. 370-76. London: Kegan Paul, 1957 (German ed., 1924).

Paret, Peter. "Fichte, Machiavelli, Pestalozzi." Ch. 8, iii of Paret, Clausewitz and the State, pp. 169-208. New York, London, and Toronto: Oxford University Press, 1976. [Re Fichte: pp. 159-60 and 173-82.]

Pfau, Thomas. "Mediated Immediacy: Production, Recognition, and the Affective Grounds of the Self in Fichte." Part 3 of Pfau's "Critical Introduction" to his edition and translation of Idealism and the Endgame of Theory: Three Essays by F. W. J. Schelling, pp. 15-23. Albany: State University of New York Press, 1994. Cloth, ISBN: 0-79014-1701-7; Paper, 0-79114-1709-3, $19.95.

Popper, Karl. The Open Society and Its Enemies, 4th, rev. ed.. New York: Harper & Row, 1963 (1st ed., 1945; 4th ed., orig. pub. 1962). Vol. 2, pp. 53-55, 70-71, and 313.

Rader, Melvin. No Compromise. The Conflict Between Two Worlds. New York: Macmillan, 1939. [Re Fichte: pp. 228-30, 233-34, and 256-59.]

Riobó Gonzáles, Manuel. "The Current of Living in the Existential-I-Subject according to the Philosophy of J. G. Fichte." Trans. Nina L. Molinaro. Analecta Husserliana 29 (1990): 37-48.

Riobó Gonzáles, Manuel. "Phenomenological Convergences Between Fichte and Husserl." Analecta Husserliana 36 (1991): 269-81.

Rocker, Rudolf. Nationalism and Culture. Trans. Ray E. Chase. Los Angeles, CA: Rocker Publications Committee, 1937. [Re Fichte: pp. 187-92.]

Rockmore, Tom. "Fichte, Lask, and Lukács's Hegelian Marxism." Journal of the History of Philosophy 30 (1992): 557-77.

Roman, Eric. "Will, Hope, and the Noumenon." Journal of Philosophy 72 (1975): 59-76.

Rosen, Stanley. "Freedom and Spontaneity in Fichte." Ch. 4 of Rosen, The Ancients and the Moderns. Rethinking Modernity,, pp. 65-82. New Haven, CT and London: Yale University Press, 1989. (A rev. version of the paper by the same name orig. published in Philosophical Forum 19 [1987-88]: 140-55.)

Russell, Bertrand. Freedom versus Organization 1814-1914. London: Norton, 1934. [Re Fichte: pp. 356-61.]

Sluga, Hans. "Fichte, Nietzsche, and the Nazis." Ch. 2 of Heidegger's Crisis, pp. 29-52. Cambridge, MA and London: Harvard University Press, 1993. Cloth, ISBN: 0-674-38711-2.

Stirk, S. D. "Kleist and Fichte in Nazi Dress." Ch. XI, sect. i of Stirk's The Prussian Spirit: A Survey of German Literature and Politics 1914-1940, pp. 165-73. London: Faber and Faber, 1941.

Thompson, Martyn P. "Ideas of Europe during the French Revolution and Napoleonic Wars." Journal of the History of Ideas 55 (1994): 37-58. [Re Fichte: pp. 56-57.]

Valalas, Theresa Pentzopoulou. "Phenomenology and Teleology: Husserl and Fichte." In Analecta Husserliana 34 (1991): 409-26.

Verweyen, Hans J. "Recent Studies on German Idealism." Philosophy and Theory 8 (1975): 33-47. [Re Fichte: pp. 33-38.]

Wallace, William. "Relations of Fichte and Hegel to Socialism." Pt. II, ch. 8 of Wallace, Lectures and Essays on Natural Theology and Ethics, ed. Edward Caird, pp. 427-47. Oxford: The Clarendon Press, 1898.

Part VII: Other Recently Published Books and Articles on
Fichte and Related Topics

Cesa, Claudio. "La première réception de Fichte et de Schelling en Italie (1804-1862)." Revue de métaphysique et de Morale 99 (1994): 9-17.

Erhard, J. B. Du droit du people à faire la revolution et autres ecrits de philosophie politique (1793-1795). Suivi de deux études par S. Colbois et H.G. Haasis. Trans. J. Berger and A. Perrinjaquet. Intro. by A. Perrinjaquet. Notes by S. Colbois and A. Perrinjaquet. Lausanne: Editions l'Age d'Homme, 1993. 396 pp.

Janke, Wolfgang. Entgegensetzungen: Studien zu Fichte-Konfrontationen von Rousseau bis Kierkegaard. (Fichte Studien -- Supplementa 4.) Amsterdam and Atlanta, GA: Rodopi: 1994. 205 pp. Paper, ISBN: 90-5183-6223-6, $27.

Contents: "Zurück zur Natur? Fichtes Umwendung des Rousseauischen Naturstandes"; "Logos: Vernunft und Wort. Humboldts Weg zur Sprache und Fichtes Sprachabhandlungen"; "Thetisches Urteil -- Spekulativer Satz. Fichte und Hegel über die Ausdrucksform der Grundsetzung 'Ich bin -- Ich'"; Intellektuelle und ästhetische Anschauung. Zu Schellings 'System des transzendentalen Idealismus'"; "Religion und Mystik. Fichtes Abwehr des Mystizismus"; "Amor Dei intellectualis. Vernunft und Gottesliebe in Gipfelsätzen neuzeitlicher Systembildungen (Spinoza, Hegel, Schelling -- Fichte)"; "'Dieses Seyn muß nicht mit der Identität verwechselt werden.' Hölderlin im Jena der Fichtezeit"; "Zeichen des Himmels -- Bild des Absoluten. Hölderlins Gnomik und Fichtes Phänomenologie"; "Das Phantastische und die Phantasie bei Hegel und Fichte im Lichte von Kierkegaards pseudonymen Schriften."

Königsson-Montain, Marie-Jeanne. "Hegel et l'histoire de la philosophie: la critique de Fichte dans l'écrit sur la 'Difference.'" Les études philosophique. 1993, no. 2: 179-90.

Lauth, Reinhard. Vernünftige Durchdringung der Wirklichkeit: Fichte und sein Umkreis. Neuried: bei München: ars una Verlagsgesellschaft, 1994. 598 pp. Cloth, ISBN: 3-89391-331-9, 138 DM.

A collection of 22 essays, papers, and lectures from the past 40 years, six of which (including a very substantial new essay on the Grundlage der gesamten Wissenschaftslehre) are here published for the first time, and another four of which here appear for the first time in German. This is a companion volume to Lauth's previously published collection, Transzendentale Entwicklungslinien von Descartes bis zu Marx und Dostojewski (Hamburg: Meiner, 1989).

The essays in this new collection are very wide-ranging, but tend to focus on the theme of philosophy and/of history. Though virtually all the papers in this collection include references to Fichte, the following titles are explicitly concerned with various features of his thought: "Descartes' und Fichtes Konzeption der Begründung des Wissens"; "Das Fehlverständnis der Wissenschaftslehre als subjektiver Spinozismus; "Die Frage der Vollständigkeit der Wissenschaftslehre in Zeitraum von 1793 - 1796; "Hegels spekulative Position in seiner 'Differenz des Ficht'schen und Schelling'schen Systems der Philosophie' im Lichte der Wissenschaftslehre"; "Ueber Fichtes Lehrtätigkeit in Berlin von Mitte 1799 bis Anfang 1805 und seine Zuhörerschaft"; "Fichte in der Jahren 1802 und 1803"; "Mme de Staëls Gespräch mit Fichte im März 1804"; "Kann Schellings Philosophie von 1804 als System bestehen? Fichtes Kritik"; "Fichtes Leistung in der Geschichte der Philosophie"; "Fichtes Geschichtskonzeption"; "L'action historique d'après la philosophie transcendentale de Fichte"; "Elementare Pflichte und höhere Moral"; "Philosophie und Geschichtsbestimmung"; and "Der letzte Grund von Fichtes 'Reden an die deutsche Nation.'"

Maesschalok, Mark. "Philosophie et révélation dans l'idéalisme allemand." Freiburger Zeitschrift für Philosophie und Theologie 39 (1992): 39-60.

Pannenberg, Wolfart. "Fichte und die Metaphysik des Unendlichen." Zeitschrift für philosophische Forschung 46 (1992): 348-62.

Radrizzani, Ives. "Philosophie transcendentale et praxis politique chez Fichte." Revue de théologie et philosophie 125 (1993): 1-20.

Rotta, Graziella. "Recenti studi fichtiani." Teoria 12 (1992): 51-57.

Schmitz, Hermann. Die entfremdete Subjektivität von Fichte zu Hegel. Bonn: Bouvier, 1992.

Vetö, Miklos. "Les trois images de l'absolu. Contributions à l'étude de la derniere philosophie de Fichte." Revue philosophique de la France et de L'étranger 1 (1992): 31-64.

Vincenti, Luc. Education et liberté. Kant et Fichte. Paris: Presses Universitaire de France, 1992.


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