- published: 14 May 2015
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German idealism was a theological, philosophical movement that emerged in Germany in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. It reacted against Kant's Critique of Pure Reason and was closely linked with both romanticism and the revolutionary politics of the Enlightenment. The best-known thinkers in the movement were Johann Gottlieb Fichte, Friedrich Schelling, and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, while Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi, Gottlob Ernst Schulze, Karl Leonhard Reinhold, and Friedrich Schleiermacher were also major contributors.
The word "idealism" has more than one meaning. The philosophical meaning of idealism here is that the properties we discover in objects depend on the way that those objects appear to us as perceiving subjects, and not something they possess "in themselves," apart from our experience of them. The very notion of a "thing in itself" should be understood as an option of a set of functions for an operating mind, such that we consider something that appears without respect to the specific manner in which it appears. The question of what properties a thing might have "independently of the mind" is thus incoherent for Idealism[citation needed][clarification needed].
A History of Philosophy | 56 German Idealism
From German Idealism to American Pragmatism - and back | Prof Robert Brandom
"Mind & Nature in German Idealism" - Lecture 1: Metaphysics Before Kant
"Mind & Nature in German Idealism" - Lecture 2: Kant's Copernican Revolution
"Mind & Nature in German Idealism" - Lecture 4: Fichte's Subjective Idealism
"Mind & Nature in German Idealism" - Lecture 5: Schelling's Philosophy of Nature
"Mind & Nature in German Idealism"- Lecture 7: Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
"Mind & Nature in German Idealism" - Lecture 8: Schelling's Criticism of Hegel
PHILOSOPHY: IDEALISM, KANT and HEGEL
German Idealism and Psychoanalysis with Slavoj Zizek, Alenka Zupancic, Mladen Dolar - Part 1
German Idealism and Psychoanalysis with Slavoj Zizek, Alenka Zupancic, Mladen Dolar - Part 2
German Idealism and Psychoanalysis with Slavoj Zizek, Alenka Zupancic, Mladen Dolar - Part 3
German Idealism and Psychoanalysis with Slavoj Zizek, Alenka Zupancic, Mladen Dolar - Part 4
From German Idealism to American Pragmatism & Back (Brandom)