Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Special Section on Goethe and Idealism
- Introduction—Goethe and Idealism: Points of Intersection
- Goethe and Spinoza: A Reconsideration
- Goethean Intuitions
- Goethe's Notion of an Intuitive Power of Judgment
- “Idealism is nothing but genuine empiricism”: Novalis, Goethe, and the Ideal of Romantic Science
- The Quest for the Seeds of Eternal Growth: Goethe and Humboldt's Presentation of Nature
- Hegel's Faust
- Goethe contra Hegel: The Question of the End of Art
- Goethean Morphology, Hegelian Science: Affinities and Transformations
- Die Gretchenfrage: Goethe and Philosophies of Religion around 1800
- Civic Attachments & Sibling Attractions: The Shadows of Fraternity
- Margarete-Ariadne: Faust's Labyrinth
- Save the Prinz: Schiller's Geisterseher and the Lure of Entertainment
- Walsers Trilogie der Leidenschaft: Eine Analyse seines Goethe-Romans Ein liebender Mann im Kontext der Tradition der Ulrike-Romane
- Review Essay: What's New in the New Economic Criticism
- Book Reviews
Goethe's Notion of an Intuitive Power of Judgment
from Special Section on Goethe and Idealism
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Special Section on Goethe and Idealism
- Introduction—Goethe and Idealism: Points of Intersection
- Goethe and Spinoza: A Reconsideration
- Goethean Intuitions
- Goethe's Notion of an Intuitive Power of Judgment
- “Idealism is nothing but genuine empiricism”: Novalis, Goethe, and the Ideal of Romantic Science
- The Quest for the Seeds of Eternal Growth: Goethe and Humboldt's Presentation of Nature
- Hegel's Faust
- Goethe contra Hegel: The Question of the End of Art
- Goethean Morphology, Hegelian Science: Affinities and Transformations
- Die Gretchenfrage: Goethe and Philosophies of Religion around 1800
- Civic Attachments & Sibling Attractions: The Shadows of Fraternity
- Margarete-Ariadne: Faust's Labyrinth
- Save the Prinz: Schiller's Geisterseher and the Lure of Entertainment
- Walsers Trilogie der Leidenschaft: Eine Analyse seines Goethe-Romans Ein liebender Mann im Kontext der Tradition der Ulrike-Romane
- Review Essay: What's New in the New Economic Criticism
- Book Reviews
Summary
Introduction
IN THIS PAPER, I explore the meaning of Goethe's notion of an intuitive power of judgment (anschauende Urteilskraft) and investigate its philosophical function. In order to do so, I situate it within the development of post-Kantian thinking. My goal, however, is not antiquarian but critical. I argue that Goethe's notion is grounded in a critique of conceptual thinking, which can be rationally reconstructed, and that it offers a possible answer to some of the shortcomings of propositional knowledge. I thus want to articulate its own systematic legitimacy.
Conceptual Thinking
The world according to Kant is conceptually constituted. The crux of his argument can be reconstructed in the following way.
Given the supposition that individuals have to be re-identifiable, and that such identification is done by an identifying subject, it follows that individuals have to be possible objects of these subjects. Now, being the possible object of a subject means that the subject can refer to the individual being its object. And in order to be able to refer to an individual, the subject has to stand in a definite relation to it. What is this relation like? It is characterized by two reciprocal directions. One direction leads from the individual to the subject. It bestows the subject with information about its point of reference. The other direction leads from the subject to the individual. Using the information with which it is bestowed, the subject can determine the identity of the individual.
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- Information
- Goethe Yearbook 18 , pp. 51 - 66Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2011