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Being, knowledge and nature in Novalis

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Being, knowledge and nature in Novalis. / Stone, Alison.
In: Journal of the History of Philosophy, Vol. 46, No. 1, 01.2008, p. 141-164.

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Stone A. Being, knowledge and nature in Novalis. Journal of the History of Philosophy. 2008 Jan;46(1):141-164.

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Stone, Alison. / Being, knowledge and nature in Novalis. In: Journal of the History of Philosophy. 2008 ; Vol. 46, No. 1. pp. 141-164.

Bibtex

@article{4e2308bc80bf436283d61297ad7ca2f2,
title = "Being, knowledge and nature in Novalis",
abstract = "This paper reconstructs the evolution of Novalis' thought concerning being, nature, and knowledge. In his earlier writings (above all the Fichte-Studies) he argues that unitary being underlies finite phenomena and that we can never know, but only strive towards knowledge of, being. In contrast, in his later writings, principally the Allgemeine Brouillon, he maintains that the unitary reality underlying finite things can be known, because it is an organic whole which develops and organises itself according to an intelligible pattern. Novalis equates this whole with nature. However, because this organic whole exercises spontaneity in assuming particular forms of organisation, we can never know why it assumes just these particular forms; nature therefore remains partly unintelligible to us. I argue that Novalis' intellectual shift towards the idea that the whole can be known is motivated by his concern to explain how the modern, 'disenchanted', view of nature could be overcome. I also argue that by recognising this shift, we can resolve the dispute between Frank and Beiser as to whether Novalis thinks that the absolute can be known.",
author = "Alison Stone",
year = "2008",
month = jan,
language = "English",
volume = "46",
pages = "141--164",
journal = "Journal of the History of Philosophy",
issn = "0022-5053",
publisher = "Johns Hopkins University Press",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Being, knowledge and nature in Novalis

AU - Stone, Alison

PY - 2008/1

Y1 - 2008/1

N2 - This paper reconstructs the evolution of Novalis' thought concerning being, nature, and knowledge. In his earlier writings (above all the Fichte-Studies) he argues that unitary being underlies finite phenomena and that we can never know, but only strive towards knowledge of, being. In contrast, in his later writings, principally the Allgemeine Brouillon, he maintains that the unitary reality underlying finite things can be known, because it is an organic whole which develops and organises itself according to an intelligible pattern. Novalis equates this whole with nature. However, because this organic whole exercises spontaneity in assuming particular forms of organisation, we can never know why it assumes just these particular forms; nature therefore remains partly unintelligible to us. I argue that Novalis' intellectual shift towards the idea that the whole can be known is motivated by his concern to explain how the modern, 'disenchanted', view of nature could be overcome. I also argue that by recognising this shift, we can resolve the dispute between Frank and Beiser as to whether Novalis thinks that the absolute can be known.

AB - This paper reconstructs the evolution of Novalis' thought concerning being, nature, and knowledge. In his earlier writings (above all the Fichte-Studies) he argues that unitary being underlies finite phenomena and that we can never know, but only strive towards knowledge of, being. In contrast, in his later writings, principally the Allgemeine Brouillon, he maintains that the unitary reality underlying finite things can be known, because it is an organic whole which develops and organises itself according to an intelligible pattern. Novalis equates this whole with nature. However, because this organic whole exercises spontaneity in assuming particular forms of organisation, we can never know why it assumes just these particular forms; nature therefore remains partly unintelligible to us. I argue that Novalis' intellectual shift towards the idea that the whole can be known is motivated by his concern to explain how the modern, 'disenchanted', view of nature could be overcome. I also argue that by recognising this shift, we can resolve the dispute between Frank and Beiser as to whether Novalis thinks that the absolute can be known.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 46

SP - 141

EP - 164

JO - Journal of the History of Philosophy

JF - Journal of the History of Philosophy

SN - 0022-5053

IS - 1

ER -