The philosophy of the enlightenment/
by Ernst Cassirer; translated by Fritz C.A. Koelln and James P. Pettegrove
- Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press, 1979.
- xiii, 366 p.; 20 cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
I. THE MIND OF THE ENLIGHTENMENT II. NATURE AND NATURAL SCIENCE III. PSYCHOLOGY AND EPISTEMOLOGY IV. RELIGION I. THE DOGMA OF ORIGINAL SIN AND THE PROBLEM OF THEODICY II. TOLERANCE AND THE FOUNDATION OF NATURAL RELIGION III. RELIGION AND HISTORY V. THE CONQUEST OF THE HISTORICAL WORLD VI. LAW, STATE, AND SOCIETY I. LAW AND THE PRINCIPLE OF INALIEN ABLE RIGHTS II. THE CONTRACT AND THE METHOD OF THE SOCIAL SCIENCES VII. FUNDAMENTAL PROBLEMS OF AESTHETICS I. THE "age OF criticism" 11. classical aesthetics AND THE OB JECTIVITY OF THE BEAUTIFUL III. TASTE AND THE TREND TOWARD SUB JECTIVISM IV. INTUITIONAL AESTHETICS AND THE PROBLEM OF GENIUS V. REASON AND THE IMAGINATION! GOTT- SCHED AND THE SWISS CRITICS VI. THE FOUNDATION OF SYSTEMATIC AES- THETICa: BAUMGARTEN