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  1.  34
    The myth of the counter-enlightenment.Robert Edward Norton - 2007 - Journal of the History of Ideas 68 (4):635-658.
    Use of the word "Counter-Enlightenment" has become increasingly frequent in scholarly and journalistic writing. The word was almost certainly invented by the late Sir Isaiah Berlin, and it is owing to his enormous prestige and on-going influence that it has gained its current familiarity. In Berlin's view, two of the most important sources of the supposed Counter-Enlightenment are J. G. Hamann and J. G. Herder. But as I show, Berlin's numerous accounts of their thought are profoundly flawed and reflect not (...)
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  2.  74
    The beautiful soul: aesthetic morality in the eighteenth century.Robert Edward Norton - 1995 - Ithaca: Cornell University Press.
    For many eighteenth-century European philosophers and writers, the "beautiful soul" was a symbol of enlightened humanity, carrying with it the possibility that aesthetic beauty and moral goodness would be fused in a new, indivisible unity. In the first book in English on the subject, Robert E. Norton follows the fortunes of this cultural icon, exploring the reasons for both its initial popularity and its subsequent decline as a cultural ideal during the Enlightenment.
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  3.  23
    Herder's aesthetics and the European Enlightenment.Robert Edward Norton - 1991 - Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press.
    Introduction Herder's status within German intellectual history has largely rested on the premise that he, along with his friend Johann Georg Hamann, ...
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  4.  23
    Isaiah Berlin's ''Expressionism,'' or: ''Ha! du bist das Blökende!''.Robert Edward Norton - 2008 - Journal of the History of Ideas 69 (2):339-347.
    Reply to Steven Lestition's article, "Countering, Transposing, or Negating the Enlightenment? A Response to Robert Norton," published in the Journal of the History of Ideas(2007), pp. 659-81.
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