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Der Geschloßne Handelsstaat

Felix Meiner Verlag (2013)

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  1. Welche Freiheit macht glücklich?Ludwig Siep - 2015 - History of Philosophy & Logical Analysis 18 (1):15-29.
    Practical philosophy in the classical German tradition from Kant to Hegel seems to be moralistic and even ascetic. The core of its moral and legal philosophy is a concept of freedom as independence from any longing for pleasure and happiness. Tracing the development of Hegel’s philosophy of subjective, objective and absolute spirit, however, exhibits a deep systematic connection between the forms of freedom and happiness in all their traditional and modern meanings. Many of them can be compared with modern conceptions, (...)
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  • Schiller, scots and germans: Freedom and diversity in the aesthetic education of man.Douglas Moggach - 2008 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 51 (1):16 – 36.
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  • Fichte's reappraisal of Kant's theory of cosmopolitan right.David James - 2010 - History of European Ideas 36 (1):61-70.
    I argue that although in the Foundations of Natural Right Fichte adopts a theory of cosmopolitan right that is in a number of important respects formally identical to the one developed by Kant, he later came in The Closed Commercial State to reassess his earlier Kantian cosmopolitanism. This work can in fact be seen to identify a problem with Kant's cosmopolitanism, namely, Kant's failure to recognize the possibility of an indirect form of coercion based on unequal relations of economic dependence. (...)
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