Paradoxes of Freedom: The Romantic Mystique of a Transcendence

Clarendon Press (1996)
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Abstract

Paradoxes of Freedom is a study of the philosophical and historical concept of liberty. Centring his argument upon the Romantic exaltation of freedom, Thomas McFarland identifies freedom as one of the three chief transcendences, along with love and religion, by which humanity orientates itself. McFarland indicates, by an examination ranging from Shakespeare and Luther to the writings of Nietzsche and Wagner, both the reasons for the supreme valuation of freedom and the nature of the hindrances, in theory and fact, that enmesh the actual realization of freedom.

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Chapters

Insular Countercurrents

This chapter examines the literature concerning the limiting of freedom by necessity. It suggests that this type of attitude towards freedom, elaborated by the great German Romantic philosophers, was conditioned first and foremost by the ramifications of the subject considered as a pure di... see more

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