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Peter Hanns Reill [11]Peter H. Reill [1]
  1.  7
    Vitalizing Nature in the Enlightenment.Peter Hanns Reill - 2005 - University of California Press.
    This far-reaching study redraws the intellectual map of the Enlightenment and boldly reassesses the legacy of that highly influential period for us today. Peter Hanns Reill argues that in the middle of the eighteenth century, a major shift occurred in the way Enlightenment thinkers conceived of nature that caused many of them to reject the prevailing doctrine of mechanism and turn to a vitalistic model to account for phenomena in natural history, the life sciences, and chemistry. As he traces the (...)
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  2. Vitalizing Nature in the Enlightenment.Peter Hanns Reill - 2006 - Journal of the History of Biology 39 (1):199-203.
    This far-reaching study redraws the intellectual map of the Enlightenment and boldly reassesses the legacy of that highly influential period for us today. Peter Hanns Reill argues that in the middle of the eighteenth century, a major shift occurred in the way Enlightenment thinkers conceived of nature that caused many of them to reject the prevailing doctrine of mechanism and turn to a vitalistic model to account for phenomena in natural history, the life sciences, and chemistry. As he traces the (...)
     
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  3. Visions of empire.David Philip Miller, Peter H. Reill & J. F. M. Cannon - 1997 - Annals of Science 54 (3):321-321.
     
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  4.  37
    The German enlightenment and the rise of historicism.Peter Hanns Reill - 1975 - Berkeley: University of California Press.
    Introduction i In an important study of the German Enlightenment, Max Wundt wryly observed that the term "Enlightenment" shed very little enlightenment upon ...
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  5.  25
    Eighteenth-century uses of vitalism in constructing the human sciences.Peter Hanns Reill - 2010 - In Denis Alexander & Ronald L. Numbers (eds.), Biology and Ideology From Descartes to Dawkins. London: University of Chicago Press.
    In the period of the high and late Enlightenment, the human sciences were reformed based on ideas, methods, and assumptions drawn from the life sciences. The goal was to improve the human sciences by naturalizing them, injecting them with the spirit that animated the search for the principles of life in biology. Many Enlightenment thinkers took interest in the agenda set by a loose group of natural philosophers known as vitalists, which included Georges-Louis Leclerc de Buffon, Paul Barthez, Charles Bonnet, (...)
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  6.  16
    What's left of Enlightenment?: a postmodern question.Keith Michael Baker & Peter Hanns Reill (eds.) - 2001 - Stanford, Calif.: Stanford University Press.
    For all their differences, the many varieties of thinking commonly known as postmodernism share at least one salient characteristic: they all depend upon a stereotyped account of the Enlightenment. Postmodernity requires a 'modernity' to be repudiated, and the tenets of this modernity have invariably been identified with the Enlightenment Project. This volume aims to explore critically the opposition between Enlightenment and Postmodernity and question some of the conclusions drawn from it. The authors focus on three general areas. Part I, Enlightenment (...)
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  7.  7
    The Scientific Construction of Gender and Generation in the German Late Enlightenment and in German Romantic Naturphilosophie.Peter Hanns Reill - 2014 - In Susanne Lettow (ed.), Reproduction, Race, and Gender in Philosophy and the Early Life Sciences. State University of New York Press. pp. 65-82.
  8. Ranke: The meaning of history.Peter Hanns Reill - 1981 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 19 (1):125-127.
  9. Wissenschaft als kulturelle Praxis, 1750-1900.Hans Erich Bodeker, Peter Hanns Reill & Jurgen Schlumbohm - 1999 - History and Philosophy of the Life Sciences 21 (3):410.
     
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  10. Ethnographic exploration in the Blumenbachian tradition.Peter Hanns Reill - 2018 - In Nicolaas A. Rupke & Gerhard Lauer (eds.), Johann Friedrich Blumenbach: race and natural history, 1750-1850. New York, NY: Routledge.
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  11.  7
    Narration and Structure in Late Eighteenth-Century Historical Thought.Peter Hanns Reill - 1986 - History and Theory 25 (3):286-298.
    A new scientific mentality of the late eighteenth century, dissatisfied with mechanistic and mathematical models of reasoning and demonstration, replaced static concepts with dynamic ones and defined reality in terms of complex interconnections. These thinkers believed there were basic regulative patterns common to all living entities which could be grasped only by analogical reasoning and comparison. But they also believed that the specific content, such as laws, languages, and nations, existed within a specific historic context. Historical understanding was seen as (...)
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  12.  8
    Leonard Krieger, "Ranke: The Meaning of History". [REVIEW]Peter Hanns Reill - 1981 - Journal of the History of Philosophy 19 (1):125.
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