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The Berlin Refuge 1680-1780: Learning and Science in European Context: Brill's Studies in Intellectual History, cartea 114

Editat de Sandra Pott, Martin Mulsow, Lutz Danneberg
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 mai 2003
This volume deals with the intellectual Huguenot Refuge (ca 16801780), discussing its philosophical, theological, historical, and literary aspects in European context. It uses Berlin as its regional point of departure: In the French-Protestant community of Berlin, the erudites rapidly established networks which pursued a very wide range of interest, communicating with every Protestant scholar who might contribute to the dissemination of Enlightened thought.
The first part of the book, therefore, introduces the biggest and most complex centre of the Refuge in Germany. Whereas the second and third part examine different fields of knowledge, the fourth focusses on the topic of dissemination. All contributions present new materialbe it on 'Huguenot' hermeneutics, journalism, history, or on the relationship between Berlin and the United Provinces.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004125612
ISBN-10: 9004125612
Pagini: 246
Dimensiuni: 160 x 240 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.62 kg
Ediția:New.
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Studies in Intellectual History


Public țintă

All those interested in intellectual history, the history of the Huguenots, the history of literature, the history of philosophy, especially of natural law and hermeneutics.

Cuprins

Preface, Sandra Pott

I. INTRODUCTION
1. “Gentle, refined, cultivated, witty people”: Comments on the Intellectual History of the Berlin Refuge and on Relevant Research, Sandra Pott
2. Views of the Berlin Refuge: Scholarly Projects, Literary Interests, Marginal Fields, Martin Mulsow

II. THEOLOGY AND PHILOSOPHY
3. Ezechiel Spanheim’s Dispute with Richard Simon. On the Biblical Philology at the End of the 17th Century, Lutz Danneberg
4. Temporizing After Bayle: Isaac de Beausobre and the Manicheans, John Christian Laursen

III. HISTORY AND NATURAL LAW
5. Ein vergessener Pufendorf-Übersetzer: der Réfugié Antoine Teissier, Fiammetta Palladini
6. Natural Right, Liberty of Conscience and “Summa Potestas” in Jean Barbeyrac, Fabrizio Lomonaco

IV. DISSEMINATION AND POPULARISATION
7. Der Refuge und der Journalismus um 1700: Gabriel d’Artis (ca. 1650–ca. 1730), Herbert Jaumann
8. Lektüre, Bildung, Wissenskanon: Jean-Henri-Samuel Formeys Ratschläge zum Aufbau einer Privatbibliothek im 18. Jahrhundert, Annett Volmer
9. The Huguenot Clerisy in the United Provinces: Aspects of Huguenot Influence on Dutch Intellectual Life After the Revocation, Joris van Eijnatten

Index of Names

Notă biografică

Sandra Pott, Dr. (1998) in German Literature, is currently fellow of the Centre national de la recherche scientifique (Paris). She has published on the subject of the Refuge, in Reformierte Morallehren und deutsche Literatur von J. Barbeyrac bis C.M. Wieland (Niemeyer, 2002).

Martin Mulsow, Dr. (1991) in Philosophy, is Privatdozent at the University of Munich and a member of the Institute for Advanced Study, Princeton. He has published on Renaissance Philosophy and Early Enlightenment, including Moderne aus dem Untergrund (Hamburg, 2002).

Lutz Danneberg is Professor of German Literature at the Humboldt University Berlin. He has published on methodology, logic and hermeneutics, including Säkularisierung in den Wissenschaften: Die Anatomie des Text-Körpers und des Natur-Körpers (Berlin, New York, 2002).

Descriere

This volume deals with the intellectual Huguenot Refuge (ca 1680–1780), discussing its philosophical, theological, historical, and literary aspects in European context. It uses Berlin as its regional point of departure: In the French-Protestant community of Berlin, the erudites rapidly established networks which pursued a very wide range of interest, communicating with every Protestant scholar who might contribute to the dissemination of Enlightened thought.
The first part of the book, therefore, introduces the biggest and most complex centre of the Refuge in Germany. Whereas the second and third part examine different fields of knowledge, the fourth focusses on the topic of dissemination. All contributions present new material–be it on 'Huguenot' hermeneutics, journalism, history, or on the relationship between Berlin and the United Provinces.

Contributors include: Lutz Danneberg, Joris van Eijnatten, Herbert Jaumann, John Christian Laursen, Fabrizio Lomonaco, Martin Mulsow, Fiammetta Palladini, Sandra Pott, and Annett Volmer.