Grappling with something huge like Kant, Hegel, or German Idealism is daunting. I'm sure all of them had good and bad influences. I try not to moralize too generally with historical figures, but rather direct such judgements to particular facets of thought. Though it was an ambition of the 17th C early modern philosophers, systematic philosophizing really exploded in the German academic tradition with and after Kant. Having been trained in traditions that took a step back from that, I can easily find such things ominous or at least ripe for unintended impact. Poor Kant was still alive when he noticed German Idealists using his name and work towards ends he thought incorrect.kokorodoko wrote: Mon Oct 31, 2022 6:34 amMy current reading is especially in the hope of laying some groundwork for delving into German idealism, in order to get a better handle on Marx. I understand a lot of their concerns revolve around the subject and subjectivity, which is a central topic in a lot of communist theory. Also maybe you can trace there some roots of totalitarian thinking. At the same time, a short summary I read of Fichte suggested that he was searching for a non-statal form of sovereignty rooted in the in-themselves-free individual. Max Stirner comes from that same stock. So yeah, probably lots of interesting things to be discovered.VaticanShotglass wrote: Sun Oct 30, 2022 1:15 pmI have more or less lost my ability to seriously engage this book, what little I had. That's not a criticism, just an acknowledgment that one makes choices where one gets to competently dig deep, and this is not the path I went down. I'd like to refresh myself with secondary sources, if for no other reason than the significance for later work I'm more directly interested in.
Also neo-Kantians excercised quite some influence on the first wave of socialists and social democrats. Not one I am keen on, by the looks of it, but I'd like to know more about it.
Then there are more recent anti-Kant folks I'm interested in. Deleuze states in the preface of his book on Kant that he wanted to write a book about his enemy. Nick Land also engages with Kant in an antagonistic manner. So the question is why.
I'm very rusty on this, but I want to learn a little more on some of the diametrically opposed neo-Kantian traditions of the 19th and early 20th centuries, especially among the sciences. My slim understanding is that there were similarly (more so even) fractured Hegelian lines. I've never been able to draw a bead on Hegel, mostly from neglect. Outside of film and lit classes I never spent much time with Marx. I guess I'm too motivated by intellectual whims and stimulation in my reading. I've benefitted from the partial success Marx's ideas enough to find many of them right enough to be boring. I'm open to correction, and my whims do shift.
Still, with Hegel, I can't see the big deal beyond clear historical impact. I have to be missing something. Again, Hegel may be suffering from his own success. I find the whole thesis/antithesis/synthesis affair and the historical back and forth to be right in so far as it is, though also a smidge vague. I don't know enough about it to get a feel for it within his own historical context. The entire P & ~P thing seems all but trivial when you get to the most reasonable interpretations I've read. Furthermore, I find his teleological bent a disappointing step back from modernist criticisms of teleology. More innocuous interpretations of his teleological history are at odds with what I've read in his work on art history, which comes off as near German supremacism. Basically, I'd love a good, solid secondary source for current readers to clear me up. Other than sheer influence, I don't know enough to tempt me past an article length reading, let alone his own tomes.
Unpopular positions, maybe. I don't like dismissing thinkers like this. I just have to be honest about my personal limitations with this sort of thing.