The Explanatory Notes to Franz von Baader’s Lectures (1828–1836) provide an extensive critical and historical commentary on the sources, quotations, and conceptual references that inform Baader’s philosophical and theological writings. Drawing on a wide range of ancient, patristic, scholastic, and modern authors—from Plato, Augustine, and Thomas Aquinas to Kant, Fichte, and Windischmann—the annotations elucidate Baader’s engagement with Catholic theology, German idealism, mysticism, and natural philosophy. They trace the intertextual fabric of Baader’s thought, revealing how he mediates between revelation and reason, faith and philosophy, theosophy and speculative science. As a scholarly apparatus, the notes serve both as a philological tool for the critical edition and as an interpretive guide to Baader’s dense symbolic and theological vocabulary.
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Bonchino A
2024-01-01
Abstract
The Explanatory Notes to Franz von Baader’s Lectures (1828–1836) provide an extensive critical and historical commentary on the sources, quotations, and conceptual references that inform Baader’s philosophical and theological writings. Drawing on a wide range of ancient, patristic, scholastic, and modern authors—from Plato, Augustine, and Thomas Aquinas to Kant, Fichte, and Windischmann—the annotations elucidate Baader’s engagement with Catholic theology, German idealism, mysticism, and natural philosophy. They trace the intertextual fabric of Baader’s thought, revealing how he mediates between revelation and reason, faith and philosophy, theosophy and speculative science. As a scholarly apparatus, the notes serve both as a philological tool for the critical edition and as an interpretive guide to Baader’s dense symbolic and theological vocabulary.Pubblicazioni consigliate
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