David Hume über den Glauben oder Idealismus und Realismus. Ein Gespräch.

JACOBI Friedrich Heinrich (1787.)

£1750.00  [First Edition]

Please contact us in advance if you would like to view this book at our Curzon Street shop.

First edition. 8vo. ix, [1], 230 pp. Contemporary paper covered boards, flat spine panelled with simple gilt rules, second panel lettered in gilt on blue paper label, ink manuscript paper label to foot (neat ownership inscription of Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Himly dated '1803' in black ink to front pastedown, intermittent underlinings and marginal highlighting throughout, mostly in pencil but with occasional use of blue crayon; extremities rubbed and bumped, spine slightly darkened, minor scuffing to covers, notwithstanding a very good, unsophisticated copy). Breslau, Loewe.

The rare first edition of 'David Hume on Faith, or Idealism and Realism' by the influential German philosopher Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi (1743-1819), written as an elaboration and defence of Jacobi's views on the concept of faith ('Glaube') expounded two years earlier at the outset of the so-called controversy pantheism controversy ('Pantheismusstreit') that gripped German philosophy during the 1780s.

'This work includes three distinct sections, although only two are named in the title. The first section is dedicated to the need to clarify the controversial term Glaube. An intermission between the first and the second sections introduces an interesting account of Jacobi’s own philosophical education. The second section criticises the principle of the ground (Der Satz des Grundes) in contraposition to the principle of reason (das Principium der Vernunft), which is intended as part of the principle of life (das Principium des Lebens) and ushers in the topic that dominates the third and final section: the living being. Hence, the third section revolves around the rationality of life, providing an analysis of Leibniz’s philosophy' (Stanford Encylopedia of Philosophy).

Stock Code: 245285

close zoom-in zoom-out close zoom