The Science of Culture in Enlightenment Germany

Εξώφυλλο
Harvard University Press, 2007 - 360 σελίδες

In the late 1770s, as a wave of revolution and republican unrest swept across Europe, scholars looked with urgency on the progress of European civilization. The question of social development was addressed from Edinburgh to St. Petersburg, with German scholars, including C. G. Heyne, Christoph Meiners, and J. G. Eichhorn, at the center of the discussion.

Michael Carhart examines their approaches to understanding human development by investigating the invention of a new analytic category, "culture." In an effort to define human nature and culture, scholars analyzed ancient texts for insights into language and the human mind in its early stages, together with writings from modern travelers, who provided data about various primitive societies. Some scholars began to doubt the existence of any essential human nature, arguing instead for human culture. If language was the vehicle of reason, what did it mean that all languages were different? Were rationality and virtue universal or unique to a given nation?

In this scholarship lie the roots of anthropology, sociology, and classical philology. Dissecting the debates over nature versus culture in Enlightenment Europe, Carhart offers a valuable contribution to cultural and intellectual history and the history of the human sciences.

 

Περιεχόμενα

Words and Things
1
One Orientalism and Reform
27
Two Culture and the Origin of Language
69
Three The Search for the Historical Plato
105
Four The Search for the Historical Homer
135
Five The Search for the Historical Moses
161
Six The Sociology of Ancient History
193
Seven Three Anthropologies
222
Eight A Scientific Revolution
248
Enlightenment Social Science
277
Notes
301
Index
353
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Michael C. Carhart is Associate Professor of History at Old Dominion University.

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