For a project on the origins and migrations of the European nations, Leibniz wanted to see a comparative lexicon purporting to derive the Germanic languages from Asiatic sources. Friends in nearby Gotha were known to have the book; its author had corresponded with Leibniz a few years earlier. But actually getting the book was more difficult than one might expect. In addition to the actual logistics and manners of scholarly communication in the late seventeenth century, this essay shows what scholars were trying to accomplish by establishing the prehistoric origins of the modern nations
This paper takes as its starting point several statements by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on the role o...
Asia, America, and Europe have been intellectually intertwined for centuries. Several studies have b...
Knowledge of nature may be common to all of humanity, yet it is written in many tongues. The story o...
For a project on the origins and migrations of the European nations, Leibniz wanted to see a compara...
Who are the nations of Europe, and where did they come from? Early modern people were as curious abo...
This contribution offers a succinct overview of Leibniz’s interest in the ‘natural’ languages. The f...
The article discusses the early chapter in the long history of the development of the German Sonderb...
Leibniz’s philosophical and philological interests overlapped at many points, and some of his fundam...
Previous discussions of the early modern republic of letters by intellectual historians have tended ...
Humanists across Europe during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries focused intense scholarly att...
A number of elite thinkers in Europe during the 16th and 17th centuries pursued an agenda which hist...
Intellectual history is traditionally text-based. Sometimes regarded as synonymous with the history ...
The essay argues that different attitudes towards the use of vernacular languages as means for schol...
'What is the German's fatherland?', Ernst Moritz Arndt famously demanded to know. Also famous is his...
The purpose of the article is to present John Yench’s a priori language as a continuation of Leibniz...
This paper takes as its starting point several statements by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on the role o...
Asia, America, and Europe have been intellectually intertwined for centuries. Several studies have b...
Knowledge of nature may be common to all of humanity, yet it is written in many tongues. The story o...
For a project on the origins and migrations of the European nations, Leibniz wanted to see a compara...
Who are the nations of Europe, and where did they come from? Early modern people were as curious abo...
This contribution offers a succinct overview of Leibniz’s interest in the ‘natural’ languages. The f...
The article discusses the early chapter in the long history of the development of the German Sonderb...
Leibniz’s philosophical and philological interests overlapped at many points, and some of his fundam...
Previous discussions of the early modern republic of letters by intellectual historians have tended ...
Humanists across Europe during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries focused intense scholarly att...
A number of elite thinkers in Europe during the 16th and 17th centuries pursued an agenda which hist...
Intellectual history is traditionally text-based. Sometimes regarded as synonymous with the history ...
The essay argues that different attitudes towards the use of vernacular languages as means for schol...
'What is the German's fatherland?', Ernst Moritz Arndt famously demanded to know. Also famous is his...
The purpose of the article is to present John Yench’s a priori language as a continuation of Leibniz...
This paper takes as its starting point several statements by Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz on the role o...
Asia, America, and Europe have been intellectually intertwined for centuries. Several studies have b...
Knowledge of nature may be common to all of humanity, yet it is written in many tongues. The story o...