This chapter is an attempt to resolve two sets of disagreements on Fichte’s theory of right. One disagreement concerns the content of Fichtean property rights, and the other is about the role of coercion in the formation of the Fichtean social order. With respect to the first disagreement I argue that it stems from the mistaken assumption that Fichte is committed to a particular universally applicable right to property. Once this assumption is dropped, it is possible to appreciate the variety of such rights that his theory can support. With respect to the second disagreement I argue that Fichte does not see a necessary conflict between coercion and freedom; in fact, he believes coercion is conducive to the formation of rightful relations am...
Johann Gottlieb Fichte became famous because of his Reden an die deutsche Nation, where he articulat...
Fichte is well known for adhering to some version of the thesis of the Primacy of the Practical. The...
Contribution issue du 2e Internationale Reinhold-Tagung ; Lucerne, Suisse, 2002.This article focuses...
A common criticism of Fichte’s political thought is that it is not systematically connected to his i...
This article focuses on Fichte’s essay on Revelation (2nd ed.) and on his review of Creuzer’s book o...
Fichte’s deduction of the concept of right (Recht) in the first main division of the Foundations of ...
This paper fundamentally deals with J. G. Fichte’s philosophical views, which reshapes intellectual-...
Fichte’s account of free will is at the heart of his philosophy. However, there exists no full-lengt...
In this paper I provide an interpretation of Hegel’s account of ‘recognition’ (Anerkennung) in the 1...
In the first section of this essay I show how Hegel’s account of the struggle for recognition can be...
This article aims at giving an explanation of Fichte’s theory of property in his Foundations of Natu...
This paper aims to show that the Fichtean theory of recognition of the other carries important conse...
Fichte's mature conception of transcendental freedom is the subject of some controversy. This paper ...
Fichte's philosophy of right constitutes an anomaly within German Idealism, particularly due to its ...
This thesis rejects the traditional picture of Fichte as a 'philosopher of subjectivity' who conceiv...
Johann Gottlieb Fichte became famous because of his Reden an die deutsche Nation, where he articulat...
Fichte is well known for adhering to some version of the thesis of the Primacy of the Practical. The...
Contribution issue du 2e Internationale Reinhold-Tagung ; Lucerne, Suisse, 2002.This article focuses...
A common criticism of Fichte’s political thought is that it is not systematically connected to his i...
This article focuses on Fichte’s essay on Revelation (2nd ed.) and on his review of Creuzer’s book o...
Fichte’s deduction of the concept of right (Recht) in the first main division of the Foundations of ...
This paper fundamentally deals with J. G. Fichte’s philosophical views, which reshapes intellectual-...
Fichte’s account of free will is at the heart of his philosophy. However, there exists no full-lengt...
In this paper I provide an interpretation of Hegel’s account of ‘recognition’ (Anerkennung) in the 1...
In the first section of this essay I show how Hegel’s account of the struggle for recognition can be...
This article aims at giving an explanation of Fichte’s theory of property in his Foundations of Natu...
This paper aims to show that the Fichtean theory of recognition of the other carries important conse...
Fichte's mature conception of transcendental freedom is the subject of some controversy. This paper ...
Fichte's philosophy of right constitutes an anomaly within German Idealism, particularly due to its ...
This thesis rejects the traditional picture of Fichte as a 'philosopher of subjectivity' who conceiv...
Johann Gottlieb Fichte became famous because of his Reden an die deutsche Nation, where he articulat...
Fichte is well known for adhering to some version of the thesis of the Primacy of the Practical. The...
Contribution issue du 2e Internationale Reinhold-Tagung ; Lucerne, Suisse, 2002.This article focuses...