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The Philosophical Foundations of Early German Romanticism by
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Roy
is on page 63
I’m so incredibly calm that I don’t know what to do with it.
Probably nothing.
Just enjoy it.
It’s been ages, if I’ve ever felt this way at all.
I don’t think I’ve ever felt so free from the relentless drive to develop as I do right now.
It’s still there, but without the force of decision.
My calmth is some sort of momentaneous, temporal immovability.
What will happen when the moment is over?
— Mar 24, 2024 09:34AM
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Probably nothing.
Just enjoy it.
It’s been ages, if I’ve ever felt this way at all.
I don’t think I’ve ever felt so free from the relentless drive to develop as I do right now.
It’s still there, but without the force of decision.
My calmth is some sort of momentaneous, temporal immovability.
What will happen when the moment is over?
Roy
is on page 61
Interesting.
But I need a break.
Am I finally going to accept short reading sessions with relatively small progress as valuable?
Would be nice.
— Mar 05, 2024 07:43AM
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But I need a break.
Am I finally going to accept short reading sessions with relatively small progress as valuable?
Would be nice.
Roy
is on page 55
Once again, I’m reading so many of my fundamental thoughts and intuitions written into sentences.
I’ll have to delve into the philosophical works of Novalis, too.
And probably teach myself some logic.
I am starting to believe that my idea of relating Schiller to early German Romanticism is a valid idea to work out; there’s definitely connections with Schlegel and Novalis, perhaps with Hölderlin, too.
— Feb 27, 2024 09:09AM
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I’ll have to delve into the philosophical works of Novalis, too.
And probably teach myself some logic.
I am starting to believe that my idea of relating Schiller to early German Romanticism is a valid idea to work out; there’s definitely connections with Schlegel and Novalis, perhaps with Hölderlin, too.
Roy
is on page 47
Yeah… this bit was too technical and abstract for me to make proper sense of right now.
— Feb 26, 2024 09:48AM
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Roy
is on page 33
Oh lord… A basic realism founded on skepticism to an absolute first principle…
These dudes took waywardness to its… ‘logical’… extremes, straight down into the unending, ever-expanding dimensions of philosophy…
I can see why I’m so drawn to them…
It’s basically got the drawing force of a black hole.
Perhaps I should move back to reality when I’m done with my masters…
— Feb 23, 2024 04:32AM
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These dudes took waywardness to its… ‘logical’… extremes, straight down into the unending, ever-expanding dimensions of philosophy…
I can see why I’m so drawn to them…
It’s basically got the drawing force of a black hole.
Perhaps I should move back to reality when I’m done with my masters…
Roy
is on page 23
Yup, this is showing to be exactly what I thought already, to confirm my intuitions in reading Schelling, and before reading Schiller and Schlegel.
But that begs the question; does it now appeal to me so much because it seems like truth to me, or is it just the recognisance of the confirmation of the only philosophical approach I’ve personally understood well enough?
— Feb 12, 2024 12:49PM
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But that begs the question; does it now appeal to me so much because it seems like truth to me, or is it just the recognisance of the confirmation of the only philosophical approach I’ve personally understood well enough?
Roy
is on page 11
Once again, my fundamental intuitions about a movement are confirmed in an introduction by secondary authors.
— Feb 12, 2024 06:12AM
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Roy
is on page 2
Here I am, again starting a book “only for the sections I need”, knowing full well I’m going to read the whole thing, despite my thesis supervisor convincing me I’ve already read plenty to get the start of my writing process going.
Oops.
😄
— Feb 12, 2024 02:02AM
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Oops.
😄
Sah
is on page 2
Early German Romanticism or Frühromantik is a movement heralded
for its poetic achievements, scorned for its nationalistic leanings, and characterized
as a celebration of the imagination in its most creative freedom.
— Jul 14, 2013 03:52AM
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for its poetic achievements, scorned for its nationalistic leanings, and characterized
as a celebration of the imagination in its most creative freedom.



