Relational Ontology. Researches on Classical German Philosophy

Authors

Antonio Carrano
University of Naples Federico II
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6851-8805
Marco Ivaldo
University of Naples Federico II
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6996-9122

Keywords:

relationship, ontology, logic, morality, law, identity

Synopsis

Logo_FedOAPress

Publishers: FedOA - Federico II University Press

Series:  School of Human and Social Sciences. Working Papers

Pages:  156

Language: Italian

NBN: http://nbn.depositolegale.it/urn:nbn:it:unina-25619

Abstract: The volume contains the proceedings of the conference on the subject of relational ontology, which involved a group of scholars of classical German philosophy with the aim of explaining the reasons, drawing inspiration and categories from the ideal and conceptual constellation of that age of culture. The idea from which they make the contributions is that for relational ontology we can understand a theory on the structure of reality (onto-logic), attentive to the development of the explanatory and normative potential of the category of reciprocity. The contributions thus define a path that, starting from Kant and the question of a unity and duplicity of the ego, passing through the consideration of the Fichtian relational ontology and the idea of a constitution of identity responding to the appeal from the other (on this theme a dialogue Ricoeur / Fichte is also staged), it touches on the notion of natural law of Schelling, to arrive at the Hegelian construction of an ontology and logic of the relationship, which can be found in the very notion of civil society, and finally to reading in a 'materialistic' key of Kantian transcendental idealism, in relation to the notion of reciprocal action.

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Author Biographies

Antonio Carrano, University of Naples Federico II

Antonio Carrano teaches History of Philosophy at the Department of Humanities of the University of Naples "Federico II". His study interests focus on authors of the Enlightenment (Lessing, Kant) and classical German philosophy (Jacobi, Schelling, Hölderlin, Hegel), of which he was also a translator and curator (Humboldt, Fichte).

 

Marco Ivaldo, University of Naples Federico II

Marco Ivaldo taught Moral Philosophy at the Department of Humanities of the "Federico II" University of Naples. He is co-director of the Fichte-Studien. His studies focus on modern German philosophy and German idealism (Leibniz, Kant, Humboldt, Jacobi, Reinhold, Fichte, Hegel, Schelling), and on their resumptions in the late twentieth century (Pareyson, Lauth).

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Published

December 6, 2019

Details about this monograph

ISBN-13 (15)

978-88-6887-064-5

Publication date (01)

2019-12-07

doi

10.6093/978-88-6887-064-5