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  1. This book presents an important new account of Johann Gottlieb Fichte's Closed Commercial State, a major early nineteenth-century development of Rousseau and Kant's political thought. Isaac Nakhimovsky shows how Fichte reformulated Rousseau's constitutional politics and radicalized the economic implications of Kant's social contract theory with ...

  2. 16 de out. de 2017 · Download Fichte Johann. The Closed Commercial State [PDF] - Sciarium. Fichte Johann. The Closed Commercial State. New York: State University of New York Press, 2013. — 260 p. — ISBN10: 1438440200; ISBN13: 978-1438440200 — (SUNY Series in Contemporary Continental Philosophy). Translated and with an Interpretive Essay by Anthony Curtis Adler.

  3. This book presents an important new account of Johann Gottlieb Fichte's Closed Commercial State, a major early nineteenth-century development of Rousseau and Kant's political thought. Isaac Nakhimovsky shows how Fichte reformulated Rousseau's constitutional politics and radicalized the economic implications of Kant's social contract theory with his defense of the right to work.

    • Isaac Nakhimovsky
  4. 8 de mai. de 2020 · Thus, the Closed Commercial State itself proposes a social arrangement in which the economic existence of every individual is completely regulated by the state, which grants to each individual not only the right to pursue a certain defined economic activity (extracting produce from this piece of land, pursuing this specific trade) but guarantees that, in return for their labor, they will be ...

  5. 30 de ago. de 2001 · The Closed Commercial State, trans. Anthony Curtis Adler, Albany, SUNY Press, 2012. Sonnenklarer Bericht an das größere Publikum über das eigentliche Wesen der neuesten Philosophie. Ein Versuch, die Leser zum Verstehen zu zwingen, 1801.

  6. 25 de jul. de 2011 · This book presents an important new account of Johann Gottlieb Fichte's Closed Commercial State , a major early nineteenth-century development of Rousseau and Kant's political thought.

  7. The terms used in the title of this book belong to a language of political reflection that is at once familiar and remote. They evoke concerns that we consider