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  1. Republican Rigorism: Hegelian Views of Emancipation in 1848.Douglas Moggach - 2003 - The European Legacy 8 (4):441-457.
    This paper examines whether Bruno Bauer's critical assessment of Jewish emancipation in Prussia is consistent with his other republican writings in the 1840s. It argues that Bauer's political position is a form of republican rigorism, according to which human emancipation requires identification with universal interests, and not the defence of particular identities. Rigorism involves the elimination of internal as well as external heteronomous influences, and implies shifting the boundaries between the juridical and the moral realms as defined by Kant. Subjects' (...)
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  • Peter Burke (ed.), New Perspectives on Historical Writing. Cambridge: Polity Press, 1991. £35.00, paper £10.95, vii + 254 pp. [REVIEW]Ludmilla Jordanova - 1992 - History of the Human Sciences 5 (4):59-67.
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  • Painting for the blind: Nathaniel Hone’s portraits of Sir John Fielding.Georgina Cole - 2017 - Intellectual History Review 27 (3):351-376.
    Nathaniel Hone’s three portraits of Sir John Fielding establish a public image for the magistrate and a visual language for representing his blindness. Fielding is represented in 1757 as a family man, in 1762 as a sociable member of the Republic of Letters, and finally in 1773 as the embodiment of Justice. The movement across the portraits from empiricism to allegory not only conveys his increasing social status and celebrity, but also the mingling of philosophical and poetic ideas about blindness (...)
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