The Problem of Fichte’s Phenomenology of Love

Idealistic Studies 6 (2):178-190 (1976)
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Abstract

One of the more recent approaches in attempting a reinterpretation of the philosophy of Johann Gottlieb Fichte has been to concentrate on his theory of interpersonality as a key to his system. But a study of Fichte’s interpersonal theory in its early forms shows, among other things, a rather surprising lack of treatment of an important form of immediate interpersonal experience: love. And yet if interpersonality lies at the core of Fichte’s philosophy, one could expect that a treatment of some sort of love experience would be central to his view of the life-world.

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