The Romantic Circumstance: Novalis between Kittler and Luhmann

Substance 43 (3):46-66 (2014)
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Abstract

Romanticism was a philosophical movement concerned with the question of orders—orders of things, of persons, of being. Friedrich von Hardenberg, the Early German Romantic who called himself Novalis, writes that “only [the infinite stone] is firm // it is the dos moi, pu sto [give me a place to stand] of Archimedes” . It is strange to find, among the foundational texts of Early German Romanticism, anything having to do with foundations. The movement has often been characterized as “anti-foundational” and even occasionalist . And yet statements revealing a fascination with figures of intervention, revolution, and ..

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