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Chargement... Traité sur l'origine des langues (1772)par Johann Gottfried Herder
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Est contenu dansEnsayo sobre el origen del lenguaje ; Otra filosofía de la historia para la educación de la humanidad ; Ideas para la filosofía de la historia de la humanidad (selección) ; Una metacrítica de la "Crítica de la razón pura" par Johann Gottfried Herder
Johann Gottfried Herder: Abhandlung über den Ursprung der Sprache Edition Holzinger. Taschenbuch Berliner Ausgabe, 2017, 4. Auflage Durchgesehener Neusatz mit einer Biographie des Autors bearbeitet und eingerichtet von Michael Holzinger Entstanden 1770. Erstdruck: Berlin 1772. Textgrundlage ist die Ausgabe: Sturm und Drang. Weltanschauliche und ästhetische Schriften. Herausgegeben von Peter Müller, Band 1-2, Berlin und Weimar: Aufbau, 1978. Herausgeber der Reihe: Michael Holzinger Reihengestaltung: Viktor Harvion Umschlaggestaltung unter Verwendung des Bildes: Johann Gottfried Herder (Gemälde von Anton Graff, 1785) Gesetzt aus der Minion Pro, 10 pt. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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Ironic, with that last, because Herder and Condillac don't disagree nearly as much as Herder thinks (pretends?) they do. Their epistemology, and in particular their account of the development of languages (not the origin of language), are virtually identical (difference is, C sees two children externalizing their internal words in order to cooperate together; Herder sees us sitting around the fire and the natural Word hitting us with a thunderbolt--the sheep is the thing that goes baaa!--and then, because that's the most exciting thing to have happened in many thousands of moons, we get together and invent more. Their main split is on the matter of the origin of language--the putative topic of the essay, which Herder seems to want to settle and move beyond as soon as possible. "Already as a beast, man has language," he says, and with that radical beginning (in 1772, very radical indeed!) he pushes back not only Condillac's constructivism but also the divine origin of language people, and Kant with his innate ideas (to Herder, language is innate, and ideas rise out of it, the reverse situation), and Lockean designativism. We may howl our fear and desire when alone, he say, evoking the Greek hero Philoctetes abandoned on his island with his reeking wound, but as soon as we enter human company, these unilateral blasts give rise to the infinitely complex and beautiful process of connecting with our neighbour, instantiating a Volksgeist, exploring the mind of the Other. Herder loves all cultures and all peoples, but not in a gross neoliberal way: cherish yourself, cherish what you come from, and then go out and slurp down down everything else on the human buffet table, he says. He's the antifascist polyphile, and we may yet find he's our best way forward. ( )