German Idealism(12)# Thoughts - 思考者
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German Idealism (12)
Schopenhauer The last great representative of German Idealism in systematic
philosophy was Schopenhauer. While with him the phenomenal world is idea
(that is, existing only as a subject idea) its objective basis is not a
"thing in itself" as Kant taught, but a universal will. This Schopenhauer
interprets as a blind, illogical, aimless impulse, without any original
ethical tendency whatsoever. Through the blind impulse of this world-will
arises human intelligence and the phen
Schopenhauer The last great representative of German Idealism in systematic
philosophy was Schopenhauer. While with him the phenomenal world is idea
(that is, existing only as a subject idea) its objective basis is not a
"thing in itself" as Kant taught, but a universal will. This Schopenhauer
interprets as a blind, illogical, aimless impulse, without any original
ethical tendency whatsoever. Through the blind impulse of this world-will
arises human intelligence and the phen