Minor in Environmental Studies - Nature and Romanticism
HSTC 4300 Nature and Romanticism
CREDIT HOURS: 3
Kant’s “Copernican Revolution” in philosophy, ironically, marked a resurrection of a full-blown “idealist” philosophy of nature. This course will investigate the attempts of Kant’s followers to construct a natural philosophy and its engagement with the rival mechanical world picture. It explores the implications of this endeavour for the growth of romanticism, vitalism and our modern picture of “nature”. It begins with an examination of the ambiguous heritage presented by Kant’s writings on nature and proceeds through the attempts to develop a complete program of idealist
Naturphilosophie and its spread throughout European thought by the medium of romanticist art and natural philosophy.
FORMAT:
CROSS-LISTING:
HIST 5004.03,
EMSP 4300.03