Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 A Comparative Look at the Scottish and German Enlightenments
- 2 The Significance of Scotland in Germany
- 3 The Hazards of Translation: Some Models of Misreception
- Part II Adam Ferguson and the Civic Discourse
- 4 Ferguson's Scottish Contexts: Life, Ideas, and Interlocutors
- 5 Ferguson in Germany: An Overview
- 6 The Civic Discourse and the Hazards of Translation: Ferguson's <i>Essay on the History of Civil Society</i> in German
- 7 Isaak Iselin: The Rejection of Conflict
- 8 Christian Garve: The Trouble with ‘Public Spirit’
- 9 Gotthold Ephraim Lessing: God in History
- 10 The Göttingen Scholars: Natural Law and the British Constitution
- 11 Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi: ‘Anti-Rationalism’ and the Civic Discourse
- 12 Friedrich Schiller: The Citizen and the Dancer
- Conclusion
- 1. Primary Sources
- 2. Secondary Sources
- Index
2. Secondary Sources
2. Secondary Sources
- Source:
- Translating the Enlightenment
- Publisher:
- Oxford University Press
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- Title Pages
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1 A Comparative Look at the Scottish and German Enlightenments
- 2 The Significance of Scotland in Germany
- 3 The Hazards of Translation: Some Models of Misreception
- Part II Adam Ferguson and the Civic Discourse
- 4 Ferguson's Scottish Contexts: Life, Ideas, and Interlocutors
- 5 Ferguson in Germany: An Overview
- 6 The Civic Discourse and the Hazards of Translation: Ferguson's <i>Essay on the History of Civil Society</i> in German
- 7 Isaak Iselin: The Rejection of Conflict
- 8 Christian Garve: The Trouble with ‘Public Spirit’
- 9 Gotthold Ephraim Lessing: God in History
- 10 The Göttingen Scholars: Natural Law and the British Constitution
- 11 Friedrich Heinrich Jacobi: ‘Anti-Rationalism’ and the Civic Discourse
- 12 Friedrich Schiller: The Citizen and the Dancer
- Conclusion
- 1. Primary Sources
- 2. Secondary Sources
- Index