PHILOSOPHISCHE SCHRIFTEN. COMPLETE IN 2 VOLUMES, BOUND TOGETHER
Berlin: Bey Christian Friedrich Voss, 1761. Item #42899
1st edition. Period half-leather, 12mo, 256 + 228 pages. In German. Title translates as, “Writings.” Includes frontis engraving, as well as 2 different title vignettes, 1 on each title page, by Johann Wilhelm Meil.
Goedeke IV, 1, 488, 6. Meyer 108; Dorn 105-107; Holzmann/Bohatta, Deutsches Anomymen-Lexikon, IV, no. 1559.
1st edition of Mendelssohn’s second work, in which he "began his formulation of a new psychological theory that stressed the autonomy of aesthetics, logic and ethics relative to each other." (Merriam-Webster's Encyclopedia of World Religions, p. 710).
Contents:Vol. 1. Vorrede. I. Ueber die Empfindungen. II. Gespra¨che; Vol. 2. I. Rhapsodie, oder, Zusa¨tze zu den Briefen u¨ber die Empfindungen. II. Ueber die Hauptgrundsa¨tze der scho¨nen Ku¨nste und Wissenschaften. III. Ueber das Erhabene und Naive in den scho¨nen Wissenschaften. IV. Ueber die Wahrscheinlichkeit. Also includes bibliographical references.
Included within these is a series of writings on aesthetics which influenced Lessing and Schiller, with Lessing noting,“We have to thank him [Mendelssohn] for the true theory of mixed sensations.”
Moses Mendelssohn (Moses of Dessau; 1729–1786) was a philosopher of the German Enlightenment in the pre-Kantian period, early Maskil, and a renowned Jewish figure in the 18th century. Mendelssohn was fluent in German and Hebrew and learned Latin, Greek, English, French, and Italian. His early teachers were young, broadly educated Jews, and he met the writer and dramatist G.E. Lessing (1754) and a deep and lifelong friendship developed between them. Throughout his life he worked as a merchant, while carrying out his literary activities and widespread correspondence in his free time. In 1754 Mendelssohn began to publish – at first with the assistance of Lessing – philosophical writings and later also literary reviews.
He also started a few literary projects (for example, the short-lived periodical Kohelet Musar) in order to enrich and change Jewish culture and took part in the early Haskalah. In 1763, he was awarded the first prize of the Prussian Royal Academy of Sciences for his work Abhandlung über die Evidenz in metaphysischen Wissenschaften ("Treatise on Evidence in Metaphysical Knowledge"). However, when the academy elected him as a member in 1771, King Frederick II refused to ratify its decision.
In 1769, he became embroiled in a dispute on the Jewish religion, and from then on, he confined most of his literary activity to the sphere of Judaism. His most notable and enduring works in this area included the translation into German and commentary on the Pentateuch, Sefer Netivot ha-Shalom ("Book of the Paths of Peace," 1780–83) and his Jerusalem: oder, Ueber religiöse Macht und Judenthum ("Jerusalem, or On Religious Power and Judaism," 1783, this work), the first polemical defense of Judaism in the German language and one of the pioneering works of modern Jewish philosophy.
An active intermediary on behalf of his own people in difficult times and a participant in their struggle for equal rights, he was at the same time a forceful defender of the Enlightenment against the opposition to it which gained strength toward the end of his life. In the midst of a literary battle against one of the leading figures of the counter-Enlightenment, he died in 1786 (EJ). SUBJECT(S): Philosophy -- Early works to 1800. Philosophie -- Ouvrages avant 1800. Philosophy OCLC: 4181196Wear to boards, especially to spine, bookplate, marks to endpapers, some offsetting to margins of first and final leaves. Internally very bright, clean, and tight. Good Condition (KH-10-25-GGWW-’ccelxr*).
Price: $1,400.00