
Contents
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2.1 Introduction 2.1 Introduction
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2.2 The Young Schelling on Myth 2.2 The Young Schelling on Myth
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2.3 “We Must Have a New Mythology” 2.3 “We Must Have a New Mythology”
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2.4 Old Precursors to the New Mythology 2.4 Old Precursors to the New Mythology
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2.4.1 Winckelmann and Hamann on Mythology 2.4.1 Winckelmann and Hamann on Mythology
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2.4.2 Herder on Mythology 2.4.2 Herder on Mythology
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2.5 Schlegel on Poetry 2.5 Schlegel on Poetry
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2.6 “Rede über die Mythologie” 2.6 “Rede über die Mythologie”
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2.7 Mythology in Schelling’s Idealism 2.7 Mythology in Schelling’s Idealism
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter argues that Friedrich Schlegel and F. W. J. Schelling build upon Schiller’s ideas in formulating the call for a “new mythology.” The chapter begins (in §2.2) with a discussion of Schelling’s early work on mythology, before turning (in §2.3) to the anonymous “Oldest System-Program of German Idealism,” which raises the idea of a “mythology of reason.” §2.4 traces earlier sources of this idea in Winckelmann, Hamann, and Herder. The remainder of the chapter demonstrates how the project of a new mythology informs Schlegel’s Dialogue on Poetry (in §§2.5–2.6) and Schelling’s System of Transcendental Idealism (in §2.7). A common thread to their work is the idea that mythology serves as a “middle link” between thought and feeling, whereby ideas of reason can acquire motivating force.
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