SUNY series in contemporary continental philosophy
Includes bibliographical references (pages 135-138) and index
The unfolding of the task -- Freedom, pantheism, and idealism -- The account of the possibility of evil -- The account of the actuality of freedom -- The real concept of freedom--the formal side -- The description of the manifestation of evil in humanity -- God as moral being--the nature of the whole with respect to freedom -- Indifference and the birth of love
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"With clarity and liveliness, Bernard Freydberg explores the major themes treated in Schelling's final public work: freedom, imagination, the nature of God, indifference, and love. Freydberg also examines Schilling's engagement with philosophy's history, including the relationship between his ideas and those of Plato and Kant, his oracular and mythical languages, and his relevance to contemporary thought."--BOOK JACKET
Schelling, Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von,1775-1854., Philosophische Untersuchungen über das Wesen der menschlichen Freiheit