Exotericism after Lessing: The Enduring Influence of F. H. Jacobi on Leo Strauss
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Published:2007
Issue:1
Volume:15
Page:59-83
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ISSN:1053-699X
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Container-title:The Journal of Jewish Thought and Philosophy
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language:
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Short-container-title:J Jew Thought Philos
Affiliation:
1. 1Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Florianópolis
Abstract
AbstractThis study shows that despite the fact that Leo Strauss published little about Jacobi, the misunderstood thinker about whom he wrote his doctoral dissertation exercised a crucial influence on what is often thought to be Strauss's most enduring achievement: his rediscovery of exotericism. A consideration of several of Strauss's writings that do mention Jacobi but remained unpublished at the time of his death—in particular his studies on Moses Mendelssohn, who was Jacobi's principal target in the Pantheismusstreit—reveal that Strauss considered Jacobi to be an exoteric writer. Appropriately enough, it is only a Straussian-style reading of Strauss's claims that exotericism lapsed after Lessing's death that reveals Jacobi's influence between the lines. Some consideration is given to the question of why Strauss wrote about Jacobi in this secretive way.
Subject
Literature and Literary Theory,Philosophy,Sociology and Political Science,Religious studies,Anthropology,Cultural Studies
Cited by
3 articles.
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3. Leo Strauss on ''German Nihilism'': Learning the Art of Writing;Journal of the History of Ideas;2007