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Peter Watson - The German Genius Europe’s Third Renaissance, the Second Scientific Revolution and the Twentieth Century PDF

1189 Pages·2011·5.322 MB·English
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The German Genius Europe’s Third Renaissance, the Second Scientific Revolution, and the Twentieth Century Peter Watson Contents Author’s Note Introduction: Blinded by the Light: Hitler, the Holocaust, and “the Past That Will Not Pass Away” Part One The Great Turn in German Life 1. Germanness Emerging 2. Bildung and the Inborn Drive toward Perfection Part Two A Third Renaissance, between Doubt and Darwin 3. Winckelmann, Wolf, and Lessing: the Third Greek Revival and the Origins of Modern Scholarship 4. The Supreme Products of the Age of Paper 5. New Light on the Structure of the Mind 6. The High Renaissance in Music: The Symphony as Philosophy 7. Cosmos, Cuneiform, Clausewitz 8. The Mother Tongue, the Inner Voice, and the Romantic Song 9. The Brandenburg Gate, the Iron Cross, and the German Raphaels Part Three The Rise of the Educated Middle Class: the Engines and Engineers of Modern Prosperity 10. Humboldt’s Gift: The Invention of Research and the Prussian (Protestant) Concept of Learning 11. The Evolution of Alienation 12. German Historicism: “A Unique Event in the History of Ideas” 13. The Heroic Age of Biology 14. Out from “The Wretchedness of German Backwardness” 15. “German Fever” in France, Britain, and the United States 16. Wagner’s Other Ring—Feuerbach, Schopenhauer, Nietzsche 17. Physics Becomes King: Helmholtz, Clausius, Boltzmann, Riemann 18. The Rise of the Laboratory: Siemens, Hofmann, Bayer, Zeiss 19. Masters of Metal: Krupp, Benz, Diesel, Rathenau 20. The Dynamics of Disease: Virchow, Koch, Mendel, Freud Part Four The Miseries and Miracles of Modernity 21. The Abuses of History 22. The Pathologies of Nationalism 23. Money, the Masses, the Metropolis: The “First Coherent School of Sociology” 24. Dissonance and the Most-Discussed Man in Music 25. The Discovery of Radio, Relativity, and the Quantum 26. Sensibility and Sensuality in Vienna 27. Munich/Schwabing: Germany’s “Montmartre” 28. Berlin Busybody 29. The Great War between Heroes and Traders 30. Prayers for a Fatherless Child: The Culture of the Defeated 31. Weimar: “Unprecedented Mental Alertness” 32. Weimar: The Golden Age of Twentieth-Century Physics, Philosophy, and History 33. Weimar: “A Problem in Need of a Solution” Part Five Songs of the Reich: Hitler and the “Spiritualization of the Struggle” 34. Nazi Aesthetics: The “Brown Shift” 35. Scholarship in the Third Reich: “No Such Thing as Objectivity” 36. The Twilight of the Theologians 37. The Fruits, Failures, and Infamy of German Wartime Science 38. Exile, and the Road into the Open Part Six Beyond Hitler: Continuity of the German Tradition under Adverse Conditions 39. The “Fourth Reich”: The Effect of German Thought on America 40. “His Majesty’s Most Loyal Enemy Aliens” 41. “Divided Heaven”: From Heidegger to Habermas to Ratzinger 42. Café Deutschland: “A Germany Not Seen Before” Conclusion: German Genius: The Dazzle, Deification, and Dangers of Inwardness Appendix: Thirty-five Underrated Germans Notes and References Searchable Terms About the Author Praise Other Books by Peter Watson Credits Copyright About the Publisher Author’s Note I n The Proud Tower, her splendid book about Europe in the run up (or run down) to World War I, Barbara Tuchman, the American historian, describes an incident in which Philip Ernst, the artist father of the surrealist Max Ernst, was painting a picture of his garden when he omitted a tree that spoiled the composition. Then, “overcome with remorse” at his offense against realism, he cut down the tree. It is a good story. If one had to make a criticism it might be that it falls into the trap of stereotyping Germans—as sticklers for exactitude, as pedantic and literal-minded. Part of the point of the book you are holding (as with the quotations given before the Table of Contents) is to go beyond stereotypes but also to show that the stereotypes peoples have of themselves can be as misleading—and as dangerous—as the stereotypes their neighbors, rivals, and enemies have of them. That is far from being the only point of the book, of course, which aims to be a history of German ideas over the past 250 years, from the death of Bach. No one can be an expert on such a long period, and in the course of my research I have been helped by a number of people whose assistance I would like to acknowledge here, some of whom have read all or parts of the typescript and offered suggestions for improvement. None of the names that follow, all of whom I thank warmly, is responsible for such errors, omissions, and solecisms that remain. My first debt is to George (Lord) Weidenfeld, who encouraged me in this project and opened countless doors in Germany. I next thank Keith Bullivant, an old friend, now professor of Modern German Studies at the University of Florida but someone who, in 1970, with R. H. Thomas, founded the first ever Department of German Studies, at Warwick University. This is a direction now followed throughout the English- speaking world. But I also extend my gratitude to: Charles Aldington, Rosemary Ashton, Volker Berghahn, Tom Bower, Neville Conrad, Claudia Amthor-Croft, Ralf Dahrendorf, Bernd Ebert, Hans Magnus Enzensberger, Joachim Fest, Corinne Flick, Gert-Rudolf Flick, Andrew Gordon, Roland Goll, Karin Graf, Ronald Grierson, David Henn, Johannes Jacob, Joachim Kaiser, Marion Kazemi, Wolf-Hagen Krauth, Martin Kremer, Michael Krüger, Manfred Lahnstein, Jerry Living, Robert Gerald Livingston, Günther Lottes, Constance Lowenthal, Inge Märkl, Christoph Mauch, Gisela Mettele, Richard Meyer, Peter Nitze, Andrew Nurnberg, Sabine Pfannensteil-Wright, Richard Pfennig, Werner Pfennig, Elisabeth Pyroth, Darius Rahimi, Ingeborg Reichle, Rudiger Safranski, Anne-Marie Schleich, Angela Schneider, Jochen Schneider, Kirsten Schroder, Hagen Schulze, Bernd Schuster, Bernd Seerbach, Kurt-Victor Selge, Fritz Stern, Lucia Stock, Robin Straus, Hans Strupp, Michael Stürmer, Patricia Sutcliffe, Clare Unger, Fritz Unger, and David Wilkinson. At the end of this book there are many pages of references. In addition to those, however, I would like to place on record my debt to a number of books on which I have relied especially heavily—all are classics of their kind. Alphabetically by author/editor they are: T. C. W. Blanning, The Culture of Power and the Power of Culture: Old Regime Europe, 1660– 1789 (Oxford, 2002); John Cornwell, Hitler’s Scientists: Science, War and the Devil’s Pact (Penguin, 2003); Steve Crawshaw, Easier Fatherland: Germany and the Twenty-First Century (Continuum, 2004); Eva Kolinsky and Wilfried van der Will, eds., The Cambridge Companion to Modern German Culture (Cambridge, 1998); Timothy Lenoir, The Strategy of Life: Teleology and Mechanics in Nineteenth-Century German Biology (Chicago, 1982); Bryan Magee, Wagner and Philosophy (Penguin, 2000); Suzanne L. Marchand, Down from Olympus: Archaeology and Philhellenism in Germany, 1750–1970 (Princeton, 1996); Peter Hanns Reill, The German Enlightenment and the Rise of Historicism (Berkeley, 1975); Robert J. Richards, The Romantic Conception of Life: Science and Philosophy in the Age of Goethe (Chicago, 2002). I also wish to thank the staff of the Goethe Institute, London, as well as the staffs at the cultural and press sections of the German Embassy in London, at the London Library, the Wiener Library, and at the German Historical Institutes in London and Washington, D.C. A few paragraphs of this book overlap with material used in my earlier books. They are indicated at the appropriate places in the references. A

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