Readership: Students and scholars of enlightenment studies; European history; philosophy; French, German, and comparative literature; linguistics
Avi Lifschitz, Lecturer in European History, University College London; Research Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study (Wissenschaftskolleg), Berlin
Avi Lifschitz is Lecturer in Early Modern European History at University College London (UCL), and Research Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Study (Wissenschaftskolleg) in Berlin. He is co-editor of Epicurus in the Enlightenment (2009).
Introduction 1: The mutual emergence of language, mind, and society: an Enlightenment debate 2: Symbolic cognition from Leibniz to the 1760s: theology, aesthetics, and history 3: The evolution and genius of language: debates in the Berlin Academy 4: J. D. Michaelis on language and vowel points: from confessional controversy to naturalism 5: A point of convergence and new departures: the 1759 contest on language and opinions 6: Language and cultural identity: the controversy over Prémontval's Préservatif 7: Tackling the naturalistic conundrum: instincts and conjectural history to 1771 8: Conclusion and a glimpse into the future