since 07/2023
Gerda Henkel Scholarship (Project:
2021-2022
Scholar at the Gotha Research Centre of the University of Erfurt (development of the proposal: The Leibniz-Cocceji Controversy and its Environment. Possibilities of thinking about subjective rights in German natural law around 1700).
2019-2021
Teaching assistant in welcome classes (GS), Schule am Breiten Luch, Berlin-Hohenschönhausen
2016-2019
Research Assistant, University of Paderborn, Center for the History of Women Philosophers and Scientists (directed by Prof. Dr. Ruth Hagengruber): Project Management Digital Edition: Émilie Du Châtelet, St. Petersburg Manuscripts.
March-August 2016
Research Associate of the Leibniz Endowed Professorship, Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz University of Hannover (Prof. Dr. Wenchao Li).
2011-2015
Research Associate, Leibniz Edition, Potsdam, Berlin-Brandenburg Academy of Sciences and Humanities (Leibniz Academy Edition, Series IV:Political Writings)
2008-2010
Research assistant in the interdisciplinary research project "Sacramental Representation", Center for Literary and Cultural Research, Berlin
2008
Doctorate (Dr. phil.) with the dissertation "Naturrecht und göttliches Gesetz. Hermeneutische Transformationen bei Grotius, Hobbes und Spinoza" (Philosophical Institute of the Humboldt University of Berlin, doctoral supervisor Prof. Dr. Rolf-Peter Horstmann, second supervisor Prof. Dr. Gerald Hartung)
2006
Visiting scholar at the Centre des Études en Rhétorique, Philosophy et Histoire des Idées, École Normale Supérieure des Lettres et Sciences Humaines (CERPHI-ENS), Lyon
2004-2008
hD student at the Max Planck Institute for History, Göttingen (International Max Planck Research School) Doctoral studies in Medieval and Early Modern Studies, Georg-August-University Göttingen
2004
agistra Artium Philosophy, Modern German Literature, Art History (Master's thesis "Natural Law and Morality in Hegel's Jena System Designs" with Prof. Dr. Rolf-Peter Horstmann)
2001-2003
Student assistant in the library of the Philosophical Institute of the HU Berlin
1997-2004
Studies of Philosophy, Modern German Literature and Art History at the Humboldt-University of Berlin
1996-1997
tudies of Modern German Literature and Philosophy, TU Dresden
1994-1997
Studies of Psychology at the Technical University of Dresden
The Leibniz-Cocceji Controversy and its Environment. Possibilities of Thinking of Natural Rights in Debates on Principles of German Natural Law around 1700, project developed within the framework of the TMWWDG-scholarship
This research project is a case study of the reception and transformation of the doctrine of natural rights and the debates on principles of natural law that accompanied its development in German natural law around 1700. At the center of the investigation is the controversy over the principia iuris naturalis between Samuel Cocceji and Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz in the years 1700-1702. The fundamental importance of the Leibniz-Cocceji controversy in the history of ideas lies in the fact that in it the central opposition of the early modern debate on natural law in the Grotius succession - the opposition between social-anthropologically based reason-based law and 'voluntaristic' norm absolutism - was explicitly negotiated on the basis of the natural rights doctrine ; its resonance in the natural law of the early German Enlightenment was correspondingly strong. The research project aims at a reconstruction of (a) the historical course of the controversy; (b) the positions and arguments in their historical spheres of influence; (c) the contemporary reception; and finally at a discussion of the historical positions and the social models implicit in them in the context of contemporary philosophical debates on rights.
Fig.: Johann Georg Mentzel: Heinrich von Cocceji, ca. 1720.
Atoms, Monads and Passions in Julien Offray de La Mettrie's previously undiscovered early work Essai d'un nouveau systême sur les passions, considerées par les atosmes (1741), project funded by the Gerda Henkel Foundation
The philosophical first work of the physician and radical enlightener Julien Offray de La Mettrie (1709-1751), who died in exile in Prussia in 1751, has so far been considered the Histoire naturelle de l'ame (1745). While La Mettrie had already become known as an author and translator of medical and scientific writings in the preceding decade, neither textual evidence nor reliable biographical data on the prehistory of his first materialist programme appeared to have come down to us so far, so that La Mettrie's philosophical beginnings remained obscure. However, it is most likely that a clandestine publication from 1741 can be attributed to La Mettrie, thus closing an important gap in La Mettrie's intellectual biography. The Essai d'un nouveau systême sur les passions, considerées par les atômes (1741) reveals two constellations that decisively shaped La Mettrie's 'first' philosophy, albeit with partly contrary accents:
1. the debates on metaphysics in the circle of Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis, Voltaire and Émilie du Châtelet;
2. the research and monistic natural philosophical speculations in the circle of La Mettrie's academic teacher and friend François-Joseph Hunauld (1701-1742), which were influenced by neo-Epicurean medicine and Newtonian chemistry.
Exploring these constellations reveals an intriguing new perspective on both the (micro-)genealogy of materialism in the early French
Enlightenment and on the scientific-historical horizons and the intellectual-historical dimensions of La Mettrie's materialist
epistemology.
Fig.: Essai d'un nouveau systême sur les passions considerées par les atosmes. Copy from the former Charlottenburg private library of Frederick II. Title page. Berlin, Staatsbibliothek Unter den Linden.
Abb.: Essai d'un nouveau systême sur les passions considerées par les atosmes. Exemplar aus der ehemaligen Charlottenburger Privatbibliothek Friedrichs II. Titelblatt. Berlin, Staatsbibliothek Unter den Linden.
Historisch-kritische Editionen
Monographien
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Aufsätze
Übersetzungen
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