- Research Article
- 10.1515/dzph-2025-0024
- Sep 19, 2025
- Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie
- Hannah Peaceman + 1 more
- Research Article
- 10.1515/dzph-2025-0022
- Sep 19, 2025
- Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie
- Gustav Melichar
Abstract This essay describes the linguistic phenomenon of false statements being made in public without their falsity being concealed. The phenomenon is referred to as spitting. It consists in the demonstration of the ability to make false statements and thus indicates a powerful discourse position. Through its speech act, it also makes a comment on the character of discourse in the public sphere: this is detached from the orientation of truth and reduced to a power play. The essay distinguishes the phenomenon of spitting from lying and from Harry Frankfurt’s concept of bullshitting. In the analysis of the speech act of spitting, its linguistic character is explained and linked to psychological and social functions. Finally, the essay argues that there are certain political positions that have a greater tendency to spit due to their background beliefs. The essay concludes with reflections on how to counter the destructive effects of spitting.
- Research Article
- 10.1515/dzph-2025-0018
- Sep 19, 2025
- Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie
- Klaus-Michael Kodalle + 2 more
Abstract In this interview, Klaus-Michael Kodalle gives insight into more than five decades of his philosophical career, covering various topics such as the relationship between politics and religion in the present and in his research on Hobbes; historic guilt, especially concerning National Socialism, forgiving and reconciliation; the philosophy of individual nonconformity; the role of the negative and the imaginative in historical and political conflicts. The second half of the interview touches on the post-1945 philosophical developments in Jena and Kodalle’s own activities in Jena after Reunification.
- Research Article
- 10.1515/dzph-2025-0019
- Aug 26, 2025
- Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie
- David Heering
- Research Article
- 10.1515/dzph-2025-0012
- Aug 26, 2025
- Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie
- Günter Zöller
Abstrakt This contribution places Hegel’s groundbreaking differentiation between civil society and the political state in Elements of the Philosophy of Right into the systematic context of his politico-philosophical thought and into the historical context of his intellectual biography between revolution and restoration. Particular attention is paid to the innovative conception of a specifically modern form of civico-political ethos (“Sittlichkeit”, ethical life) and the intricate interlacing of state and society by means of a differential conception of large civico-political groupings (“Stände”, estates). The modern polity portrayed by Hegel proves to be, by and large, our own.
- Research Article
- 10.1515/dzph-2025-0016
- Aug 26, 2025
- Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie
- Jacob Blumenfeld
Abstract This paper explores the intersection of class, moral injury, and recognition, examining how the class structure degrades human dignity and autonomy, and proposes paths for social transformation beyond recognition. Class represents a moral injury to the status of being human. Unlike identity-based claims that seek recognition, the condition of class necessitates abolition. The paradox is that even though class can be diagnosed as a form of misrecognition, its rectification cannot be accomplished via recognition. To identify class as a moral injury is to recognise that recognition cannot resolve the misrecognition of class. Undoing the epistemic injustices and misrecognitions of class rather demands the collective work of abolishing class itself.
- Research Article
- 10.1515/dzph-2025-0013
- Aug 26, 2025
- Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie
- Juan José Rodríguez
Abstract Schelling’s system of identity, initiated in 1801, soon encounters several ontological challenges following the publication of the dialogue Bruno in 1802. These issues revolve around the distinction between the Absolute and the world, and the very existence of the finite. The central theme of Schelling’s Philosophy and Religion – and of this paper – is the concept of the Fall. Schelling develops this idea by drawing an analogy with Christian dogma; in his philosophy, however, it signifies the emergence of meaning and explains the existence of a finite world. Moreover, freedom, inherently linked to finitude, now depends on the establishment of a “real absolute” where nature, the world, and humanity are recognised as the proper domain of freedom, in contrast to the original, self-contained “ideal absolute”. Comparing this development with Schelling’s earlier identity system, we argue that between 1802 and 1804 he shifts toward a more dualistic stance, thereby departing from mainstream German Idealism years before the Freedom Essay.
- Research Article
- 10.1515/dzph-2025-0014
- Aug 26, 2025
- Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie
- Kerstin Andermann
- Research Article
- 10.1515/dzph-2025-0021
- Aug 26, 2025
- Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie
- Christian Grüny
- Research Article
- 10.1515/dzph-2025-0017
- Aug 26, 2025
- Deutsche Zeitschrift für Philosophie
- Christian Schmidt
Abstract Despite the possibility of clearly defining social classes on the basis of economic criteria, ambivalent relationships occur time and again in concrete social constellations. Classes in such an intermediate relationship can be characterised as “amphibious”. A considerable proportion of the working class also exhibits such “amphibious” characteristics due to the effects of historical and current differentiation processes. The phenomenon is further entrenched by the education system, thereby explaining why people who have ascended through the educational system often develop ambivalent feelings about their milieus of origin. It is argued here that an analysis based on classes has more transformative potential than theories focusing on the trespassing of class boundaries.