Have you seen the new Springer volume “Teaching Women Philosophers”? In her chapter, Evelin Root (Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherland)examines Germaine de Staël’s De l’influence des passions sur le bonheur des individus et des nations and analyzes how Staël integrates the passions into her moral and philosophical framework:
Germaine de Staël’s theory of the impassioned nature of human beings, as set out in her work De l’influence des passions sur le bonheur des individus et des nations (1796), provides an insightful account of a sentimentalist theory in which human sensibility and emotionality are understood to be a core part of moral thought. In this work, Staël develops a psychological anthropology and moral theory that presents an interplay between the rational and the sentimental as one of its core aspects. Understanding the impassioned nature of human beings is crucial if—like Staël—one believes that passions are the most important root from which individual and collective happiness sprout. Furthermore, passions are essential for moral judgement: in the complex human psychology, dual negative and positive influences of both reason and the passions influence each other. This interplay functions on a political and public level as well as on a personal and private level.
Eveline Groot also contributed to the IAPh 2021 with her presentation Germaine de Staël’s Philosophy of Sensibility. Find out more about the IAPh conference here.
Here you can also see Groot in an interview at our Libori Summer School 2019:
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