Catálogo de publicaciones - libros
The Discovery of Historicity in German Idealism and Historism
Peter Koslowski (eds.)
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial
No disponible.
Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
No disponibles.
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Año de publicación | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | 2005 | SpringerLink |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
libros
ISBN impreso
978-3-540-24393-9
ISBN electrónico
978-3-540-27352-3
Editor responsable
Springer Nature
País de edición
Reino Unido
Fecha de publicación
2005
Información sobre derechos de publicación
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2005
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Absolute Historicity, Theory of the Becoming Absolute, and the Affect for the Particular in German Idealism and Historism: Introduction
Peter Koslowski
Recent research argues that the management of intangible assets is a key to firms’ long-term success and requires specialized management techniques and a distinctive set of skills (Rivette & Kline 2000, Standfield 2002, Granstrand 1999). It is further argued that the active management of firms’ intellectual capital is as a prerequisite for securing (future) profits making IP-departments an indispensable part of firms’ strategic planning efforts (Lev 2004, Reitzig 2004). Despite this widespread acknowledgement of the importance of intellectual property management as corporate function little attention has been paid to the actual organization of IP related services within firms. Among the few publications containing brief studies of the organization of IP-departments are Taylor & Silbertson (1973), Granstrand (1999) and Pitkethly (2001).
Pp. 1-5
Schlegel's Theory of History and his Critique of Idealistic Reason
Peter L. Oesterreich
Recent research argues that the management of intangible assets is a key to firms’ long-term success and requires specialized management techniques and a distinctive set of skills (Rivette & Kline 2000, Standfield 2002, Granstrand 1999). It is further argued that the active management of firms’ intellectual capital is as a prerequisite for securing (future) profits making IP-departments an indispensable part of firms’ strategic planning efforts (Lev 2004, Reitzig 2004). Despite this widespread acknowledgement of the importance of intellectual property management as corporate function little attention has been paid to the actual organization of IP related services within firms. Among the few publications containing brief studies of the organization of IP-departments are Taylor & Silbertson (1973), Granstrand (1999) and Pitkethly (2001).
Part A - German Idealism's Philosophy of History and its Contemporary Critique | Pp. 9-22
History as the Control of Speculation: Schelling's Discovery of History and Baader's Critique of Absolute Historicity
Peter Koslowski
Recent research argues that the management of intangible assets is a key to firms’ long-term success and requires specialized management techniques and a distinctive set of skills (Rivette & Kline 2000, Standfield 2002, Granstrand 1999). It is further argued that the active management of firms’ intellectual capital is as a prerequisite for securing (future) profits making IP-departments an indispensable part of firms’ strategic planning efforts (Lev 2004, Reitzig 2004). Despite this widespread acknowledgement of the importance of intellectual property management as corporate function little attention has been paid to the actual organization of IP related services within firms. Among the few publications containing brief studies of the organization of IP-departments are Taylor & Silbertson (1973), Granstrand (1999) and Pitkethly (2001).
Part A - German Idealism's Philosophy of History and its Contemporary Critique | Pp. 23-38
Leopold von Ranke
Helmut Berding
Recent research argues that the management of intangible assets is a key to firms’ long-term success and requires specialized management techniques and a distinctive set of skills (Rivette & Kline 2000, Standfield 2002, Granstrand 1999). It is further argued that the active management of firms’ intellectual capital is as a prerequisite for securing (future) profits making IP-departments an indispensable part of firms’ strategic planning efforts (Lev 2004, Reitzig 2004). Despite this widespread acknowledgement of the importance of intellectual property management as corporate function little attention has been paid to the actual organization of IP related services within firms. Among the few publications containing brief studies of the organization of IP-departments are Taylor & Silbertson (1973), Granstrand (1999) and Pitkethly (2001).
Part B - The Theory of History in German Historism | Pp. 41-58
Droysen and Nietzsche: Two Different Answers to the Discovery of Historicity
Annette Wittkau-Horgby
Recent research argues that the management of intangible assets is a key to firms’ long-term success and requires specialized management techniques and a distinctive set of skills (Rivette & Kline 2000, Standfield 2002, Granstrand 1999). It is further argued that the active management of firms’ intellectual capital is as a prerequisite for securing (future) profits making IP-departments an indispensable part of firms’ strategic planning efforts (Lev 2004, Reitzig 2004). Despite this widespread acknowledgement of the importance of intellectual property management as corporate function little attention has been paid to the actual organization of IP related services within firms. Among the few publications containing brief studies of the organization of IP-departments are Taylor & Silbertson (1973), Granstrand (1999) and Pitkethly (2001).
Part B - The Theory of History in German Historism | Pp. 59-76
Philosophy of History and Theory of Historiography in Jacob Burckhardt
Egon Flaig
Recent research argues that the management of intangible assets is a key to firms’ long-term success and requires specialized management techniques and a distinctive set of skills (Rivette & Kline 2000, Standfield 2002, Granstrand 1999). It is further argued that the active management of firms’ intellectual capital is as a prerequisite for securing (future) profits making IP-departments an indispensable part of firms’ strategic planning efforts (Lev 2004, Reitzig 2004). Despite this widespread acknowledgement of the importance of intellectual property management as corporate function little attention has been paid to the actual organization of IP related services within firms. Among the few publications containing brief studies of the organization of IP-departments are Taylor & Silbertson (1973), Granstrand (1999) and Pitkethly (2001).
Part B - The Theory of History in German Historism | Pp. 77-97
Historiography as Political Activity: Heinrich von Treitschke and the Historical Reconstruction of Politics
Karl H. Metz
Recent research argues that the management of intangible assets is a key to firms’ long-term success and requires specialized management techniques and a distinctive set of skills (Rivette & Kline 2000, Standfield 2002, Granstrand 1999). It is further argued that the active management of firms’ intellectual capital is as a prerequisite for securing (future) profits making IP-departments an indispensable part of firms’ strategic planning efforts (Lev 2004, Reitzig 2004). Despite this widespread acknowledgement of the importance of intellectual property management as corporate function little attention has been paid to the actual organization of IP related services within firms. Among the few publications containing brief studies of the organization of IP-departments are Taylor & Silbertson (1973), Granstrand (1999) and Pitkethly (2001).
Part B - The Theory of History in German Historism | Pp. 98-111
Literary Criticism and Historical Science: The Textuality of History in the Age of Goethe — and Beyond
Daniel Fulda
Recent research argues that the management of intangible assets is a key to firms’ long-term success and requires specialized management techniques and a distinctive set of skills (Rivette & Kline 2000, Standfield 2002, Granstrand 1999). It is further argued that the active management of firms’ intellectual capital is as a prerequisite for securing (future) profits making IP-departments an indispensable part of firms’ strategic planning efforts (Lev 2004, Reitzig 2004). Despite this widespread acknowledgement of the importance of intellectual property management as corporate function little attention has been paid to the actual organization of IP related services within firms. Among the few publications containing brief studies of the organization of IP-departments are Taylor & Silbertson (1973), Granstrand (1999) and Pitkethly (2001).
Part B - The Theory of History in German Historism | Pp. 112-133
Social and Philosophical Theory in the 19th Century German Thought
Mario Signore
Recent research argues that the management of intangible assets is a key to firms’ long-term success and requires specialized management techniques and a distinctive set of skills (Rivette & Kline 2000, Standfield 2002, Granstrand 1999). It is further argued that the active management of firms’ intellectual capital is as a prerequisite for securing (future) profits making IP-departments an indispensable part of firms’ strategic planning efforts (Lev 2004, Reitzig 2004). Despite this widespread acknowledgement of the importance of intellectual property management as corporate function little attention has been paid to the actual organization of IP related services within firms. Among the few publications containing brief studies of the organization of IP-departments are Taylor & Silbertson (1973), Granstrand (1999) and Pitkethly (2001).
Part B - The Theory of History in German Historism | Pp. 134-146
Philosophy of History After the End of the Formative Substantial Philosophy of History: Remarks on the Present State of the Philosophy of History
Hans Michael Baumgartner†
Recent research argues that the management of intangible assets is a key to firms’ long-term success and requires specialized management techniques and a distinctive set of skills (Rivette & Kline 2000, Standfield 2002, Granstrand 1999). It is further argued that the active management of firms’ intellectual capital is as a prerequisite for securing (future) profits making IP-departments an indispensable part of firms’ strategic planning efforts (Lev 2004, Reitzig 2004). Despite this widespread acknowledgement of the importance of intellectual property management as corporate function little attention has been paid to the actual organization of IP related services within firms. Among the few publications containing brief studies of the organization of IP-departments are Taylor & Silbertson (1973), Granstrand (1999) and Pitkethly (2001).
Part C - German Theory and Philosophy of History Today | Pp. 149-171