A Will Free to Presence... or Not: Schelling on the Originality of the Will

Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 18 (1):67-78 (2013)
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Abstract

This article presents Schelling’s doctrine of creation, primarily as outlined in his lectures on mythology and revelation. Schelling there presents not a will to power, but a power to will or not to will—the decisiveness of freedom rather than blind willing. Accordingly, Schelling is able to surpass the tradition of the metaphysics of presence through freedom as an unprecognoscible act prior to potency/power. Schelling’s will is not natural but preternatural, capable of bringing forth something original, i.e., that which first becomes possible only once it has already become actual

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Tyler Tritten
Gonzaga University

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