- Women and Intellectual History in the Twentieth Century, Part Two: Activists, Academics, and the Future
- The Influence of the Principle “Necessitas Non Habet Legem” on Nordic Medieval Laws on Theft
- Sinai and the Areopagus: Philip Melanchthon, Natural Law, and the Beginnings of Athenian Legal History in the Shadow of the Schmalkaldic War
- The Strategic Emergence of Cartesianism: Descartes, Public Controversy, and the Quarrel of Utrecht
- Breaking the Revolutionary Deadlock? Volney’s Leçons and the Debate on the Value of History
- The Antihumanism of the Young Deleuze: Sartre, Catholicism, and the Perspective of the Inhuman, 1945–48
- “Building the Earth”: Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, Science, and the Spirituality of the United Nations
- Contents of Volume 85
- M. N. Roy and the Problem of Parliamentary Democracy
- Marcia L. Colish (1937–2024)
- Women and Intellectual History in the Twentieth Century, Part One: Rethinking the “Origins” of US Intellectual History
- Antiquarianism, Local Traditions, and Urban Identity in the Early Modern Netherlands: The Controversy about the City of the Nervii
- Sieyès’s Constitutional Jury, the Pennsylvania Council of Censors, and the Debate on the Conservative Power in the French Revolution
- “Facts” and “Ideas”: Richard Jones, William Whewell, and the Entangled Histories of Science and Political Economy in Early Nineteenth-Century Britain
- Seeing the Future through a Kaleidoscope: Uses of Morphological Type in Michelet’s National and Natural Histories
- Foucault and Dumézil on Antiquity
- Prisoner, Sailor, Soldier, Spy: Hobbes on Coercion and Consent
- The Speech without Doors: A Genre, 1627–1769
- Sophie de Grouchy’s Political Thought in the Letters on Sympathy (1798)
- Neo-Confucianism and the Development of German Idealism
- A Food Utopia? Italian Colonial Visions of Tripolitania and Cyrenaica, 1911–13
- When Jupiter Meets Saturn: Aby Warburg, Karl Sudhoff, and Astrological Medicine in the Age of Disenchantment
- Conceitos and Conceptos: The Weight of Words in the Iberian World
- Historicizing a Dream of Complete Science
- A Calf from a Tree-Trunk: From a Rustic Proverb to a Standard Scholastic Argument
- “The right we have to our owne bodies, goods, and liberties”: The Freedom of the Ancient Constitution and Common Law in Milton’s Early Prose
- Taking Pragmatism Seriously Enough: Toward a Deeper Understanding of the British Debate over Pragmatism, ca. 1900–1910
- Channeling Erasmus in Communist Poland: Leszek Kołakowski, Vatican II, and the Reinvention of “Counter-Reformation”
- Alternate Edens: History, Evolution, and Origins in UNESCO’s Cultural and Scientific History of Mankind
- Psychiatry and Decolonization: Histories of Transcultural Psychiatry in the Twentieth Century
- Legal Analogies in Cicero’s Political Thought
- Donald R. Kelley (1931–2023)
- Thinking about Chemistry in Byzantium and the Islamic World
- The Idea of Deafness as Disability in Renaissance Germany
- Euhemerus and Euhemerism in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries
- Bureaucracy: The Making of a Buzzword
- “The Stereotype Takes Care of Everything”: Labor Antisemitism and Critical Theory During World War II
- Myth, Modernity, and the Legacy of the Axial Age: Taylor, Habermas, Assmann, and Jaspers
- Historians of Ideas Rush in Where Stratigraphers Fear to Tread
- The Wise Adviser Trap: Catastrophic Decision-Making in Herodotus and Thucydides
- Portable Scholasticism? The Intellectual Horizons of Gervase of Tilbury
- On Indexing: The Birth and Early Development of an Idea
- Astronomical Chronology, the Jesuit China Mission, and Enlightenment History
- Art as Critical Experience in Theodor W. Adorno and John Dewey
- Hannah Arendt among the Cold War Liberals
- The Neoliberal Transition in Intellectual and Economic History
- “A Primitive Kind of Superstition”: The Idea of the Paranoid Style in Art, Psychiatry, and Politics
- The Cambridge Greek Lexicon: An Essay-Review
- Mapping Atlantis: Olof Rudbeck and the Use of Maps in Early Modern Scholarship
- The Accountants of Nineveh: Exile Jews and Capitalism in British Imperial Thinking
- Women’s Reception of Kant, 1790–1810
- The Romance of the Republic: Class Conflict and the Problem of Progress in Thomas Arnold’s History of Rome (1838–42)
- Anarchism in One Country: Diego Abad de Santillán and the Invention of Participatory National Economic Planning in Interwar Anarchism
- Linguistic Diplomacy: Roman Jakobson between East and West, 1956–68
- The Remnants of Giorgio Agamben: The Omnibus Homo Sacer upon Its Completion
- Rome as “Part of the Heavens”? Leon Battista Alberti’s Descriptio urbis Romae (ca. 1450) and Ptolemy’s Almagest
- Occupy the Commonplaces: Machiavelli and the Aristotelian Tradition of the Topics
- Knowing Old Age in the Renaissance: Medicine, Poetry, and Spirituality in Ulisse Aldrovandi’s Encyclopedia of Old Age
- The Abbé d’Aubignac’s Homer and the Culture of the Street in Seventeenth-Century Paris
- Max Weber, the Rise of the Polis, and the “Hoplite Revolution” Theory
- How to Do Things with Words: Antifascism as a Differentially Mobilizing Ideology, from the Popular Front to the Black Power Movement
- Historians and Programmers in the 1970s: Formal Languages, the Writing of History, and Ideas of Science
- Rethinking War, Nature, and Supernature in Early Modern Scholasticism: Introduction
- Warfare, Christianity, and the Law of Nature
- Across the Confessional Divide: Johannes Hoornbeeck, José de Acosta, and the Role of Force and Free Will in the Development of a Reformed Missiology
- Seventeenth-Century Scotism and the War Just on Both Sides
- The Jewish Family, Forced Baptism, and Holy War in Early Modern Roman Scotism
- Iberian Theories of Empire in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
- Contents of Volume 83
- Redefining Reciprocity: Appointment Edicts and Political Thought in Medieval China
- The Linguistic Terror in France according to Jean Paulhan and Jean-Paul Sartre
- “I am aware that this letter may be offensive”: The Unapologetic Achievements of Ruth Barcan Marcus and Marjorie Glicksman Grene
- Liberality as a Fiscal Problem in Medieval and Renaissance Thought: A Genealogy from Aristotle’s Tyrant to Machiavelli’s Prince
- Debating Drama in the Early Modern University: John Case, Aristotle’s Politics, and a Previously Unknown Oxford Disputation
- Charles Francis Sheridan on the Feudal Origins and Political Science of the 1772 Revolution in Sweden
- The Neapolitan Enlightenment and the Conceptual Challenges of Antislavery Legislation in Colombia
- From Status Politics to the Paranoid Style: Richard Hofstadter and the Pitfalls of Psychologizing History
- Identity, Immigration, and Islam: Neo-reactionary and New-Right Perceptions and Prescriptions
- The Many Lives of René Descartes
- Eilhard Lubin, Academic Unorthodoxy, and the Dynamics of Confessional Intellectual Cultures
- The Mystery of Mount Vesuvius’s Crosses: Belief, Credulity, and Credibility in Post-Reformation Catholicism
- Body Knowledge, Part II: Motion, Memory, and the Mythology of Modernity
- Locating Ludwig von Mises: Introduction
- The Politics of Rationality in Early Neoliberalism: Max Weber, Ludwig von Mises, and the Socialist Calculation Debate
- Two Types of Separation: Ludwig von Mises and German Neoliberalism
- Repurposing Mises: Murray Rothbard and the Birth of Anarchocapitalism
- Neoliberal Economic Thinking and the Quest for Rational Socialism in China: Ludwig von Mises and the Market Reform Debate
- A Beginner’s Success: The Impact of Plotinus’s First Treatise among Christians
- A “Revolution” in Political Thought: Translations of Polybius Book 6 and the Conceptual History of Revolution
- Protestant Intellectual Culture and Political Ideas in the Scottish Universities, ca. 1600–50
- Georg Lukács and Revolutionary Realpolitik, 1918–19: An Essay on Ethical Action, Historical Judgment, and the History of Political Thought
- Global Laozegetics: A Study in Globalized Philosophy
- Body Knowledge, Part I: Dance, Anthropology, and the Erasure of History
- Farewell to The German Ideology
- Contents of Volume 82
- Anselm’s Predicament: The Proslogion and Anti-intellectual Rhetoric in the Aftermath of the Berengarian Controversy
- The “Urbild” of “Einbildung”: The Archetype in the Imagination in Eighteenth-Century German Aesthetics
- The Logician in the Archive: John Venn’s Diagrams and Victorian Historical Thinking
- Epistemological Battles on the Home Front: Early Neoliberals at War against the Social Relations of Science Movement
- The Capital of Race Capitals: Toward a Connective Cartography of Black Internationalisms
- Planning the American Future: Daniel Bell, Future Research, and the Commission on the Year 2000
- The Immeasurability of the Monastic Mind: Writing about Peter Abelard (1079–1142)
- Conceptions of Tolerance in Antiquity and Late Antiquity
- Anxieties of Transmission: Rabbinic Responsa and Early Modern “Print Culture”
- The First Conceptualization of Terrorism: Tallien, Roederer, and the “System of Terror” (August 1794)
- The Superhuman Origins of Human Dignity: Kantorowicz’s Dante
- Translation in Action: Global Intellectual History and Early Modern Diplomacy
- Multilingual Foreign Affairs: Translation and Diplomatic Agency in Eighteenth-Century Stockholm
- Drawing the Lines: Translation and Diplomacy in the Central Asian Borderlands
- A Question of Political Correctness: Translating Friendship across Time and Space
- Terms of Government: Early Modern Japanese Concepts of Rulership and Political Geography in Translation
- The Making of a Philosopher: The Contemplative Letters of Charles de Bovelles
- “No distinction of Black or Fair”: The Natural History of Race in Adam Ferguson’s Lectures on Moral Philosophy
- Making Historicity: Paleontology and the Proximity of the Past in Germany, 1775–1825
- Contingency, Freedom, and Uchronic Narratives: Charles Renouvier’s Philosophy of History in the Shadow of the Franco-Prussian War
- Wartime Pamphlets, Anti-English Metaphors, and the Intensification of Antidemocratic Discourse in Germany after the First World War
- The “Servile State” Down Under: Hilaire Belloc and Australian Political Thought, 1912–53
- The Tyrant and the Martyr: Recent Research on Sovereignty and Theater
- Not Six Million nor Thirty Thousand: From “Holocaust Revisionism” to “State Terrorism” Denial in Argentina, 1945–2016
- When Race Was Removed from Racism: Per Engdahl, the Networks that Saved Fascism and the Making of the Concept of Ethnopluralism
- Fascisms and Their Afterli(v)es: An Introduction
- Fascism’s Stages: Imperial Violence, Entanglement, and Processualization
- Masters of Sex? Nazism, Bigamy, and a University Professor’s Fight with Society and the State (1930–1970)
- Human Character and the Formation of the State: Reconsidering Machiavelli and Polybius 6
- At the Bottom of the Soul: The Psychologization of the “Fundus Animae” between Leibniz and Sulzer
- Early Modern Iberia, Indexed: Early Modern Iberia, Indexed: Hernando Colón’s Cosmography
- Reforming Utilitarianism: Lyric Poetry in J. S. Mill’s “Thoughts on Poetry and Its Varieties” and Autobiography
- The Theatre of Moral Sentiments: Neoclassical Dramaturgy and Adam Smith’s Impartial Spectator
- Contents of Volume 81
- Negotiating an “Economic Revolution”: History, Collectivism, and Liberalism in William Clarke’s Thought
- Revolutionizing the New Model Army: Ecclesiastical Independence, Social Justice, and Political Legitimacy
- Physiology of the Haunted Mind: Naturalistic Theories of Apparitions in Early Nineteenth-Century Scotland
- Gandhi’s Spinning Wheel: The Charkha and Its Regenerative Effects
- Aquinas, ius gentium, and the Decretists
- Immanuel Kant on Race Mixing: The Gypsies, the Black Portuguese, and the Jews on St. Thomas
- History, Nation, and Modernity: The Idea of “Decadência” in Portuguese Medievalist Discourses (1842–1940)
- The Rural Economics of René de Girardin: Landscapes at the Service of L’Idéologie Nobiliaire
- Searching for Orientation in the History of Culture: Aby Warburg and Leo Frobenius on the Morphological Study of the Ifa-Board
- The Early Modern Debate over the Age of the Hebrew Vowel Points: Biblical Criticism and Hebrew Scholarship in the Confessional Republic of Letters
- The Idea of Liberty, 1600–1800: A Distributional Concept Analysis
- Montesquieu’s Considerations on the State of Europe
- Frantz Fanon, Institutional Psychotherapy, and the Decolonization of Psychiatry
- The Emergence of Texture
- Hugo Grotius and Marriage’s Global Past: Conjugal Thinking in Early Modern Political Thought
- Northern Declarations of Freedom of the Press: The Relative Importance of Philosophical Ideas and of Local Politics
- The Cloche and Its Critics: Muting the Church’s Voice in Pre-Revolutionary France
- J. S. Mill on Liberty, Socratic Dialectic, and the Logic behind Political Discourse
- Communism as Religious Phenomenon: Phenomenology and Catholic Socialism In Yugoslav Slovenia, 1927–42
- Orient contra China: Eusèbe Renaudot’s Vision of World History (ca. 1700)
- The Idea of the Upelekwa: Constructing a Transcontinental Community in Eastern Africa, 1888–96
- Perfecting Community as “One Man”: Moses Ḥayim Luzzatto’s Pietistic Confraternity in Eighteenth-Century Padua
- Technology, Law, and Annihilation: Carl Schmitt’s Critique of Utopianism
- A Meadow that Lifts the Soul: Originality as Anthologizing in the Byzantine Church Interior
- “Peril in the means of its diffusion”: William Godwin on Truth and Social Media
- Crashing the Cathedral: Historical Reassessments of Twentieth-Century International Relations
- Raymond Aron’s “Machiavellian” Liberalism
- Deformations of the Secular: Naquib Al-Attas’s Conception and Critique of Secularism
- Contents of Volume 80
- The Idea of Volk and the Origins of Völkisch Research, 1800–1930s
- Geoffrey Scott and Modern Architectural Thought: The Creation of a Legacy throughout the Twentieth Century
- On Genius: The Development of a Philosophical Concept of Genius in Eighteenth-Century Britain
- Adam Boreel on Collegiant Freedom of Speech
- Spinoza and Menasseh ben Israel: Facts and Fictions
- Historical Approaches to Epistemic Authority: The Case of Neoplatonism
- Localizing Dewey’s Notions of Democracy and Education: A Journey across Configurations in Latin America
- Practices of Intellectual Labor in the Republic of Letters: Leibniz and Edward Bernard on Language and European Origins
- Pierre Bayle’s Correspondence and Its Significance for the History of Ideas
- Transcendental Materialism in the German Free Religious Movement: Science, Nature, and Theology in Kirchliche Reform, 1846-52
- Sovereignty after Gender Trouble: Language, Reproduction, and Supranationalism in Estonia, 1980–2017
- Defending Political Theory After Burke: Stewart’s Intellectual Disciplines and the Demotion of Practice
- The Language of “Political Science” in Early Modern Europe
- Feminism and Natural Right in François Poulain de la Barre and Gabrielle Suchon
- The Construction of the Concepts “Democracy” and “Republic” in Arabic in the Eastern and Southern Mediterranean, 1798–1878
- The Creuzerstreit and Hegel’s Philosophy of History
- Scrutiny’s Virtue: Leavis, MacIntyre, and the Case for Tradition
- Without Apparent Occasion: Recent Research on Melancholy
- Value, Justice, and Presumption in the Late Scholastic Controversy over Price Regulation
- Modernity as Theodicy: Odo Marquard Reads Hans Blumenberg’s The Legitimacy of the Modern Age
- Archives, Thresholds, Discontinuities: Blumenberg and Foucault on Historical Substantialism and the Phenomenology of History
- Secularization, Genealogy, and the Legitimacy of the Modern Age: Remarks on the Löwith-Blumenberg Debate
- Hagiography by the Book: Bibliomancy and Early Modern Cultures of Compilation in Francisco Zumel’s De vitis patrum (1588)
- The Idea of Royal Empire and the Imperial Crown of England, 1542–1698
- Sovereignty and Government in Jean Bodin’s Six Livres de la République (1576)
- Introduction: Reflections on the Fiftieth Anniversary of Hans Blumenberg’s The Legitimacy of the Modern Age
- The History of Dogma and the Story of Modernity: The Modern Age as “Second Overcoming of Gnosticism”
- Life without Toothache: Hans Blumenberg’s Zettelkasten and History of Science as Theoretical Attitude
- The Ministerium Naturae: Natural Law in the Exegesis and Theological Discourse at Paris between 1160 and 1215
- Subjection without Servitude: The Imperial Protectorate in Renaissance Political Thought
- Conway and Charleton on the Intimate Presence of Souls in Bodies
- Paul et Virginie, or the Enigma of Evil: The Double Theodicy of Bernardin de Saint-Pierre
- Moral Comfort versus Tragic Downfall: Kant’s Concept of the Dynamically Sublime and Schelling’s Tragic Alternative
- Japanese Right-Wing Discourse in International Context: Minoda Muneki’s Interwar Writings on Class and Nation
- Contents of Volume 79
- Retracing the “Art of Arts and Science of Sciences” from Gregory the Great to Philo of Alexandria
- The Origen of Pico’s Kabbalah: Esoteric Wisdom and the Dignity of Man
- Immaterial Spirits and the Reform of First Philosophy: The Compatibility of Kant’s pre-Critical Metaphysics with the Arguments in Dreams of a Spirit-Seer
- Revisiting Hempel’s 1942 Contribution to the Philosophy of History
- Introduction: Special Forum on Christianity and Human Rights
- Christian Human Rights in the French Revolution
- American Protestants and the Era of Anti-racist Human Rights
- Theology and the Politics of Christian Human Rights
- Catholics, Protestants, and the Tortured Path to Religious Liberty
- An Anti-totalitarian Saint: The Canonization of Edith Stein
- When the Eyes Are Shut: The Strange Case of Girolamo Cardano’s Idolum in Somniorum Synesiorum Libri IIII (1562)
- Pierre Bayle and the Secularization of Conscience
- Volney and the French Revolution
- “Writers Who Have Rendered Women Objects of Pity”: Mary Wollstonecraft’s Literary Criticism in the Analytical Review and A Vindication of the Rights of Woman
- Family, Gender, and Progress: Sophie de Grouchy and Her Exclusion in the Publication of Condorcet’s Sketch of Human Progress
- Marx and the Kabbalah: Aaron Shemuel Lieberman’s Materialist Interpretation of Jewish History
- John Robert Seeley, Natural Religion, and the Victorian Conflict between Science and Religion
- Anthropologia: An (Almost) Forgotten Early Modern History
- The First Orchestrated Attack on Spinoza: Johannes Melchioris and the Cartesian Network in Utrecht
- The Many Liberalisms of Serge Audier
- Revising History: Introduction to the Symposium on the Bicentennial of the Latin American Revolutions of Independence
- Empires, Nations, and Revolutions
- The Conceptual History of Independence and the Colonial Question in Spanish America
- Catholic Republicanism: The Creation of the Spanish American Republics during Revolution
- Beyond the “History of Ideas”: The Issue of the “Ideological Origins of the Revolutions of Independence” Revisited
- Race, Wars, and Citizenship: Free People of Color in the Spanish American Independence
- History of Concepts and the Historiography of the Independence of Brazil: A Preliminary Diagnosis
- Can the Nonhuman Speak?: Breaking the Chain of Being in the Anthropocene
- Saving the Philosopher’s Soul: The De pietate Aristotelis by Fortunio Liceti
- Useful Knowledge, Improvement, and the Logic of Capital in Richard Ligon’s True and Exact History of Barbados
- Charles Darwin’s Theory of Moral Sentiments: What Darwin’s Ethics Really Owes to Adam Smith
- Marie Stopes’s Wonderful Rhythm Charts: Normalizing the Natural
- Theory, Practice, and Modernity: Leo Strauss on Rousseau’s Epicureanism
- A Thousand Warburgs
- Contents of Volume 78
- “Scholasticism Is a Daughter of Judaism”: The Discovery of Jewish Influence on Medieval Christian Thought
- Francis Bacon’s Valerius Terminus and the Voyage to the “Great Instauration”
- The Picture Multiple: Figuring, Thinking, and Knowing in Descartes’s Essais (1637)
- Deformities of Nature: Sleepwalking and Non-Conscious States of Mind in Late Eighteenth-Century Britain
- The Greatest Metaphor Ever Mixed: Gold in the British Bible, 1750–1850
- The Metaphysics of Morris R. Cohen: From Realism to Objective Relativism
- The Philosophical Genealogy of Taylor’s Social Imaginaries: A Complex History of Ideas and Predecessors
- Girolamo Cardano and Julius Caesar Scaliger in Debate about Nature’s Musical Secrets
- Zilsel’s Thesis, Maritime Culture, and Iberian Science in Early Modern Europe
- Spinoza’s Life: 1677–1802
- Leopold Zunz and the Meanings of Wissenschaft
- John Rawls in Light of the Archive: Introduction to the Symposium on the Rawls Papers
- Rawls on Philosophy and Democracy: Lessons from the Archived Papers
- “The Latest Invasion from Britain”: Young Rawls and His Community of American Ethical Theorists
- Rawls on Dewey before the Dewey Lectures
- Just Society as a Fair Game: John Rawls and Game Theory in the 1950s
- Notices