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10

feb

2026

Notification of public defence with Nicholas Lawrence, Philosophy

Nicholas Lawrence presents his doctoral thesis ”Salomon Maimon’s Life; or, the History of the Imagining I”.

Subject: Philosophy
Research area: Critical and Cultural Theory
Graduate School: Baltic and East European Graduate School (BEEGS)
Language: English

The public defence of doctoral thesis will take place on Friday 27 February 2026.

Abstract:
This thesis breaks with tradition by reading Salomon Maimon’s “Lebensgeschichte” as a work of philosophy. Rather than the mere re-telling of a story, Maimon’s pragmatic treatment of his own life history is interpreted as a philosophical act grounded in his own system of thought. The many – seemingly digressive and regressive – stages of Maimon’s life are revealed by the writing of their history as having been transformations in the development of an idea coming to expression in various degrees of perfection. In and through writing the history of a life, which stretches from fanaticism to philosophy, Maimon recognises himself as an instance of a supra-individual imagining I that is productive, pragmatic and free. The notion of a universal I of this kind, or a world soul considered as the efficient cause of nature, is something that, in his psychological writings, Maimon argues can be fruitfully presupposed as ground in the explanation of the deeds and actions of all human beings. As such, Maimon establishes his life as having had led to him inventing the very idea which grounds, and thus determines, the course of that same life leading up to its invention. The thesis supports this reading by offering an interpretation of the ten chapters of “Lebensgeschichte” devoted to the writings of Maimonides – subsequently showing how the idea of a universal imagining I can be developed out of the work of Maimon’s greatest teacher. It demonstrates, as well, how the psychological fragments, which had previously been written in the third-person singular in the experiential psychological journal of which Maimon was co-editor, exhibit a process of perfection guided by the very same idea. In writing his history, Maimon is thus discerning the idea of a universal poetic faculty, and the ideal path towards perfection accompanying it, in and amongst the minutest of details of his life. This presupposes a capacity for spontaneously grasping the very idea that the systematic ordering of his history would show his life to have been the ongoing manifestation and realisation of. Because this is the kind of operation that Maimon claims is only possible for an imagination that is free, it would mean that Maimon’s life was the history of a poetic faculty culminating in the highest degree of perfection at the very moment of writing that same history. The new perspective which this reading offers shows Maimon to be a thinker of the imagination to a larger extent than has previously been appreciated. It also demonstrates that he was tackling problems concerning the historical development of ideas and knowledge in ways traditionally associated with subsequent thinkers.

Keywords: Salomon Maimon, life history, productive imagination, world soul, pragmatic history, transformation, metamorphosis, autobiography, philosophy of life, self-knowledge, perfection, imitation, freedom, fiction, poetic faculty, fanaticism, ideas

Tid och plats

10 februari 2026, 15:00-16:00

Spikningsceremoni

The Library lounge, floor 5, Alfred Nobels allé 11, Södertörn University, hitta hit

Engelska

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Organised by the Library and Philosophy at the School of Culture and Education, Södertörn University.

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Sidan är uppdaterad
2026-01-26