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The modern sciences, including the natural sciences, played a part in "secularizing" perception and thinking. The objective of this three-volume work is to show how different this scientific contribution was from case to case. It is noted, for instance, that it is often more appropriate to speak of a "Christianization" of thinking and that even "libertarianism" did not have a directly secularizing effect. Through examples of early modern science and literature anticipating the early 19th century, the concept of secularization is given historical contour. Diverging a good deal of current research, these volumes portray secularization as a long-term accumulation of knowledge and insight into interrelationships in the natural world. This third volume examines the ideas of the wholeness and divisibility of bodies which have been given since ancient times. Anatomy provides the preconditions for visualizing both the textual corpus and the natural body using analysis and anatomia as methodological tools. Together, the three works create a conceptual and analytical foundation for understanding secularization, a key concept in research on early modern cultural and intellectual history.
Sandra Pott is a fellow in the Emmy Noether Program of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) and is working at the Institute of Germanic Studies at the University of London.Lutz Danneberg is Professor for the Study of Modern German Literature in Berlin.Jörg Schönert and Friedrich Vollhardt have chairs for the Study of Modern German Literature in Hamburg and Giessen.