ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1962, the second volume of how the psychological structure of German politics evolved deals with the age of monarchical absolutism and intellectual enlightenment, i.e. the last one and a half centuries of the Roman-German Empire. It traces the political principles which inspired the leading statesmen, the advocates of reforms and their adversaries, as well as the various social groups. This is a history of ideal and ideologies, of public opinions and of the ideas which a people holds of itself and other peoples and vice versa. It paved the way for an unprejudiced view of nations by comparing their thought and actions under comparable circumstances and investigating parallels and differences from a sociological point of view.

chapter 2|11 pages

The Emperor and the Estates

chapter 3|22 pages

Religion and Enlightenment

chapter 5|29 pages

Political Thought in the 17th Century

chapter 6|13 pages

G.W. Leibniz

chapter 9|8 pages

Emperor Leopold I and his Policy

chapter 12|13 pages

Emperor Charles VI

chapter 13|28 pages

The Principal German States Until about 1740

chapter 14|16 pages

Christian Wolff and Enlightenment

chapter 15|22 pages

Prussia Becomes a Great Power

chapter 20|13 pages

The French Revolution

chapter 21|22 pages

The End of the Empire

chapter |4 pages

Epilogue