This work brings together, for the first time in English translation, Hegel's journal publications from his years in Heidelberg (1816–18), writings which have been previously either untranslated or ...only partially translated into English. The Heidelberg years marked Hegel's return to university teaching and represented an important transition in his life and thought. The translated texts include his important reassessment of the works of the philosopher F. H. Jacobi, whose engagement with Spinozism, especially, was of decisive significance for the philosophical development of German Idealism. They also include his most influential writing about contemporary political events, his essay on the constitutional assembly in his native Württemberg, which was written against the background of the dramatic political and social changes occurring in post-Napoleonic Germany. The translators have provided an introduction and notes that offer a scholarly commentary on the philosophical and political background of Hegel's Heidelberg writings.
Hegel's Encyclopaedia Logic constitutes the foundation of the system of philosophy presented in his Encyclopaedia of the Philosophical Sciences. Together with his Science of Logic, it contains the ...most explicit formulation of his enduringly influential dialectical method and of the categorical system underlying his thought. It offers a more compact presentation of his dialectical method than is found elsewhere, and also incorporates changes that he would have made to the second edition of the Science of Logic if he had lived to do so. This volume presents it in a new translation with a helpful introduction and notes. It will be a valuable reference work for scholars and students of Hegel and German idealism, as well as for those who are interested in the post-Hegelian character of contemporary philosophy.
Michael Inwood, an eminent scholar of German philosophy, presents a full and detailed new commentary on a classic work of the nineteenth century. Hegel's Philosophy of Mind is one of the main pillars ...of his thought. Inwood offers the clear and careful guidance needed for an understanding of this challenging work.
Contrairement à une idée reçue, Hegel n’est pas un penseur perdu dans des abstractions logiques. La folie, la mort et l’éducation sont au centre de la pensée du philosophe allemand et forment un ...ensemble cohérent, concourant à caractériser l’homme comme une nature en conflit entre une particularité figée et un universel auquel il lui faudrait s’élever. Les réflexions anthropologiques essaiment dans l’ensemble de sa pensée et contribuent à forger une réflexion stimulante qui, partant de l’homme comme être du possible, s’attache à dégager les modalités de sa réalisation grâce à la technique et à la formation. En adoptant une perspective dynamique, la pensée de Hegel rencontre certains enjeux contemporains touchant à ce que l’homme pourrait être, en particulier les thèses du transhumanisme. Loin de trancher dogmatiquement en faveur ou en défaveur d’une anthropotechnique, elle nous offre certains réquisits normatifs et nous donne les éléments d’une éducation au possible reposant sur une culture de la décision. L‘auteur dessine ainsi une voie hégélienne de réponse au posthumanisme.
This major addition to the series of Cambridge Texts in the History of Political Thought seeks to give students with no specialist knowledge access to both the practical and the metaphysical aspects ...of Hegel's political thought. The ethical and metaphysical texts in this collection both illuminate and contrast with those political and historical texts in which Hegel draws important conclusions about the modern world from remarkable comparative analyses of recent developments in England, France and Germany. The translator of these texts, H. B. Nisbet, was responsible for the acclaimed rendition of Hegel's Philosophy of Right already published in this series, and Lawrence Dickey's lucid editorial commentary introduces this distinctive corpus of political writing by one of the very greatest thinkers in the European tradition. A full chronology, explanatory annotation, glossary and bibliography are appended to aid the student reader.
Schiller, Hegel, and Marx Kain, Philip J
Schiller, Hegel, and Marx,
c1982, 19820901, 1982, 1982-09-01, Letnik:
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eBook
All three believed that the modern world could be remade according to this model, though none succeeded in his endeavor. At times Schiller seemed to recognize the failure of the model; in his mature ...writing Hegel dropped the model; and Marx, as he grew older, fundamentally modified the model. Nevertheless, focusing upong their attempts and failures allows an explanation of certain aspects of one of the fundamental concerns of current Marx studies: Marx's humanism and the relationship between his earlier and later thought.