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نویسندگان: Frederick C. Beiser
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ISBN (شابک) : 9780521382748
ناشر: Cambridge University Press
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تعداد صفحات: 0
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : EPUB (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
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در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب The Cambridge Companion to Hegel به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
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Cover Title Page Copyright Contents List of Contributors Introduction: Hegel and the Problem of Metaphysics Notes 1: Hegel’s Intellectual Development to 1807 Notes 2: You Can’t Get There from Here: Transition Problems in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit I. What Is a Phenomenology of Spirit? II. The Problem of the Absolute III. Changing the Subject: From Consciousness to Spirit. IV. Why Reason Must Become Spirit. V. Conclusion NOTES 3: Hegel’s Conception of Logic I. Frege on Psychologism II. Russell on Self-Reference III. Understanding, Dialectic and Speculation IV. Is the Logic Transcendental? V. The Two Logics VI. The Dialectic of Being VII. Essential Speculation VIII. Conceptual Understanding IX. Conclusion Notes 4: Hegel’s Idealism: The Logic of Conceptuality I. The Metaphysics of Absolute Idealism II. The Logic of Absolute Idealism III. Speculative and Transcendental Logic IV. Interpretations of Hegel’s Idealism A. Spirit Monism B. Non-Metaphysical Interpretations C. Category Theory D. Transcendental Idealism V. Conclusion. Notes 5: Hegel’s Dialectical Method I. The General Character of the Method II. The Philosophical Functions of the Method III. The Method’s Alleged Original Sins IV. The Origins of the Method Notes 6: Thought and Being: Hegel’s Critique of Kant’s Theoretical Philosophy I. Kant’s Theoretical Philosophy II. Hegel’s Critique: the Underlying Assumptions III. Hegel’s Critique: the Bill of Particulars IV. Conclusion: the Intuitive Intellect and Radical Contingency Notes 7: Hegel’s Ethics I. Background II. The Development of Hegel’s Ethical Thought III. The Self-Actualization of Freedom IV. Abstract Right V. Morality VI. Ethical Life VII. Ethics and the Free Society Notes 8: The Basic Context and Structure of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right I II III IV V NOTES 9: Hegel’s Historicism I. Hegel’s Historical Revolution II. The Basis of Hegel’s Historicism III. In Defense of Hegel’s Historicism IV. Hegel’s Historical Method V. The Metaphysics of Hegel’s Historicism VI. The Politics of Hegel’s Historicism Notes 10: Hegel on Religion and Philosophy I. The Importance of Context II. The Sources: Hegel’s Views on Religion and Philosophy During the Berlin Period III. Speculative Philosophy: the Politics of Bildung in the 1820S IV. Speculative Philosophy: Religious Metaphysics and Scientific Method V. Christian Consciousness: Content and Form in Hegel’s Philosophy VI. Atheism and Egocentric Religion VII. Hegel and Panlogism: Christianity and the Activism and Progressivism of Old-left Hegelianism VIII. Hegel and Feuerbach: From Religion to Anthropology IX. Hegel: Thought and Action in the Context of Secularization X. Protestantism as a Political Ideology: Hegel as a Philosopher of the Prussian State Notes 11: Hegel’s Aesthetics: An Overview I. Art as the Expression of Metaphysical Knowledge: Hegel’s Conception of Artistic Beauty II. The Social Context of Artistic Expression: Art, Religion, and Philosophy III. Hegel’s Theory of Art History: Symbolic, Classic, and Romantic Art IV. The Five Fine Arts: Architecture, Sculpture, Painting, Music, and Poetry V. Hegel’s Theory of Beauty A. The Principle of Humanity B. The Principle of Perfection Perfection as Self-Correspondence The Artistic Means to Achieve Perfection as Self-Correspondence: Idealization and Organic Unification VI. Hegel’s “End of Art” Thesis VII. Criticism and Conclusion Notes 12: Transformations of Hegelianism, 1805–1846 I. Hegelianism as a Form of Speculative Idealism II. Diversity Within Hegelianism as a Form of Speculative Idealism III. Hegelian Humanism IV. From Hegelian Humanism to the Analytic of Existence Notes 13: Hegel and Marxism Background Dialectic Civil Society Estates Bourgeois Society Poverty in Civil Society The Rabble History and Spirit National Principles and World History Historical Materialism Analogies and Anticipations The Fundamental Issues The Limits of Self-Transparency Notes 14: Hegel and Analytic Philosophy Notes Bibliography Chronology Index Other Volumes in This Series of Cambridge Companions