The Paradigm of Recognition : Freedom as Overcoming the Fear of Death.
In The Paradigm of Recognition. Freedom as Overcoming the Fear of Death Paul Cobben elaborates a paradigm of recognition based on Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit. This framework enables fundamental criticism of Honneth's three forms of social freedom.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Leiden :
BRILL,
2012.
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Colección: | Critical studies in German idealism.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Volume Foreword; Chapter One Recognition as the New Paradigm; Introduction; Marx's Materialistic Version of the Lord/Bondsman Relation; Habermas's Criticism of the Marxist Basic Position; The Basic Scheme of the Theory of Communicative Action; Thinking Through the Theory of Communicative Action; Axel Honneth's Elaboration of the Paradigm of Recognition; Chapter Two Overcoming Cartesian Dualism: From Kant's Criticism of Hume to Hegel's Criticism of Kant; Introduction; Hume's Rejection of Descartes's Universalism; Hume's Empiricism: The Primacy of Impressions.
- The Distinction between Ideas and ImpressionsProblems with Regard to Hume's Conception of Ideas; Kant's Second Form of Synthesis: The Synthesis of the Faculty of Imagination; The Categories; The Problems of Kant's Project; Hegel's Criticism of Kant's Theoretical Reason; Hegel's Deduction of the "Kantian" Categories; Hegel's Determination of the Categories of Quantity in Perception; Hegel's Determination of the Category "Particularity" at the Level of Understanding; Conclusion; Chapter Three Self-Consciousness: The Practical Foundation of Theoretical Reason; Introduction.
- The Program of the Self-Consciousness ChapterDesire as the Reflective Repetition of Sense Certainty; The Struggle for Life and Death as the Reflective Repetition of Perception; Self-Consciousness as the Unity of Mind and Body; Self-Conscious Life: Aristotle's Animal Rationale; Hegel's Conception of the Fear of Death; Hegel's Version of Kant's Categories of Relation; The Lord/Bondman Relation as the Elementary Model to Conceive of the Unity of the "Critique of Pure Reason" and the "Critique of Practical Reason"; Conclusion; Chapter Four The "System of Freedom": Religion of Nature; Introduction.
- The Historical Form of the Lord at the Level of the Religion of Naturea. The Religion of the God as Light; b. The Religion of Plant and Animal; c. The Religion of the Artificer; The Transition to the Greek World; Conclusion; Chapter Five Axel Honneth's Interpretation of the Self-Consciousness Chapter of the Phenomenology of Spirit; Introduction; A Critical Analysis of Honneth's Reading of the Self-Consciousness Chapter; Conclusion; Chapter Six Grounding the Paradigm of Recognition; Introduction; Becoming Aware of the Independence of Objective Reality.
- Reason as the Attempt to Ground the Paradigm of RecognitionThe Polis as the Immediate Reality of the Human Law that Includes the Free Individual's Relation to the Human Law; The Medieval World (the Realm of Education) as the Reflective Repetition of the Greek World; The Moral World of Modernity as the True Realization of Reason; Conclusion; Chapter Seven The Domain of Love; Introduction; Honneth's Conception of the Basic Setting of the Domain of Love; Is Honneth's Basic Setting Adequate for Answering the Questions He Raises?