Concepts of normativity : Kant or Hegel? /
The influence of Kant's understanding of morality is too strong to be ignored. Hegel, however, fundamentally criticized Kant for offering merely a 'formal' model of normativity that cannot sufficiently comprehend human action as free. Instead, Hegel argues in his doctrine of ethical l...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Otros Autores: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés Alemán |
Publicado: |
Leiden ; Boston :
Brill,
[2019]
|
Colección: | Critical studies in German idealism ;
v. 24. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro; Concepts of Normativity: Kant or Hegel?; Copyright; Contents; List of Contributors; 1 Introduction; 2 Being at Home with Oneself in the Whole-Hegel's Philosophy of Freedom as Actuality; 3 Hegel's Radicalization of Kant's Copernican Turn: the Internal Unity of the Natural and the Moral Law; 4 The Religion of the God-Man: Hegel's Account of Revealed Religion in the Phenomenology of Spirit; 5 The Reality of Value as a Problem of Kantian Ethics; 6 Foundations of Normativity; 7 Hegel über die logischen Grundlagen der Sittlichkeit; 8 How is Practical Philosophy Speculatively Possible?
- 9 The Normative Function of the Right of Objectivity in Hegel's Theory of Imputation10 Freedom from Kant to Hegel; 11 Justification of the State: Kant and Hegel; 12 Hegel's Republican Penal Philosophy: An Attempt at a Contemporary Reconstruction; 13 History as the Progress in the (Un)Consciousness of Freedom?; 14 Is There Any Philosophy of History?; 15 "Freedom in the European sense": Hegel on Action, Heroes, and Europe's Philosophical Groundwork; Index