The Idealism of Freedom /
In The Idealism of Freedom, Klaus Vieweg argues for a Hegelian turn in philosophy. Hegel's idealism of freedom contains a number of epoch-making ideas that articulate a new understanding of freedom, which still shape contemporary philosophy. Hegel establishes a modern logic, as well as the idea...
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Leiden ; Boston :
BRILL,
2020.
|
Colección: | Critical studies in German idealism ;
26. |
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Half Title
- Series Information
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Part 1 On the Fundament of Hegel's Philosophy
- Chapter 1 Hegel's Adventures in Wonderland, or the Beginning of Philosophy
- 1 With What Must the Science Begin?
- 2 Mediation or Immediacy
- 3 The Beginning of Practical Philosophy
- 4 Conclusion
- Chapter 2 Hegel's Sicilian Defence: Beyond Realism and Constructivism
- 1 The Logic of Essence
- 2 Immanent Negativity
- 3 Conclusion
- Chapter 3 The "Reversal of Consciousness Itself": Along the Path of the Phenomenology of Spirit
- 1 Reversals
- 2 Conclusion
- Chapter 4 Pyrrho and the Wisdom of the Animals: Hegel on Scepticism
- 1 Pyrrhonism
- Freedom of Character and Freedom of Thought
- 1.1 "Subjectivity of Character"
- Practical Scepticism as a Way of Life
- 1.2 'Thinking' Pyrrhonism
- 'Subjectivity of Knowledge'
- 2 Happy and Unhappy Consciousness
- 3 The Unity of the Theoretical and Practical Idea
- 3.1 The First Moment (5)
- 3.2 The Second Moment (6)
- 3.3 The Unity of Both Moments (7)
- 4 Ataraxia and Conscience
- Part 2 Hegel's Practical Philosophy as a Philosophy of Freedom
- Chapter 5 Hegel's Theory of Free Will
- 1 The Foundational Structure of the Will
- 5-7
- 1.1 5
- The First Moment of the Concept of Free Will (Universality
- U)
- 1.2 6
- The Second Moment of the Free Will
- the Particular Concept (Particularity- P)
- 1.3 7 The Logical Unity of Both Moments, the Determination of Both Concepts
- Individuality (I) as Reason, as the Concept Itself
- 1.4 8-28 Further Determination of the Basic Pattern
- 1.4.1 Purpose
- 1.4.2 Will and Nature
- 1.4.3 Resolution and Decision
- the Will as Will of a Determinate Individual
- 1.4.4 Doing What One Wants
- the Arbitrary Will as a Necessary and Insufficient Moment of Free Will, as Formal, Irrational Will
- 1.4.5 The Truly Universal Will
- 2 Conclusion
- Chapter 6 Inter-Personality and Wrong
- 1 The Concept of the Person
- 2 Personality and Inter-Personality
- Recognition of the Person and Legal Capacity
- 3 Wrong and the Theory of 'Second Coercion'
- 4 The Logically Grounded Structure in Judgment
- 4.1 The Simple-Negative Judgment
- 4.2 The Infinite Judgment
- 4.2.1 The Infinite Judgment as Identical
- Deception
- 4.2.2 The Infinite-Negative Judgment
- Crime
- Chapter 7 Care and Forethought: The Idea of Sustainability in Hegel's Practical Philosophy
- 1 Property
- 2 Property and the 'Formation' of the Natural
- 2.1 Self-formation
- the Appropriation of the Body as the Natural, Immediate Existence of the Person
- 2.2 The Formation of the External World
- Property in External Things
- 3 The Appropriation of Elemental Things
- 4 'Forethought Which Looks to, and Secures, the Future'
- 5 Natural Sustainability
- the Forest as Paradigm
- Chapter 8 Hegel's Philosophical Theory of Action