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Hegel and the Freedom of Moderns /

'Hegel and the Freedom of Moderns' shows how the philosopher was fully engaged in the political debates of his day. Losurdo argues that attempts to cast Hegel as a 'conservative' or a 'liberal' have obscured many aspects of Hegel's political thought.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Losurdo, Domenico (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Italiano
Publicado: Durham : Duke University Press, 2004.
Colección:Book collections on Project MUSE.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • ONE A Liberal, Secret Hegel?
  • I Searching for the "Authentic'' Hegel
  • 1. Censorship and Self-Censorship
  • 2. Linguistic Self-Censorship and Theoretical Compromise
  • 3. Private Dimension and Philosophical Dimension
  • 4. Hegel, a Mason?
  • 5. Esoteric and Exoteric History
  • 6. Philosophical Arguments and Political "Facts''
  • 7. An Interpretative "Misunderstanding'' or a Real Contradiction?
  • II The Philosophies of Right: A Turning Point or Continuity
  • 1. Reason and Actuality
  • 2. The Power of the Sovereign
  • 3. One Turn, Two Turns, or No Turn at All.
  • TWO Hegel, Marx, and the Liberal Tradition-- III Contractualism and the Modern State
  • 1. Anticontractualism = Antiliberalism?
  • 2. Contractualism and the Doctrine of Natural Law
  • 3. Liberal Anticontractualism
  • 4. The Celebration of Nature and the Ideology of Reactionism
  • 5. Hegel and Feudal, Proto-Bourgeois Contractualism
  • 6. Contractualism and the Modern State
  • IV Conservative or Liberal? A False Dilemma
  • 1. Bobbio's Dilemma
  • 2. Authority and Freedom
  • 3. State and Individual
  • 4. The Right to Resistance
  • 5. The Right of Extreme Need and Individual Rights
  • 6. Formal and Substantive Freedom
  • 7. Interpretative Categories and Ideological Presuppositions.
  • V Hegel and the Liberal Tradition: Two Opposing Interpretations of History
  • 1. Hegel and Revolutions
  • 2. Revolutions from the Bottom-Up or from the Top-Down
  • 3. Revolution According to the Liberal Tradition
  • 4. Patricians and Plebeians
  • 5. Monarchy and Republic
  • 6. The Repression of the Aristocracy and the March Toward Freedom
  • 7. Anglophobia and Anglophilia
  • 8. Hegel, England, and the Liberal Tradition
  • 9. Equality and Freedom.
  • VI The Intellectual, Property, and the Social Question
  • 1. Theoretical Categories and Immediate Political Options
  • 2. The Individual and Institutions
  • 3. Institutions and the Social Question
  • 4. Labor and Otium
  • 5. Intellectuals and Property-Owners
  • 6. Property and Political Representation
  • 7. Intellectuals and Craftsmen
  • 8. A Banausic, Plebeian Hegel?
  • 9. The Social Question and Industrial Society.
  • THREE Legitimacy and Contradictions of Modernity
  • VII Right, Violence, and Notrecht
  • 1. War and the Right to Property: Hegel and Locke
  • 2. From the Ius Necessitatis to the Right of Extreme Need
  • 3. The Contradictions of Modern Economic Development
  • 4. Notrecht and Self-Defense: Locke, Fichte, and Hegel
  • 5. "Negative Judgment, '' "Negatively Infinite Judgment, '' and "Rebellion''
  • 6. Notrecht, Ancien Regime, and Modernity
  • 7. The Starving Man and the Slave
  • 8. Ius Necessitatis, Ius Resistentiae, Notrecht
  • 9. The Conflicts of Right with Moral Intention and Extreme Need
  • 10. An Unsolved Problem.
  • VIII "Agora'' and "Schole'': Rousseau, Hegel, and the Liberal Tradition
  • 1. The Image of Ancient Times in France and Germany
  • 2. Cynics, Monks, Quakers, Anabaptists, and Sansculottes
  • 3. Rousseau, the "Poor People's Grudge, '' and Jacobinism
  • 4. Politics and Economics in Rousseau and Hegel
  • 5. The Social Question and Taxation
  • 6. State, Contract, and Joint-Stock Company
  • 7. Christianity, Human Rights, and the Community of Citoyens
  • 8. The Liberal Tradition and Criticism of Rousseau and Hegel
  • 9. Defense of the Individual and Criticism of Liberalism.
  • IX School, Division of Labor, and Modern Man's Freedom
  • 1. School, State, and the French Revolution
  • 2. Compulsory Education and Freedom of Conscience
  • 3. School, State, Church, and Family
  • 4. The Rights of Children
  • 5. School, Stability, and Social Mobility
  • 6. Professions and the Division of Labor
  • 7. Division of Labor and the Banality of Modernity: Schelling, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche.
  • X Moral Tension and the Primacy of Politics
  • 1. Modern World and the Waning of Moral Heroes
  • 2. Inconclusiveness and Narcissism in Moral-Religious Precepts
  • 3. Modern World and the Restriction of the Moral Sphere
  • 4. Hegel and Kant
  • 5. Hegel, Schleiermacher, and the Liberal Tradition
  • 6. Hegel, Burke, and Neo-Aristotelian Conservatism
  • 7. Hegel, Aristotle, and the Rejection of Solipsistic Escape
  • 8. The French Revolution and the Celebration of Ethicality
  • 9. Morality, Ethicality, and Modern Freedom
  • 10. Hegel's Ethical Model and Contemporary Actuality.
  • XI Legitimacy of the Modern and Rationality of the Actual
  • 1. The "Querelle des Anciens, des Modernes, '' and of the Ancient Germans
  • 2. Rejection of Modernity, Cult of Heroes, and Anti-Hegelian Polemic
  • 3. Kant, Kleist, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche
  • 4. Modernity and the Uneasiness of the Liberal Tradition
  • 5. Philistinism, Statism, and Modern Standardization
  • 6. The Rationality of the Actual and the Difficult Balance between Legitimation and Criticism of Modernity.
  • FOUR The Western World, Liberalism, and the Interpretation of Hegel's Thought
  • XII The Second Thirty Years War and the "Philosophical Crusade'' against Germany
  • 1. Germans, "Goths, '' "Huns, '' and "Vandals''
  • 2. The Great Western Purge
  • 3. The Transformation of the Liberal Western World
  • 4. An Imaginary Western World, an Imaginary Germany
  • 5. Hegel Faces the Western Tribunal
  • 6. Ilting and the Liberal Rehabilitation of Hegel
  • 7. Lukács and the Burden of National Stereotypes.
  • XIII Liberalism, Conservatism, the French Revolution, and Classic German Philosophy
  • 1. Allgemeinheit and Égalite
  • 2. The English Origins of German Conservatism
  • 3. A Selective Anglophilia
  • 4. Tracing the Origins of Social Darwinism and Fascist Ideology
  • 5. Beyond National Stereotypes
  • 6. Burke and the History of European Liberalism
  • 7. Burke's School of Thought and Classic German Philosophy
  • 8. Hegel and the Legacy of the French Revolution
  • 9. The Conflicts of Freedom.