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- catalog abstract "An advance on recent revisionist thinking about Hegelian philosophy, this book interprets Hegel's achievement as part of a revolutionary modernization of ancient philosophical thought initiated by Kant. In particular, Paul Redding argues that Hegel's use of hermeneutics, an emerging way of thinking objectively about intentional human subjects, overcame the major obstacle encountered by Kant in his attempt to modernize philosophy. The result was the first genuinely modern, hermeneutic, and "nonmetaphysical" philosophy. Redding describes Hegel's accomplishment in terms of a development of Kant's revolution in philosophy, a "Copernican" revolution analogous to that which initiated modern science. He shows how the heterodox pantheistic views and hermeneutic social thought that merged at the end of the eighteenth century provided a fruitful environment for the transformation that Kantian idealism underwent within the work of Schelling and the early Hegel. He argues that Hegel overcame Schelling's pantheistic metaphysics with the Phenomenology of Spirit and developed a postmetaphysical hermeneutic mode of philosophy. Redding goes on to show how the social theory of Hegel's Philosophy of Right and the conceptual structures of his allegedly most metaphysical work, the Science of Logic, are systematically linked to the hermeneutic insights of the Phenomenology. Against this background, Hegel's works are freed from traditional misunderstandings. Redding demonstrates that Hegel's analyses of modernity and the modern state surpass the one-sided views of Adam Smith and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, providing a coherent framework for modern social and political thought.".
- catalog contributor b9143749.
- catalog created "1996.".
- catalog date "1996".
- catalog date "1996.".
- catalog dateCopyrighted "1996.".
- catalog description "11. The recognitive logic of the rational state -- Hegel and Rousseau on the social contract and the common will -- The estates as representative and deliberative bodies -- The monarch -- Speculative logic and practical philosophy: Allen Wood's reconstruction of an autonomous Hegelian ethical theory -- The paradoxical logic of absolute freedom -- Conclusion: The nature of Hegelian philosophy -- Kant and Hegel on philosophy and politics -- Hegel and the limits of philosophy.".
- catalog description "3. Hegel's early Schellingianism -- From Fichte to Schelling's identity philosophy -- Hegel's Schelingian critique of Fichte -- The coincidence or "indifference," of opposites in Schelling's "constructed line" -- The perspectival character of potences -- Recognition and the constructed line: Hegel's early analysis of ethical life -- 4. The revolutionary philosophical form of Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit -- Philosophy and everyday consciousness in Hegel's essay on skepticism -- The phenomenological drama and its audience -- Sense-certainty: Certainty of the "this" -- Perception -- Der Verstand as the understanding of the natural sciences".
- catalog description "5. Hegel's recognitive theory of spirit -- Fichte's concept of recognition -- The emergence of recognition from the processes of life -- Anerkennung, spirit and the hermeneuticization of Kant -- Hegelian philosophy as a development of postmetaphysical Kantianism -- 6. Figure of recognition -- Master and slave -- Penitent and priest: Unhappy consciousness -- The culmination of objective spirit in morality -- Religious consciousness and absolute knowing -- Our progress so far".
- catalog description "7. The logic of recognition -- The project of the science of logic -- Hegel's critique of Aristotle's logic -- The concrete "syllogism of necessity" -- The complex structure of objectivity -- The absolute idea -- 8. Right and recognition -- The logical foundations of social philosophy -- The will and its right -- Contract -- From right to wrong -- Law and the moral law".
- catalog description "9. Sittlichkeit and its spheres -- Love and family -- Civil society -- Spheres of Sittlichkeit as cognitive contexts: (i) The familial and the familiar -- Spheres of Sittlichkeit as cognitive contexts: (ii) The epistemology and logic of the Burger -- 10 The celebration and criticism of civil society -- Hegel, Smith, and the rationality of civil society -- Hegel, Rousseau, and the madness of civil society".
- catalog description "An advance on recent revisionist thinking about Hegelian philosophy, this book interprets Hegel's achievement as part of a revolutionary modernization of ancient philosophical thought initiated by Kant. In particular, Paul Redding argues that Hegel's use of hermeneutics, an emerging way of thinking objectively about intentional human subjects, overcame the major obstacle encountered by Kant in his attempt to modernize philosophy. The result was the first genuinely modern, hermeneutic, and "nonmetaphysical" philosophy. Redding describes Hegel's accomplishment in terms of a development of Kant's revolution in philosophy, a "Copernican" revolution analogous to that which initiated modern science. He shows how the heterodox pantheistic views and hermeneutic social thought that merged at the end of the eighteenth century provided a fruitful environment for the transformation that Kantian idealism underwent within the work of Schelling and the early Hegel. He argues that Hegel overcame Schelling's pantheistic metaphysics with the Phenomenology of Spirit and developed a postmetaphysical hermeneutic mode of philosophy. Redding goes on to show how the social theory of Hegel's Philosophy of Right and the conceptual structures of his allegedly most metaphysical work, the Science of Logic, are systematically linked to the hermeneutic insights of the Phenomenology. Against this background, Hegel's works are freed from traditional misunderstandings. Redding demonstrates that Hegel's analyses of modernity and the modern state surpass the one-sided views of Adam Smith and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, providing a coherent framework for modern social and political thought.".
- catalog description "Includes bibliographical references (p. 247-252) and index.".
- catalog description "Introduction: Hegel, hermeneutics, and the Copernican revolution in philosophy -- Kant and the beginnings of philosophical Copernicanism -- Scientific Copernicanism: The problematization of viewpoint and the redescription of experience -- Copernican philosophy and the post-Kantian trajectory -- Copernican philosophy and hermeneutics -- 1. Science, theology, and the subject in modern philosophy -- Descartes's response to perspectivity: Divine and scientific knowledge -- The ambiguity of Kant's response to perspectivity: Non-theocentric epistemology and theocentric ontology -- The Immanentist tradition 1: Nicholas of Cusa -- The Immanentist tradition 2: Spinoza -- Hegel, Leibniz, and the limits of Spinozistic pantheism -- 2. The pathways of hermeneutic philosophy -- Pantheism and hermeneutics -- Romanticism, language, and subjectivity -- Later hermeneutics and its view of Hegel".
- catalog extent "xvi, 262 p. ;".
- catalog hasFormat "Hegel's hermeneutics.".
- catalog identifier "0801431808 (alk. paper)".
- catalog isFormatOf "Hegel's hermeneutics.".
- catalog issued "1996".
- catalog issued "1996.".
- catalog language "eng".
- catalog publisher "Ithaca : Cornell University Press,".
- catalog relation "Hegel's hermeneutics.".
- catalog subject "B2949.H35 R43 1996".
- catalog subject "Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770-1831 Contributions in hermeneutics.".
- catalog subject "Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770-1831.".
- catalog subject "Hermeneutics.".
- catalog tableOfContents "11. The recognitive logic of the rational state -- Hegel and Rousseau on the social contract and the common will -- The estates as representative and deliberative bodies -- The monarch -- Speculative logic and practical philosophy: Allen Wood's reconstruction of an autonomous Hegelian ethical theory -- The paradoxical logic of absolute freedom -- Conclusion: The nature of Hegelian philosophy -- Kant and Hegel on philosophy and politics -- Hegel and the limits of philosophy.".
- catalog tableOfContents "3. Hegel's early Schellingianism -- From Fichte to Schelling's identity philosophy -- Hegel's Schelingian critique of Fichte -- The coincidence or "indifference," of opposites in Schelling's "constructed line" -- The perspectival character of potences -- Recognition and the constructed line: Hegel's early analysis of ethical life -- 4. The revolutionary philosophical form of Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit -- Philosophy and everyday consciousness in Hegel's essay on skepticism -- The phenomenological drama and its audience -- Sense-certainty: Certainty of the "this" -- Perception -- Der Verstand as the understanding of the natural sciences".
- catalog tableOfContents "5. Hegel's recognitive theory of spirit -- Fichte's concept of recognition -- The emergence of recognition from the processes of life -- Anerkennung, spirit and the hermeneuticization of Kant -- Hegelian philosophy as a development of postmetaphysical Kantianism -- 6. Figure of recognition -- Master and slave -- Penitent and priest: Unhappy consciousness -- The culmination of objective spirit in morality -- Religious consciousness and absolute knowing -- Our progress so far".
- catalog tableOfContents "7. The logic of recognition -- The project of the science of logic -- Hegel's critique of Aristotle's logic -- The concrete "syllogism of necessity" -- The complex structure of objectivity -- The absolute idea -- 8. Right and recognition -- The logical foundations of social philosophy -- The will and its right -- Contract -- From right to wrong -- Law and the moral law".
- catalog tableOfContents "9. Sittlichkeit and its spheres -- Love and family -- Civil society -- Spheres of Sittlichkeit as cognitive contexts: (i) The familial and the familiar -- Spheres of Sittlichkeit as cognitive contexts: (ii) The epistemology and logic of the Burger -- 10 The celebration and criticism of civil society -- Hegel, Smith, and the rationality of civil society -- Hegel, Rousseau, and the madness of civil society".
- catalog tableOfContents "Introduction: Hegel, hermeneutics, and the Copernican revolution in philosophy -- Kant and the beginnings of philosophical Copernicanism -- Scientific Copernicanism: The problematization of viewpoint and the redescription of experience -- Copernican philosophy and the post-Kantian trajectory -- Copernican philosophy and hermeneutics -- 1. Science, theology, and the subject in modern philosophy -- Descartes's response to perspectivity: Divine and scientific knowledge -- The ambiguity of Kant's response to perspectivity: Non-theocentric epistemology and theocentric ontology -- The Immanentist tradition 1: Nicholas of Cusa -- The Immanentist tradition 2: Spinoza -- Hegel, Leibniz, and the limits of Spinozistic pantheism -- 2. The pathways of hermeneutic philosophy -- Pantheism and hermeneutics -- Romanticism, language, and subjectivity -- Later hermeneutics and its view of Hegel".
- catalog title "Hegel's hermeneutics / Paul Redding.".
- catalog type "text".