Wiley.com
Print this page Share
Textbook

An Introduction to Hegel: Freedom, Truth and History, 2nd Edition

ISBN: 978-0-631-23063-2
Paperback
332 pages
February 2005, ©2005, Wiley-Blackwell
List Price: US $51.00
Government Price: US $34.52
Enter Quantity:   Buy
An Introduction to Hegel: Freedom, Truth and History, 2nd Edition (0631230637) cover image
This is a Print-on-Demand title. It will be printed specifically to fill your order. Please allow an additional 10-15 days delivery time. The book is not returnable.
Other Available Formats: Hardcover

Acknowledgements to the Second Edition.

Acknowledgements to the First Edition.

List of Abbreviations.

Chronology.

Introduction.

1 History and Truth.

The Historicity of Thought and Civilization.

Comparing Civilizations.

Self-consciousness and Historical Progress.

History, Truth and Relativism.

History and the Absolute.

2 Thinking Without Presuppositions.

Thought and Freedom.

From Indeterminate to Determinate Thought.

The Method of Dialectical Thinking.

Logic and Ontology.

Logic, Science and History.

3 Phenomenology and Natural Consciousness.

Logic and Phenomenology.

The Method of Phenomenology.

Logic in Phenomenology.

The Role of the “We”.

Sense-certainty.

From Certainty to Truth.

Absolute Knowing: The Standpoint of Philosophy.

4 The Path to Absolute Knowing.

Self-consciousness and the Master/Slave Relation.

Stoicism.

The Unhappy Consciousness and Reason.

Spirit and Absolute Freedom.

Moral Spirit.

Conscience.

The Beautiful Soul, Evil and Forgiveness.

Religion.

Absolute Knowing.

Phenomenology and Philosophy.

5 Reason in Nature.

From Logic to Nature.

Nature: The Idea as the “Negative of Itself”.

Reason and Nature’s “System of Stages”.

Contingency and the Limits of Philosophy.

Philosophy and Natural Science.

6 Space, Gravity and the Freeing of Matter.

Space and its Dimensions.

Time.

Place and Motion.

Matter and its Gravity.

Mass, Inertia and Weight.

Falling Bodies and Galileo’s Law.

The Solar System.

Kepler’s Laws of Planetary Motion.

Hegel and Newton.

Hegel and Relativity.

7 Life and Embodied Spirit.

The “Ideal” Structure of Life.

Chemistry and Life.

Plants and Animals.

Sensation in Animals.

Life, Death and Spirit.

Evolution.

Embodied Spirit.

Intelligence and its Signs.

8 Freedom, Rights and Civility.

From Hegel to Hitler?.

The Limits of Choice.

Rights, Property and Slavery.

The Problem with Being Moral.

Freedom at Home in the World.

Civil Society and Poverty.

Freedom and the State.

9 Art and Human Wholeness.

Art, Religion and Philosophy.

The Function of Art.

Beauty and Ideal Character.

The Historicity of Art.

Symbolic and Classical Art.

Christianity, Aesthetic Autonomy and the “Death” of Art.

10 Philosophy and Christian Faith.

Philosophy, Reason and Geist.

Philosophy and Religious Representation.

God as Reason and Love.

Faith and Worship.

Death, Freedom and New Life.

Faith, Interpretation and Philosophy.

Philosophy and Faith in History.

Notes.

Bibliographical Essay.

Index

Related Titles

More By This Author

19th Century Philosophy

by Irving M. Zeitlin
by Horst Althaus, Michael Tarsh (Translated by)
by Keith Ansell-Pearson (Editor)
Back to Top