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Terry Pinkard draws on Hegel's central works as well as his lectures on aesthetics, the history of philosophy, and the philosophy of history in this deeply informed and original exploration of Hegel's naturalism.
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Terry Pinkard draws on Hegel's central works as well as his lectures on aesthetics, the history of philosophy, and the philosophy of history in this deeply informed and original exploration of Hegel's naturalism.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 228
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Oktober 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 395g
- ISBN-13: 9780199330072
- ISBN-10: 0199330077
- Artikelnr.: 37724611
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 228
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Oktober 2013
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 14mm
- Gewicht: 395g
- ISBN-13: 9780199330072
- ISBN-10: 0199330077
- Artikelnr.: 37724611
Terry Pinkard is Professor of Philosophy at Georgetown University; author of German Philosophy 1760-1860: The Legacy of Idealism, Hegel: A Biography and Hegel's Phenomenology: The Sociality of Reason; and editor of Heinrich Heine on the History of Religion and Philosophy in Germany.
Preface
Introduction
Part One
Chapter 1: Disenchanted Aristotelian Naturalism
A: Hegel's Aristotelian Turn
1: Animal Life
2: The Inwardness of Animal Life
B: From Animal Subjectivity to Human Subjectivity
C: Animal Life and the Will
Chapter 2: Self-Consciousness in the Natural World
A: Animal and Human Awareness
B: Consciousness of the World
C. Self-Consciousness
1: Being at Odds with Oneself in Desire
2: The Attempt at Being at One with Oneself as Mastery Over Others
3. Masters, Slaves and Freedom
4: The Truth of Mastery and Servitude
5: Objectivity, Intuition and Representation
Part Two
Chapter 3: The Self-Sufficient Good
A: Actualized Agency: The Sublation of Happiness
B: The Actually Free Will
C: The Impossibility of Autonomy and the "Idea" of Freedom
D. Being at One with Oneself as a Self-Sufficient Final End
Chapter 4: Inner Lives and Public Orientation
A. Failure in Forms of Life
B. The Phenomenology of a Form of Life
C. Greek Tensions, Greek Harmony
D: Empire and the Inner Life
Chapter Five: Public reasons, Private Reasons
A. Enlightenment and Individualism
B: Morality and Private Reasons
C. Ethical Life and Public Reasons
Chapter Six: The Inhabitable Alienation of Modern Life
A: Alienation as Uninhabitability
1: Diderot's Dilemma
2: Civil Society and the Balance of Interests
3: Making the Sale and Getting at the Truth
B: Power: the Limits of Morality in Politics
1. Bureaucratic Democracy?
2: The Nation State?
Chapter Seven: Conclusion: Hegel as a Post-Hegelian
A. Self-Comprehension
1: Hegelian Amphibians
2: Second Nature and Wholeness
B: Final Ends?
Introduction
Part One
Chapter 1: Disenchanted Aristotelian Naturalism
A: Hegel's Aristotelian Turn
1: Animal Life
2: The Inwardness of Animal Life
B: From Animal Subjectivity to Human Subjectivity
C: Animal Life and the Will
Chapter 2: Self-Consciousness in the Natural World
A: Animal and Human Awareness
B: Consciousness of the World
C. Self-Consciousness
1: Being at Odds with Oneself in Desire
2: The Attempt at Being at One with Oneself as Mastery Over Others
3. Masters, Slaves and Freedom
4: The Truth of Mastery and Servitude
5: Objectivity, Intuition and Representation
Part Two
Chapter 3: The Self-Sufficient Good
A: Actualized Agency: The Sublation of Happiness
B: The Actually Free Will
C: The Impossibility of Autonomy and the "Idea" of Freedom
D. Being at One with Oneself as a Self-Sufficient Final End
Chapter 4: Inner Lives and Public Orientation
A. Failure in Forms of Life
B. The Phenomenology of a Form of Life
C. Greek Tensions, Greek Harmony
D: Empire and the Inner Life
Chapter Five: Public reasons, Private Reasons
A. Enlightenment and Individualism
B: Morality and Private Reasons
C. Ethical Life and Public Reasons
Chapter Six: The Inhabitable Alienation of Modern Life
A: Alienation as Uninhabitability
1: Diderot's Dilemma
2: Civil Society and the Balance of Interests
3: Making the Sale and Getting at the Truth
B: Power: the Limits of Morality in Politics
1. Bureaucratic Democracy?
2: The Nation State?
Chapter Seven: Conclusion: Hegel as a Post-Hegelian
A. Self-Comprehension
1: Hegelian Amphibians
2: Second Nature and Wholeness
B: Final Ends?
Preface
Introduction
Part One
Chapter 1: Disenchanted Aristotelian Naturalism
A: Hegel's Aristotelian Turn
1: Animal Life
2: The Inwardness of Animal Life
B: From Animal Subjectivity to Human Subjectivity
C: Animal Life and the Will
Chapter 2: Self-Consciousness in the Natural World
A: Animal and Human Awareness
B: Consciousness of the World
C. Self-Consciousness
1: Being at Odds with Oneself in Desire
2: The Attempt at Being at One with Oneself as Mastery Over Others
3. Masters, Slaves and Freedom
4: The Truth of Mastery and Servitude
5: Objectivity, Intuition and Representation
Part Two
Chapter 3: The Self-Sufficient Good
A: Actualized Agency: The Sublation of Happiness
B: The Actually Free Will
C: The Impossibility of Autonomy and the "Idea" of Freedom
D. Being at One with Oneself as a Self-Sufficient Final End
Chapter 4: Inner Lives and Public Orientation
A. Failure in Forms of Life
B. The Phenomenology of a Form of Life
C. Greek Tensions, Greek Harmony
D: Empire and the Inner Life
Chapter Five: Public reasons, Private Reasons
A. Enlightenment and Individualism
B: Morality and Private Reasons
C. Ethical Life and Public Reasons
Chapter Six: The Inhabitable Alienation of Modern Life
A: Alienation as Uninhabitability
1: Diderot's Dilemma
2: Civil Society and the Balance of Interests
3: Making the Sale and Getting at the Truth
B: Power: the Limits of Morality in Politics
1. Bureaucratic Democracy?
2: The Nation State?
Chapter Seven: Conclusion: Hegel as a Post-Hegelian
A. Self-Comprehension
1: Hegelian Amphibians
2: Second Nature and Wholeness
B: Final Ends?
Introduction
Part One
Chapter 1: Disenchanted Aristotelian Naturalism
A: Hegel's Aristotelian Turn
1: Animal Life
2: The Inwardness of Animal Life
B: From Animal Subjectivity to Human Subjectivity
C: Animal Life and the Will
Chapter 2: Self-Consciousness in the Natural World
A: Animal and Human Awareness
B: Consciousness of the World
C. Self-Consciousness
1: Being at Odds with Oneself in Desire
2: The Attempt at Being at One with Oneself as Mastery Over Others
3. Masters, Slaves and Freedom
4: The Truth of Mastery and Servitude
5: Objectivity, Intuition and Representation
Part Two
Chapter 3: The Self-Sufficient Good
A: Actualized Agency: The Sublation of Happiness
B: The Actually Free Will
C: The Impossibility of Autonomy and the "Idea" of Freedom
D. Being at One with Oneself as a Self-Sufficient Final End
Chapter 4: Inner Lives and Public Orientation
A. Failure in Forms of Life
B. The Phenomenology of a Form of Life
C. Greek Tensions, Greek Harmony
D: Empire and the Inner Life
Chapter Five: Public reasons, Private Reasons
A. Enlightenment and Individualism
B: Morality and Private Reasons
C. Ethical Life and Public Reasons
Chapter Six: The Inhabitable Alienation of Modern Life
A: Alienation as Uninhabitability
1: Diderot's Dilemma
2: Civil Society and the Balance of Interests
3: Making the Sale and Getting at the Truth
B: Power: the Limits of Morality in Politics
1. Bureaucratic Democracy?
2: The Nation State?
Chapter Seven: Conclusion: Hegel as a Post-Hegelian
A. Self-Comprehension
1: Hegelian Amphibians
2: Second Nature and Wholeness
B: Final Ends?