In this book, Dean Moyar offers a comprehensive reading of Hegel's social and political philosophy, specifically his theory of justice, through the lens of Hegel's inferentialism, his basic theory of rationality. Moyar argues that Hegel's conception of justice depends on the realization of value in an institutional system rooted in the purposes of family members, workers, and citizens. He traces the development of Hegel's theory from its foundation in the modern tradition and its basic conception of property rights; to Hegel's own inclusive conception of value, "the Good"; resulting in a…mehr
In this book, Dean Moyar offers a comprehensive reading of Hegel's social and political philosophy, specifically his theory of justice, through the lens of Hegel's inferentialism, his basic theory of rationality. Moyar argues that Hegel's conception of justice depends on the realization of value in an institutional system rooted in the purposes of family members, workers, and citizens. He traces the development of Hegel's theory from its foundation in the modern tradition and its basic conception of property rights; to Hegel's own inclusive conception of value, "the Good"; resulting in a system of just institutions, governed by moral ideals but realized through concrete economic and political processes. Moyar's analysis shows that against the idea that justice is only a matter of securing a set of private entitlements, Hegel constructs a theory of justice incorporating individual rights.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Dean Moyar is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy at Johns Hopkins University. He is the co-editor (with Michael Quante) of Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit: A Critical Guide (Cambridge University Press, 2007), the editor of the Routledge Companion to Nineteenth Century Philosophy (2010) and of the Oxford Handbook of Hegel (2017). He is the author of Hegel's Conscience (Oxford University Press, 2011).
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1. Political Moralism and Critical Realism 2. An Overlooked Theory of Value 3. Hegel's Teleological Inferentialism 4. Justice and the Living Institutional System 5. The Basic Argument Chapter 1: Individual Right and the Living Ethical Order 1.1. Mutual Recognition and the Externalism of Modern Right 1.2. The Critique of Fichte and the Appeal to Life 1.3. Self-Consciousness and the Rationality of Life 1.4. The Emergence of Value in the Work of the Servant 1.5. The Tragedy of Immediate Justice Chapter 2: The Inferences of Right 2.1. Free Spirit and Infinite Value 2.2. Expressively Valid Inferences of the Free Will 2.3. Immanent Development and the Basic Argument of Right Chapter 3: Value in the Development and Conclusion of Abstract Right 3.1. The Purpose of Personality 3.2. Property Rights as Expressions of the Free Will 3.3. Value as the "true substantiality" of Property 3.4. Forms of Value as Types of Alienation 3.5. Contract and Inferential Equivalence Value 3.6. The Inferentialism of Crime and Punishment 3.7. Value in the Transition to Morality Chapter 4: The Incorporation of Subjective Value into the Good 4.1. The Process and Purpose of Morality 4.2. The Deficient Practical Inference of the Deed 4.3. Objective and Subjective Value in Intentional Action 4.4. The Right of Necessity and the Transition to Universal Value 4.5. The Good as the Final Purpose of the World 4.6. Conscience and Reflective Equilibrium Chapter 5: The Living Good 5.1. Sittlichkeit as the Just System of Value 5.2. The System of Practical Inferences 5.3. Ethical Mutuality and the Equivalence of Rights and Duties 5.4. How to Build a Living Institution 5.5. The Family as the Living Good Chapter 6: The Circulation of Value in Civil Society and the State 6.1. Completing the Inference of Needs through Education 6.2. The Value of Work and the Division into Estates 6.3. The Return of the Good in "The Police and the Corporation" 6.4. Settling One's Own Account with the State 6.5. The Living State as a Totality of Inferences 6.6. The Executive Branch and Governance "From Below" Chapter 7: Law and Public Reason 7.1. Inferentialism and Processes of Law 7.2. Hegel's Legal Positivism 7.3. The Contextualism of Justice and the Limits of Philosophy 7.4. The Court as the Prototype of Public Reason 7.5. Hegel's Constitutionalism 7.6. Public Reason and Representative Interests Chapter 8: The Sovereignty of the Good 8.1. Internal Sovereignty and the Justice of the Whole 8.2. External Sovereignty and Mutual Recognition between States 8.3. Purpose and Justice in History 8.4. Moral and Civil Religion 8.5. Liberation and Reconciliation
Introduction 1. Political Moralism and Critical Realism 2. An Overlooked Theory of Value 3. Hegel's Teleological Inferentialism 4. Justice and the Living Institutional System 5. The Basic Argument Chapter 1: Individual Right and the Living Ethical Order 1.1. Mutual Recognition and the Externalism of Modern Right 1.2. The Critique of Fichte and the Appeal to Life 1.3. Self-Consciousness and the Rationality of Life 1.4. The Emergence of Value in the Work of the Servant 1.5. The Tragedy of Immediate Justice Chapter 2: The Inferences of Right 2.1. Free Spirit and Infinite Value 2.2. Expressively Valid Inferences of the Free Will 2.3. Immanent Development and the Basic Argument of Right Chapter 3: Value in the Development and Conclusion of Abstract Right 3.1. The Purpose of Personality 3.2. Property Rights as Expressions of the Free Will 3.3. Value as the "true substantiality" of Property 3.4. Forms of Value as Types of Alienation 3.5. Contract and Inferential Equivalence Value 3.6. The Inferentialism of Crime and Punishment 3.7. Value in the Transition to Morality Chapter 4: The Incorporation of Subjective Value into the Good 4.1. The Process and Purpose of Morality 4.2. The Deficient Practical Inference of the Deed 4.3. Objective and Subjective Value in Intentional Action 4.4. The Right of Necessity and the Transition to Universal Value 4.5. The Good as the Final Purpose of the World 4.6. Conscience and Reflective Equilibrium Chapter 5: The Living Good 5.1. Sittlichkeit as the Just System of Value 5.2. The System of Practical Inferences 5.3. Ethical Mutuality and the Equivalence of Rights and Duties 5.4. How to Build a Living Institution 5.5. The Family as the Living Good Chapter 6: The Circulation of Value in Civil Society and the State 6.1. Completing the Inference of Needs through Education 6.2. The Value of Work and the Division into Estates 6.3. The Return of the Good in "The Police and the Corporation" 6.4. Settling One's Own Account with the State 6.5. The Living State as a Totality of Inferences 6.6. The Executive Branch and Governance "From Below" Chapter 7: Law and Public Reason 7.1. Inferentialism and Processes of Law 7.2. Hegel's Legal Positivism 7.3. The Contextualism of Justice and the Limits of Philosophy 7.4. The Court as the Prototype of Public Reason 7.5. Hegel's Constitutionalism 7.6. Public Reason and Representative Interests Chapter 8: The Sovereignty of the Good 8.1. Internal Sovereignty and the Justice of the Whole 8.2. External Sovereignty and Mutual Recognition between States 8.3. Purpose and Justice in History 8.4. Moral and Civil Religion 8.5. Liberation and Reconciliation
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