This work---the first full-length account of its theme in English---identifies Kant's doctrine of inner sense as a central, and problematic, element within the `architectonic of pure reason' of the fi
Rozsa (philosophy, U. of Debrecen, Hungary) presents a fascinating study of the complicated subject of the modern individual found in Hegel's philosophy. This subject is not a simple identity, a Carte
Metaphysics of Freedom? Kant’s Concept of Cosmological Freedom in Historical and Systematic Perspective scrutinizes the mostly neglected cosmological foundation of Kant’s concept of freedom.
Hegel s "Science of Logic" is widely acknowledged as one of the greatest works of European philosophy. However, its contribution to arguably the most important philosophical problem, Pyrrhonian scepti
The paradigm of recognition, explains Cobben (history of modern philosophy, Tilburg U., the Netherlands), focuses on the intersubjective dimensions of social relations, rather that the dimensions of l
Beginning in 1821, philosopher G.W.F. Hegel began a sustained inquiry into the philosophy of world historical religions (contained in the Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion), in which he sought to
Moczanow (logic and methodology of science, Rzeszow U., Poland) points out an unbridgeable gap between the notion of quantificational truth expressed by German mathematician and philosopher Gottlob Fr
The debate over the ontology of organizations is currently dominated by the positivist, the social constructionist, and the critical realist meta-perspectives (paradigms), says Krijnen, none of which
In Paul Cobben’s, Value in Capitalist Society, Marx’s criticism of Capitalism is conceived of as an immanent criticism of Hegel. This perspective leads to an alternative conception of value which is f
In Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel – A Propaedeutic, Thomas Soren Hoffmann invites the philosophically interested reader to converse with, to work with, and to think with the “master philosopher of Germ
In The Marriage of Aesthetics and Ethics, fifteen authors reflect on the nature of friendship and love and on the complex relation between art and morality.
In "I that is We, We that is I" leading scholars analyze the many facets of Hegel’s formula for the intersubjective structure of human life and explores its relevance for debates on social ontology, r
Grounds of Pragmatic Realism shows Hegel is a major epistemologist, who disentangled Kant’s critique of judgment, across the Critical corpus, from transcendental idealism, and augmented its enormous e
Drawing on the connection of the I to an absolute ground in the metaphysics of Schelling and the poetry of Holderlin, this book offers a contemporary model of God as both unitary and personal ground
In Hegel’s Conception of the Determinate Negation, Terje Sparby develops a comprehensive account of the three forms of the determinate negation in Hegel’s philosophy.