HegelPsychology Press, 1983 - 582 pagina's Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Abbreviations -- Chronological Table -- Preface -- Introduction -- Part One PRELUDE -- I Perception, Conception and Thought -- 1 The sensuous -- 2 Concepts and conceptions -- 3 The acquisition of thoughts -- 4 Pure thoughts -- 5 A mathematical analogy -- 6 Non-empirical conceptions -- 7 Grammar and metaphor -- II Thinking and the Self -- 1 Form, content and object -- 2 The subject as thinker -- 3 The subject as thoughts -- 4 The growth of self-consciousness -- III Experience, Meta-thinking and Objectivity -- 1 Science and commonsense -- 2 Empirical science -- 3 Science and thought -- 4 Explanation -- 5 The defects of empirical science -- 6 Objectivity and science -- 7 Varieties of objectivity -- 8 Thought and essence -- 9 Self and world -- Part Two PROBLEMS -- IV Philosophy and the Fall of Man -- 1 Problems and the fall -- 2 Evil -- 3 The fall from innocence -- 4 The restoration of unity -- 5 Philosophy and problems -- V Knowledge and Assumptions -- 1 The rejection of epistemology -- 2 Knowledge and reality -- 3 Refutation and self-refutation -- 4 Completeness and necessity -- 5 Scepticism and diversity -- 6 Limits and intelligibility -- 7 The problem of the beginning -- 8 Language and meta-language -- 9 Fiction and meta-fiction -- 10 Circles and infinity -- VI Infinite Objects and Finite Cognition -- 1 Metaphysics and opposition -- 2 Infinity and description -- 3 Concepts and truth -- 4 Wholes, parts and falsity -- 5 From the concept o f infinity to the infinite concept -- 6 Truth and predication -- 7 Propositions and assumptions -- 8 The superfluity of the propositional form -- 9 Concepts and logic -- 10 Dogmatism and antinomy -- VII Faith, Proofs and Infinity -- 1 The defects of cognition -- 2 Faith and its objects -- 3 The variety of faith -- 4 The Unknown God |
Inhoudsopgave
Introduction | 1 |
Perception Conception and Thought | 9 |
Thinking and the Self | 26 |
CONTENTS | 29 |
Experience Metathinking and Objectivity | 46 |
Part Two PROBLEMS | 91 |
Philosophy and the Fall of Man | 93 |
Problems and the fall | 94 |
Thought and reflexivity | 271 |
The advance of thinking | 276 |
Meaning and metaphor | 279 |
The construction of meaning | 282 |
Complexity and transcendence | 287 |
Progress and contradictions | 292 |
Hegels triads | 294 |
The ambiguity of the triad | 297 |
Evil | 97 |
The fall from innocence | 99 |
The restoration of unity | 103 |
Philosophy and problems | 107 |
Knowledge and Assumptions | 113 |
The rejection of epistemology | 114 |
Knowledge and reality | 118 |
Refutation and selfrefutation | 125 |
Completeness and necessity | 128 |
Scepticism and diversity | 134 |
Limits and intelligibility | 139 |
The problem of the beginning | 141 |
Language and metalanguage | 144 |
Fiction and metafiction | 148 |
Circles and infinity | 149 |
Infinite Objects and Finite Cognition | 155 |
Metaphysics and opposition | 157 |
Infinity and description | 165 |
Concepts and truth | 170 |
Wholes parts and falsity | 173 |
From the concept of infinity to the infinite concept | 176 |
Truth and predication | 180 |
Propositions and assumptions | 184 |
The superfluity of the propositional form | 186 |
Concepts and logic | 188 |
Dogmatism and antinomy | 190 |
Faith Proofs and Infinity | 193 |
Faith and its objects | 196 |
The variety of faith | 199 |
The Unknown God | 201 |
Religion and consensus | 202 |
The vacuity of immediacy | 205 |
The mediated and the immediate | 209 |
The conditions of certainty | 210 |
Hegels debt to Jacobi | 213 |
Proofs grammar and physiology | 215 |
The traditional conception of the proofs | 216 |
Concept and properties | 218 |
Perfection and abstraction | 220 |
Theology and geometry | 222 |
Hegels reply to Kant | 224 |
Criticisms of the traditional view | 227 |
Finitude and deduction | 228 |
Grounds and dependence | 229 |
Identity difference and Spinoza | 232 |
The rise to God | 234 |
Philosophical arguments | 237 |
The traditional ontological proof | 239 |
Hegels ontological proof | 242 |
God as spirit | 246 |
Minds machines and organisms | 251 |
Substance and subject | 256 |
Part Three THE SYSTEM | 259 |
Thinking about Thinking | 261 |
Form and content | 265 |
The point of logic | 269 |
Contradictions and organisms | 299 |
Criticism and selfcriticism | 302 |
Thoughts thinking and the ego | 308 |
Thought and individuals | 311 |
Hegels circles | 317 |
From logic to logic | 321 |
A tale that tells itself | 326 |
Maps infinity and selfreference | 331 |
The standpoint of the concept | 332 |
Concepts and the concept | 336 |
Reciprocity and purpose | 338 |
Teleology and concepts | 342 |
The concept vindicated | 345 |
the Transition to Nature | 348 |
Nature and contingency | 355 |
Infinity reconsidered | 362 |
The concrete universals | 366 |
Conceiving a thing which is unconceived | 380 |
Form matter and ineffability | 384 |
The elimination of the material | 385 |
Relations and the inverted world | 391 |
The primacy of relations | 396 |
Reciprocal reductions | 400 |
Idealism Appearance and Contradiction | 404 |
Appearance and actuality | 408 |
Appearance and the concept | 413 |
Actuality and the concept | 416 |
Purpose and subjectivity | 419 |
Hegel Kant and objectivity | 422 |
Logic and things | 426 |
Objective understanding and objective reason | 427 |
Appearance and change | 431 |
Degrees of truth | 434 |
Death and immortality | 441 |
Varieties of contradiction | 445 |
Contradictions and the finite | 448 |
The overcoming of contradiction | 463 |
Consistency and idealism | 466 |
Freedom Morality and the End of History | 469 |
Autonomy and empiricism | 470 |
Kant and freedom | 473 |
Hegels solutions | 477 |
Pure thinking and pure willing | 482 |
Nature and society | 484 |
Freedom and dissent | 489 |
Morality and the final end | 491 |
Is the world as it ought to be? | 496 |
Critics heroes and rebels | 501 |
What next? | 509 |
The close of Hegels system | 514 |
The end of history | 517 |
Conclusion | 520 |
Notes | 527 |
565 | |
575 | |
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Veelvoorkomende woorden en zinsdelen
absolute abstract accept animal answer apply argue argument assumptions axiomatic system beliefs causality claim cognitive concept considered contingent contradictions contradictory contrast correspond course criticism defect depends derived determinacy determinate distinct distinguish doctrine element empirical sciences example explain external fact finite things finitude Firstly follow form of consciousness Hegel believes Hegel's account Hegel's system Hegel's view immediate awareness individual inference infinite entity infinity involves Kant Kant's language least lightning Loch Ness monster logical idea means mediated meta-language mind naïve realism object one's ontological ontological argument Parmenides particular perception perhaps phenomena Phenomenology Philosophy of Mind position predicates premiss presuppose problems proofs propositions pure thinking pure thoughts question reason regarded relationship Secondly seen sensations sense sense-data sense-experience simply speak Spinoza Subjective Logic suggests suppose teleology thesis thing-in-itself thought-determinations true truth types of thinking understanding universal whole
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