Hegel

Voorkant
Psychology 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
Bibliography
565
Index
575
Copyright

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