: An Investigation into Hegel's Philosophy of Right
\ Frank Ruda ; [preface by Slavoj Žižek].
; New York
: Continuum
, 2011.
xviii, 218 p.
Continuum studies in philosophy
Includes bibliographical references (p. [209]-216) and index.
Introduction: from the rabble to the proletariat -- Luther and the transfiguration of poverty -- Pauper-rabble: the question of poverty -- The emergence of the rabble from the un-estate of poverty -- Transition: from the poor to the rabble -- Pauper-rabble -- Luxury-rabble vs. poverty-rabble -- The formula of infinite unbinding: "this is the rabble", or, resentment- -- The lost habit: elements to a Hegelian theory of laziness/foulness -- Without attitude: rabble and state -- Without right, without duty: rabble, right without right or, un-right -- To will nothing or not to will anymore: the rabble as will and presentation -- The sole aim of the state and the rabble as un-organic ensemble -- Conclusion: Hegel's rabble: Hegel's impossibility -- Coda: preliminary notes concerning Angelo-humanism and the conception of the proletariat in early Marx.
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Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich,1770-1831-- Political and social views.
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich,1770-1831., Grundlinien der Philosophie des Rechts.