Richard Dien Winfield, Distinguished Research Professor University of Georgia, USA.
New York
Palgrave Macmillan
2014
PART I: PHENOMENOLOGY AND LOGIC --;1. Is Phenomenology Necessary as Introduction to Philosophy? --;2. Negation and Truth --;3. How Should Essence Be Determined? Reflections on Hegel's Two Divergent Accounts --;4. The Objectivity of Thought --;5. Being and Idea --;6. Truth, the Good and the Unity of Theory and Practice --;7. The End of Logic --;PART II: NATURE AND HUMANITY --;8. The Logic of Nature --;9. The Limits of Intersubjectivity in Hegel's Philosophy of Subjective Spirit --;10. Economy and Ethical Community --;11. The Challenge of Political Right --;12. The Normativity of Globalization --;13. Literary Form and Civilization.
Hegel and the Future of Systematic Philosophy critically rethinks and extends Hegel's project for systematic philosophy without foundations, engaging the most important contemporary debates concerning logic, epistemology, metaphysics, nature, mind, economic justice, political freedom, globalization, and literary theory.
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, -- 1770-1831.
PHILOSOPHY -- History & Surveys -- Modern.
Philosophy.
B2948
.
R534
2014
Richard Dien Winfield, Distinguished Research Professor University of Georgia, USA.