Cornell University Press
Hegel's Hermeneutics
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Paul Redding
About this book
An advance on recent revisionist thinking about Hegelian philosophy, this book interprets Hegel's achievement as part of a revolutionary modernization of ancient philosophical thought initiated by Kant. In particular, Paul Redding argues that Hegel's use of hermeneutics, an emerging way of thinking objectively about intentional human subjects, overcame the major obstacle encountered by Kant in his attempt to modernize philosophy. The result was the first genuinely modern, hermeneutic, and "nonmetaphysical" philosophy.
Redding describes Hegel's accomplishment in terms of a development of Kant's revolution in philosophy, a "Copernican " revolution analogous to that which initiated modern science. He shows how the heterodox pantheistic views and hermeneutic social thought which merged at the end of the eighteenth century provided a fruitful environment for the transformation that Kantian idealism underwent within the work of Schelling and the early Hegel. He argues that Hegel overcame Schelling's pantheistic metaphysics with the Phenomenology of Spirit and developed a post-metaphysical hermeneutic mode of philosophy.
Redding goes on to show how the social theory of Hegel's Philosophy of Right and the conceptual structures of his allegedly most metaphysical work, the Science of Logic, are systematically linked to the hermeneutic insights of the Phenomenology. Against this background, Hegel's works are freed from traditional misunderstandings. Redding demonstrates that Hegel's analyses of modernity and the modern state surpass the one-sided views of Adam Smith and Jean-Jacques Rousseau, providing a coherent framework for modern social and political thought.
Author / Editor information
Paul Redding is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Sydney.
Reviews
A significant contribution to Hegel scholarship.... well written, clear.... all in all, an impressive achievement.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Preface
xi -
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Abbreviations
xv -
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INTRODUCTION: Hegel, Hermeneutics, and the Copernican Revolution in Philosophy
1 -
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CHAPTER 1. Science, Theology, and the Subject in Modern Philosophy
18 -
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CHAPTER 2. The Pathways of Hermeneutic Philosophy
35 -
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CHAPTER 3. Hegel's Early Schellingianism
50 -
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CHAPTER 4. The Revolutionary Philosophical Form of Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit
72 -
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CHAPTER 5. Hegel's Recognitive Theory of Spirit
99 -
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CHAPTER 6. Figures of Recognition
119 -
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CHAPTER 7. The Logic of Recognition
144 -
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CHAPTER 8. Right and Its Recognition
166 -
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CHAPTER 9. Sittlichkeit and Its Spheres
182 -
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CHAPTER 10. The Celebration and Criticism of Civil Society: Hegel, Adam Smith, and Jean-Jacques Rousseau
204 -
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CHAPTER 11. The Recognitive Logic of the Rational State
219 -
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CONCLUSION. The Nature of Hegelian Philosophy
238 -
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Bibliography
247 -
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Index
253