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Hegel's idealism the satisfactions of self-consciousness

by Pippin Robert B.

Synopsis

This is the most important book on Hegel to have appeared in the past ten years. The author offers a completely new interpretation of Hegel's idealism that focuses on Hegel's appropriation and development of Kant's theoretical project. Hegel is presented neither as a pre-critical metaphysician nor as a social theorist, but as a critical philosopher whose disagreements with Kant, especially on the issue of intuitions, enrich the idealist arguments against empiricism, realism, and naturalism. In the face of the dismissal of absolute idealism as either unintelligible or implausible, Pippin explains and defends an original account of the philosophical basis for Hegel's claims about the historical and social nature of self-consciousness and of knowledge itself.

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Book Information

Copyright year 1989
ISBN-13 9780521379236
ISBN-10 0521379237
Class Copyright
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Subject PHILOSOPHY
File Size 0 MB
Number of Pages 331
Length of Recording 24
Shelf No. JV841