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G.W.F.Hegel: The Berlin Phenomenology

Edited and Translated with an Introduction and Explanatory Notes
ISBN/EAN: 9789027712059
Umbreit-Nr.: 1605699

Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: cx, 210 S.
Format in cm:
Einband: gebundenes Buch

Erschienen am 31.05.1981
€ 106,99
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  • Zusatztext
    • Since the three volume edition ofHegel's Philosophy of Subjective Spirit (1978, 19792) has been so well received, I have been encouraged to select that part of it most suitable for teaching purposes, and to publish it here as a separate work. As a teaching text, the Berlin Phenomenology has several important advan­ tages. Unlike so many ofHegel's writings, must notably theJena Phenomeno­ logy of 1807, it is concise and to the point, and concemed with issues already familiar to most students of philosophy. Since it consists for the most part of a searching and radical analysis of Kant's epistemology, Fichte's ethics and Schelling's system-building, it provides tirst-rate insight into Hegel's assessment of his immedi~te predecessors. When considered in context, as part of the Encyclopaedia if the Philosophical Sciences, it enables us to distinguish dearly between the systematic, the logical and the psychological aspects of Hegelianism, and is therefore also relevant to some of the central issues in modem phenomenology. It is to be hoped that the introduction and notes prepared for the present edition will prove helpful to both teachers and students. Every effort has been ma de to produce a thoroughly reliable ba sic text and an accurate translation. The text published in 1978 was prepared at the Hegel Archive in Bochum from photocopies, and I am most grateful to the Central Interfaculty of the Erasmus University, Rotterdam, for having made it possible for me to check the printed version against the original manuscripts.
  • Autorenportrait
    • InhaltsangabeConsciousness.- ?) The ego <br />413.- 1)Diremption.- 2)The soul.- 3)Sublation <br /> 414.- i)Knowledge.- ii)Certainty.- iii)Truth.- ß) Subjective idealism <br /> 415.- 1)Kant.- 2)Fichte.- 3)Characterization of consciousness.- i)Comprehension.- ii)The object.- a. Sensation.- b. Content and thought.- c. Universal subjectivity.- iii) The goal <br />416.- ?) Division of consciousness <br /> 417.- A. Consciousness as such.- 1)Division of consciousness as such.- 2)Division of the object.- 3)Consciousness and spirit.- ?) Sensuous consciousness <br /> 418.- 1)Otherness.- 2)Sensuousness.- i)Space.- ii)Time.- iii)Manifoldness.- 3)The thing <br />419.- i)Externality.- ii)Content.- iii)Concrete alteration.- ß) Perceiving <br /> 420.- 1)Experiences.- 2)Connection <br />421.- 3)Objects and their properties.- ?) Understanding <br /> 422.- 1)Necessity.- 2)Laws.- 3)Subjectivity <br /> 423.- i)Motion.- ii)Animation.- iii) Consciousness of life.- B. Self-consciousness <br /> 424.- 1)Characterization.- 2)Freedom <br /> 425.- i)Abstract.- ii)Free self-certainty.- iii)Objectification.- 3)Division of self-consciousness.- ?) Desire <br /> 426.- 1)Drive and activity <br /> 427.- 2)Self-seeking and destruction <br /> 428.- 3)Satisfaction and identification <br />.- ß) Recognitive self-consciousness <br /> 430.- 1) Struggle <br />431.- i)Imperiousness.- ii)Life and death <br /> 432.- iii) Coercion and subjection.- 2)Mastery and servitude <br /> 433.- 3)Community of need <br /> 434.- i)Slavery <br /> 435.- ii)Service.- iii)Communal provision.- ?) Universal self-consciousness <br /> 436.- 1)Recognition.- 2)Acceptance <br /> 437.- 3)Rationality.- C. Reason <br />438.- 1)Subjective.- 2)Objective.- 3)Notional.- ?) Certainty <br /> 439.- 1)Subjective.- 2)Objective.- 3)Knowledge.- ?) Substantial Knowledge.- 1)Self-certainty.- 2)Spiritual activity.- 3)Cognition.- ?) Spirit and Truth.- 1)Unity.- 2)Spiritual certainty.- 3)Truth.- Notes.- Index to the Text.- Index to the Introduction and Notes.