An Introduction To Hegel: The Stages of Modern Philosophy

An Introduction To Hegel: The Stages of Modern Philosophy

by Howard P. Kainz
An Introduction To Hegel: The Stages of Modern Philosophy

An Introduction To Hegel: The Stages of Modern Philosophy

by Howard P. Kainz

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Overview

In a sense it would be inappropriate to speak of “Hegel’s system of philosophy,” because Hegel thought that in the strict sense there is only one system of philosophy evolving in the Western world. In Hegel’s view, although at times philosophy’s history seems to be a chaotic series of crisscrossing interpretations of meanings and values, with no consensus, there has been a teleological development and consistent progress in philosophy and philosophizing from the beginning; Hegel held that his own version of “German idealism” was simply bringing to final expression the latest refinements of an ongoing, perennial system.

If we take Hegel at his word, then one of the best entries into his system would be through the history of philosophy, showing how systems and schools of thought prior to Hegel led up to his system. The most important currents to focus on, however, would be in modern philosophy, in which especially intensive changes led ultimately to German idealism and Hegel’s immediate predecessors.

Fortunately, Hegel lectured extensively on the history of modern philosophy and structured his lectures in such a way as to throw light on the status of the “one system” of Western philosophy at the time — the status to which Hegel felt he had been contributing and was continuing to contribute. These lectures are of interest, first of all, as a systematic chronicle of philosophical positions in the heyday of modern philosophy, from Bacon to Hegel. Second, they are interesting because Hegel’s critical comments on his predecessors clarify his own positions: for example, the dialectic method and the importance of triplicity, the relationship of philosophy to the scientific method, the necessity for avoidance of the extremes of empiricism and of idealism, the subject/object problematic, the “identity” of rationality and reality, and the technical meaning in Hegel’s philosophy of “absolute,” “infinity,” and the “idea.”


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780821411421
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Publication date: 02/15/1996
Edition description: 1
Pages: 116
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

Howard P. Kainz is a professor of philosophy at Marquette University. He is the author of Hegel's Phenomenology, Parts I and II (Ohio, 1994, 1983) and An Introduction to Hegel: The Stages of Modern Philosophy (Ohio, 1996).

Table of Contents

Prefacevii
1Introduction: The Transition from Medieval to Modern Philosophy1
2Francis Bacon4
3Jacob Boehme7
4Rene Descartes11
5Benedict Spinoza16
6Nicholas Malebranche23
7John Locke25
8Hugo Grotius31
9Thomas Hobbes32
10Isaac Newton35
11Gottfried Wilhelm, Baron von Leibniz36
12Christian Wolff45
13Bishop George Berkeley48
14David Hume52
15Jean-Jacques Rousseau55
16Immanuel Kant57
17Johann Gottlieb Fichte76
18Frederick Wilhelm Joseph Schelling82
Afterword: Hegel's Position92
Bibliography97
Concordance99
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