Reason and Revelation in Hegel: Metaphysical Dimension of the Absolute
Scholar and philosopher Jeffrey Reid’s latest monograph, Reason and Revelation in Hegel, offers a new understanding of Hegel’s metaphysical thought, centring on the Absolute’s self-revelatory agency – its unfolding through nature, human thought, and history.

Structured in four sections, the book explores absolute agency and the relationship between eternal truth and historical temporality. How does absolute presence take place in art, religion, and philosophy? Finally, questions of systematicity and meaning are engaged with reference to the Big Bang universe, our experience of music, and the question of what Hegel’s Science leaves behind.

Reason and Revelation in Hegel stands out in the landscape of Hegelian studies, where dominant trends often downplay metaphysical dimensions in favor of analytic, materialist, and secular interpretations. Rather than reducing Hegel’s religious ideas to cultural phenomena or aspirational human consciousness, Reid argues that the Absolute is not a distant metaphysical object but an active, performative force within rational human striving itself.

In this view, the failures of historical actuality become openings for philosophical truth – shaped by, and inseparable from, eternal revelation.

1147296608
Reason and Revelation in Hegel: Metaphysical Dimension of the Absolute
Scholar and philosopher Jeffrey Reid’s latest monograph, Reason and Revelation in Hegel, offers a new understanding of Hegel’s metaphysical thought, centring on the Absolute’s self-revelatory agency – its unfolding through nature, human thought, and history.

Structured in four sections, the book explores absolute agency and the relationship between eternal truth and historical temporality. How does absolute presence take place in art, religion, and philosophy? Finally, questions of systematicity and meaning are engaged with reference to the Big Bang universe, our experience of music, and the question of what Hegel’s Science leaves behind.

Reason and Revelation in Hegel stands out in the landscape of Hegelian studies, where dominant trends often downplay metaphysical dimensions in favor of analytic, materialist, and secular interpretations. Rather than reducing Hegel’s religious ideas to cultural phenomena or aspirational human consciousness, Reid argues that the Absolute is not a distant metaphysical object but an active, performative force within rational human striving itself.

In this view, the failures of historical actuality become openings for philosophical truth – shaped by, and inseparable from, eternal revelation.

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Reason and Revelation in Hegel: Metaphysical Dimension of the Absolute

Reason and Revelation in Hegel: Metaphysical Dimension of the Absolute

by Jeffrey Reid
Reason and Revelation in Hegel: Metaphysical Dimension of the Absolute

Reason and Revelation in Hegel: Metaphysical Dimension of the Absolute

by Jeffrey Reid

Hardcover

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Overview

Scholar and philosopher Jeffrey Reid’s latest monograph, Reason and Revelation in Hegel, offers a new understanding of Hegel’s metaphysical thought, centring on the Absolute’s self-revelatory agency – its unfolding through nature, human thought, and history.

Structured in four sections, the book explores absolute agency and the relationship between eternal truth and historical temporality. How does absolute presence take place in art, religion, and philosophy? Finally, questions of systematicity and meaning are engaged with reference to the Big Bang universe, our experience of music, and the question of what Hegel’s Science leaves behind.

Reason and Revelation in Hegel stands out in the landscape of Hegelian studies, where dominant trends often downplay metaphysical dimensions in favor of analytic, materialist, and secular interpretations. Rather than reducing Hegel’s religious ideas to cultural phenomena or aspirational human consciousness, Reid argues that the Absolute is not a distant metaphysical object but an active, performative force within rational human striving itself.

In this view, the failures of historical actuality become openings for philosophical truth – shaped by, and inseparable from, eternal revelation.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781487563646
Publisher: University of Toronto Press
Publication date: 11/21/2025
Pages: 242
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Jeffrey Reid is a professor in the Department of Philosophy at the University of Ottawa.

Table of Contents

Part 1: Absolute Agency and Revelation
1. Reason and Revelation: The Limits of Worldly Actuality
2. Absolute Selfhood and the Otherness of Nature
3. Comets, Moons, and the Voices of Nature
Part 2: The Temporality of Reason
4. History and the Absolute Now
5. Knowledge of God and the Perils of Insight
6. Overcoming (Mis)Understanding: The Language of Representation
Part 3: Speculative Forms of Presence
7. The Death of God and the Beautiful Finitude of Art
8. The Hermeneutics of Worship
9. Philosophy and Its Scientific Conclusion (Schluss)
Part 4: After the Schluss: Da Capo al Fini
10. Organic Systematicity and Its Excremental Challenge
11. Reason, Revelation, and the Big Bang
12. Absolute Music and Meaningfulness
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