The Problem of Nature in Hegel's Final System
Wes Furlotte critically evaluates Hegel’s philosophy of human freedom in terms of his often-disregarded conception of nature. In doing so, he gives us a new portrait of Hegel’s final system that is surprisingly relevant for our contemporary world, connecting it with recent work in speculative realism and new materialism.
Furlotte offers a sophisticated sense of the fundamental materialism permeating Hegel’s concept of freedom and how the former serves as the inescapable precondition of subjectivity and social history. He also reveals how material nature and culture’s reactions to it problematize human freedom – even threaten it with utter annihilation. This book forces us to reconsider accepted accounts of Hegel’s system and to re-evaluate what Hegel, and German Idealism, might still offer us today.

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The Problem of Nature in Hegel's Final System
Wes Furlotte critically evaluates Hegel’s philosophy of human freedom in terms of his often-disregarded conception of nature. In doing so, he gives us a new portrait of Hegel’s final system that is surprisingly relevant for our contemporary world, connecting it with recent work in speculative realism and new materialism.
Furlotte offers a sophisticated sense of the fundamental materialism permeating Hegel’s concept of freedom and how the former serves as the inescapable precondition of subjectivity and social history. He also reveals how material nature and culture’s reactions to it problematize human freedom – even threaten it with utter annihilation. This book forces us to reconsider accepted accounts of Hegel’s system and to re-evaluate what Hegel, and German Idealism, might still offer us today.

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The Problem of Nature in Hegel's Final System

The Problem of Nature in Hegel's Final System

by Wes Furlotte
The Problem of Nature in Hegel's Final System

The Problem of Nature in Hegel's Final System

by Wes Furlotte

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$39.95 
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Overview

Wes Furlotte critically evaluates Hegel’s philosophy of human freedom in terms of his often-disregarded conception of nature. In doing so, he gives us a new portrait of Hegel’s final system that is surprisingly relevant for our contemporary world, connecting it with recent work in speculative realism and new materialism.
Furlotte offers a sophisticated sense of the fundamental materialism permeating Hegel’s concept of freedom and how the former serves as the inescapable precondition of subjectivity and social history. He also reveals how material nature and culture’s reactions to it problematize human freedom – even threaten it with utter annihilation. This book forces us to reconsider accepted accounts of Hegel’s system and to re-evaluate what Hegel, and German Idealism, might still offer us today.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781474435543
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 06/04/2020
Series: New Perspectives in Ontology
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x (d)

About the Author

Wes Furlotte is Professor of Philosophy at Dominican UniversityCollege and part-time Professor of Philosophy at the University of Ottawa. Specialising in German idealism and 19th- and 20th-century European thought, he has published on problems in ontology, epistemology and socio-political philosophy.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Problem of a Philosophical Rendering of Nature and Hegel’s Philosophy of the Real

Part I: ‘Gleaming leprosy in the sky’

1. The ‘Non-Whole’ of Hegelian Nature: Extrinsicality and the Problems of Sickness and Death

2. The Instability of Space-Time and the Contingency of Necessity

3. The Problem of Nature’s Spurious Infinite within the Register of Animal Life

4. Assimilation and the Problems of Sex, Violence, and Sickness unto Death

Part II: Spirit’s Birth from within the Bio-Material World

5. The Other Hegel: The Anthropology and Spirit’s Birth from within the Bio-Material World

6. Embodiment: Spirit, Material–Maternal Dependence, and the Problem of the in utero

7. The Nightmare of Reason and Regression into the Night of the World

8. Treatment as (re-)Habituation: From Psychopathology to (re-)Actualised Subjectivity

Part III: The Problem of Surplus Repressive Punishment

9. An Introduction to the Problem of Surplus Repressive Punishment

10. Abstract Right: Natural Immediacy within the Matrices of Personhood

11. Crime, the Negation of Right, and the Problem of European Colonial Consciousness

12. Surplus Repressive Punishment and Spirit’s Regressive (de-)Actualisation

Conclusion: Freedom within Two Natures, or, the Nature–Spirit Dialectic in the Final System

Bibliography

Index

What People are Saying About This

With clarity and rigor, Wes Furlotte provides a fundamental and sweeping reassessment of Hegel’s intellectual itinerary as well as his mature philosophical project.  He convincingly recasts Hegelian Naturphilosophie as absolutely central to Hegel’s larger framework.  What is more, Furlotte’s depiction of the situation of human mindedness and culture within the broader expanse of natural reality renders the Hegelian Philosophy of Nature strikingly timely - a live theoretical option for the early-twenty-first century. This book makes crucial contributions to the ongoing reassessment of Hegel’s enduring significance

University of New Mexico Professor Adrian Johnston

With clarity and rigor, Wes Furlotte provides a fundamental and sweeping reassessment of Hegel’s intellectual itinerary as well as his mature philosophical project.  He convincingly recasts Hegelian Naturphilosophie as absolutely central to Hegel’s larger framework.  What is more, Furlotte’s depiction of the situation of human mindedness and culture within the broader expanse of natural reality renders the Hegelian Philosophy of Nature strikingly timely - a live theoretical option for the early-twenty-first century. This book makes crucial contributions to the ongoing reassessment of Hegel’s enduring significance

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