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Hegel on Logic and Religion

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A distinction often missed by Hegelian interpreters is that, for Hegel, logic functions differently when it is applied to the contingencies of nature and history. Burbidge shows that Hegel did not ...
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  • 20 August 1992
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A distinction often missed by Hegelian interpreters is that, for Hegel, logic functions differently when it is applied to the contingencies of nature and history. Burbidge shows that Hegel did not claim to have reached the end of history. The future is open.

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Price: £25.00
Pages: 184
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Hegelian Studies
Publication Date: 20 August 1992
ISBN: 9780791410189
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

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"John Burbidge is widely respected for his book, On Hegel's Logic. This book continues his interest in logic, with special application to the reasonableness of Christianity. It is well organized into three major areas: logic; logic applied; and Christianity. It will enhance the respect in which he is held as a Hegel scholar." — William Desmond

Acknowledgments

1. Lessing's Ditch: A Preface

LOGIC

2. The First Chapter of Hegel's Larger Logic

3. Transition or Reflection

4. Where is the Place of Understanding?

5. The Necessity of Contingency

LOGIC APPLIED

6. Challenge to Hegel: Contraries and Contradictories in Schelling's Late Philosophy

7. Is Hegel a Rationalist or an Empiricist?

8.Concept and Time in Hegel

9. The Inequity of Equality

CHRISTIANITY

10. 'Unhappy Consciousness' in Hegel: An Analysis of Medieval Catholicism?

11. God, Man, and Death in Hegel's Phenomenology

12. The Syllogisms of Revealed Religion

13. Is Hegel a Christian?

Notes

Index