Skip to product information
1 of 1

Hegel's Absolute

Regular price £72.50
Sale price £72.50 Regular price £72.50
Sale Sold out
Offers suggestions for approaching Hegel's most difficult and important work.Reputed to be one of the most difficult yet rewarding works of philosophical literature, Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 11 January 2007
View Product Details

Offers suggestions for approaching Hegel's most difficult and important work.

Reputed to be one of the most difficult yet rewarding works of philosophical literature, Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit has long been in need of an introduction for English readers. Without using jargon or technical terms, Donald Phillip Verene provides that introduction, guiding the reader through Hegel's text as a whole and offering a way to grasp the major insights and sections of Hegel's text without oversimplifying its narrative. A glossary of sixty of Hegel's terms, discussed in both their original German and English equivalents, is included.

files/i.png Icon
Price: £72.50
Pages: 147
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Imprint: SUNY Press
Series: SUNY series in Hegelian Studies
Publication Date: 11 January 2007
ISBN: 9780791469637
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

REVIEWS Icon

"This is genuinely an introduction to reading the Phenomenology, as opposed to the more typical commentary or exegesis insisting on some particular reading, and it introduces the Phenomenology in a way that actively encourages new and different readings. The author encourages the reader to take Hegel on his own terms, to follow the path that Hegel believes Spirit travels in the midst of its unfolding autobiography. The first task—if one is truly to profit from reading the Phenomenology—is just to try to see why Hegel thinks as he does. Embedding the Hegelian project in the philosophical and cultural context of the early nineteenth century, as well as drawing on disparate parts of the rest of the tradition to help elucidate his points, Verene provides an elegant and rich framework within which to take up this task." — Brian John Martine, author of Indeterminacy and Intelligibility

Preface

1. Hegel’s Preface: Reflection versus Speculation

2. Hegel’s "Introduction": The Double Ansich

3. Hegel’s Reason: A Digression

4. Hegel’s System: Dialectic of "Andness"

5. The Beginning of the Phenomenology

6. Force, Understanding, and the Inverted World

7. Self-Consciousness of Masterhood and Servitude

8. Unhappy Consciousness

9. On Reading the Second "Half" of the Phenomenology: An Overview of Reason and Spirit

10. Absolute Knowing

Appendix. Hegel’s Terminology
Works Cited
Index