ABSTRACT

This book discusses the most comprehensive of Hegel’s works: his long-neglected Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences in Outline. It contains original essays by internationally renowned and emerging voices in Hegel scholarship. Their contributions elucidate fundamental aspects of Hegel’s encyclopedic system with an eye to its contemporary relevance. The book thus addresses system-level claims about Hegel’s unique conceptions of philosophy, philosophical "science" and its method, dialectic, speculative thinking, and the way they relate to both Hegelian and contemporary notions of nature, history, religion, freedom, and cultural praxis.

chapter 1|7 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|14 pages

Hegel's Science of Reason as a Science of Freedom

From Nuremberg to Heidelberg

chapter 7|18 pages

Between Religion and the Empirical Sciences

Hegel's Concept of Philosophical Science According to the Introduction to the Encyclopedia

chapter 10|22 pages

Nature's Otherness

On the Status of Nature in Hegel's Encyclopedic System

chapter 11|16 pages

The Two Souls

Some Remarks on Hegel's Investigation of ‘Soul’ in the Philosophy of Subjective Spirit and Philosophy of Nature

chapter 15|22 pages

The Proximity of Philosophy to Religion

Hegel's Evaluative Reason

chapter 16|29 pages

Hegel's Notion of Philosophy

The Concept-Based Unity of Self-Referential Universality and Differentiated Particularity