ABSTRACT

In this clear, critical examination of the ideas of one of the greatest and most influential of modern philosophers, M.J. Inwood makes Hegel's arguments fully accessible. He considers Hegel's system as a whole and examines the wide range of problems that it was designed to solve - metaphysical, epistemological theological and political. He concentrates especially on the logical and metaphysical ideas which underpin the system and which supply the key to understanding much of what is obscure in Hegel's thought. Throughout the book, M.J Inwood reconstructs Hegel's thought by arguing with him. He examines Hegel's arguments and restates his views precisely and clearly. He also conveys the impressive unity of Hegel's system and its links with the thought of such philosophers as Aristotle, Spinoza and Kant.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

part 1|83 pages

Prelude

chapter 1|17 pages

Perception, Conception and Thought

chapter 2|20 pages

Thinking and the Self

chapter 3|44 pages

Experience, Meta-thinking and Objectivity

part 2|168 pages

Problems

chapter 4|20 pages

Philosophy and the Fall of Man

chapter 5|42 pages

Knowledge and Assumptions

chapter 6|38 pages

Infinite Objects and Finite Cognition

chapter 7|66 pages

Faith, Proofs and Infinity

part 3|261 pages

The System

chapter 8|87 pages

Logic: Thinking about Thinking

chapter 10|65 pages

Idealism, Appearance and Contradiction

chapter 11|51 pages

Freedom, Morality and the End of History

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion