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18Hegel's philosophy of religionIn Graham Oppy & Nick Trakakis (eds.), Nineteenth-Century Philosophy of Religion: The History of Western Philosophy of Religion, Volume 4, Routledge. 2009.
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2Mathematics, Computation, Language and Poetry: The Novalis ParadoxIn Dalia Nassar (ed.), The Relevance of Romanticism: Essays on German Romantic Philosophy, Oxford University Press. pp. 221-238. 2014.Recent scholarship has helped to demythologise the life and work of Georg Philipp Friedrich von Hardenberg who, as the poet “Novalis”, had come to instantiate the nineteenth-century’s stereotype of the romantic poet. Among Hardenberg’s interests that seem to sit uneasily with this literary persona were his interests in science and mathematics, and especially in the idea, traceable back to Leibniz, of a mathematically based computational approach to language. Hardenberg’s approach to language, a…Read more
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96The analytic neo-hegelianism of John McDowell & Robert BrandomIn Michael Baur & Stephen Houlgate (eds.), The Blackwell Companion to Hegel, Blackwell. 2011.The historical origins of the analytic style that was to become dominant within academic philosophy in the English-speaking world are often traced to the work of Bertrand Russell and G. E. Moore at the turn of the twentieth century, and portrayed as involving a radical break with the idealist philosophy that had bloomed in Britain at the end of the nineteenth. Congruent with this view, Hegel is typically taken as representing a type of philosophy that analytic philosophy assiduously avoids. Thus…Read more
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157Hegel’s Anticipation of the Early History of Analytic PhilosophyThe Owl of Minerva 42 (1/2). 2010.Putting it very crudely, it might be said that in the much discussed opening three chapters that make up the section “Consciousness” of his Phenomenology of Spirit Hegel sketches and “test-drives” various models for a consciousness able to experience and know the world.1 Kant had thought of objects of experience as necessarily having conceptual (as well as spatio-temporal) form, but non-conceptual (“intuitional”) content. But for Hegel, that objects show themselves to have a conceptual form emer…Read more
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101Angelica Nuzzo (ed): Hegel and the Analytic Tradition (review)Philosophy 85 (4): 567-574. 2010.
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1104Prior to Kojève's well-known account in his Introduction to the Reading of Hegel there seems to have been relatively little interest in Hegel's concept of recognition— Anerkennung.1 After Kojève, however, a popular view of Hegel's philosophy emerged within which the idea of recognition plays a central role: what distinguishes us as selfconscious beings from the rest of nature is that we are driven by a peculiar type of desire, the desire for recognition leading to struggle's over recognition. Wh…Read more
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111McDowell's Radicalization of Kant's Account of Concepts and Intuitions: a Sellarsian (and Hegelian) CritiqueVerifiche: Rivista Trimestrale di Scienze Umane 41 (1–3). 2012.McDowell’s attempts to find a way out of the grip of some seemingly intractable problems besetting analytic philosophy has led him back to Kant and Hegel. Understanding, with Kant, the role played by concepts in experience will point the way forward, but Kant’s thinking must be released from its own problems which threaten to reduce the contents of experience and knowledge to “facts about us”. Kant’s “subjectivism” must be subjected to an “Hegelian” critique. However, McDowell’s solution to that…Read more
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213The Role of Logic "Commonly So Called" in Hegel's Science of LogicBritish Journal for the History of Philosophy 22 (2): 281-301. 2014.This paper examines Hegel’s accounts of the nature of judgements and inferences in the ‘subjective logic’ of the Science of Logic, and does so in light of the history of the tradition of formal logic to his time. It is argued that, contrary to the attitude often displayed by interpreters of Hegel’s logic, it is important to understand the positive role played by formal logic, ‘logic commonly so called’, in Hegel’s own conception of logic. It is argued that Hegel’s own scientific presentation [Da…Read more
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60If Reason is ‘in the World’, Where Exactly is it Located?European Journal of Philosophy 24 (3): 712-724. 2016.In his recent book James Kreines argues that for Hegel reason is “in the world”, but how we are to understand the idea of reason's being so located? One answer, suggested by more traditional theocentric readings of Hegel, would be to appeal to the idea of a divine thought, coursing through the world. Another answer, more congenial to modern sensibilities, might locate reason within the rational activities of inter-subjectively connected human beings, as suggested by Terry Pinkard's idea of the “…Read more
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1439Thom Brook's project of a systematic reading of Hegel's Philosophy of RightHegel Bulletin 33 (2). 2012.Thom Brooks'sHegel's Political Philosophy: A Systematic Reading of the Philosophy of Rightpresents a very clear and methodologically self-conscious series of discussions of key topics within Hegel's classic text. As one might expect for a ‘systematic’ reading, the main body of Brooks's text commences with an opening chapter on Hegel's system. Then follow seven chapters, the topics of which are encountered sequentially as one reads through thePhilosophy of Right. Brooks's central claim is that to…Read more
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126Hegel’s Logic of Being and the Polarities of Presocratic ThoughtThe Monist 74 (3): 438-456. 1991.Recently a view of Hegel’s “idealism” which hitherto had seemed unquestionable—the view that it is fundamentally a metaphysical doctrine—has been seriously challenged. Thus yesterday’s metaphysical Hegel, complete with his cosmic megasubject hidden behind the events of nature and history, has been joined by today’s “nonmetaphysical Hegel,” the postkantian categorial “genealogist.” According to the nonmetaphysical Hegelians, a century and a half of misunderstanding has been based on the confusion…Read more
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72The relation of logic to ontology in HegelIn Leila Haaparanta & Heikki Koskinen (eds.), Categories of Being: Essays on Metaphysics and Logic, Oup Usa. pp. 145-166. 2012.Even among those philosophers who hold particular aspects of Hegel's philosophy in high regard, there have been few since the 19th century who have found Hegel's "metaphysics" plausible, and just as few not sceptical about the coherency of the "logical" project on which it is meant to be based. Indeed, against the type of work characteristic of the late nineteenth-century logical revolution which issued in modern analytic philosophy, it is often difficult to see exactly how Hegel's "logical" wri…Read more
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4309Hegel, Aristotle and the Conception of Free AgencyIn Axe Honneth & Gunnar Hendrichs (eds.), Freiheit: Stuttgarter Hegelkrongress 2011, Vittorio Klostermann. 2011.
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20Some Metaphysical Implications of Hegel's TheologyEuropean Journal for the Philosophy of Religion 4 (1). 2012.Hegel makes claims about the relation of philosophy to religion that might raise concerns for those who want to locate his philosophy generally within the modern enlightenment tradition. For example, at the outset of his Lectures on Aesthetics he claims that philosophy “has no other object but God and so is essentially rational theology”.1 What might seem to placate worries here is that Hegel of course differentiates between the forms of religious and philosophical cognition in which such a cont…Read more
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136Philosophical Republicanism and Monarchism—and Republican and Monarchical Philosophy—in Kant and HegelThe Owl of Minerva 26 (1): 35-46. 1994.If Hegel has been taken seriously at all in this century it has been qua social and political philosopher. As author of the Science of Logic, that work on which he considered the Realphilosophie dependent, he has been largely dismissed. Recently, however, interest in Hegel’s peculiar logico-ontological project as developed in his Logic has been revived and the traditional negative reading of this work challenged. Here debate has tended to center on the question of his relation to Kant. In contra…Read more
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72Action, language and text: Dilthey's conception of the understandingPhilosophy and Social Criticism 9 (2): 228-244. 1982.
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63In Mind and World and subsequent writings up to an essay first published in 2008 entitled “Avoiding the Myth of the Given”,1 John McDowell had insisted not only on the conceptuality of what is often discussed as “perceptual content” but also on the propositionality of that content. Many might find this puzzling. At the most intuitive level, one might think of the “content” of perception, what one perceives, as things— things with particular properties, and things arranged in particular relations…Read more
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81The Pittsburgh School of Philosophy: Sellars, Brandom and McDowell, by Chauncey Maher. Abingdon: Routledge, 2012, xiii + 156 pp. ISBN: 978-0-415-80442-4 hbk £80.00; ISBN: 978-0-203-09750-2 ebk £53.20 (review)European Journal of Philosophy 21 (S3). 2013.
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2059Pragmatism, Idealism, and the Modal Menace: Rorty, Brandom, and Truths about PhotonsThe European Legacy 19 (2): 174-186. 2014.In a short exchange published in 2000, Richard Rorty and Robert Brandom differed over the status of “facts” in a world containing no speakers and, hence, no speech acts. While Brandom wanted to retain the meaningfulness of talk of “facts” or “truths” about things—in this case truths about photons —in a world in which there could be no claimings about such things, Rorty denied the existence of any such “worldly items” as “facts.” In this essay the difference between Rorty and Brandom on this issu…Read more
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88Two directions for analytic kantianism : Naturalism and idealismIn Mario De Caro & David Macarthur (eds.), Naturalism and Normativity, Cambridge University Press. 2010.Usually, analytic philosophy is thought of as standing firmly within the tradition of empiricism, but recently attention has been drawn to the strongly Kantian features that have characterized this philosophical movement throughout a considerable part of its history. Those charting the history of early analytic philosophy sometimes point to a more Kantian stream of thought feeding it from both Frege and Wittgenstein, and as countering a quite different stream flowing from the early Russell and M…Read more
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55Review of Michael Quante, Hegel's Concept of Action (review)Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2005 (2). 2005.
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Freud's theory of consciousnessIn Michael Levine (ed.), Analytic Freud: Philosophy and Psychoanalysis, Routledge. pp. 119--131. 1999.
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Nietzschean perspectivism and the logic of practical reasonPhilosophical Forum 22 (1): 72-88. 1990.
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156Anthropology as ritual: Wittgenstein's reading of Frazer's the golden boughMetaphilosophy 18 (3-4): 253-269. 1987.
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21Kant: Transcendental Idealist and/or Cognitive ScientistIn Volker Gerhardt, Rolf-Peter Horstmann & Ralph Schumacher (eds.), Kant Und Die Berliner Aufklärung: Akten des IX Internationalen Kant-Kongresses, Walter De Gruyter. pp. 77-84. 2001.
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