• Spirit without the Form of Self
    In Will Dudley (ed.), Hegel and History, State University of New York Press. pp. 135-153. 2010.
  •  6
    Absolute Knowing
    In Kenneth R. Westphal (ed.), The Blackwell Guide to Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit, Wiley‐blackwell. 2009.
    This chapter contains sections titled: Introduction Apparent Knowing and Its Absolute Ground Discovery and Structure of the Self Absolute Knowing as Science of the Self References.
  • Derangements of the soul
    In Marina F. Bykova (ed.), Hegel's Philosophy of Spirit: A Critical Guide, Cambridge University Press. 2019.
  •  11
    Hegel's Anthropology: life, psyche, and second nature
    Northwestern University Press. 2021.
    A groundbreaking contribution to scholarship on Hegel and nineteenth-century philosophy, this book makes the case that the "Anthropology" is essential to understanding Hegel's philosophy of spirit in its connection with the philosophy of nature.
  •  24
    On Arash Abazari's Hegel's Ontology of Power
    Hegel Bulletin 43 (2): 291-304. 2022.
    If one's goal as a scholar is neither rejection nor embrace, whether piecemeal or wholesale, of a classical text, but rather the clarification of its key concepts, arguments and intellectual context, in order to show where those concepts and arguments lead—possibly to conclusions beyond those made explicit in the text itself—then Arash Abazari's Hegel's Ontology of Power: The Structure of Social Domination in Capitalism leads by example. The general premise of this study is that Hegel's philosop…Read more
  •  2
    Rights-Pragmatism and the Right of Humanity
    Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie 102 (1): 22-39. 2016.
    The article opens with the analysis of a 2013 legal memorandum of the U.S. Department of Justice that sanctions state ordered killings of citizens on foreign soil, as well as the violation of foreign sovereignty that may have to accompany such killings. This document, together with arguments of contemporary juridical pragmatist like M. Ignatieff, functions in the article as a prototype of the kind of juridical thinking that has been explicitly countered in classical philosophies of right. Sectio…Read more
  •  19
    The Parmenides and De Anima in Hegel's Perspective
    Hegel Bulletin 27 (1-2): 51-68. 2006.
    In the chapter on ‘Plato and Aristotle’ of theLectures on the History of PhilosophyHegel praises Aristotle's work for displaying a principle of ‘pure subjectivity’ in a manner that he considers to be largely absent from the Platoniccorpus:In general, Platonic thinking [das Platonische] represents objectivity, but it lacks a principle of life, a principle of subjectivity; and this principle […], not in the sense of a contingent, merely particular subjectivity, but in the sense of pure subjectivit…Read more
  •  11
    The article expresses skepticism on the alleged affinity between Hegel’s theory of conceptuality and conceptual pragmatism. Despite the intriguing philosophical impetus underlying the latter, the author formulates doubts about its compatibility with logical and metaphysical principles of absolute idealism. The criticism is articulated in four theses: (1) pragmatism’s concerns with (ultimately empirical) concept-acquisition and concept-application are largely alien to Hegel’s logical-metaphysical…Read more
  •  19
    This international collection of essays from the 2014 Hegel Society of America Meeting addresses three major stances in the decades-long controversy on the topic: Hegel as a full-blooded pre-critical metaphysician; Hegel as a thinker without metaphysics; and Hegel as a neo-Aristotelian metaphysician par excellence. This work successfully overcomes the stalemates between ‘analytic’ and ‘continental’, ‘anti-metaphysical’ and ‘metaphysical’ Hegel.
  •  10
    HEGEL EXPLICATES HIS THEORY of the history of philosophic thinking in several introductions to the various cycles of Lectures on the History of Philosophy held in Jena, Heidelberg, and Berlin. Only the introductions to the first cycle of Heidelberg lectures and to the second cycle of Berlin lectures survive in Hegel's own hand. Since the earlier of these is an integral part of the latter, an analysis of the 1820 Introduction provides a reliable account of Hegel's theory.
  •  55
    Metaphysical Foundations of the History of Philosophy
    Review of Metaphysics 59 (1): 3-31. 2005.
    HEGEL EXPLICATES HIS THEORY of the history of philosophic thinking in several introductions to the various cycles of Lectures on the History of Philosophy held in Jena, Heidelberg, and Berlin. Only the introductions to the first cycle of Heidelberg lectures and to the second cycle of Berlin lectures survive in Hegel's own hand. Since the earlier of these is an integral part of the latter, an analysis of the 1820 Introduction provides a reliable account of Hegel's theory.
  •  51
    Aristotle in the Nineteenth Century
    Idealistic Studies 30 (2): 107-119. 2000.
  •  1
    The Parmenides And De Anima In Hegel's Perspective
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 53 51-68. 2006.
  •  19
    Rights-Pragmatism and the Right of Humanity
    Archiv Für Rechts- Und Sozialphilosphie 102 (1): 22-39. 2016.
    The article opens with the analysis of a 2013 legal memorandum of the U.S. Department of Justice that sanctions state ordered killings of citizens on foreign soil, as well as the violation of foreign sovereignty that may have to accompany such killings. This document, together with arguments of contemporary juridical pragmatist like M. Ignatieff, functions in the article as a prototype of the kind of juridical thinking that has been explicitly countered in classical philosophies of right. Sectio…Read more
  •  2
    Kant’s Shameful Proposition: A Hegel-Inspired Criticism of Kant’s Theory of Domestic Right
    International Philosophical Quarterly 40 (3): 297-312. 2000.