The philosophy of history has long been shaped by the tension between metaphysical and scientific approaches. This paper examines the fundamental contrast between Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel’s teleological historiography and Heinrich Rickert’s scientific and methodological approach. Hegel conceives history as a rational and necessary process, unfolding according to the dialectical development of Spirit (Geist). In contrast, Rickert rejects historical determinism, maintaining that historical me…
Read moreThe philosophy of history has long been shaped by the tension between metaphysical and scientific approaches. This paper examines the fundamental contrast between Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel’s teleological historiography and Heinrich Rickert’s scientific and methodological approach. Hegel conceives history as a rational and necessary process, unfolding according to the dialectical development of Spirit (Geist). In contrast, Rickert rejects historical determinism, maintaining that historical meaning is not inherent in events but constructed through conceptual selection and methodological categorization. This divergence raises critical questions: Is history an ontologically structured process, or is it an interpretative discipline shaped by epistemological frameworks? Hegel’s approach emphasizes universalism, necessity, and progress, positioning history as a teleological movement toward the realization of reason and freedom. Rickert, on the other hand, treats history as a field of contingent and unique events, arguing that historical inquiry must rely on systematic classification and value-based selection rather than speculative metaphysics. This study explores the implications of both perspectives, assessing their theoretical coherence, methodological strengths, and limitations. The analysis reveals that Hegel’s philosophy of history provides a grand explanatory framework, allowing for a coherent and structured understanding of historical change, but at the risk of overlooking contingency and historical specificity. Meanwhile, Rickert’s emphasis on methodological rigor ensures a more flexible and empirical approach, yet it raises concerns about fragmentation and the absence of overarching historical meaning. This debate remains central to historiography, influencing discussions on historical objectivity, interpretation, and the role of historians in shaping narratives. By engaging with this debate, this paper highlights the continued relevance of both metaphysical and scientific historiography in contemporary historical thought.