•  1
    To Know and Not Know Right
    In Thom Brooks Sebastian Stein (ed.), Hegel's Political Philosophy: On the Normative Significance of Method and System, Oxford University Press. pp. 161-182. 2017.
    This chapter discusses the epistemological status of the knowledge claims Hegel makes in the _Philosophy of Right_. It distinguishes between empirical knowledge (EK), potentially conditioned knowledge (PCPK), and philosophical knowledge (PK), and argues that PK is immune to criticism based on EK and PCPK because it is ontological prior to them. From ‘our’, PCPK-style perspective, Hegel might have failed truthfully to express PK so for ‘us’, his claims as well as our own are open for revision by …Read more
  •  39
    Algorithms and mechanisms for procuring services with uncertain durations using redundancy
    with E. H. Gerding, A. C. Rogers, K. Larson, and N. R. Jennings
    Artificial Intelligence 175 (14-15): 2021-2060. 2011.
  •  101
    Reasoning about responsibility in autonomous systems: challenges and opportunities
    with Vahid Yazdanpanah, Enrico H. Gerding, Mehdi Dastani, Catholijn M. Jonker, Timothy J. Norman, and Sarvapali D. Ramchurn
    AI and Society 38 (4): 1453-1464. 2023.
    Ensuring the trustworthiness of autonomous systems and artificial intelligence is an important interdisciplinary endeavour. In this position paper, we argue that this endeavour will benefit from technical advancements in capturing various forms of responsibility, and we present a comprehensive research agenda to achieve this. In particular, we argue that ensuring the reliability of autonomous system can take advantage of technical approaches for quantifying degrees of responsibility and for coor…Read more
  •  38
    Hegel on the will and its freedom
    Hegel-Jahrbuch 2012 (1): 125-128. 2012.
  •  57
    Hegel's account of ethical life can be shown to contradict Aristotle's in two main ways: first, Hegel follows Kant in emancipating virtue/duty from the particularity associated with the content of motivational drives and with Aristotle's eudaimonia. Hegel thus rejects Aristotelian happiness as the final end of rational action and prioritizes duty. However, against Kant, Hegel unites abstract duty and determined drives within a speculative notion of ethical duty: rational agents find happiness in…Read more
  •  98
    Hegel and Kant on rational willing: The relevance of method
    Hegel Bulletin 35 (2): 273-291. 2014.
    Hegel’s account of rational willing has recently been misrepresented by both critics and supporters who argue that the content of willing is externally received from history, social context, practices of recognition, etc. This contradicts the conceptual structure of Hegel’s notion of rational action as free individuality, according to which the difference between the willing subject and the content of willing is an internal relation of identity. Since this ‘difference within identity’ can only b…Read more
  •  50
  •  93
    While Kantian constructivism has become one of the most influential and systematic schools of thought in analytic moral and political philosophy, Hegelian approaches to practical normativity hold out the promise of building upon Kantian insights into individual self-determination while avoiding their dualistic tendencies. James Gledhill and Sebastian Stein unite distinguished scholars of German idealism and contemporary Anglophone practical philosophy with rising stars in the field, to explore w…Read more
  • The first section analyzes Hegel’s notion of philosophy as an ideal, self-referential unity with its internal differentiation into Geist and nature, compares Hegel’s account of the relationship between truth and thinkers to those of his essentialist- naturalist predecessors Aristotle and Spinoza and identifies Hegel’s system’s unified but differentiated categorial determinations as an expression of the one concept’s self-developing singularity. This leads into the second section’s discussion of …Read more
  •  26
    Hegel famously argues that his speculative method is a foundation for claims about socio-political reality within a wider philosophical system. This systematic approach is thought a superior alternative to all other ways of philosophical thinking. Hegel's method and system have normative significance for understanding everything from ethics to the state. Hegel's approach has attracted much debate among scholars about key philosophical questions - and controversy about his proposed answers to the…Read more
  •  24
    Readers of the Phenomenology face an abundance of different philosophical presuppositions, research strategies and hermeneutic efforts.To enable better orientation within the interpretative landscape, this volume summarizes, contextualizes and critically comments on contemporary Phenomenology scholarship.
  •  31
    Guest Editors' Introduction
    Idealistic Studies 54 (2): 99-105. 2024.
  •  76
    Against recent naturalist critiques of Kant and interpretations of Hegel, it can be shown that Hegel’s accounts of consciousness and mind (Geist) commit him to a distinctly supernatural, post-Kantian idealist concept of subjectivity. While Kant describes this subjectivity as independent, unconditioned and self-positing, he relies on the notion of an interplay of two distinct realms — labelled the ‘natural’-phenomenal and the ‘supernatural’-noumenal — to justify it. While Fichte accepts Kant’s de…Read more
  •  66
    Hegel's absolute idealism has proven to be one of the most controversial philosophical positions to characterize. The most abstract categories of essence are what Hegel calls the determinations of reflection, i.e. identity, difference and ground. Continuing his analysis of the determinations of essence, Hegel then discusses the notions of subsistence, relation and the whole and its parts and arrives at essence's determinations of “inner” and outer: the “inner” functions as ground of appearance a…Read more
  •  43
    Despite his commitment to universal explicability, a case can be made that Hegel is better labelled an idealist than a naturalist. As an analysis of his three syllogisms of philosophy reveals, he strictly differentiates between the domains of nature and Geist, suggesting in sequence that Geist replaces nature, Geist comprehends nature and that Geist and nature are comprehended as forms of the metaphysical idea and determine and mediate each other. Since Hegel grounds his accounts of the metaphys…Read more