Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W3022520306> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 58 of
58
with 100 items per page.
- W3022520306 endingPage "44" @default.
- W3022520306 startingPage "23" @default.
- W3022520306 abstract "This chapter contextualizes G.W.F. Hegel’s work by tracing the pathway of thought from Immanuel Kant’s transcendental philosophy, through G.E. Schulze’s post-Kantian skepticism, through J.G. Fichte’s “Bold philosophy of freedom,” and then finally to the Spinozistic thinking of F.W.J. Schelling and Hegel himself. In the early 1790s, Schulze argued that Kant’s “transcendental” account of the a priori conditions of knowing had failed to live up to the principles of Kant’s own philosophy. According to Schulze, Kant made illicit use of the concept of “substance” by supposing that the human mind is a kind of “substrate” which, though unknowable “in itself,” somehow underlies and makes possible our knowledge of objects of experience. Relatedly, critics argued that Kant made illicit use of the concept of “cause” by implying that the human mind (unlike God’s mind) does not create everything that it knows but depends on the givenness of an independent “transcendental object” which, though unknowable “in itself,” somehow affects human knowing and renders it finite. In response to such criticisms, Fichte argued that it is possible to defend the Kantian system, but only if one recognizes that our activity as knowers is rooted in our radical freedom as agents and therefore can never become an object that one experiences or represents to oneself, and indeed can never become an object of any theoretical knowing at all. For Fichte, the knower’s radical ability to doubt (that is, its non-representational awareness that no given content can ever be the determining cause of one’s own knowing) is an indicator of the knower’s radical freedom as an agent. In the 1790s, the young Schelling and Hegel became avid proponents of Fichte’s philosophy of freedom; but, like their friend Friedrich Hölderlin, they had doubts about whether Fichte had adequately explained how human knowing is free (that is, unbounded by anything simply “given” to it from the outside) yet also finite (that is, distinguishable from divine knowing). Relying on the work of Spinoza, they argued that freedom (or the “I” or “mind”) and nature (or the “not-I” or “world”) are not simply discontinuous with one another, but are really just two aspects of one and the same unbounded whole. This unbounded whole, Schelling argued, can be apprehended only through art which alone can serve as philosophy’s true organ. Resisting Schelling’s romantic tendencies, Hegel argued that this unbounded whole could be apprehended through philosophical, speculative reason, but only by means of the indirect, stepwise approach of “determinate negation” as shown in the Phenomenology of Spirit." @default.
- W3022520306 created "2020-05-13" @default.
- W3022520306 creator A5035556402 @default.
- W3022520306 date "2020-01-01" @default.
- W3022520306 modified "2023-09-27" @default.
- W3022520306 title "Situating Hegel: From Transcendental Philosophy to a Phenomenology of Spirit" @default.
- W3022520306 cites W1546733650 @default.
- W3022520306 cites W2496958263 @default.
- W3022520306 doi "https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-26597-7_2" @default.
- W3022520306 hasPublicationYear "2020" @default.
- W3022520306 type Work @default.
- W3022520306 sameAs 3022520306 @default.
- W3022520306 citedByCount "0" @default.
- W3022520306 crossrefType "book-chapter" @default.
- W3022520306 hasAuthorship W3022520306A5035556402 @default.
- W3022520306 hasBestOaLocation W30225203062 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConcept C111472728 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConcept C121977515 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConcept C150104678 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConcept C18296254 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConcept C188370112 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConcept C196595271 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConcept C2781238097 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConcept C32506930 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConcept C41895202 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConcept C84269361 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConceptScore W3022520306C111472728 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConceptScore W3022520306C121977515 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConceptScore W3022520306C138885662 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConceptScore W3022520306C150104678 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConceptScore W3022520306C18296254 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConceptScore W3022520306C188370112 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConceptScore W3022520306C196595271 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConceptScore W3022520306C2781238097 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConceptScore W3022520306C32506930 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConceptScore W3022520306C41895202 @default.
- W3022520306 hasConceptScore W3022520306C84269361 @default.
- W3022520306 hasLocation W30225203061 @default.
- W3022520306 hasLocation W30225203062 @default.
- W3022520306 hasOpenAccess W3022520306 @default.
- W3022520306 hasPrimaryLocation W30225203061 @default.
- W3022520306 hasRelatedWork W1554136224 @default.
- W3022520306 hasRelatedWork W1588556810 @default.
- W3022520306 hasRelatedWork W1900111204 @default.
- W3022520306 hasRelatedWork W2103078967 @default.
- W3022520306 hasRelatedWork W2166678699 @default.
- W3022520306 hasRelatedWork W2940062896 @default.
- W3022520306 hasRelatedWork W2963045966 @default.
- W3022520306 hasRelatedWork W4238839429 @default.
- W3022520306 hasRelatedWork W607101420 @default.
- W3022520306 hasRelatedWork W2182292653 @default.
- W3022520306 isParatext "false" @default.
- W3022520306 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W3022520306 magId "3022520306" @default.
- W3022520306 workType "book-chapter" @default.