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Index
Title Page
Copyright
Contents
The Life
Hegel’s Sister, Christiane
Foreseeing Psychotherapy?
Hegel’s Education
The Excerpt Mill
A Student in Tübingen
Hölderlin and Schelling
Hegel’s Reading
The Example of Goethe
The French Revolution
Hegel and the Spirit of ’89
Absolute Freedom and the Terror
Hegel as Private Tutor
The Swiss Aristocracy
Political Economy
Outstripped by Schelling
The Importance of Hölderlin
Introducing Kant
The 3 Critiques
A Schizophrenia in Philosophy
Church and State
The Christian Religion
Introducing Spinoza
Introducing Fichte
Enlightenment…
… Post-Enlightenment and German Idealism
Arrival in Jena
Differences between Schelling and Fichte
Genesis of The Phenomenology of Spirit
Napoleon Advances
What is the Phenomenology About?
“The Science of the Experience of Consciousness”
History as Self-Realization
The Master and the Slave
14 Stations of the Cross
Absolute Knowledge...
The Newspaper Editor
Hegel goes to Nuremberg
Hegel’s Marriage and Illegitimate Son
Is Philosophy Teachable?
Aristotelian Logic
Dialectical Thinking
Totality
Aufhebung or Sublation
A Grammar of Thinking
Negation
Three Kinds of Contradiction
Triadic Structure
What is Knowing?
Success at Last!
The Reformers Call Hegel to Berlin
Hegel’s Public Role in Berlin
The Fall of Napoleon
Hegel’s Politics
The Rise of a New Right
Nationalism and Anti-Semitism
Against Moral Subjectivism
Hegel’s Lectures
Freedom and the State
The State
The Evolution of Freedom
The Philosophy of Right
Social Ethics
Civil Society
“The Actual is the Rational”
The Philosophy of History
The Course of World History
The “Germanic World”
Freedom Without a Future?
The Philosophy of Nature
Unsatisfactory Science
Science is Incomplete Understanding
Nature as Idea
The Philosophy of Art
Art in Relation to Religion and Philosophy
Symbolic, Classic and Romantic Art
Classic or Greek Art
Romantic Art
The Five Arts
The Ideal in Painting
Poetry, the Highest Art
Philosophy, Higher than Art
The Problem of Irony
The End of Art
The Philosophy of Religion
The Trinity
Mystic Diagrams
The Triadic History of Religion
The Politics of Religion
The English Reform Bill of 1830
The End
The Decline of Hegelianism
Hegelians Left, Right and Centre
The Left or Young Hegelians
Feuerbach’s Essence of Christianity
The German Ideology
An End to Reason
The Origins of Existentialism
Is Hegel Still Important?
Towards the Postmodern Impasse
Rediscovering Hegel and Marx
Critical Theory
Negative Dialectics
Deconstruction
History is Always Right
Fukuyama’s “End of History”
In Conclusion
Further Reading
Biography
Books on Hegel
Dedication
Artist’s Acknowledgements
Biographies
Index
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