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Index
Cover
Contents
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations of Primary Texts
Introduction
Conceptualizing Religion in the Modern West
Religion and Politics
Recent Hegel Scholarship and the Philosophy of Religion
1. Civil Religion and Social Reform: Hegel’s Early Reflection on Religion
The Religious and Political Milieu of Hegel’s Youth
Religion and Society in Hegel’s Early Writings: Tübingen and Berne
Frankfurt and the Move Beyond Kantian Morality
2. The Philosophical Basis of Hegel’s Philosophy of Religion
Kant on the Synthetic Unity of Apperception
Hegel’s Critique of Kant and Post-Kantian Idealism in the Early Jena Writings
Hegel’s Response: The Logic
3. Locating the Philosophy of Religion
The Relationship to the Needs of the Day
The Relationship to Philosophy as a Whole
The Structure of the Philosophy of Religion
4. The Concept of Religion: Hegel’s God and the Relation Between Religion and Philosophy
The Concept of God
Knowledge of God
The Cultus
5. Spirit and/in History
Constant Revision and Its Significance
Determinate Religion as a Conceptual Mapping
Determinate Religion as a Narrative of Genesis
The Problems with Trying to Combine These Conceptions and the Inadequate Rationale for Doing So
Conclusion on Ambition
6. The Consummation of Religion
The Idea of a Consummate Religion
The First Element
The Second Element
The Third Element
7. Cultivating Our Intuitions: Hegel on Religion, Politics, and Public Discourse
The State as the Actualization of Spirit
The Difference Form Makes
Cultivating Political Dispositions
Responding to Religious Challenges
Hegel and Contemporary Conversations
Conclusion
Selected Bibliography
Index
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
Y
Z
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