Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Title page COPYRIGHT The Books The Phenomenology of Spirit
CONTENTS Preface: On Scientific Knowledge Introduction A. Consciousness I. CERTAINTY AT THE LEVEL OF SENSE-EXPERIENCE - THE “THIS”, AND “MEANING” II. PERCEPTION: OR THINGS AND THEIR DECEPTIVENESS III. FORCE AND THE UNDERSTANDING-THE WORLD OF APPEARANCE AND THE SUPERSENSIBLE WORLD B. Self-Consciousness IV. THE TRUTH WHICH CONSCIOUS CERTAINTY OF SELF REALIZES C. Free Concrete Mind V. REASON’S CERTAINTY AND REASON’S TRUTH VI. SPIRIT VII. RELIGION VIII. ABSOLUTE KNOWLEDGE
The Logic of Hegel
CONTENTS I. Introduction II. Preliminary Notion III. First Attitude of Thought to Objectivity IV. Second Attitude of Thought to Objectivity V. Third Attitude of Thought to Objectivity VI. Logic Defined & Divided VII. Being VIII. Essence IX. The Notion
Hegel’s Philosophy of Mind
CONTENTS Preface. Five Introductory Essays In Psychology And Ethics. Essay I. On The Scope Of A Philosophy Of Mind. Essay II. Aims And Methods Of Psychology. Essay III. On Some Psychological Aspects Of Ethics. Essay IV. Psycho-Genesis. Essay V. Ethics And Politics. Section I. Mind Subjective. Sub-Section A. Anthropology. The Soul. Sub-Section B. Phenomenology Of Mind. Consciousness. Sub-Section C. Psychology. Mind134. Section II. Mind Objective. Sub-Section A. Law.152 Sub-Section B. The Morality Of Conscience155. Sub-Section C. The Moral Life, Or Social Ethics161. Section III. Absolute Mind171. Sub-Section A. Art. Sub-Section B. Revealed Religion172. Sub-Section C. Philosophy. ENDNOTES.
Elements of the Philosophy of Right
CONTENTS Translator’s Preface. Author’s Preface. Introduction. First Part: Abstract Right. First Section. Property. Second Section: Contract. Third Section: Wrong. B. Fraud. C. Violence and Crime. Second Part: Morality. First Section: Purpose and Responsibility. Second Section: Intention and Well-being. Third Section: The Good and Conscience. Third Part: The Ethical System. First Section: The Family. A. Marriage. B. The Family Means. C. Education of the Children and Dissolution of the Family. Second Section: The Civic Community. A. The System of Wants. B. Administration of Justice. C. Police and Corporation. Third Section: The State. A. Internal Polity. I. Internal Constitution. A. The Function of the Prince. B. The Executive. C. The Legislature. II. External Sovereignty. B. International Law. C. World-History.
The Philosophy of Fine Art
CONTENTS TRANSLATOR’S PREFACE INTRODUCTION FIRST PART SUBDIVISION OF SUBJECT CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III SECOND PART INTRODUCTION SUBSECTION I CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III SUBSECTION II CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III SUBSECTION III CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III THIRD PART INTRODUCTION CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III SUBSECTION II CHAPTER I CHAPTER II CHAPTER III SUBSECTION III CHAPTER I CHAPTER II THIRD PART (CONTINUED) SUBSECTION III CHAPTER III (CONTINUED)
The Philosophy of History
CONTENTS TRANSLATOR’S INTRODUCTION CHARLES HEGEL’S PREFACE Lectures INTRODUCTION. GEOGRAPHICAL BASIS OF HISTORY. CLASSIFICATION OF HISTORIC DATA PART I: THE ORIENTAL WORLD SECTION I: CHINA SECTION II: INDIA SECTION II. (CONTINUED). INDIA - BUDDHISM. SECTION III: PERSIA. CHAPTER I. THE ZEND PEOPLE CHAPTER II. THE ASSYRIANS, BABYLONIANS, MEDES, AND PERSIANS. CHAPTER III. THE PERSIAN EMPIRE AND ITS CONSTITUENT PARTS. PERSIA SYRIA AND THE SEMITIC WESTERN ASIA JUDAEA EGYPT TRANSITION TO THE GREEK WORLD PART II: THE GREEK WORLD SECTION I: THE ELEMENTS OF THE GREEK SPIRIT. SECTION II: PHASES OF INDIVIDUALITY ÆSTHETICALLY CONDITIONED CHAPTER I. THE SUBJECTIVE WORK OF ART CHAPTER II. THE OBJECTIVE WORK OF ART CHAPTER III. THE POLITICAL WORK OF ART THE WARS WITH THE PERSIANS ATHENS SPARTA THE PELOPONNESIAN WAR THE MACEDONIAN EMPIRE SECTION III: THE FALL OF THE GREEK SPIRIT. PART III: THE ROMAN WORLD SECTION I: ROME TO THE TIME OF THE SECOND PUNIC WAR. CHAPTER I. THE ELEMENTS OF THE ROMAN SPIRIT CHAPTER II. THE HISTORY OF ROME TO THE SECOND PUNIC WAR SECTION II: ROME FROM THE SECOND PUNIC WAR TO THE EMPERORS SECTION III: CHAPTER I. ROME UNDER THE EMPERORS. CHAPTER II. CHRISTIANITY. CHAPTER III. THE BYZANTINE EMPIRE. PART IV: THE GERMAN WORLD. SECTION I: THE ELEMENTS OF THE CHRISTIAN GERMAN WORLD. CHAPTER I. THE BARBARIAN MIGRATIONS. CHAPTER II MOHAMETANISM. CHAPTER III. THE EMPIRE OF CHARLEMAGNE. SECTION II: THE MIDDLE AGES CHAPTER I. THE FEUDALITY AND THE HIERARCHY. CHAPTER III. THE TRANSITION FROM FEUDALISM TO MONARCHY. ART AND SCIENCE AS PUTTING A PERIOD TO THE MIDDLE AGES SECTION III: THE MODERN TIME. CHAPTER I. THE REFORMATION CHAPTER II. INFLUENCE OF THE REFORMATION ON POLITICAL DEVELOPMENT. CHAPTER III. THE ÉCLAIRCISSEMENT AND REVOLUTION Philosophy of History INTRODUCTION I. ORIGINAL HISTORY II. REFLECTIVE HISTORY 1. UNIVERSAL HISTORY 2. PRAGMATICAL HISTORY 3. CRITICAL HISTORY III. PHILOSOPHIC HISTORY I. REASON GOVERNS THE WORLD II. ESSENTIAL DESTINY OF REASON (1) THE ABSTRACT CHARACTERISTICS OF THE NATURE OF SPIRIT (2) THE MEANS SPIRIT USES TO REALISE ITS IDEA III. PHILOSOPHIC HISTORY, II. THE ESSENTIAL DESTINY OF REASON (3) THE EMBODIMENT SPIRIT ASSUMES - THE STATE III. THE COURSE OF THE WORLD’S HISTORY
Lectures on the History of Philosophy
CONTENTS TRANSLATOR’S NOTE INAUGURAL ADDRESS PREFATORY NOTE INTRODUCTION A THE NOTION OF THE HISTORY OF PHILOSOPHY. B The Relation of Philosophy to other Departments of Knowledge. Division, Sources, and Method adopted in treating of the History of Philosophy. ORIENTAL PHILOSOPHY A. Chinese Philosophy. B. Indian Philosophy. PART ONE. GREEK PHILOSOPHY INTRODUCTION SECTION ONE. First Period, from Thales to Aristotle CHAPTER I. Period I. - Division I. - Thales to Anaxagoras A. The Ionic Philosophy. B. Pythagoras and the Pythagoreans. C. The Eleatic School. D. Heraclitus. E. Empedocles, Leucippus and Democritus. F. Anaxagoras. CHAPTER II. First Period, Second Division: From the Sophists to the Socratics. A. - The Sophists. B. - Socrates. C. The Socratics. ENDNOTES. CHAPTER III. First Period, Third Division: Plato and Aristotle. A. Plato. B. Aristotle. α. Ethics. β. Politics. SECTION TWO Second Period: Dogmatism and Scepticism. A. The Philosophy of the Stoics. B. Epicurus. C. The New Academy. D. Scepticism. SECTION THREE Third Period: The Neo-Platonists. A. Philo. B. Cabala and Gnosticism. C. Alexandrian Philosophy. ENDNOTES. PART TWO. PHILOSOPHY OF THE MIDDLE AGES INTRODUCTION SECTION ONE. Arabian Philosophy A. Philosophy of the Medabberim. B. Commentators of Aristotle. C. Jewish Philosophers. SECTION TWO. The Scholastic Philosophy A. Relationship of the Scholastic Philosophy to Christianity. B. General Historical Points of View. C. General Standpoint of the Scholastics. SECTION THREE. Revival of the Sciences A. Study of the Ancients. B. Certain Attempts in Philosophy. C. The Reformation. PART THREE. MODERN PHILOSOPHY INTRODUCTION SECTION ONE. Modern Philosophy in its First Statement A. Bacon. B. Jacob Boehme. SECTION TWO. Period of the Thinking Understanding CHAPTER I. The Metaphysics of the Understanding A. First Division. B. Second Division. C. Third Section. CHAPTER II. Transition Period A. Idealism and Scepticism. B. Scottish Philosophy. C. French Philosophy. D. The German Illumination. SECTION THREE. Recent German Philosophy A. Jacobi. B. Kant. C. Fichte. D. Schelling. E. Final Result. ENDNOTES.
Lectures on the Proofs of the Existence of God
CONTENTS FIRST LECTURE SECOND LECTURE THIRD LECTURE FOURTH LECTURE FIFTH LECTURE SIXTH LECTURE SEVENTH LECTURE EIGHTH LECTURE NINTH LECTURE TENTH LECTURE ELEVENTH LECTURE TWELFTH LECTURE THIRTEENTH LECTURE FOURTEENTH LECTURE FIFTEENTH LECTURE SIXTEENTH LECTURE AMPLIFICATION OF THE TELEOLOGICAL PROOF IN THE LECTURES ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION DELIVERED IN THE SUMMER OF 1831. AMPLIFICATION OF THE TELEOLOGICAL AND ONTOLOGICAL PROOFS GIVEN IN THE LECTURES ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION FOR THE YEAR 1827. AMPLIFICATION OF THE ONTOLOGICAL PROOF IN THE LECTURES ON THE PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION FOR THE YEAR 1831.
The Criticism Prolegomena to the Study of Hegel’s Philosophy by William Wallace
CONTENTS PREFACE FROM THE PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION BOOK I. OUTLOOKS AND APPROACHES TO HEGEL CHAPTER I. WHY HEGEL IS HARD TO UNDERSTAND. CHAPTER II. WHY TRANSLATE HEGEL? CHAPTER III. ENGLISH PHILOSOPHY AND HEGEL. CHAPTER IV. HEGEL AND THEOLOGY. CHAPTER V. PSEUDO-IDEALISM: JACOBI. CHAPTER VI. THE SCIENCES AND PHILOSOPHY. CHAPTER VII. ANTICIPATORY SKETCH OF THE SCOPE OF PHILOSOPHY. CHAPTER VIII. THE SCEPTICAL DOUBT: HUME. CHAPTER IX. THE ATTEMPT AT A CRITICAL SOLUTION: KANT. CHAPTER X. THE CRITICAL SOLUTION, CONTINUED: KANT. CHAPTER XI. SYNTHESIS AND RECONSTRUCTION: FICHTE. CHAPTER XII. THE BEGINNINGS OF SCHELLING. CHAPTER XIII. THE PHILOSOPHY OF NATURE AND IDEALISM. CHAPTER XIV. TRANSITION TO HEGEL. BOOK II. IN THE PORCHES OF PHILOSOPHY CHAPTER XV. THE TWO AGES OF REASON. CHAPTER XVI. THE NEW IDEALISM. CHAPTER XVII. METHODS, ARTIFICIAL AND NATURAL. CHAPTER XVIII. THE RANGE OF PERSONALITY. CHAPTER XIX. GENESIS IN MENTAL LIFE. CHAPTER XX. GENERAL LAW OF THE PHILOSOPHY OF HISTORY. CHAPTER XXI. ABSTRACT AND CONCRETE I AND THE ORDINARY LOGIC. CHAPTER XXII. FROM SENSE TO THOUGHT. CHAPTER XXIII. FIGURATE OR REPRESENTATIVE THOUGHT. CHAPTER XXIV. FROM SUBSTANCE TO SUBJECT. CHAPTER XXV. REASON AND THE DIALECTIC OF UNDERSTANDING. BOOK III. LOGICAL OUTLINES CHAPTER XXVI. THOUGHT PURE AND ENTIRE. CHAPTER XXVII. ABSOLUTE AND RELATIVE: OR THE CATEGORIES. CHAPTER XXVIII. THE THREE PARTS OF LOGIC. CHAPTER XXIX. THE SEARCH FOR A FIRST PRINCIPLE. CHAPTER XXX. THE LOGIC OF DESCRIPTION: NATURAL REALISM: BEING. CHAPTER XXXI. THE LOGIC OF EXPLANATION AND REALISTIC METAPHYSICS: ESSENCE. CHAPTER XXXII. LOGIC OF COMPREHENSION AND IDEALISM: THE NOTION.
On Some Hegelisms by William James Preface to ‘On the Will in Nature’ by Arthur Schopenhauer Critique of Hegel’s ‘Philosophy of Right’ by Karl Marx
A CRITICISM OF THE HEGELIAN PHILOSOPHY OF RIGHT
Criticism of Philosophy by Friedrich Nietzsche The Biography Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel by William Wallace and John Henry Muirhead The Delphi Classics Catalogue
Series Contents Alphabetical List of Titles
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion