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Prefatory Note

In Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (ed.), Early theological writings. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press (1948)

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  1. Realizing the Good: Hegel's Critique of Kantian Morality.Nicolás García Mills - 2017 - European Journal of Philosophy (1):195-212.
    Although the best-known Hegelian objection against Kant's moral philosophy is the charge that the categorical imperative is an ‘empty formalism’, Hegel's criticisms also include what we might call the realizability objection. Tentatively stated, the realizability objection says that within the sphere of Kantian morality, the good remains an unrealizable ‘ought’ – in other words, the Kantian moral ‘ought’ can never become an ‘is’. In this paper, I attempt to come to grips with this objection in two steps. In the first (...)
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  • An Institutional Approach to Alterity: Thinking Love in Levinas and Hegel.Christopher D. DiBona - 2022 - Journal of Religious Ethics 50 (3):462-487.
    Emmanuel Levinas's early work inaugurated a tradition of thinking about alterity as at odds with generalized forms of knowledge that characterize political institutions. However, in his later work Levinas broaches but leaves underdeveloped the provocative idea that institutional modes of reasoning can provide a welcome home for alterity if they follow the wisdom of love. Against this backdrop, I argue that reading G. W. F. Hegel's early writings on neighbor love alongside his mature philosophy of the state offers us important (...)
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  • Hegel's phenomenology: The moral failures of asocial man.Judith N. Shklar - 1973 - Political Theory 1 (3):259-286.
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  • Affective Consisting in Lispector’s an apprenticeship or the Book of Pleasures.Irving Goh - 2023 - Angelaki 28 (2):79-89.
    At first glance, Clarice Lispector’s An Apprenticeship or The Book of Pleasures (1969) might read like a regression from her earlier feminist and anti-Hegelian Passion According to G.H. (1964), given the female protagonist Lóri’s deference in large part to the male character Ulisses. I argue in this essay that any suspicion of such a philosophical letdown can be easily dispelled if we attend to Lóri’s attunement to affects and her immersion in them. As will be explicated in this essay, such (...)
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  • Alan Norrie, Law and the Beautiful Soul: Glasshouse Press, London, 2005, vi + 218 pp.Gideon Calder - 2009 - Criminal Law and Philosophy 3 (3):317-320.
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  • (1 other version)Idealism and religion in the philosophy of T.l.S. Sprigge.Brenda Almond - 2010 - Philosophy 85 (4):531-549.
    Although T.L.S. Sprigge described idealist philosophy as the stage beyond religion, his pantheistic idealism, while not itself a religion, offers a conception of God that seeks to meet the aspiration of human beings to understand their own place in the universe. While he shared with most mid twentieth century British philosophers a basic assumption of the primacy of experience, Sprigge took this strong empiricist assumption in a Berkeleyian rather than a Humean direction. This enabled him to find a place for (...)
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  • Bound by Recognition?Robert Williams - 2009 - Critical Horizons 10 (1):118-140.
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