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Hegel, the essential writings
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Hegel, the essential writings

Author: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
Publisher: New York : Harper & Row, 1974.
Series: Harper torchbooks, TB 1831
Edition/Format:   Book : EnglishView all editions and formats
Summary:
"This book of Hegalian selections by Professor Weiss is...very valuable. the passages incorporated are quite excellently chose. Professor Weiss has included a long excerpt from the introductory chapters of the 'Encyclopaedia', which are Hegel's own, most successful attempt to introduce his system. He has also included some colorful sections from the 'Phenomenology', some weighty sections from the 'Science of  Read more...
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Document Type: Book
All Authors / Contributors: Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
ISBN: 0061397156 9780061397158 0061318310 9780061318313
OCLC Number: 1194964
Description: xx, 346 p. ; 21 cm.
Contents: Introduction: the philosophy of Hegel --
Dialectic and human experience: the phenomenology of spirit --
Dialectic and the science of logic --
Toward a concrete metaphysics;rationalism, empiricism, critical philosophy, and the idea ---
Nature and spirit: self-estrangement and reconciliation --
Objective spirit: human conduct and philosophic truth --
Absolute spirit.
Series Title: Harper torchbooks, TB 1831
Responsibility: edited and with introductions by Frederick G. Weiss ; foreword by J.N. Findlay.

Abstract:

"This book of Hegalian selections by Professor Weiss is...very valuable. the passages incorporated are quite excellently chose. Professor Weiss has included a long excerpt from the introductory chapters of the 'Encyclopaedia', which are Hegel's own, most successful attempt to introduce his system. He has also included some colorful sections from the 'Phenomenology', some weighty sections from the 'Science of Logic', as also the magnificently revealing paragraphs on the Absolute Idea at the end of 'Logic' in the 'Encyclopaedia'. There are also good excerpts from the 'Philosophy of Nature' and 'Philosophy of Right'. And since the translations are good, a great deal of the difficult self-revisionary thought of Hegel comes across, helped by Professor Weiss's own valuable comments." --Foreword.

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