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Hegel's systematic contingency[elect...
~
Burbidge, John W., (1936-)
Hegel's systematic contingency[electronic resource] /
紀錄類型:
書目-語言資料,印刷品 : Monograph/item
杜威分類號:
193
書名/作者:
Hegel's systematic contingency/ John W. Burbidge.
作者:
Burbidge, John W.,
出版者:
Basingstoke [England] ; : Palgrave Macmillan,, 2007.
面頁冊數:
x, 219 p.
標題:
Contingency (Philosophy)
ISBN:
9780230590366
ISBN:
0230590365
書目註:
Includes bibliographical references (p. 194-213) and index.
內容註:
Philosophy and history -- The necessity of contingency -- Secondness-- The 'infinite agony' of despair -- Absolute knowing -- Language andthought -- Absolute idea -- Chemism and chemistry -- Life and biology -- Cognition and psychology -- Teleology and history -- "Building the world as it ought to be" -- Philosophy after Hegel.
摘要、提要註:
When Hegel says that historical development is stimulated and maintained by the human passions, he is placing contingency at the heart of his understanding of the world. Indeed, a careful analysis of his discussion of Actuality shows that contingency is absolutely necessary. From this perspective, one discovers in his Phenomenology of Spirit an extended description of the way confident expections are confounded by experience. In Hegel's Systematic Contingency John Burbidge shows how this affects the systematic structure of the Science of Logic and its relation to the Philosophy of Nature (chemistry and biology) and the Philosophy of Spirit (psychology and history). In conclusion he explores what this understanding of Hegel's thought would involve if applied to some developments of modern science. Despite the tradition that at the centre of Hegel's system is an entity called "the Absolute", Burbidge shows that absolute knowing involves expecting that ones knowledge claims will beconfounded by experience, that the method of pure thinking confrontsunanticipated distinctions and new insights, and that the cosmic life of the universe is characterized by pure intention, action that createsnew realities, and the comprehensive ability to understand how it all,nevertheless, fits together into a coherent pattern.
電子資源:
access to fulltext (Palgrave)
Hegel's systematic contingency[electronic resource] /
Burbidge, John W.,1936-
Hegel's systematic contingency
[electronic resource] /John W. Burbidge. - Basingstoke [England] ;Palgrave Macmillan,2007. - x, 219 p.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 194-213) and index.
Philosophy and history -- The necessity of contingency -- Secondness-- The 'infinite agony' of despair -- Absolute knowing -- Language andthought -- Absolute idea -- Chemism and chemistry -- Life and biology -- Cognition and psychology -- Teleology and history -- "Building the world as it ought to be" -- Philosophy after Hegel.
When Hegel says that historical development is stimulated and maintained by the human passions, he is placing contingency at the heart of his understanding of the world. Indeed, a careful analysis of his discussion of Actuality shows that contingency is absolutely necessary. From this perspective, one discovers in his Phenomenology of Spirit an extended description of the way confident expections are confounded by experience. In Hegel's Systematic Contingency John Burbidge shows how this affects the systematic structure of the Science of Logic and its relation to the Philosophy of Nature (chemistry and biology) and the Philosophy of Spirit (psychology and history). In conclusion he explores what this understanding of Hegel's thought would involve if applied to some developments of modern science. Despite the tradition that at the centre of Hegel's system is an entity called "the Absolute", Burbidge shows that absolute knowing involves expecting that ones knowledge claims will beconfounded by experience, that the method of pure thinking confrontsunanticipated distinctions and new insights, and that the cosmic life of the universe is characterized by pure intention, action that createsnew realities, and the comprehensive ability to understand how it all,nevertheless, fits together into a coherent pattern.
Electronic reproduction.
Basingstoke, England :
Palgrave Macmillan,
2009.
Mode of access:World Wide Web.
ISBN: 9780230590366
Standard No.: 10.1057/9780230590366doiSubjects--Personal Names:
372146
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich,
1770-1831.Subjects--Topical Terms:
372147
Contingency (Philosophy)
Index Terms--Genre/Form:
336502
Electronic books.
LC Class. No.: B2949.C63 / B87 2007eb
Dewey Class. No.: 193
Hegel's systematic contingency[electronic resource] /
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When Hegel says that historical development is stimulated and maintained by the human passions, he is placing contingency at the heart of his understanding of the world. Indeed, a careful analysis of his discussion of Actuality shows that contingency is absolutely necessary. From this perspective, one discovers in his Phenomenology of Spirit an extended description of the way confident expections are confounded by experience. In Hegel's Systematic Contingency John Burbidge shows how this affects the systematic structure of the Science of Logic and its relation to the Philosophy of Nature (chemistry and biology) and the Philosophy of Spirit (psychology and history). In conclusion he explores what this understanding of Hegel's thought would involve if applied to some developments of modern science. Despite the tradition that at the centre of Hegel's system is an entity called "the Absolute", Burbidge shows that absolute knowing involves expecting that ones knowledge claims will beconfounded by experience, that the method of pure thinking confrontsunanticipated distinctions and new insights, and that the cosmic life of the universe is characterized by pure intention, action that createsnew realities, and the comprehensive ability to understand how it all,nevertheless, fits together into a coherent pattern.
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