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Thinking and the I Hegel and the critique of Kant

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextLanguage: English Original language: Italian Publication details: Illinois Northwestern University Press 2019Description: xv, 233p. 23 cmISBN:
  • 9780810139381
Other title:
  • Thinking & the I
Uniform titles:
  • Pensare e l'io English
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 193 23 FE-T
LOC classification:
  • B2949.T48 F4713 2019
Contents:
Acknowledgments -- List of abbreviations -- Introduction: The actuality of thought -- Hegel on recognition : self-consciousness, individuality, and intersubjectivity -- Nonhuman thinking? -- The movement of thought : spontaneity and reification -- On transforming representations into concepts -- Kant's and Hegel's reason -- Conclusions.
Summary: "The author shows that Hegel's philosophy entails a radical criticism of an ordinary conception of thinking. Breaking with the habitual presuppositions of modern philosophy and common sense, the author explains that thought, negation, truth, reflection, and dialectic for Hegel are not properties of an I and cannot be reduced to the subjective activity of a self-conscious subject. Rather, he elucidates, thought is objective for Hegel in different senses. Reality as a whole is animated by a movement of thought and un unconscious logic as a spontaneity that reifies itself in determinate forms. The author concludes the book with a comprehensive comparison of Hegel's and Kant's concepts of reason."-- Back cover.
Item type: Print
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Acknowledgments -- List of abbreviations -- Introduction: The actuality of thought -- Hegel on recognition : self-consciousness, individuality, and intersubjectivity -- Nonhuman thinking? -- The movement of thought : spontaneity and reification -- On transforming representations into concepts -- Kant's and Hegel's reason -- Conclusions.

"The author shows that Hegel's philosophy entails a radical criticism of an ordinary conception of thinking. Breaking with the habitual presuppositions of modern philosophy and common sense, the author explains that thought, negation, truth, reflection, and dialectic for Hegel are not properties of an I and cannot be reduced to the subjective activity of a self-conscious subject. Rather, he elucidates, thought is objective for Hegel in different senses. Reality as a whole is animated by a movement of thought and un unconscious logic as a spontaneity that reifies itself in determinate forms. The author concludes the book with a comprehensive comparison of Hegel's and Kant's concepts of reason."-- Back cover.

Translated from the Italian.

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