Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel
From: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
|
Date: 2008
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel , 1770-1831, German philosopher, b. Stuttgart; son of a government clerk.
Life and Works
Educated in theology at Tübingen, Hegel was a private tutor at Bern and Frankfurt. In 1801 he became privatdocent [tutor] and in 1805 professor at the Univ. of Jena. While considered a follower of Schelling, he was developing his own system, which he first presented in Phenomenology of Mind (1807). During the Napoleonic occupation Hegel edited (1807-8) a newspaper, which he left to become rector (1808-16) of a Gymnasium at Nuremberg. He then returned to professorships at Heidelberg (1816-18) and Berlin (1818-31), where he became famous.
In his lectures at Berlin he set forth the system elaborated in his books. Chief among these were Science of Logic (1812-16); Encyclopedia of the Philosophical Sciences (1817), an outline of his whole philosophy; and Philosophy of Right (1821). He also wrote books on ethics, aesthetics, history, and religion. His interests were wide, and all were incorporated into his unified philosophy.
Philosophy
The Hegelian Dialectic
Hegel's absolute idealism envisaged a world-soul that develops out of, and is known through, the dialectical logic. In this development, known as the Hegelian dialectic, one concept (thesis) inevitably generates its opposite (antithesis), and the interaction of these leads to a new concept (synthesis). This in turn becomes the thesis of a new triad. Hegel regarded Kant's study of categories as incomplete. The idea of being is fundamental, but it evokes its antithesis, not being. However, these two are not mutually exclusive, for they necessarily produce the synthesis, becoming. Hence activity is basic, progress is rational, and logic is the basis of the world process.
Nature and the State
The study of nature and mind reveal reason as it realizes itself in cosmology and history. The world process is the absolute, the active principle that does not transcend reality but exists through and in it. The universe develops by a self-creating plan, proceeding from astral bodies to the world, from the mineral kingdom to the vegetable, from the vegetable kingdom to the animal. In society the same progress can be discovered; human activities lead to property, which leads to law.
Out of the relationship between the individual and law develops the synthesis of ethics, where both the interdependence and the freedom of individuals interact to produce the state. The state thus is a totality above all individuals, and since it is a unit, its highest development is rule by monarchy. Such a state is an embodiment of the absolute idea. In his study of history, Hegel reviewed the history of states that held sway over lesser peoples until a higher representative of the absolute evolved. Though much of his development was questionable, the concept of the conflict of cultures stimulated historical analysis.
Aesthetics and Religion
Hegel considered art a closer approach to the absolute than government. In the history of art he distinguished three periods—the Oriental, the Greek, and the romantic. He believed that the modern romantic form of art cannot encompass the magnitude of the Christian ideal. Hegel taught that religion moved from worship of nature through a series of stages to Christianity, where Christ represents the union of God and humanity, of spirit and matter. Philosophy goes beyond religion as it enables humankind to comprehend the entire historical unfolding of the absolute.
Influence
Hegel has influenced many subsequent philosophies—post-Hegelian idealism, the existentialism of Kierkegaard and Sartre, the socialism of Marx and Lasalle, and the instrumentalism of Dewey. His theory of the state was the guiding force of the group known as the Young Hegelians, who sought the unification of Germany. His lectures on philosophy, religion, aesthetics, and history were collected in eight volumes after his death.
Bibliography
See biographies by F. Wiedmann (1968) and T. Pinkard (2000); S. Hook, From Hegel to Marx (1936, repr. 1962); H. Marcuse, Reason and Revolution (1955, repr. 1963); J. N. Findlay, Hegel: A Re-examination (1958, repr. 1964); W. A. Kaufman, Hegel: Reinterpretation, Texts and Commentary (1965); Z. A. Pelczynski, ed., Hegel's Political Philosphy: Problems and Perspectives (1971); S. Rosen, Hegel (1974); H. S. Harris, Hegel's Development (2 vol., 1983); E. E. Harris, An Introduction to the Logic of Hegel (1984).
Author not available, HEGEL, GEORG WILHELM FRIEDRICH.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
For permission to reuse this article, contact Copyright Clearance Center.
Related articles from HighBeam Research:
|
Hegel on the Incarnation: unique or universal? (Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel)
Theological Studies; 6/1/1995; Jamros, Daniel P.; 11889 words;
... German idealists like Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831), and then ... or made manifest. See Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Phanomenologie des Geistes ... Hodgson at the end of his Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, in Nineteenth-Century ...
|
|
Hegel on Schleiermacher and postmodernity.(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Friedrich Schleiermacher )
CLIO; 6/22/2003; Reid, Jeffrey; 5696 words;
... between G. W. F. Hegel and Friedrich Schleiermacher at ... explored. In fact, Hegel's antipathy toward ... association with Friedrich Schlegel, whom he ... J. Schelling and Friedrich Holderlin, but not Hegel. Diez represented ...
|
|
The Structure and Method of Hegel's Phenomenology.(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel)
CLIO; 6/22/1998; KAIN, PHILIP J.; 7830 words;
... try to understand. So Hegel sets these experiences ... fails. In this way, Hegel's approach is a negative ... leave nothing out. Hegel's approach is a bit ... 18-19, 34-35).(10) For Georg Lukacs, the necessity ... ingenuity and wit, by Hegel acting behind the scenes ... One can almost hear ...
|
|
The Journey of the Mind of God to Us: Hegel's Ladder and Harris's Graduate Seminars.(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, H.S. Harris)
CLIO; 6/22/1998; SHANNON, DANIEL; 7787 words;
... thoroughly versed in Hegel's own culture, and ... successors among German Hegel scholars and editors ... weighing the positions of Hegel's contemporaries in ... in chapter four of Hegel's Ladder, The World ... intra alia that (a) Hegel rejects Descartes ... sense,(7) and (b) Hegel is committed ...
|
|
Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich. Schriften und Entwurfe (1799-1808).(Book Review)
The Review of Metaphysics; 6/1/2003; Pozzo, Riccardo; 604 words;
G. W. F. Hegel, Gesammelte Werke, Bd ... Cloth, 236.00 [euro]--Hegel scholars have been waiting ... unpublished papers written by Hegel from the end of the Frankfort ... the lectures given by Hegel at Jena on Introduction ... complicated history of Hegel's development because they document the state ...
|
|
The specter of Hegel in Coleridge's Biographia Literaria.(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, Hartley Coleridge,)
Journal of the History of Ideas; 4/1/2007; Roy, Ayon; 10375 words;
... fuhren und ausgesprochen werden. See G. W. F. Hegel, Phanomenologie des Geistes (Frankfurt am ... writes that Coleridge annotated some of Hegel's Phanomenologie des Geistes because of ... Wissenschaft der Logik is the only work of Hegel's which Coleridge is known to have annotated ... to the Phenomenology, ...
|
|
Hegel's analysis of colonialism and its roots in Scottish political economy.(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel)
CLIO; 6/22/2003; Paquette, Gabriel; 6968 words;
G. W. F. Hegel's account of colonies in the Elements of ... general, they convincingly demonstrate that Hegel's endorsement of colonialism undermines ... non-European peoples. These interpretations of Hegel's advocacy of colonialism should be supplemented ...
|
|
Hegel, Harris, and the Spirit of the Phenomenology.(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, H.S. Harris)
CLIO; 6/22/1998; WESTPHAL, KENNETH R.; 8152 words;
... graduate student. I was already convinced that Hegel's naturalism and realism were underestimated ... Phenomenology--finally replacing Theodor Haering's Hegel: Sein Wollen und Sein Werk.(1) Despite ... opportunity, and reported that it was a landmark. Hegel's texts are notoriously rich, compressed ...
|
|
Hegel on the life of the understanding.(PHILOSOPHICAL ABSTRACTS)(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel)(Critical essay)(Brief article)
The Review of Metaphysics; 12/1/2006; Morris, David; 116 words;
This article clarifies Hegel's argument within Force and the Understanding ... Phenomenology of Spirit by developing Hegel's underlying point through discussion ... The article thereby shows how and why Hegel's analysis of the understanding inaugurates ...
|
|
SCHELLING'S CRITIQUE OF HEGEL'S SCIENCE OF LOGIC.(Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph von Schelling)(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel)(Critical Essay)
The Review of Metaphysics; 9/1/1999; HOULGATE, STEPHEN; 12437 words;
... modern philosophy by revealing the flaws in Hegel in ways which help set the agenda for philosophy ... The claim that Schelling's critique of Hegel has exercised considerable influence on ... heard Schelling lecture in the years after Hegel's death in 1831 and were receptive to his ...
|
|
Negativity and dialectical materialism: Zhang Shiying's reading of Hegel's dialectical logic.(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel)
Philosophy East and West; 1/1/2007; Button, Peter; 9820 words;
... wisdom directly through an encounter with Hegel's Science of Logic, the terms of Chinese ... basis of hearsay, it should be noted, since Hegel did not count the mastery of the Chinese ... assumed that the terminological references to Hegel were little more than window dressing for ...
|
|
Hegel and the ontological critique of liberalism. (Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel)
American Political Science Review; 12/1/1997; Kaufman, Alexander; 10569 words;
... community's ethical consensus.(36) Moreover, as Hegel emphasizes, the nature of political right ... principles and subjective preferences which Hegel seeks to remedy. Finally, a third strand of ... less consciously (Dunn 1990, 26). Thus, as in Hegel's account, trust can be understood both as ... the product of ...
|
|
"L'etica del sapere".(Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel)
CLIO; 6/22/1998; HARRIS, H.S.; 6338 words;
... attention. It was better for me to go back to Hegel's concept of Spirit as I did than to try ... between Logic and Philosophy of Spirit in Hegel. The absoluteness of Logic must always ... most important points in the unfolding of Hegel's early thought, and he has shown that ...
|
|
Responding to the call: Hartman between Wordsworth and Hegel.(Geoffrey Hartman, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, William Wordsworth)
Wordsworth Circle; 1/1/2006; Balfour, Ian; 1687 words;
... me not to recall a graduate seminar on Wordsworth and Hegel co-taught by Hartman and Paul de Man when students were ... together. Hartman's disposition was not so far from Hegel's own, Hegel being a thinker who explicitly likens poetry to speculative ...
|
|
The absolute spirit comes to Old Sarum: Hegel on the English Reform Bill. (Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel)
CLIO; 3/22/1994; Mann, Doug; 4015 words;
... essay on the English Reform Bill of 1832, Hegel attempts to come to grips with the process ... political rights. I will return to these themes in Hegel's essay after a brief detour through historical ... representation in Parliament. Into this debate came the news from Paris of the glorious days of July, ...
|
See all results from premium newspaper and magazine articles, images, maps and more at HighBeam Research.
Related articles from newspapers, magazines and other sources:
Hegel's Art History and the Critique of Modernity & Art of the Modern Age: Philosophy of Art from Kant to Heidegger. (Book Reviews).
The Art Bulletin; 9/1/2002; Gilmore, Jonathan; 4491 words;
|
Thinking the world: a comment on philosophy of history and globalization studies.
International Social Science Review; 9/22/2005; Dorfman, Ben; 9339 words;
|
A bibliography of German Romantic literary criticism and theory in English.
Style; 12/22/1994; Gorman, David; 8047 words;
|
Dialectic schemes in thesaurus creation.
Library Philosophy and Practice; 2/1/2008; Amirhosseini, Maziar; 2674 words;
|
Origins of the art history survey text.
Art Journal; 9/22/1995; Schwarzer, Mitchell; 5370 words;
|
Dis/Continuities in Dresden's Dances of Death.
The Art Bulletin; 3/1/2000; Hertel, Christiane; 26667 words;
|
Mounting Vision: Charles Eastlake and the National Gallery of London.
The Art Bulletin; 6/1/2000; Klonk, Charlotte; 15949 words;
|
The dialectics of decay: rereading the Kantian subject. (interpretation of philosopher Immanuel Kant's essay 'Critique of Judgment')
The Art Bulletin; 9/1/1997; Lang, Karen; 26236 words;
|
From symbol to allegory: Aby Warburg's theory of art.
The Art Bulletin; 3/1/1997; Rampley, Matthew; 13467 words;
|
Gender and Citizenship: The Dialectics of Subject-Citizenship in Nineteenth-Century French Literature and Culture.(Book Review)(Brief Article)
The Modern Language Review; 7/1/2003; Donachie, Sarah; 571 words;
|
|
|