Notice bibliographique
- Notice
Type(s) de contenu et mode(s) de consultation : Texte noté : sans médiation
Auteur(s) : Kreines, James
Titre(s) : Reason in the world [Texte imprimé] : Hegel's metaphysics and its philosophical appeal / James Kreines
Publication : Oxford : Oxford university press, cop. 2015
Description matérielle : 1 vol. (XI-290 p.) ; 25 cm
Comprend : Introduction: The fundamentality of the metaphysics of reason ; Primitive and mediate reasons : immanent concepts from mechanism to teleology ; The dialectic of mechanism ; Against empiricist metaphysics and for the concept thesis and the metaphysics of reason ; Kant's challenge and Hegel's defense of natural teleology : the concept as the substance of life ; The inescapable problem of complete reasons: Kant's dialectic critique of metaphysics ; Kant's dialectic argument and the restriction of knowledge ; The opening for Hegel's response to Kant's dialectic ; Complete reasons : from the idea to the absolute idea ; Against the metaphysics of the understanding and the final subject or substratum ; Insubstantial holism and the real contradiction of the lawful : chemism ; The idea: Complete reason as process ; Free kind for itself : from the metaphysics of the absolute idea to epistemological monism and idealism ; Method and conclusion of the logic : dialectic, contradiction, and absolute knowledge.
Note(s) : Bibliogr. p. 273-278. Index
This book defends a new interpretation of Hegel's theoretical philosophy, according
to which Hegel's project in his central Science of Logic has a single organizing focus,
provided by taking metaphysics as fundamental to philosophy, rather than any epistemological
problem about knowledge or intentionality. Hegel pursues more specifically the metaphysics
of reason, concerned with grounds, reasons, or conditions in terms of which things
can be explained-and ultimately with the possibility of complete reasons. There is
no threat to such metaphysics in epistemological or skeptical worries. The real threat
is Kant's Transcendental Dialectic case that metaphysics comes into conflict with
itself. But Hegel, despite familiar worries, has a powerful case that Kant's own insights
in the Dialectic can be turned to the purpose of constructive metaphysics. And we
can understand in these terms the unified focus of the arguments at the conclusion
of Hegel's Science of Logic. Hegel defends, first, his general claim that the reasons
which explain things are always found in immanent concepts, universals or kinds. And
he will argue from here to conclusions which are distinctive in being metaphysically
ambitious yet surprisingly distant from any form of metaphysical foundationalism,
whether scientistic, theological, or otherwise. Hegel's project, then, turns out neither
Kantian nor Spinozist, but more distinctively his own. Finally, we can still learn
a great deal from Hegel about ongoing philosophical debates concerning everything
from metaphysics, to the philosophy of science, and all the way to the nature of philosophy
itself.--Publisher website
Sujet(s) : Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich (1770-1831) -- Métaphysique
Identifiants, prix et caractéristiques : ISBN 9780190204303. - ISBN 0190204303 (rel.)
Identifiant de la notice : ark:/12148/cb444947114
Notice n° :
FRBNF44494711
(notice reprise d'un réservoir extérieur)

