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Georg Wilhelm Hegel
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  • Hegel's Absolute was completely classical, completely rational and completely orderly.†   (source)
  • Hegel united and developed almost all the ideas that had surfaced in the Romantic period.†   (source)
  • Hegel emphasized what he called the 'objective' powers.†   (source)
  • You also need to hear about Hegel and Kierkegaard.†   (source)
  • So Hegel says one cannot 'resign from society.'†   (source)
  • Hegel said that the world spirit returns to itself in three stages.†   (source)
  • You might say that Hegel was somewhat skeptical of the individual.†   (source)
  • Hegel called the force that drives history forward world spirit or world reason.†   (source)
  • This was something Hegel had also analyzed.†   (source)
  • So to Hegel, history was like a running river.†   (source)
  • It shows that Hegel was also a child of his time.†   (source)
  • It is actually doubtful whether one can say that Hegel had his own 'philosophy' at all.†   (source)
  • When he describes man's 'alienation,' he is echoing the central ideas of Hegel and Marx.†   (source)
  • Each in his own way, both Kierkegaard and Marx took Hegel's philosophy as their point of departure.†   (source)
  • Among such powers, Hegel emphasized the importance of the family, civil society, and the state.†   (source)
  • According to Hegel, it is not the individual that finds itself, it is the world spirit.†   (source)
  • Hegel will also be a significant part of the picture for us.†   (source)
  • Therefore to Kierkegaard, Hegel and the Romantics were tarred with the same brush.†   (source)
  • Hegel also indicated certain rules that apply for this chain of reflections.†   (source)
  • That was quite different from Hegel's world spirit.†   (source)
  • But Hegel didn't see it as pressing history into any kind of framework.†   (source)
  • Hegel calls this objective spirit because it appears in interaction between people.†   (source)
  • But according to Marx, Hegel was standing on his head.†   (source)
  • In general, we usually say that the era of the great philosophical systems ended with Hegel.†   (source)
  • Hegel also uses the term 'world spirit,' but in a new sense.†   (source)
  • A final aspect of Hegel's philosophy needs to be mentioned here.†   (source)
  • According to Hegel, the state is 'more' than the individual citizen.†   (source)
  • Hegel claimed that the 'world spirit' is developing toward an ever-expanding knowledge of itself.†   (source)
  • He reacted against the idealistic philosophy of Spinoza just as Kierkegaard reacted against Hegel.†   (source)
  • Hegel believed there was an interactive, or dialectic, relationship between man and nature.†   (source)
  • But Hegel's dialectic is not only applicable to history.†   (source)
  • Kierkegaard thought Hegel had forgotten that he was a man.†   (source)
  • Marx says, with a Hegelian expression, that the worker becomes alienated.†   (source)
  • The Eleatics had put forward a claim, and Hegel called a standpoint like that a thesis.†   (source)
  • However, Hegel said the Absolute Mind was the source of everything, but then excluded romantic experience from the "everything" it was the source of.†   (source)
  • The Vedanta of the Hindus, the Way of the Taoists, even the Buddha had been described as an absolute monism similar to Hegel's philosophy.†   (source)
  • Hegel, for example, whom I referred to earlier, rejected Hindu systems of philosophy as no philosophy at all.†   (source)
  • This refutation of scientific materialism, however, seemed to put him in the camp of philosophic idealism…Berkeley, Hume, Kant, Fichte, Schelling, Hegel, Bradley, Bosanquet…good company all, logical to the last comma, but so difficult to justify in "common sense" language they seemed a burden to him in his defense of Quality rather than an aid.†   (source)
  • Hegel calls this a dialectic process.†   (source)
  • Several of these existential philosophers, or existentialists, based their ideas not only on Kierkegaard, but on Hegel and Marx as well.†   (source)
  • Hegel pointed out that as regards philosophical reflection, also, reason is dynamic; it's a process, in fact.†   (source)
  • I just have to read a chapter on Hegel.†   (source)
  • No, Hegel had died ten years earlier, but his ideas were predominant in Berlin and in many parts of Europe.†   (source)
  • What did that have to do with Hegel?†   (source)
  • Both were influenced by Hegel's mode of thought, but both rejected his 'world spirit,' or his idealism.†   (source)
  • Hegel called that 'negative thinking.'†   (source)
  • I still have to tell you about Hegel.†   (source)
  • Hegel had pointed out that historical development is driven by the tension between opposites—which is then resolved by a sudden change.†   (source)
  • According to Hegel, history is the story of the 'world spirit' gradually coming to consciousness of itself.†   (source)
  • Hegel said that 'truth is subjective/ thus rejecting the existence of any 'truth' above or beyond human reason.†   (source)
  • These three concepts were formulated as a criticism of philosophical tradition in general, and of Hegel in particular.†   (source)
  • To both Hegel and Marx, work was a positive thing, andwas closely connected with the essence of mankind.†   (source)
  • Hegel … the reasonable is that which is viable Hilde let the big ring binder fall to the floor with a heavy thud.†   (source)
  • Hegel did not believe it was possible.†   (source)
  • He thought that both the idealism of the Romantics and Hegel's 'historicism' had obscured the individual's responsibility for his own life.†   (source)
  • Hegel called it thinking negatively.†   (source)
  • According to Hegel, the study of history shows that humanity is moving toward greater rationality and freedom.†   (source)
  • What is usually known as Hegel's philosophy is mainly a method for understanding the progress of history.†   (source)
  • It is also Hegel—who was critical of the individual, and who saw everything as the expression of the one and only world reason.†   (source)
  • When Hegel talks of 'world spirit' or 'world reason,' he means the sum of human utterances, because only man has a 'spirit.'†   (source)
  • I am going to tell you about a Danish philosopher who was infuriated by Hegel's philosophy," said Alberto.†   (source)
  • Hegel's philosophy teaches us nothing about the inner nature of life, but it can teach us to think productively.†   (source)
  • Hegel calls this subjective spirit.†   (source)
  • And Hegel had not made much of that?†   (source)
  • Empedocles' standpoint—which provided the compromise between the two schools of thought—was what Hegel called the negation of the negation.†   (source)
  • Hegel's 'reason' is thus dynamic logic.†   (source)
  • All the philosophical systems before Hegel had had one thing in common, namely, the attempt to set up eternal criteria for what man can know about the world.†   (source)
  • Hegel was aware of this early on.†   (source)
  • However, Hegel's philosophy was so all-embracing and diversified that for present purposes we shall content ourselves with highlighting some of the main aspects.†   (source)
  • Kierkegaard idicated that the sort of 'objective truths' that Hegelianism was concerned with were totally irrelevant to the personal life of the individual.†   (source)
  • We can also observe something else: The many men in Hegel's time who could reel off gross broadsides like that on on the inferiority of women hastened the development of feminism.†   (source)
  • Hegel called this a nega-tion.†   (source)
  • This is what he wrote about the Hegelian professor: "While the ponderous Sir Professor explains the entire mystery of life, he has in distraction forgotten his own name; that he is a man, neither more nor less, not a fantastic three-eighths of a paragraph."†   (source)
  • Did he meet Hegel?†   (source)
  • What was Hegel's view?†   (source)
  • Plotinus begat St. Augustine…… Kant begat Hegel.†   (source)
  • We call him Hegel Gant.†   (source)
  • Our hostess remained at home; also a convalescent Dominican who has read too much Maritain and too little Hegel; Sir Adrian Porson, of course, and two rather forbidding Magyar cousins—I have tried them in German and in French, but in neither tongue are they diverting.†   (source)
  • There was a careless office of old equipment, and he sat in rolled sleeves and smoked cigars at a desk where my book-accustomed eyes spotted a Spinoza and a Hegel and other things odd for a doctor, and especially one in his line.†   (source)
  • So here is Hegel in the Cotton Belt!†   (source)
  • Hegel begat Vergil Weldon.†   (source)
  • All that he had read in books, all the tranquil wisdom he had professed so glibly in his philosophy course, and the great names of Plato and Plotinus, of Spinoza and Immanuel Kant, of Hegel and Descartes, left him now, under the mastering surge of his wild Celtic superstition.†   (source)
  • If one classed him at all it would be as the countryman of Hegel and Kant, as the idealist, inclined to be dreamy, whose Imperialism was the Imperialism of the air.†   (source)
  • They spoke about Marx, whose Kapital Leo Naphta had studied in a popular edition, and then moved on to Hegel, of whom, or about whom, he had also read enough to be able to offer a few striking comments.†   (source)
  • Or, going one step farther, with those striking remarks to which Naphta had treated Pater Unterpertinger in their colloquy about Hegel and the "Catholicity" of that state philosopher, about how "politics" and "Catholicism" were psychologically related and formed a single objective reality?†   (source)
  • Whether due to his general bent for paradox or out of courtesy, he called Hegel a "Catholic" thinker; and in response to the priest's smiling question about the basis for this comment, inasmuch as Hegel was actually the state philosopher of Prussia and generally considered a Protestant, Leo had replied: the very term "state philosopher" confirmed he was correct in pointing to Hegel's Catholicity in the religious sense, if not, of course, in regard to Church dogmatics.†   (source)
  • The conversations were miles beyond Jo's comprehension, but she enjoyed it, though Kant and Hegel were unknown gods, the Subjective and Objective unintelligible terms, and the only thing 'evolved from her inner consciousness' was a bad headache after it was all over.†   (source)
  • Of late in Moscow and in the country, since he had become convinced that he would find no solution in the materialists, he had read and re-read thoroughly Plato, Spinoza, Kant, Schelling, Hegel, and Schopenhauer, the philosophers who gave a non-materialistic explanation of life.†   (source)
  • It's exciting to hear them talking about poetry and science and philosophy—about Shakespeare and Milton; Newton and Einstein and Freud; about Plato and Hegel and Kant, and all the other names that echo like great church bells in my mind.†   (source)
  • Roaming in Thought [After reading Hegel] Roaming in thought over the Universe, I saw the little that is Good steadily hastening towards immortality, And the vast all that is call'd Evil I saw hastening to merge itself and become lost and dead.†   (source)
  • Having studied the new and antique, the Greek and Germanic systems, Kant having studied and stated, Fichte and Schelling and Hegel, Stated the lore of Plato, and Socrates greater than Plato, And greater than Socrates sought and stated, Christ divine having studied long, I see reminiscent to-day those Greek and Germanic systems, See the philosophies all, Christian churches and tenets see, Yet underneath Socrates clearly see, and underneath Christ the divine I see, The dear love of man…†   (source)
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