Hegel’s Ethics of Recognition

University of California Press (1997)
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Abstract

In this significant contribution to Hegel scholarship, Robert Williams develops the most comprehensive account to date of Hegel's concept of recognition. Fichte introduced the concept of recognition as a presupposition of both Rousseau's social contract and Kant's ethics. Williams shows that Hegel appropriated the concept of recognition as the general pattern of his concept of ethical life, breaking with natural law theory yet incorporating the Aristotelian view that rights and virtues are possible only within a certain kind of community. He explores Hegel's intersubjective concept of spirit as the product of affirmative mutual recognition and his conception of recognition as the right to have rights. Examining Hegel's Jena manuscripts, his _Philosophy of Right_, the _Phenomenology of Spirit_, and other works, Williams shows how the concept of recognition shapes and illumines Hegel's understandings of crime and punishment, morality, the family, the state, sovereignty, international relations, and war. A concluding chapter on the reception and reworking of the concept of recognition by contemporary thinkers including Derrida, Levinas, and Deleuze demonstrates Hegel's continuing centrality to the philosophical concerns of our age.

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Citations of this work

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Demonic despair under the guise of the good? Kierkegaard and Anscombe vs. Velleman.Roe Fremstedal - 2023 - Inquiry: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Philosophy 66 (5):705-725.
Hegel on Religion and Politics.Angelica Nuzzo (ed.) - 2012 - State University of New York Press.

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Has Hegel Anything to Say to Feminists?Heidi M. Ravven - 1988 - The Owl of Minerva 19 (2):149-168.
On Taking the Transcendental Turn.Klaus Hartmann - 1966 - Review of Metaphysics 20 (2):223 - 249.
Hegel's Concept of "Geist".R. C. Solomon - 1970 - Review of Metaphysics 23 (4):642 - 661.
The Hegel-Nietzsche problem.Daniel Breazeale - 1975 - Nietzsche Studien 4:146-164.

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