Review: Henrich, Between Kant and Hegel. Lectures on German idealism [Book Review]

Journal of the History of Philosophy 46 (2):pp. 330-331 (2008)
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Abstract

As the author explains, the title of this work is intended to distinguish it from ordinary, Whiggish accounts of the development of German philosophy “from Kant to Hegel.” Instead, Heinrich treats the positions of Kant, Fichte, and Hegel as potentially viable alternatives, none of which must be viewed as aufgehoben by those that followed, and all of which deserve reconsideration by contemporary philosophers.Dieter Henrich is known for two things: first, for championing a minutely-detailed, revisionist approach to the history of post-Kantian philosophy; and second, for his insistence that the central problem of German idealism is that of self-consciousness. Both elements are well represented in this book, which is a revised version of a series of lectures delivered at Harvard in 1973. The text thus antedates many of the more recent discoveries and claims of Henrich and his student collaborators in the “Jena project,” though some of the results are alluded to in the useful footnotes and apparatus provided by David S. Pacini, who attended the original lectures and has expert knowledge of Henrich’s more recent work

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Kant and German idealisms.Gary Banham - 2003 - British Journal for the History of Philosophy 11 (2):333 – 339.
Between Kant and Hegel: lectures on German idealism.Dieter Henrich - 2003 - Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. Edited by David S. Pacini.

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Daniel Breazeale
University of Kentucky

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