Philosophy and the Absolute [Book Review]

Idealistic Studies 17 (3):281-283 (1987)
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Abstract

It is McRae’s “position that the link between absolute knowing, and the system proper [in Hegel], cannot be understood aside from the act of presentation itself”. In a word, “absolute knowing is nothing but the presentation of the system itself”. This ongoing activity of presentation occurs in the theater of language, there being different speculative levels as well as particular “regional” languages, each in its own way capturing, in its “thick immediacy,” some stage of this process. Expressed another way, “the absolute speaks… and consequently can be known and known most perfectly in language”.

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