Results for 'Unhappy Consciousness'

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  1. Figure unhappy consciousness and mystical theology of Dionysius the Areopagite.Ota Gal - 2012 - Reflexe: Filosoficky Casopis 43:33-57.
    dicates implying a surplus in the background from previous negation) and the other three combinations . The second part of the study in relation to the issue of intersubjectivity summarizes Hegel's unhappy consciousness analysis of figures from the Phenomenology of Spirit and shows that it takes insufficient account of Hegel older authors, which is just Dionysios. In writings on mystical theology can find is the formal structure of intersubjectivity, and Hegel's analysis so they can not be correct.
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  2.  11
    1. Unhappy Consciousness and the Logic of Self-Conscious Selfhood.John Russon - 1997 - In John Edward Russon (ed.), The Self and Its Body in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. Buffalo: University of Toronto Press. pp. 15-29.
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  3.  7
    The Unhappy Consciousness: The Poetic Plight of Samuel Beckett, by Eugene F. Kaelin.Antony Easthope - 1984 - Journal of the British Society for Phenomenology 15 (1):94-95.
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  4.  11
    The “Unhappy Consciousness” And Conscious Unhappiness: On Adorno's Critique Of Hegel And The Idea Of An Hegelian Critique Of Adorno.Simon Jarvis - 1994 - Hegel Bulletin 15 (1):71-88.
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  5. The Unhappy Consciousness.E. F. KAELIN - 1981
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  6.  4
    Hegel and Slavery - The Unhappy Consciousness of Master and Slave. 허재훈 - 2018 - Journal of the New Korean Philosophical Association 94:519-541.
    헤겔의 주인과 노예의 변증법은 근대성의 양면성과 현대사회의 이념적 모델을 파악하는데 핵심적인 요소다. 여기서 헤겔이 노예제를 인지하고 그것을 자신의 철학적 구도에 어떻게 수용했으며, 어떻게 관념적으로 재구성했느냐 하는 점은 무수한 논의의 대상이다. 헤겔은 당시의 다른 철학자들과 마찬가지로 계몽주의와 노예제의 공존에서 혼란을 느꼈으며 이를 구체적으로 파악하려고 했던 것으로 보인다. 이러한 상황에서 헤겔은 ‘자유’의 문제를 전면적으로 제기하게 되었으며, 자유의 변증법을 전개함으로써 프랑스 혁명과 계몽주의 전반을 성찰하는 ‘정신’의 변증법을 구상하게 되었다. 주인과 노예의 변증법이 은유를 넘어선 현실적 의미를 획득하게 된 것도 이러한 과정 때문이었다.BR 주인과 노예의 (...)
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  7.  32
    The Unhappy Consciousness.G. C. Hay Jr - 1984 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 30:349-351.
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  8.  41
    Hegel’s Phenomenology of Unhappy Consciousness.Andrzej Wierciński - 2017 - Forum Philosophicum: International Journal for Philosophy 22 (1):65-79.
    Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit is a careful description of the progressive unfolding of Spirit. Its dialectic is the education of consciousness. There are three stages of unhappy consciousness: external beyond, changing individual, and achieved reconciliation. Being aware of its own mutability, the self yearns for reconciliation, which can only come from the external beyond, from the unchanging. The quest of unhappy consciousness for reconciliation is characterized by the three stages of devotion, sacramental desire and labour, (...)
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  9.  13
    Hegel’s Phenomenology of Unhappy Consciousness.Andrzej Wierciński - 2017 - Forum Philosophicum: International Journal for Philosophy 22 (1):65-79.
    Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit is a careful description of the progressive unfolding of Spirit. Its dialectic is the education of consciousness. There are three stages of unhappy consciousness: external beyond, changing individual, and achieved reconciliation. Being aware of its own mutability, the self yearns for reconciliation, which can only come from the external beyond, from the unchanging. The quest of unhappy consciousness for reconciliation is characterized by the three stages of devotion, sacramental desire and labour, (...)
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  10.  15
    Autonomy and Unhappy Consciousness.Ludwig Heyde - 1998 - Ethical Perspectives 5 (4):253-262.
    Perhaps even more radically than under the criticism of the ‘Maîtres du soupçon’, a whole world goes down in Greek comedy. Not only traditional religion, but also ethical life and finally even reason itself seem to be affected by the all-destroying power of laughter.The title of Aristophanes’ famous play ‘The Clouds’ has a symbolic meaning: in the comedy, Greek ethical life dissolves into a vanishing mist. Behind the player’s mask hides the principle of this total decomposition: the autonomous, selfconfident individual. (...)
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  11. The Narration of an Unhappy Consciousness: Lukács, Marxism, the Novel, and Beyond.Keith Ansell-Pearson - 1986 - Radical Philosophy 43:22.
     
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  12. "The Unhappy Consciousness: The Poetic Plight of Samuel Beckett": Eugene F. Kaelin. [REVIEW]Paul Crowther - 1983 - British Journal of Aesthetics 23 (4):380.
     
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  13.  31
    The Unhappy Consciousness[REVIEW]Robert Pogue Harrison - 1983 - Review of Metaphysics 37 (1):127-129.
    Whitford states in her preface that the limits of Merleau-Ponty's critique of Sartre form the limits of her investigation. Since Merleau-Ponty had little to say about Sartre's later development, except that it brought to light certain contradictions inherent in his ontology, the discussion centers around L'Etre et le néant. In effect, Merleau-Ponty, even after his break with Sartre, never ceased returning to that work in order to challenge some of its premises, speculate upon its implications, and use it as a (...)
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  14.  27
    The Unhappy Consciousness[REVIEW]Robert Pogue Harrison - 1983 - Review of Metaphysics 37 (1):127-129.
    The anti-metaphysical kind of philosophy known as Deconstruction, associated with the name of Derrida, has done much to trouble the conventional distinctions between philosophy and literature. Its project of "textualizing" metaphysical works in order to expose their rhetorical components and reliance on metaphor, their groundless erection of fundamenta inconcussa, has radically affected, among other things, literary criticism. Even where literary critics dissociate themselves from the deconstructive enterprise, their activity betrays an increasing involvement with issues that once belonged to the domain (...)
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  15. The Unhappy Consciousness: The Poetic Flight of Samuel Beckett. An Inquiry at the Intersection of Phenomenology and Literature. [REVIEW]G. C. Hay Jr - 1984 - Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 30:349-351.
     
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  16.  7
    Autonomy and Unhappy Consciousness.Ludwig Heyde—Ku Nijmegen - 1998 - Ethical Perspectives 5 (2):253.
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  17.  4
    The Unhappy Consciousness[REVIEW]Elaine Jasenas - 1985 - International Studies in Philosophy 17 (3):116-117.
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  18.  4
    The Unhappy Consciousness[REVIEW]Elaine Jasenas - 1985 - International Studies in Philosophy 17 (3):116-117.
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  19.  13
    The Unhappy Consciousness: The Poetic Plight of Samuel Beckett. By Eugene F. Kaelin. [REVIEW]Walter J. Stohrer - 1983 - Modern Schoolman 61 (1):61-62.
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  20.  23
    Chapter III. The unhappy consciousness in society.Judith N. Shklar - 1958 - In George H. Sabine (ed.), After Utopia: The Decline of Political Faith. Duke University Press. pp. 65-107.
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  21.  13
    From the „Unhappy Consciousness“ to „Parasitic Language“ The Concept of Alienation in Hegel, Marx, and Wittgenstein.Lotar Rasiński - 2014 - Hegel-Jahrbuch 2014 (1).
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  22.  34
    Hegel's "Unhappy Consciousness" and Nietzsche's "Slave Morality".Murray Greene - 1970 - Proceedings of the Hegel Society of America 1:125-141.
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  23. Everywhere There Are Sad Passions": Gilles Deleuze and the Unhappy Consciousness.Moritz Gansen - 2016 - In Ceciel Meiborg & Sjoerd van Tuinen (eds.), Deleuze and the Passions. [Place of publication not identified]: Punctum Books.
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  24.  49
    Hegel in Modern French Philosophy: The Unhappy Consciousness.Bruce Baugh - 1993 - Laval Théologique et Philosophique 49 (3):423-438.
  25.  35
    Unhappiness: Dialectic Terminable and Interminable.Hagit Aldema - 2012 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 26 (3):572-588.
    The purpose of the present work is to analyze Hegel's Unhappy Consciousness in light of the psychoanalytic conceptualization of the relation Subject-Other. The analysis will investigate unhappiness on two counts: its relation to Hegelian dialectic and the possibility of its coming to an end. Examining Hegelian unhappiness through the prism of psychoanalytic thought will allow us to formulate a crucial distinction between the philosophical (Hegelian) and psychoanalytic (Freudian, Lacanian) approaches to unhappiness as they relate to the arch-concepts of (...)
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  26.  15
    Double Consciousness and Despair: Exploring a Connection Between Søren Kierkegaard and W.E.B. Du Bois.Matthew Kruger - 2020 - Kierkegaard Studies Yearbook 25 (1):265-283.
    This paper explores the connection between Søren Kierkegaard’s concept of despair and W.E.B. Du Bois’ concept of double consciousness. The concepts have been separately argued to share a root in Hegel’s “Unhappy Consciousness,” and further, each notion in part explains the interaction of a person with their culture. The paper seeks to highlight the importance of culture in interpreting Kierkegaard’s despair, and to do so by including a critique via Du Bois that a person’s existence in a (...)
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  27.  49
    From Self-Consciousness to Reason in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit.Eric V. D. Luft - 2013 - International Philosophical Quarterly 53 (3):309-324.
    The transition from self-consciousness as the unhappy consciousness to reason as the critique of idealism is among the most important in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. Yet this transition is implicit and not readily discernible. This paper investigates (1) whether we can discover and describe any roadblock that the unhappy consciousness is able to knock down, or despite which it is able to maneuver, and so become reason; or (2) whether the unhappy consciousness arrives (...)
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  28. The Life of Consciousness and the World Come Alive.S. J. Quentin Lauer - 1985 - The Owl of Minerva 16 (2):183-198.
    There is in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit a relatively brief passage at the beginning of Chapter IV, “Self-Consciousness,” which may well be one of the most difficult passages in the whole Hegelian corpus, but which is also of supreme importance for coming to grips with the movement of Hegel’s thought, not only in the Phenomenology but in the entire “system.” It is precisely the difficulty of the passage, it would seem, that explains why it has not been given by (...)
     
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  29.  58
    Neural Correlates of Consciousness Meet the Theory of Identity.Michal Polák & Tomáš Marvan - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9:381399.
    One of the greatest challenges of consciousness research is to understand the relationship between consciousness and its implementing substrate. Current research into the neural correlates of consciousness regards the biological brain as being this substrate, but largely fails to clarify the nature of the brain-consciousness connection. A popular approach within this research is to construe brain-consciousness correlations in causal terms: the neural correlates of consciousness are the causes of states of consciousness. After introducing (...)
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  30.  34
    From Self-Consciousness to Reason in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit: Aporia Overcome, Aporia Sidestepped, or Organic Transition?Eric V. D. Luft - 2013 - International Philosophical Quarterly 53 (3):309-324.
    The transition from self-consciousness as the unhappy consciousness to reason as the critique of idealism is among the most important in Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit. Yet this transition is implicit and not readily discernible. This paper investigates whether we can discover and describe any roadblock that the unhappy consciousness is able to knock down, or despite which it is able to maneuver, and so become reason; or whether the unhappy consciousness arrives at an (...)
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  31. 238 Peer commentary and responses.Pure Consciousness - 1999 - In Jonathan Shear & Francisco J. Varela (eds.), The view from within: first-person approaches to the study of consciousness. Bowling Green, OH: Imprint Academic. pp. 6--2.
     
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  32. Philosophy of J. Wahl as an independent phenomenon and as an interpretation of Hegel’s philosophy.О. А Лунев-Коробский - 2023 - Siberian Journal of Philosophy 21 (2):113-132.
    The article is aimed at comprehending the perception of J. Wahl’s philosophy in Russia. The central role is assigned to the notion of “unhappy consciousness” in Hegel’s “The Phenomenology of Spirit” and to the interpretation of this notion in J. Wahl’s philosophy. The analysis of Russian–language studies dealing with his philosophy allows to outline two primary strands of engagement with it: within the framework of “French Neo–Hegelianism”, and within the framework of existentialism. Th e need to renounce this (...)
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  33.  6
    Simone de Beauvoir's Relation to Hegel's Absolute.Zeynep Direk - 2017 - In Laura Hengehold & Nancy Bauer (eds.), A Companion to Simone de Beauvoir. Chichester, UK: Wiley. pp. 198–210.
    This chapter explores Simone de Beauvoir's relation to Hegel's philosophy beyond her adaptation of the master and slave dialectic to the question of woman's historical relation to man. It focuses on her reading of the Hegelian Absolute, which underlies her rejection of the patriarchal representation of the female alterity as absolute, as manifested in the eternal myth of the feminine. Through a survey of Simone de Beauvoir's early intellectual history, it shows that the idea of the Absolute is more important (...)
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  34. Dialectic: the pulse of freedom.Roy Bhaskar - 2008 - New York: Routledge.
    Introduction: Critical realism, hegelian dialectic and the problems of philosophy preliminary considerations -- Objectives of the book -- Dialectic : an initial orientation -- Negation -- Four degrees of critical realism -- Prima facie objections to critical realism -- On the sources and general character of the hegelian dialectic -- On the immanent critique and limitations of the hegelian dialectic -- The fine structure of the hegelian dialectic -- Dialectic : the logic of absence, arguments, themes, perspectives, configurations -- Absence (...)
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  35.  8
    Hegel's Phenomenology of spirit: a reader's guide.Stephen Houlgate - 2012 - New York, NY: Bloomsbury Academic.
    Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit is probably his most famous work. First published in 1807, it has exercised considerable influence on subsequent thinkers from Feuerbach and Marx to Heidegger, Kojève, Adorno and Derrida. The book contains many memorable analyses of, for example, the master / slave dialectic, the unhappy consciousness, Sophocles' Antigone and the French Revolution and is one of the most important works in the Western philosophical tradition. It is, however, a difficult and challenging book and needs to (...)
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  36.  39
    Hegel’s God. [REVIEW]David Bachyrycz - 2004 - Review of Metaphysics 57 (3):616-617.
    The figure of the unhappy consciousness animates Hegel’s philosophical treatment of religion. Consciousness despairs and is unhappy because it cannot deal with the demands of its existence. Human beings are by their very nature agents who seek out the truth, yet the anguished plight of the unhappy consciousness consists in the fact that truth cannot be had; at this stage of the dialectic, truth and authority seem to be beyond human consciousness. “What makes (...)
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  37. Back to Hegel?Robert Pippin - 2012 - Mediations 26 (1-2).
    Robert Pippin reviews Slavoj Žižek’s Less than Nothing, a serious attempt to re-actualize Hegel in the light of Lacanian metapsychology. But does Žižek’s attempt to think Hegel with Lacan produce, as Žižek hopes, a political figuration adequate to the present? Or does it land us rather in the Hegelian zoo, along with such well-known specimens as the Beautiful Soul, the Unhappy Consciousness, and The Knight of Virtue?
     
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  38. L'etica moderna. Dalla Riforma a Nietzsche.Sergio Cremaschi - 2007 - Roma RM, Italia: Carocci.
    This book tells the story of modern ethics, namely the story of a discourse that, after the Renaissance, went through a methodological revolution giving birth to Grotius’s and Pufendorf’s new science of natural law, leaving room for two centuries of explorations of the possible developments and implications of this new paradigm, up to the crisis of the Eighties of the eighteenth century, a crisis that carried a kind of mitosis, the act of birth of both basic paradigms of the two (...)
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  39.  55
    Hegel on the Inner and the Outer.Michael Emerson - 1987 - Idealistic Studies 17 (2):133-147.
    In the chapter of the Phenomenology of Spirit entitled “The Certainty and Truth of Reason,” Hegel discusses and criticizes the distinction between the inner and the outer as it relates to the theories of physiognomy and phrenology. This discussion is the third “Observation of Reason” following the “Observation of Nature” and “Observation of the relation of self-consciousness in its purity and its relation to external actuality,” the latter being a brief discussion of the status of logical and psychological laws. (...)
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  40.  1
    Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit: A Reappraisal.G. K. Browning - 2010 - Springer.
    This book consists of a significant and valuable reappraisal of Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit by a number of outstanding, international Hegel scholars. Key questions and issues are discussed. No other book on the Phenomenology brings together penetrating articles by renowned Hegel scholars, and no previous book has included responses to articles by equally celebrated scholars. The result is that this book is unique in providing a wealth of insights into the Phenomenology of Spirit from a variety of perspectives. Among the (...)
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  41.  59
    French Hegel: from surrealism to postmodernism.Bruce Baugh - 2003 - New York: Routledge.
    This highly original history of ideas considers the impact of Hegel on French philosophy from the 1920s to the present. As Baugh's lucid narrative makes clear, Hegel's influence on French philosophy has been profound, and can be traced through all the major intellectual movements and thinkers in France throughout the 20th Century from Jean Wahl, Sartre, and Bataille to Foucault, Deleuze, and Derrida. Baugh focuses on Hegel's idea of the "unhappy consciousness," and provides a bold new account of (...)
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  42.  17
    The Figural Jew: Politics and Identity in Postwar French Thought.Sarah Hammerschlag - 2010 - University of Chicago Press.
    Introduction -- Roots, rootlessness, and fin de siècle France -- Stranger and self: Sartre's Jew -- Anti-Semite and Jew -- Dialectical history, unhappy consciousness, and the Messiah -- The ethics of uprootedness: Emmanuel Levinas's postwar project -- Literary unrest: Maurice Blanchot's rewriting of Levinas --"The Last of the Jews": Jacques Derrida and the case of the figure -- The cut -- The exemplar -- Conclusion.
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  43.  8
    The Apotheosis of Apotheosis.Christopher Fox - 2007 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 12 (1):185-204.
    The recent translation of Emmanuel Levinas’s essay On Escape complicates our view of his relationship to Hegel, and reopens the ontological question of escape. The impetus for Levinas’s essay was National Socialism’s effort to reduce subjectivity to being qua biologistic. To resist this, Levinas enlists idealism as an ally. He affirms the idealist subject’s effort to escape being, but denies that it makes good its escape. I challenge this denial by comparing Levinas’s phenomenology of escape with Hegel’s phenomenology of (...) consciousness, paying special attention to the themes of shame and the will to escape. The similarity between treatments leads me to suggest that the urge to escape emerges at least as early as medieval Christianity, thus predating the historical predicament of mid-1930s European Jewry. I conclude by interpreting space travel and the posthuman figure of the cyborg as signs that escape continues asan object of human aspiration. (shrink)
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  44. Vergílio Ferreira e a Fenomenologia.Hélder Godinho - 2011 - Phainomenon 22-23 (1):345-371.
    This study covers Vergílio Ferreira’s fiction and essays to show the that phenomenology had in both. Vergílio Ferreira even declares ata certam pomt in his literary and essayist trajectory that the influence of Husserl’s phenomenology was large in his work and especially noticed retrospectively. He who for a long period declared himself a Hegelian who had moved on to existentiabsm via unhappy consciousness will link Hegel to Husserl’s phenomenology revealing a trajectory justifying the coherence of his work.
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  45. Hegel and Psychoanalysis: A New Interpretation of "Phenomenology of Spirit".Molly Macdonald - 2013 - New York: Routledge.
    Both Hegel's philosophy and psychoanalytic theory have profoundly influenced contemporary thought, but they are traditionally seen to work in separate rather than intersecting universes. This book offers a new interpretation of Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit and brings it into conversation the work of two of the best-known contemporary psychoanalysts, Christopher Bollas and André Green. Hegel and Psychoanalysis centers a consideration of the Phenomenology on the figure of the Unhappy Consciousness and the concept of Force, two areas that are (...)
     
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  46.  5
    Feminist interpretations of Hegel’s slave and master dialectic.Н. Ю Чепелева - 2023 - Philosophy Journal 16 (4):88-106.
    The article analyzes the reception of Hegel’s philosophy in feminist theory on the example of the concepts of Simone de Beauvoir, Luce Irigaray, and Judith Butler. The first part of the article examines Hegel’s teaching on the role of women in the family, identifies the place of the feminine in Hegel’s system and analyzes the Hegelian interpretation of Sophocle’s “Antigone”. The second part of the article presents an interpretation of Si­mone de Beauvoir. I affirm that the oppositions “woman – man” (...)
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  47.  59
    A History of Reason in the Age of Insanity: The Deconstruction of Foucault in Hegel’s Phenomenology.Andrew Cutrofello - 1993 - The Owl of Minerva 25 (1):15-21.
    The struggle for self-consciousness in the Phenomenology of Spirit is fraught with false achievements. In sense-certainty, consciousness is aware of itself as consciousness of an object, but this awareness of self is thoroughly mediated by the object, which remains the essential element in the relation until this view collapses with the untenability of the theory of force. As self-certainty, consciousness then becomes immediately aware of itself, and so seems to have achieved real self-consciousness. But such (...)
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  48.  13
    La philosophie française postmoderne et les inventions narratives du roman moderniste américain.Oriane Petteni - 2019 - Symposium 23 (1):212-234.
    Le but de cet article est de réévaluer l’impact du projet philosophique de Jean Wahl sur la philosophie française postmoderne. L’angle choisi consiste à replacer le projet wahlien dans le cadre des deux grands motifs de la philosophie française de la seconde moitié du XXe siècle: le rejet du paradigme dominant de la vision et le rapport ambivalent à l’hégélianisme, cristallisé dans la ????igure de la conscience malheureuse. En suivant ces deux fils conducteurs, l’article retrace le parcours intellectuel de Jean (...)
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  49. Theism in 19th and 20th Century Intellectual Life.Jacqueline Mariña - 2012 - In Charles Taliaferro, Victoria Harrison & Stewart Goetz (eds.), Routledge Companion to Theism. Routledge.
    This chapter traces how theism was developed by leading 19th and 20th century figures (Schleiermacher, Hegel, Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Rahner, and Tillich) responding to Kant’s Copernican revolution in philosophy. Part one deals with the ontological nature of subjectivity itself and what it reveals about the conditions of the possibility of a subject’s relation to the Absolute. Part two explores the role of subjectivity and interiority in the individual’s relation to God, and part three takes a look at the theme of the (...)
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  50.  46
    The Apotheosis of Apotheosis.Christopher Fox - 2007 - Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy 12 (1):185-204.
    The recent translation of Emmanuel Levinas’s essay On Escape complicates our view of his relationship to Hegel, and reopens the ontological question of escape. The impetus for Levinas’s essay was National Socialism’s effort to reduce subjectivity to being qua biologistic. To resist this, Levinas enlists idealism as an ally. He affirms the idealist subject’s effort to escape being, but denies that it makes good its escape. I challenge this denial by comparing Levinas’s phenomenology of escape with Hegel’s phenomenology of (...) consciousness, paying special attention to the themes of shame and the will to escape. The similarity between treatments leads me to suggest that the urge to escape emerges at least as early as medieval Christianity, thus predating the historical predicament of mid-1930s European Jewry. I conclude by interpreting space travel and the posthuman figure of the cyborg as signs that escape continues asan object of human aspiration. (shrink)
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