Hegel's conception of the determinate negation /:
In Hegel's Conception of the Determinate Negation, Terje Sparby develops a comprehensive account of the three forms of the determinate negation in Hegel's philosophy.
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
Leiden ; Boston :
Brill,
©2015.
|
Schriftenreihe: | Critical studies in German idealism ;
v. 12. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Volltext |
Zusammenfassung: | In Hegel's Conception of the Determinate Negation, Terje Sparby develops a comprehensive account of the three forms of the determinate negation in Hegel's philosophy. |
Beschreibung: | 1 online resource |
Bibliographie: | Includes bibliographical references and index. |
ISBN: | 9789004284616 9004284613 9789004284609 9004284605 |
ISSN: | 1878-9986 ; |
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504 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index. | ||
520 | |a In Hegel's Conception of the Determinate Negation, Terje Sparby develops a comprehensive account of the three forms of the determinate negation in Hegel's philosophy. | ||
588 | 0 | |a Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed January 7, 2015). | |
505 | 0 | |a Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction -- 1.1. The Problem -- 1.1.1. The Determinate Negation as Exclusion or 'Material Incompatibility' -- 1.1.2. The Determinate Negation as Inclusion -- 1.1.3. Hegel's Inconsistent Use of the Term -- 1.1.4. The Root of the Problem and a Possible Resolution -- 1.2. Overview -- 2. Kant's Doctrine of Determination -- 2.1. Determination and Negation in Kant -- 2.1.1. Determination as Predication -- 2.1.2. The Transcendental Prototypon -- 2.1.3. Kant on Negation -- 2.1.4. Affirmative Negation and the Infinite Judgment -- 2.2. Real Opposition -- 2.3. Dialectical Oppositions and the Limits of Human Knowledge -- 2.3.1. The Antinomies of KrV -- 2.3.2. The Antinomies of KU -- 2.3.3. Intellectual Intuition and Intuitive Understanding -- 2.4. Seeds of the System of Transcendental Philosophy -- 2.4.1. Kant's Table of Categories -- 2.4.2. The Significance of the Third Category -- 2.4.3. Philosophical Knowledge in [ʹ] 12 of KrV -- 2.5. Summary. | |
505 | 0 | |a Note continued: 3. After Kant Fichte and Schelling -- 3.1. The Quest for a System of Transcendental Idealism: Anti-Philosophy and Skepticism -- 3.1.1. Reinhold and the Anesidemus-Review -- 3.1.2. Fichte's Wissenschaftslehre -- 3.1.3. Schelling's System des transzendentalen Idealismus -- 3.2. Fichte and Schelling's Correspondence, 1800-1802 -- 3.2.1. The Philosophy of Nature as a Necessary Complement to Transcendental Philosophy -- 3.2.2. The Absolute, the Limits of Idealism and the Method of Philosophy -- 3.3. Schelling's Philosophy of Identity -- 3.4. Summary -- 4. Hegel in Jena -- 4.1. Hegel between Fichte and Schelling: Beyond Indifference -- 4.2. Outlines of a System: From the Finite to the Infinite -- 4.2.1. From the Finite to the Infinite -- 4.2.2. The Concept of the Method in Systementwurfe II -- 4.2.3. The Determinate Negation and the Connection of Knowledge to Life -- 4.2.4. The Determinate Negation as Gestalt -- 4.3. The Determinate Negation in PhG. | |
505 | 0 | |a Note continued: 4.3.1. The Program and Method of PhG -- 4.3.2. Skepticism in PhG -- 4.3.3. The Determinate Negation as an Answer to Skepticism -- 4.4. Summary -- 5. Review and Outlook -- 6. Determinate Negation within the Program of WdL -- 6.1. The Need for a Reworking of Logic -- 6.2. The Speculative Determinate Negation and the Method of Logic -- 6.3. Summary and Preliminary Overview of the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 7. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of Being -- 7.1. The Beginning of the Logic -- 7.2. The Original Movement of Pure Thinking -- 7.2.1. Determinacy as Indeterminacy: Being -- 7.2.2. Indeterminacy as Determinacy: Nothing -- 7.2.3. Unibling the Contradictory: Becoming -- 7.2.4. The Dissolution of the Speculative Unity: The Transition to Dasein -- 7.2.5. Reflection on the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 7.3. Dasein: The Traditional, Dialectical and Speculative Framework of Determination -- 7.3.1. The Traditional Framework Revisited. | |
505 | 0 | |a Note continued: 7.3.2. Dialectical Determination: Something and Other, Limit and Finitude -- 7.3.3. Speculative Determination: The True Infinite -- 7.3.4."wo in dem Widerspruch der Einheit zweier Bestimmungen und des Gegensatzes derselben verharrt wird" -- 7.4. Indeterminate and Determinate Negation -- 7.4.1. Indeterminate Negation -- 7.4.2. Determinate Negation as "Kalte, Finsternis und dergleichen bestimmte Negationen" -- 7.5.A Comment on the Principle Omnis Determinatio est Negatio -- 7.6. Summary -- 8. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of Essence -- 8.1. The Logic of Essence in General -- 8.2. Essence as a Determinate Negation -- 8.3. The Determinations of Reflection -- 8.3.1. Identity: Difference -- 8.3.2. Difference: Bringing the Unrelated Together -- 8.3.3. Contradiction: The Intensification of Opposition -- 8.3.4. The Resolution of Contradiction: Into Nothing or Zero? -- 8.4. Problems of Contradiction in Hegel's Philosophy. | |
505 | 0 | |a Note continued: 8.4.1. What Exactly is Contradiction in Hegel's Philosophy? -- 8.4.2. Objective Contradiction, Negative Unity and the Reappearance of the Bad Infinite -- 8.5. The Logic of Essence and the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 8.5.1. How Can Something Negative be Positive? -- 8.5.2. On the Resolution of Contradiction into Abstract or Concrete Negation -- 8.6. Summary -- 9. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of the Concept -- 9.1. Hegel's Doctrine of the Concept -- 9.2. Hegel's Doctrine of the Concept in Relation to Kant's -- 9.2.1. The Transcendental Unity of Apperception -- 9.2.2. Synthetic a Priori Judgments -- 9.2.3. Truth -- 9.2.4. The Idea -- 9.2.5. Intuitive Understanding -- 9.3. The Idea of Knowledge -- 9.3.1. Theoretical Knowledge -- 9.3.2. Practical Knowledge -- 9.4. The Speculative or Absolute Idea -- 9.4.1. The Speculative Idea in General -- 9.4.2. The Stages of the Method -- 9.5. The Immanent, Necessary Progression towards Totality -- 9.5.1. Immanence. | |
505 | 0 | |a Note continued: 9.5.2. Necessity -- 9.5.3. Totality -- 9.6. Summary -- 10. Conclusion -- 10.1. The Three Forms of the Determinate Negation -- DN0: Material Incompatibility -- DN1: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of Being -- DN2: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of Essence -- DN3: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of the Concept, the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 10.2. Summary of the Three Forms of the Determinate Negation -- 10.3. Hegel's Response to Fichte and Schelling on the Methodical Foundations of Philosophy -- 10.4. Hegel's Response to Kant's Framework of Determination and Negation -- 10.3.1. Determination -- 10.3.2. Negation -- 10.3.3. Real Opposition -- 10.3.4. The Antinomies. | |
546 | |a English. | ||
600 | 1 | 0 | |a Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, |d 1770-1831. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79021767 |
600 | 1 | 7 | |a Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, |d 1770-1831 |2 fast |1 https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJjhyXcjqGcXKyp9GC4KBP |
650 | 0 | |a Logic. |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85078106 | |
650 | 0 | |a Negation (Logic) |0 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090622 | |
650 | 6 | |a Négation (Logique) | |
650 | 7 | |a PHILOSOPHY |x History & Surveys |x Modern. |2 bisacsh | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
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author | Sparby, Terje Stefan |
author_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2014055048 |
author_facet | Sparby, Terje Stefan |
author_role | |
author_sort | Sparby, Terje Stefan |
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contents | Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction -- 1.1. The Problem -- 1.1.1. The Determinate Negation as Exclusion or 'Material Incompatibility' -- 1.1.2. The Determinate Negation as Inclusion -- 1.1.3. Hegel's Inconsistent Use of the Term -- 1.1.4. The Root of the Problem and a Possible Resolution -- 1.2. Overview -- 2. Kant's Doctrine of Determination -- 2.1. Determination and Negation in Kant -- 2.1.1. Determination as Predication -- 2.1.2. The Transcendental Prototypon -- 2.1.3. Kant on Negation -- 2.1.4. Affirmative Negation and the Infinite Judgment -- 2.2. Real Opposition -- 2.3. Dialectical Oppositions and the Limits of Human Knowledge -- 2.3.1. The Antinomies of KrV -- 2.3.2. The Antinomies of KU -- 2.3.3. Intellectual Intuition and Intuitive Understanding -- 2.4. Seeds of the System of Transcendental Philosophy -- 2.4.1. Kant's Table of Categories -- 2.4.2. The Significance of the Third Category -- 2.4.3. Philosophical Knowledge in [ʹ] 12 of KrV -- 2.5. Summary. Note continued: 3. After Kant Fichte and Schelling -- 3.1. The Quest for a System of Transcendental Idealism: Anti-Philosophy and Skepticism -- 3.1.1. Reinhold and the Anesidemus-Review -- 3.1.2. Fichte's Wissenschaftslehre -- 3.1.3. Schelling's System des transzendentalen Idealismus -- 3.2. Fichte and Schelling's Correspondence, 1800-1802 -- 3.2.1. The Philosophy of Nature as a Necessary Complement to Transcendental Philosophy -- 3.2.2. The Absolute, the Limits of Idealism and the Method of Philosophy -- 3.3. Schelling's Philosophy of Identity -- 3.4. Summary -- 4. Hegel in Jena -- 4.1. Hegel between Fichte and Schelling: Beyond Indifference -- 4.2. Outlines of a System: From the Finite to the Infinite -- 4.2.1. From the Finite to the Infinite -- 4.2.2. The Concept of the Method in Systementwurfe II -- 4.2.3. The Determinate Negation and the Connection of Knowledge to Life -- 4.2.4. The Determinate Negation as Gestalt -- 4.3. The Determinate Negation in PhG. Note continued: 4.3.1. The Program and Method of PhG -- 4.3.2. Skepticism in PhG -- 4.3.3. The Determinate Negation as an Answer to Skepticism -- 4.4. Summary -- 5. Review and Outlook -- 6. Determinate Negation within the Program of WdL -- 6.1. The Need for a Reworking of Logic -- 6.2. The Speculative Determinate Negation and the Method of Logic -- 6.3. Summary and Preliminary Overview of the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 7. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of Being -- 7.1. The Beginning of the Logic -- 7.2. The Original Movement of Pure Thinking -- 7.2.1. Determinacy as Indeterminacy: Being -- 7.2.2. Indeterminacy as Determinacy: Nothing -- 7.2.3. Unibling the Contradictory: Becoming -- 7.2.4. The Dissolution of the Speculative Unity: The Transition to Dasein -- 7.2.5. Reflection on the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 7.3. Dasein: The Traditional, Dialectical and Speculative Framework of Determination -- 7.3.1. The Traditional Framework Revisited. Note continued: 7.3.2. Dialectical Determination: Something and Other, Limit and Finitude -- 7.3.3. Speculative Determination: The True Infinite -- 7.3.4."wo in dem Widerspruch der Einheit zweier Bestimmungen und des Gegensatzes derselben verharrt wird" -- 7.4. Indeterminate and Determinate Negation -- 7.4.1. Indeterminate Negation -- 7.4.2. Determinate Negation as "Kalte, Finsternis und dergleichen bestimmte Negationen" -- 7.5.A Comment on the Principle Omnis Determinatio est Negatio -- 7.6. Summary -- 8. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of Essence -- 8.1. The Logic of Essence in General -- 8.2. Essence as a Determinate Negation -- 8.3. The Determinations of Reflection -- 8.3.1. Identity: Difference -- 8.3.2. Difference: Bringing the Unrelated Together -- 8.3.3. Contradiction: The Intensification of Opposition -- 8.3.4. The Resolution of Contradiction: Into Nothing or Zero? -- 8.4. Problems of Contradiction in Hegel's Philosophy. Note continued: 8.4.1. What Exactly is Contradiction in Hegel's Philosophy? -- 8.4.2. Objective Contradiction, Negative Unity and the Reappearance of the Bad Infinite -- 8.5. The Logic of Essence and the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 8.5.1. How Can Something Negative be Positive? -- 8.5.2. On the Resolution of Contradiction into Abstract or Concrete Negation -- 8.6. Summary -- 9. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of the Concept -- 9.1. Hegel's Doctrine of the Concept -- 9.2. Hegel's Doctrine of the Concept in Relation to Kant's -- 9.2.1. The Transcendental Unity of Apperception -- 9.2.2. Synthetic a Priori Judgments -- 9.2.3. Truth -- 9.2.4. The Idea -- 9.2.5. Intuitive Understanding -- 9.3. The Idea of Knowledge -- 9.3.1. Theoretical Knowledge -- 9.3.2. Practical Knowledge -- 9.4. The Speculative or Absolute Idea -- 9.4.1. The Speculative Idea in General -- 9.4.2. The Stages of the Method -- 9.5. The Immanent, Necessary Progression towards Totality -- 9.5.1. Immanence. Note continued: 9.5.2. Necessity -- 9.5.3. Totality -- 9.6. Summary -- 10. Conclusion -- 10.1. The Three Forms of the Determinate Negation -- DN0: Material Incompatibility -- DN1: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of Being -- DN2: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of Essence -- DN3: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of the Concept, the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 10.2. Summary of the Three Forms of the Determinate Negation -- 10.3. Hegel's Response to Fichte and Schelling on the Methodical Foundations of Philosophy -- 10.4. Hegel's Response to Kant's Framework of Determination and Negation -- 10.3.1. Determination -- 10.3.2. Negation -- 10.3.3. Real Opposition -- 10.3.4. The Antinomies. |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)898771703 |
dewey-full | 193 |
dewey-hundreds | 100 - Philosophy & psychology |
dewey-ones | 193 - Philosophy of Germany and Austria |
dewey-raw | 193 |
dewey-search | 193 |
dewey-sort | 3193 |
dewey-tens | 190 - Modern western philosophy |
discipline | Philosophie |
format | Electronic eBook |
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"><subfield code="a">online resource</subfield><subfield code="b">cr</subfield><subfield code="2">rdacarrier</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="490" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Critical studies in German idealism,</subfield><subfield code="x">1878-9986 ;</subfield><subfield code="v">volume 12</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="504" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Includes bibliographical references and index.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="520" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">In Hegel's Conception of the Determinate Negation, Terje Sparby develops a comprehensive account of the three forms of the determinate negation in Hegel's philosophy.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed January 7, 2015).</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction -- 1.1. The Problem -- 1.1.1. The Determinate Negation as Exclusion or 'Material Incompatibility' -- 1.1.2. The Determinate Negation as Inclusion -- 1.1.3. Hegel's Inconsistent Use of the Term -- 1.1.4. The Root of the Problem and a Possible Resolution -- 1.2. Overview -- 2. Kant's Doctrine of Determination -- 2.1. Determination and Negation in Kant -- 2.1.1. Determination as Predication -- 2.1.2. The Transcendental Prototypon -- 2.1.3. Kant on Negation -- 2.1.4. Affirmative Negation and the Infinite Judgment -- 2.2. Real Opposition -- 2.3. Dialectical Oppositions and the Limits of Human Knowledge -- 2.3.1. The Antinomies of KrV -- 2.3.2. The Antinomies of KU -- 2.3.3. Intellectual Intuition and Intuitive Understanding -- 2.4. Seeds of the System of Transcendental Philosophy -- 2.4.1. Kant's Table of Categories -- 2.4.2. The Significance of the Third Category -- 2.4.3. Philosophical Knowledge in [ʹ] 12 of KrV -- 2.5. Summary.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Note continued: 3. After Kant Fichte and Schelling -- 3.1. The Quest for a System of Transcendental Idealism: Anti-Philosophy and Skepticism -- 3.1.1. Reinhold and the Anesidemus-Review -- 3.1.2. Fichte's Wissenschaftslehre -- 3.1.3. Schelling's System des transzendentalen Idealismus -- 3.2. Fichte and Schelling's Correspondence, 1800-1802 -- 3.2.1. The Philosophy of Nature as a Necessary Complement to Transcendental Philosophy -- 3.2.2. The Absolute, the Limits of Idealism and the Method of Philosophy -- 3.3. Schelling's Philosophy of Identity -- 3.4. Summary -- 4. Hegel in Jena -- 4.1. Hegel between Fichte and Schelling: Beyond Indifference -- 4.2. Outlines of a System: From the Finite to the Infinite -- 4.2.1. From the Finite to the Infinite -- 4.2.2. The Concept of the Method in Systementwurfe II -- 4.2.3. The Determinate Negation and the Connection of Knowledge to Life -- 4.2.4. The Determinate Negation as Gestalt -- 4.3. The Determinate Negation in PhG.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Note continued: 4.3.1. The Program and Method of PhG -- 4.3.2. Skepticism in PhG -- 4.3.3. The Determinate Negation as an Answer to Skepticism -- 4.4. Summary -- 5. Review and Outlook -- 6. Determinate Negation within the Program of WdL -- 6.1. The Need for a Reworking of Logic -- 6.2. The Speculative Determinate Negation and the Method of Logic -- 6.3. Summary and Preliminary Overview of the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 7. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of Being -- 7.1. The Beginning of the Logic -- 7.2. The Original Movement of Pure Thinking -- 7.2.1. Determinacy as Indeterminacy: Being -- 7.2.2. Indeterminacy as Determinacy: Nothing -- 7.2.3. Unibling the Contradictory: Becoming -- 7.2.4. The Dissolution of the Speculative Unity: The Transition to Dasein -- 7.2.5. Reflection on the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 7.3. Dasein: The Traditional, Dialectical and Speculative Framework of Determination -- 7.3.1. The Traditional Framework Revisited.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Note continued: 7.3.2. Dialectical Determination: Something and Other, Limit and Finitude -- 7.3.3. Speculative Determination: The True Infinite -- 7.3.4."wo in dem Widerspruch der Einheit zweier Bestimmungen und des Gegensatzes derselben verharrt wird" -- 7.4. Indeterminate and Determinate Negation -- 7.4.1. Indeterminate Negation -- 7.4.2. Determinate Negation as "Kalte, Finsternis und dergleichen bestimmte Negationen" -- 7.5.A Comment on the Principle Omnis Determinatio est Negatio -- 7.6. Summary -- 8. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of Essence -- 8.1. The Logic of Essence in General -- 8.2. Essence as a Determinate Negation -- 8.3. The Determinations of Reflection -- 8.3.1. Identity: Difference -- 8.3.2. Difference: Bringing the Unrelated Together -- 8.3.3. Contradiction: The Intensification of Opposition -- 8.3.4. The Resolution of Contradiction: Into Nothing or Zero? -- 8.4. Problems of Contradiction in Hegel's Philosophy.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Note continued: 8.4.1. What Exactly is Contradiction in Hegel's Philosophy? -- 8.4.2. Objective Contradiction, Negative Unity and the Reappearance of the Bad Infinite -- 8.5. The Logic of Essence and the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 8.5.1. How Can Something Negative be Positive? -- 8.5.2. On the Resolution of Contradiction into Abstract or Concrete Negation -- 8.6. Summary -- 9. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of the Concept -- 9.1. Hegel's Doctrine of the Concept -- 9.2. Hegel's Doctrine of the Concept in Relation to Kant's -- 9.2.1. The Transcendental Unity of Apperception -- 9.2.2. Synthetic a Priori Judgments -- 9.2.3. Truth -- 9.2.4. The Idea -- 9.2.5. Intuitive Understanding -- 9.3. The Idea of Knowledge -- 9.3.1. Theoretical Knowledge -- 9.3.2. Practical Knowledge -- 9.4. The Speculative or Absolute Idea -- 9.4.1. The Speculative Idea in General -- 9.4.2. The Stages of the Method -- 9.5. The Immanent, Necessary Progression towards Totality -- 9.5.1. Immanence.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="0" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Note continued: 9.5.2. Necessity -- 9.5.3. Totality -- 9.6. Summary -- 10. Conclusion -- 10.1. The Three Forms of the Determinate Negation -- DN0: Material Incompatibility -- DN1: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of Being -- DN2: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of Essence -- DN3: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of the Concept, the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 10.2. Summary of the Three Forms of the Determinate Negation -- 10.3. Hegel's Response to Fichte and Schelling on the Methodical Foundations of Philosophy -- 10.4. Hegel's Response to Kant's Framework of Determination and Negation -- 10.3.1. Determination -- 10.3.2. Negation -- 10.3.3. Real Opposition -- 10.3.4. 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id | ZDB-4-EBA-ocn898771703 |
illustrated | Not Illustrated |
indexdate | 2024-11-27T13:26:23Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 9789004284616 9004284613 9789004284609 9004284605 |
issn | 1878-9986 ; |
language | English |
oclc_num | 898771703 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | MAIN DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
owner_facet | MAIN DE-863 DE-BY-FWS |
physical | 1 online resource |
psigel | ZDB-4-EBA |
publishDate | 2015 |
publishDateSearch | 2015 |
publishDateSort | 2015 |
publisher | Brill, |
record_format | marc |
series | Critical studies in German idealism ; |
series2 | Critical studies in German idealism, |
spelling | Sparby, Terje Stefan. https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PCjMfjtD8bVm7mv3fYMjbwK http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n2014055048 Hegel's conception of the determinate negation / by Terje Sparby. Leiden ; Boston : Brill, ©2015. 1 online resource text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Critical studies in German idealism, 1878-9986 ; volume 12 Includes bibliographical references and index. In Hegel's Conception of the Determinate Negation, Terje Sparby develops a comprehensive account of the three forms of the determinate negation in Hegel's philosophy. Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed January 7, 2015). Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction -- 1.1. The Problem -- 1.1.1. The Determinate Negation as Exclusion or 'Material Incompatibility' -- 1.1.2. The Determinate Negation as Inclusion -- 1.1.3. Hegel's Inconsistent Use of the Term -- 1.1.4. The Root of the Problem and a Possible Resolution -- 1.2. Overview -- 2. Kant's Doctrine of Determination -- 2.1. Determination and Negation in Kant -- 2.1.1. Determination as Predication -- 2.1.2. The Transcendental Prototypon -- 2.1.3. Kant on Negation -- 2.1.4. Affirmative Negation and the Infinite Judgment -- 2.2. Real Opposition -- 2.3. Dialectical Oppositions and the Limits of Human Knowledge -- 2.3.1. The Antinomies of KrV -- 2.3.2. The Antinomies of KU -- 2.3.3. Intellectual Intuition and Intuitive Understanding -- 2.4. Seeds of the System of Transcendental Philosophy -- 2.4.1. Kant's Table of Categories -- 2.4.2. The Significance of the Third Category -- 2.4.3. Philosophical Knowledge in [ʹ] 12 of KrV -- 2.5. Summary. Note continued: 3. After Kant Fichte and Schelling -- 3.1. The Quest for a System of Transcendental Idealism: Anti-Philosophy and Skepticism -- 3.1.1. Reinhold and the Anesidemus-Review -- 3.1.2. Fichte's Wissenschaftslehre -- 3.1.3. Schelling's System des transzendentalen Idealismus -- 3.2. Fichte and Schelling's Correspondence, 1800-1802 -- 3.2.1. The Philosophy of Nature as a Necessary Complement to Transcendental Philosophy -- 3.2.2. The Absolute, the Limits of Idealism and the Method of Philosophy -- 3.3. Schelling's Philosophy of Identity -- 3.4. Summary -- 4. Hegel in Jena -- 4.1. Hegel between Fichte and Schelling: Beyond Indifference -- 4.2. Outlines of a System: From the Finite to the Infinite -- 4.2.1. From the Finite to the Infinite -- 4.2.2. The Concept of the Method in Systementwurfe II -- 4.2.3. The Determinate Negation and the Connection of Knowledge to Life -- 4.2.4. The Determinate Negation as Gestalt -- 4.3. The Determinate Negation in PhG. Note continued: 4.3.1. The Program and Method of PhG -- 4.3.2. Skepticism in PhG -- 4.3.3. The Determinate Negation as an Answer to Skepticism -- 4.4. Summary -- 5. Review and Outlook -- 6. Determinate Negation within the Program of WdL -- 6.1. The Need for a Reworking of Logic -- 6.2. The Speculative Determinate Negation and the Method of Logic -- 6.3. Summary and Preliminary Overview of the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 7. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of Being -- 7.1. The Beginning of the Logic -- 7.2. The Original Movement of Pure Thinking -- 7.2.1. Determinacy as Indeterminacy: Being -- 7.2.2. Indeterminacy as Determinacy: Nothing -- 7.2.3. Unibling the Contradictory: Becoming -- 7.2.4. The Dissolution of the Speculative Unity: The Transition to Dasein -- 7.2.5. Reflection on the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 7.3. Dasein: The Traditional, Dialectical and Speculative Framework of Determination -- 7.3.1. The Traditional Framework Revisited. Note continued: 7.3.2. Dialectical Determination: Something and Other, Limit and Finitude -- 7.3.3. Speculative Determination: The True Infinite -- 7.3.4."wo in dem Widerspruch der Einheit zweier Bestimmungen und des Gegensatzes derselben verharrt wird" -- 7.4. Indeterminate and Determinate Negation -- 7.4.1. Indeterminate Negation -- 7.4.2. Determinate Negation as "Kalte, Finsternis und dergleichen bestimmte Negationen" -- 7.5.A Comment on the Principle Omnis Determinatio est Negatio -- 7.6. Summary -- 8. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of Essence -- 8.1. The Logic of Essence in General -- 8.2. Essence as a Determinate Negation -- 8.3. The Determinations of Reflection -- 8.3.1. Identity: Difference -- 8.3.2. Difference: Bringing the Unrelated Together -- 8.3.3. Contradiction: The Intensification of Opposition -- 8.3.4. The Resolution of Contradiction: Into Nothing or Zero? -- 8.4. Problems of Contradiction in Hegel's Philosophy. Note continued: 8.4.1. What Exactly is Contradiction in Hegel's Philosophy? -- 8.4.2. Objective Contradiction, Negative Unity and the Reappearance of the Bad Infinite -- 8.5. The Logic of Essence and the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 8.5.1. How Can Something Negative be Positive? -- 8.5.2. On the Resolution of Contradiction into Abstract or Concrete Negation -- 8.6. Summary -- 9. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of the Concept -- 9.1. Hegel's Doctrine of the Concept -- 9.2. Hegel's Doctrine of the Concept in Relation to Kant's -- 9.2.1. The Transcendental Unity of Apperception -- 9.2.2. Synthetic a Priori Judgments -- 9.2.3. Truth -- 9.2.4. The Idea -- 9.2.5. Intuitive Understanding -- 9.3. The Idea of Knowledge -- 9.3.1. Theoretical Knowledge -- 9.3.2. Practical Knowledge -- 9.4. The Speculative or Absolute Idea -- 9.4.1. The Speculative Idea in General -- 9.4.2. The Stages of the Method -- 9.5. The Immanent, Necessary Progression towards Totality -- 9.5.1. Immanence. Note continued: 9.5.2. Necessity -- 9.5.3. Totality -- 9.6. Summary -- 10. Conclusion -- 10.1. The Three Forms of the Determinate Negation -- DN0: Material Incompatibility -- DN1: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of Being -- DN2: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of Essence -- DN3: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of the Concept, the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 10.2. Summary of the Three Forms of the Determinate Negation -- 10.3. Hegel's Response to Fichte and Schelling on the Methodical Foundations of Philosophy -- 10.4. Hegel's Response to Kant's Framework of Determination and Negation -- 10.3.1. Determination -- 10.3.2. Negation -- 10.3.3. Real Opposition -- 10.3.4. The Antinomies. English. Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770-1831. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79021767 Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770-1831 fast https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJjhyXcjqGcXKyp9GC4KBP Logic. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85078106 Negation (Logic) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090622 Négation (Logique) PHILOSOPHY History & Surveys Modern. bisacsh Logic fast Negation (Logic) fast Print version: Sparby, Terje Stefan. Hegel's conception of the determinate negation 9789004284609 (DLC) 2014033057 (OCoLC)889167836 Critical studies in German idealism ; v. 12. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2010085385 FWS01 ZDB-4-EBA FWS_PDA_EBA https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=929650 Volltext |
spellingShingle | Sparby, Terje Stefan Hegel's conception of the determinate negation / Critical studies in German idealism ; Machine generated contents note: 1. Introduction -- 1.1. The Problem -- 1.1.1. The Determinate Negation as Exclusion or 'Material Incompatibility' -- 1.1.2. The Determinate Negation as Inclusion -- 1.1.3. Hegel's Inconsistent Use of the Term -- 1.1.4. The Root of the Problem and a Possible Resolution -- 1.2. Overview -- 2. Kant's Doctrine of Determination -- 2.1. Determination and Negation in Kant -- 2.1.1. Determination as Predication -- 2.1.2. The Transcendental Prototypon -- 2.1.3. Kant on Negation -- 2.1.4. Affirmative Negation and the Infinite Judgment -- 2.2. Real Opposition -- 2.3. Dialectical Oppositions and the Limits of Human Knowledge -- 2.3.1. The Antinomies of KrV -- 2.3.2. The Antinomies of KU -- 2.3.3. Intellectual Intuition and Intuitive Understanding -- 2.4. Seeds of the System of Transcendental Philosophy -- 2.4.1. Kant's Table of Categories -- 2.4.2. The Significance of the Third Category -- 2.4.3. Philosophical Knowledge in [ʹ] 12 of KrV -- 2.5. Summary. Note continued: 3. After Kant Fichte and Schelling -- 3.1. The Quest for a System of Transcendental Idealism: Anti-Philosophy and Skepticism -- 3.1.1. Reinhold and the Anesidemus-Review -- 3.1.2. Fichte's Wissenschaftslehre -- 3.1.3. Schelling's System des transzendentalen Idealismus -- 3.2. Fichte and Schelling's Correspondence, 1800-1802 -- 3.2.1. The Philosophy of Nature as a Necessary Complement to Transcendental Philosophy -- 3.2.2. The Absolute, the Limits of Idealism and the Method of Philosophy -- 3.3. Schelling's Philosophy of Identity -- 3.4. Summary -- 4. Hegel in Jena -- 4.1. Hegel between Fichte and Schelling: Beyond Indifference -- 4.2. Outlines of a System: From the Finite to the Infinite -- 4.2.1. From the Finite to the Infinite -- 4.2.2. The Concept of the Method in Systementwurfe II -- 4.2.3. The Determinate Negation and the Connection of Knowledge to Life -- 4.2.4. The Determinate Negation as Gestalt -- 4.3. The Determinate Negation in PhG. Note continued: 4.3.1. The Program and Method of PhG -- 4.3.2. Skepticism in PhG -- 4.3.3. The Determinate Negation as an Answer to Skepticism -- 4.4. Summary -- 5. Review and Outlook -- 6. Determinate Negation within the Program of WdL -- 6.1. The Need for a Reworking of Logic -- 6.2. The Speculative Determinate Negation and the Method of Logic -- 6.3. Summary and Preliminary Overview of the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 7. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of Being -- 7.1. The Beginning of the Logic -- 7.2. The Original Movement of Pure Thinking -- 7.2.1. Determinacy as Indeterminacy: Being -- 7.2.2. Indeterminacy as Determinacy: Nothing -- 7.2.3. Unibling the Contradictory: Becoming -- 7.2.4. The Dissolution of the Speculative Unity: The Transition to Dasein -- 7.2.5. Reflection on the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 7.3. Dasein: The Traditional, Dialectical and Speculative Framework of Determination -- 7.3.1. The Traditional Framework Revisited. Note continued: 7.3.2. Dialectical Determination: Something and Other, Limit and Finitude -- 7.3.3. Speculative Determination: The True Infinite -- 7.3.4."wo in dem Widerspruch der Einheit zweier Bestimmungen und des Gegensatzes derselben verharrt wird" -- 7.4. Indeterminate and Determinate Negation -- 7.4.1. Indeterminate Negation -- 7.4.2. Determinate Negation as "Kalte, Finsternis und dergleichen bestimmte Negationen" -- 7.5.A Comment on the Principle Omnis Determinatio est Negatio -- 7.6. Summary -- 8. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of Essence -- 8.1. The Logic of Essence in General -- 8.2. Essence as a Determinate Negation -- 8.3. The Determinations of Reflection -- 8.3.1. Identity: Difference -- 8.3.2. Difference: Bringing the Unrelated Together -- 8.3.3. Contradiction: The Intensification of Opposition -- 8.3.4. The Resolution of Contradiction: Into Nothing or Zero? -- 8.4. Problems of Contradiction in Hegel's Philosophy. Note continued: 8.4.1. What Exactly is Contradiction in Hegel's Philosophy? -- 8.4.2. Objective Contradiction, Negative Unity and the Reappearance of the Bad Infinite -- 8.5. The Logic of Essence and the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 8.5.1. How Can Something Negative be Positive? -- 8.5.2. On the Resolution of Contradiction into Abstract or Concrete Negation -- 8.6. Summary -- 9. Determination and Negation in the Doctrine of the Concept -- 9.1. Hegel's Doctrine of the Concept -- 9.2. Hegel's Doctrine of the Concept in Relation to Kant's -- 9.2.1. The Transcendental Unity of Apperception -- 9.2.2. Synthetic a Priori Judgments -- 9.2.3. Truth -- 9.2.4. The Idea -- 9.2.5. Intuitive Understanding -- 9.3. The Idea of Knowledge -- 9.3.1. Theoretical Knowledge -- 9.3.2. Practical Knowledge -- 9.4. The Speculative or Absolute Idea -- 9.4.1. The Speculative Idea in General -- 9.4.2. The Stages of the Method -- 9.5. The Immanent, Necessary Progression towards Totality -- 9.5.1. Immanence. Note continued: 9.5.2. Necessity -- 9.5.3. Totality -- 9.6. Summary -- 10. Conclusion -- 10.1. The Three Forms of the Determinate Negation -- DN0: Material Incompatibility -- DN1: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of Being -- DN2: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of Essence -- DN3: The Determinate Negation of the Doctrine of the Concept, the Speculative Determinate Negation -- 10.2. Summary of the Three Forms of the Determinate Negation -- 10.3. Hegel's Response to Fichte and Schelling on the Methodical Foundations of Philosophy -- 10.4. Hegel's Response to Kant's Framework of Determination and Negation -- 10.3.1. Determination -- 10.3.2. Negation -- 10.3.3. Real Opposition -- 10.3.4. The Antinomies. Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770-1831. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79021767 Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770-1831 fast https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJjhyXcjqGcXKyp9GC4KBP Logic. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85078106 Negation (Logic) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090622 Négation (Logique) PHILOSOPHY History & Surveys Modern. bisacsh Logic fast Negation (Logic) fast |
subject_GND | http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79021767 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85078106 http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090622 |
title | Hegel's conception of the determinate negation / |
title_auth | Hegel's conception of the determinate negation / |
title_exact_search | Hegel's conception of the determinate negation / |
title_full | Hegel's conception of the determinate negation / by Terje Sparby. |
title_fullStr | Hegel's conception of the determinate negation / by Terje Sparby. |
title_full_unstemmed | Hegel's conception of the determinate negation / by Terje Sparby. |
title_short | Hegel's conception of the determinate negation / |
title_sort | hegel s conception of the determinate negation |
topic | Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770-1831. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n79021767 Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770-1831 fast https://id.oclc.org/worldcat/entity/E39PBJjhyXcjqGcXKyp9GC4KBP Logic. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85078106 Negation (Logic) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85090622 Négation (Logique) PHILOSOPHY History & Surveys Modern. bisacsh Logic fast Negation (Logic) fast |
topic_facet | Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770-1831. Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770-1831 Logic. Negation (Logic) Négation (Logique) PHILOSOPHY History & Surveys Modern. Logic |
url | https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&scope=site&db=nlebk&AN=929650 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT sparbyterjestefan hegelsconceptionofthedeterminatenegation |