The suspension of reason in Hegel and Schelling

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lauer, Christopher (-)
Format: Book
Language:Inglés
Published: London ; New York : Continuum 2010
Series:Continuum studies in philosophy
Subjects:
See on Universidad de Navarra:https://unika.unav.edu/discovery/fulldisplay?docid=alma991010034279708016&context=L&vid=34UNAV_INST:VU1&search_scope=34UNAV_TODO&tab=34UNAV_TODO&lang=es
Table of Contents:
  • Introduction. Suspension
  • Hegel and Schelling?
  • Outline of the whole
  • The surge of reason : faculty epistemology in Kant and Fichte. The first Critique's basic distinction
  • The third Critique
  • Fichte's Wissenschaftslehre
  • Ascendant reason : the early Schelling. Of the I
  • The 'treatises'
  • Metastatic reason : Schelling's nature philosophy. Organic reason : Ideas for a philosophy of nature
  • Rational nature : On the world-soul
  • The inhibition of nature : the Erster entwurf
  • Synthetic reason : the System of transcendental idealism. The idea of system
  • The synthetic method
  • History and art
  • Reason as reflection and speculation : Hegel's collaboration with Schelling. The differenzschrift
  • Krug's pen
  • 'The sacred abyss' : Schelling's identity philosophy. The Darstellung
  • System of philosophy in general
  • Space, time, and suspension : Hegel's 'absolute knowing.' The Phenomenology's critique of Schelling
  • 'Absolute knowing'
  • Suspended reason : Hegel on 'the certainty and truth of reason.' Empty idealism
  • Observing nature
  • Observing self-consciousness
  • Self-actualizing reason
  • The project of individuality
  • Reason on the periphery : Schelling's Freedom essay. Reason as peripheral
  • Pantheism and freedom
  • God as existing
  • Longing for ground
  • The possibility of evil
  • The actuality of evil
  • System, ground, and indifference
  • Reason's systematic excess I : Hegel's system. The myth of totalizing reason
  • The philosophy of nature
  • History
  • Reason's systematic excess II : the transition to Schelling's positive philosophy. The natural history of reason
  • The critique of Hegel
  • Now what?