Hegel on Logic and Religion: The Reasonableness of Christianity

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SUNY Press, Aug 17, 1992 - Philosophy - 184 pages
A distinction often missed by Hegelian interpreters is that, for Hegel, logic functions differently when it is applied to the contingencies of nature and history. Burbidge shows that Hegel did not claim to have reached the end of history. The future is open.
 

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Contents

Lessings Ditch A Preface
1
The First Chapter of Hegels Larger Logic
11
Transition or Reflection
19
Where is the Place of Understanding?
29
The Necessity of Contingency
39
Challenge to Hegel Contraries and Contradictories in Schellings Late Philosophy
55
Is Hegel a Rationalist or an Empiricist?
71
Concept and Time in Hegel
79
The Inequity of Equality
95
Unhappy Consciousness in Hegel An Analysis of Medieval Catholicism?
105
God Man and Death in Hegels Phenomenology
119
The Syllogisms of Revealed Religion
131
Is Hegel a Christian?
141
Notes
155
Index
177
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