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The New Hegelians
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Details

  • Page extent: 360 pages
  • Size: 228 x 152 mm
  • Weight: 0.624 kg

Library of Congress

  • Dewey number: 320/.092/243
  • Dewey version: 22
  • LC Classification: B2948 .N49 2006
  • LC Subject headings:
    • Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich,--1770-1831
    • Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich,--1770-1831--Influence
    • Philosophy, German--19th century
    • Germany--Politics and government--1806-1848

Library of Congress Record

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Hardback

 (ISBN-13: 9780521854979 | ISBN-10: 0521854970)

DOI: 10.2277/0521854970

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 (Stock level updated: 01:30 GMT, 09 July 2008)

£48.00

The period leading up to the Revolutions of 1848 was a seminal moment in the history of political thought, demarcating the ideological currents and defining the problems of freedom and social cohesion which are among the key issues of modern politics. This anthology offers new research on Hegel’s followers in the 1830s and 1840s. With essays by philosophers, political scientists, and historians from Europe and North America, it pays special attention to questions of state power, the economy, poverty, and labour, as well as to ideas on freedom. The book examines the political and social thought of Edouard Gans, Ludwig Feuerbach, Max Stirner, Bruno and Edgar Bauer, the young Engels, and Marx. It places them in the context of Hegel’s philosophy, the Enlightenment, Kant, the French Revolution, industrialisation, and urban poverty. It also views Marx and Engels in relation to their contemporaries and interlocutors in the Hegelian school.

• Six-country interdisciplinary research network (political science, history, philosophy) • Chapters by well-known philosophers and historians from Europe and North America • Extensive bibliography of works by and on the Hegelian school, including English translations

Contents

Introduction; Part I. Eduard Gans: 1. Eduard Gans on poverty and on the constitutional debate; 2. Ludwig Feuerbach’s Critique of Religion and the end of moral philosophy; Part II. Ludwig Feuerbach: 3. The symbolic dimension and the politics of Left Hegelianism; Part III. Bruno Bauer: 4. Exclusiveness and political universalism in Bruno Bauer; 5. Republican rigorism and emancipation in Bruno Bauer; Part IV. Edgar Bauer: 6. Edgar Bauer and The Origins of the Theory of Terrorism; Max Stirner 7. Ein Menschenleben: Hegel and Stirner; 8. ‘The State and I’: Max Stirner’s anarchism; Friedrich Engels: 9. Engels and the invention of the catastrophist conception of the industrial revolution; Karl Marx: 10. The basis of the state in the Marx of 1842; 11. Marx and Feuerbachian essence: returning to the question of ‘Human Essence’ in historical materialism; 12. Freedom and the ‘Realm of Necessity’; Concluding with Hegel :13. Work, language and community: a response to Hegel’s critics.

Review

'Richly informative and carefully edited … This book is instructive in a way that the new Hegelians would be in a position to appreciate, not as a lesson of republicanism but as a provocation of thought.' Katerina Deligiorgi , Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews

Contributors

Douglas Moggach, Norbert Waszek, Howard Williams, Warren Breckman, Massimiliano Tomba, Eric v.d. Luft, Lawrence S. Stepelvich, David Leopold, Gareth Stedman Jones, Andrew Chitty, Jose Cristomo de Souza, Sean Sayers, Ardis B. Collins

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