Description

Book Synopsis
A comprehensive account of Hegel's conception of recognition as the general pattern of ethical life. The author explores Hegel's intersubjective concept of spirit and shows how the idea of recognition illuminates his understanding of crime, morality, the family and war.

Table of Contents
Preface
Abbreviations

1 Recognition and Ethics
Introduction
The Concealment of Recognition in Hegelian Ethical Studies
Distortions of Recognition in the French Reception of Hegel
Recognition as Counterdiscourse of Modernity: Habermas
Michael Theunissen: Hegel's Repression of Intersubjectivity
Ludwig Siep's.Studies of Hegel's Practical Philosophy
Recognition and the Actuality of the Rational
Plan and Overview

Part One Preliminaries: Recognition, Right, and Ethics
2 Recognition in Fichte and Schelling
Fichte
Schelling
3 Recognition in the Phenomenology of Spirit
The Intersubjective Doubling of Self-Consciousness
The Double Sign.i fications in the Concept of Recognition
Mastery and Slavery as a Determinate Shape of Recognition
The Servile Consciousness
4 Recognition in the Encyclopedia Philosophy of Spirit
Introduction and Overview
Reciprocal Recognition
Crossing the Threshold of Ethical Life
Four Dimensions of Recognition
Universal Self-Consciousness as Affirmative Self-Recognition in Other
The Social Constitution and Mediation of Reason
5 Recognition and Right in the Jena Manuscripts
Recognition in the 1805 Jena Philosophy of Spirit
Recognition as the Origin and Relation of Right
Being-Recognized, Right and Wrong
The Intersubjective Concept of the Will

Part Two Recognition in the Philosophy of Right
6 Systematic: Issues in the Philosophy of Right
Recognition in the Argument of the Philosophy of Right
Hegel's Method of Abstraction
The Concept of the Will
From 'In-Itself' to 'For-Itself': The Development of the Will
7 Persons, Property, and Contract
Abstract Right and Person
The Intersubjectivity of Ownership
Embodiment, or Taking Possession of Oneself
The Intersubjectivity of Contract
8 Crime and Punishment
Wrong and Fraud
Wrong, Semblance, and the Logic of Essence
Transgression as Coercion
The Impossible Possibility of Coercion
Banquo's Ghost
The Mature Theory: Punishment as the Second Coercion
Recognition and the Second Coercion
The Nullity of Transgression
Is Punishment Necessary?
9 Morality
The Moral Subject and the Difference
The Intersubjectivity of Moral Action
Purpose and Intention, Responsibility and Welfare
Hegel's Critique of the Moral Point of View
The Decline and Fall of Conscience
Transition to Ethical Life
1O Ethical Life and the family
Ethical Substance, Rights, and Duties
Love
Transforming the Dialectics of Recognition
Marriage as an Ethical Relationship
Marriage as a Contract to Transcend Contract
Embodied Intersubjectivity and Gender Roles
11 Civil Society, Poverty, and the Corporations
Civil Society as the Sphere of Disintegration and Difference
Need and Labor, Town and Country
Antinomies in Civil Society
Poverty: Freedom and Recognition in Peril
Hegel's Portrait of Poverty
Recognition, Honor, and the Corporation
12 Recognition and the Social Contract Theory of the State
Overview of the State as a Unity of Reciprocal Recognitions
Patriotism
Social Contract Theory
Hegel and Rousseau
Hegel's Criticism of Fichte
13 The State as a Social Organism
Fichte on Social Contract and Organism
Hegel on Organism
The Encyclopedia Treatment of Mechanism and Organism
Mechanism and Chemism in the Science of Logic
Organism in the Aesthetics
Objective Idealism and Organism in the State
Recognition and the Spirit of the Laws
The Organic Correlation between Rights and Duties
Religious and Cultural Pluralism
14 Sovereignty, International Relations, and War
Sovereignty
War
Issues of Recognition in International Relations
The Deficiency of the International 'We'
15 Recent Views of Recognition and the Question of Ethics
Kojeve
Sartre and Hegel
Feminist Critique of Hegel
Hegel, Nietzsche, and Deleuze
Derrida and the 'Ethics of Deconstruction'
Levinas: Reciprocity and Totality in Question

Bibliography
Index

Hegels Ethics of Recognition

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    A Paperback / softback by Robert R. Williams

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      Publisher: University of California Press
      Publication Date: 02/10/2000
      ISBN13: 9780520224926, 978-0520224926
      ISBN10: 0520224922

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      A comprehensive account of Hegel's conception of recognition as the general pattern of ethical life. The author explores Hegel's intersubjective concept of spirit and shows how the idea of recognition illuminates his understanding of crime, morality, the family and war.

      Table of Contents
      Preface
      Abbreviations

      1 Recognition and Ethics
      Introduction
      The Concealment of Recognition in Hegelian Ethical Studies
      Distortions of Recognition in the French Reception of Hegel
      Recognition as Counterdiscourse of Modernity: Habermas
      Michael Theunissen: Hegel's Repression of Intersubjectivity
      Ludwig Siep's.Studies of Hegel's Practical Philosophy
      Recognition and the Actuality of the Rational
      Plan and Overview

      Part One Preliminaries: Recognition, Right, and Ethics
      2 Recognition in Fichte and Schelling
      Fichte
      Schelling
      3 Recognition in the Phenomenology of Spirit
      The Intersubjective Doubling of Self-Consciousness
      The Double Sign.i fications in the Concept of Recognition
      Mastery and Slavery as a Determinate Shape of Recognition
      The Servile Consciousness
      4 Recognition in the Encyclopedia Philosophy of Spirit
      Introduction and Overview
      Reciprocal Recognition
      Crossing the Threshold of Ethical Life
      Four Dimensions of Recognition
      Universal Self-Consciousness as Affirmative Self-Recognition in Other
      The Social Constitution and Mediation of Reason
      5 Recognition and Right in the Jena Manuscripts
      Recognition in the 1805 Jena Philosophy of Spirit
      Recognition as the Origin and Relation of Right
      Being-Recognized, Right and Wrong
      The Intersubjective Concept of the Will

      Part Two Recognition in the Philosophy of Right
      6 Systematic: Issues in the Philosophy of Right
      Recognition in the Argument of the Philosophy of Right
      Hegel's Method of Abstraction
      The Concept of the Will
      From 'In-Itself' to 'For-Itself': The Development of the Will
      7 Persons, Property, and Contract
      Abstract Right and Person
      The Intersubjectivity of Ownership
      Embodiment, or Taking Possession of Oneself
      The Intersubjectivity of Contract
      8 Crime and Punishment
      Wrong and Fraud
      Wrong, Semblance, and the Logic of Essence
      Transgression as Coercion
      The Impossible Possibility of Coercion
      Banquo's Ghost
      The Mature Theory: Punishment as the Second Coercion
      Recognition and the Second Coercion
      The Nullity of Transgression
      Is Punishment Necessary?
      9 Morality
      The Moral Subject and the Difference
      The Intersubjectivity of Moral Action
      Purpose and Intention, Responsibility and Welfare
      Hegel's Critique of the Moral Point of View
      The Decline and Fall of Conscience
      Transition to Ethical Life
      1O Ethical Life and the family
      Ethical Substance, Rights, and Duties
      Love
      Transforming the Dialectics of Recognition
      Marriage as an Ethical Relationship
      Marriage as a Contract to Transcend Contract
      Embodied Intersubjectivity and Gender Roles
      11 Civil Society, Poverty, and the Corporations
      Civil Society as the Sphere of Disintegration and Difference
      Need and Labor, Town and Country
      Antinomies in Civil Society
      Poverty: Freedom and Recognition in Peril
      Hegel's Portrait of Poverty
      Recognition, Honor, and the Corporation
      12 Recognition and the Social Contract Theory of the State
      Overview of the State as a Unity of Reciprocal Recognitions
      Patriotism
      Social Contract Theory
      Hegel and Rousseau
      Hegel's Criticism of Fichte
      13 The State as a Social Organism
      Fichte on Social Contract and Organism
      Hegel on Organism
      The Encyclopedia Treatment of Mechanism and Organism
      Mechanism and Chemism in the Science of Logic
      Organism in the Aesthetics
      Objective Idealism and Organism in the State
      Recognition and the Spirit of the Laws
      The Organic Correlation between Rights and Duties
      Religious and Cultural Pluralism
      14 Sovereignty, International Relations, and War
      Sovereignty
      War
      Issues of Recognition in International Relations
      The Deficiency of the International 'We'
      15 Recent Views of Recognition and the Question of Ethics
      Kojeve
      Sartre and Hegel
      Feminist Critique of Hegel
      Hegel, Nietzsche, and Deleuze
      Derrida and the 'Ethics of Deconstruction'
      Levinas: Reciprocity and Totality in Question

      Bibliography
      Index

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