Hegel a biography pinkard pdf download
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446 , 447. 1 47 . 246, 247. 352, 353 . Normallyy,o uw oulsda yt haitti sa m esheidn strumdeensti gnteocd a tcfihs h. Buty ouc oulwdi,t nho g reaitn jutroyl ogirce,v ertsheei magaen dd efinaen et asa j ocullaerx icograopnhcederi dh:e c allietad c ollecotfih oonl etsi etdo gether witsht ring. 274. 3 7 5, 494 end of history, 49z Hegel and Schelling, shared conception of (early Jena years), I 56 Hegel's early conception of: absolute aether and matter, I 87, I 89; absolute estate, I 96; absolute freedom, I 69; ab solute spirit (in state), I 95; in art, reli gion, philosophy, zoo; Diffirenzschrifi, 1 58-60; in early philosophy of nature, x 86; ethical life, I 7 I , 1 74, I 76; Faith and KnoJIJ!edge, I 63; in first Jena Logic, I 8z, I 8 5; as identity of opposites, I 69; as Potenzen, 170 Holderlin's conception of, 134 in art, 5 93 -94, 603, 6o4 inwardness, 598 Jacobi's conception of, 386 Logic, 340, 350 monarchy, z r x philosophical reflection on, 6o3, 6o4 religion, 578, 59I , 604 roman emperor, z u romantic exploration o f absolute "I," roo Schelling, the absolute in art and intellectual intuition, I 3Z-33 Schelling's conception of, 1 3o-3z
Academy of Sciences in Berlin, 446, 453, 454.
This shift in intellectual direction coincided with Hegel’s friendship with the poets Hölderlin and the philosopher Schelling, both of whom shared his desire to move beyond the stifling confines of theological education. 504, 535 Berlin wit, 541-44, 6 ss compared to Dutch cities, 506 compared to Paris, 55 1-52 Gymnasium, 505 Hegel as cultural leader, 527 as modem technological city, 643 new status after Napoleon's fall, 424 reaction to cholera epidemic, 653 salons, 482 Berliner Schnellpost for Literatur, Theater, und Geselligkeit, 542 Bernard (youthful friend of Hegel's), 29 Berne, 38, 39, 43, 45, so, s r , 52, 53, s 6,
57, ss, 59, 6o, 62, 68 , 69, 75, 7 6, 77, So, 85, 133, 1 35, 1 37, 139, 1 43, 144.
507 Bertram, Johann Baptist ( 1766- 1 84 1 ), 374 Beyme, Karl Friedrich Graf von (1765I 838), 426, 427 Biedermeier, 432, 433, 453 Bildung, z 6, 53, s 6, 57, 71, 247, zso as component in formation of consciousness, 172 definitions, I 6, 49-50 distinct from Erziehung, 49 as Enlightenment, 49-50 in the Gymnasium, 283, 284, 285, 288, 289, 290, 304, 305, 307, 505 in journals and journalism, 234.
Terry Pinkard is professor of Philosophy at Northwestern University and is author/editor of five previous books, the most recent being ^UHegel's Phenomenology (Cambridge, 1996). Pinkard also addresses the more controversial aspects of Hegel’s legacy, including his relationship to the Prussian state and his views on history, which some critics have seen as complicit in justifying authoritarianism.
This biography is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand not only the man behind the philosophy but also the philosophical roots of modernity itself.
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One of the founders of modern philosophical thought Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) has gained the reputation of being one of the most abstruse and impenetrable of thinkers.'it�t h�k1t 1ti hlel� lCLTstsoip hrko li:sns�tli,.;o� mdn onpor!l-so.n,�itls alike. JuliBaanrn esFl,a uberPta'rsr ot The eventasn da ctioonfst hihsi sto[royfp hilosopthhye]r efhoarveet he charactetrhiasittn ti hce icro nteanntdw ortihti sn ots om uchp ersonaalnidt y individual cwhhaircaehcn tteerrw sh,e reainsp olithiicsatlo trhyes ubjeocft deedasn de ventissth e individiunha ilsp articnualtaurr maalk e-ugpe,n ius, passioennse,r goyr,w eakneosfsc haractera -wionr dw,h atm akehsi mt his individHuearle[.
264, 265 Bakunin, Mikhail Aleksandrovich ( r 8 1 4r 876), 662 Bamberger Zeitung, 240, 242, 245, 254 Basel, Treaty of, 9 1 , 422 Bastille, storming of the, 45 1 , 453, 532, 534 Bavaria, 105, I I3, 1 46, 226, 227, 232, 235, 237. 275 nonegalitarian conception, 321 as purpose of travel, 507 relation to Protestantism (Hegel's concep tion), 292, 294, 629 as requiring systematic philosophy, r 6o6 r , 363 transcending society of orders, 5o-5 1 , 1 98, 369--70 women and Bildung, 321 Bloch, August Friedrich ( 1 78o-r 866), 463, 544 Blucher, Gebhard Leberecht (I742-1 8 19), 313 Boeckh, August ( 1785-t 867), 464.
The biography succeeds not only in offering an accessible introduction to Hegel’s often opaque system but also in humanizing him as a figure deeply engaged with the personal and social struggles of his time. Pinkard’s Hegel is not simply an intellectual monument but a thinker whose ideas were profoundly shaped by his personal experiences, his friendships, and the historical moment in which he lived.
549 Bohmer, Auguste ( 1 785-r Soo), u z Boisseree, Sulpiz (I 783-1 854), 326, 374. Hegel A Biography Terry Pinkard GeorgetUonwinv ersity CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS PUBLISHEDB Y THE PRESSS YNDICATEO F THE UNIVERSITOYF CAMBRIDGE TheP ittB uildiTnrgum,p ingtoSntr eeCamtb, ridge,U niteKdi ngdom CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS TheE dinbugrh BuildingC,a mbridgeC Bz2 RTJUK, http:/ww/w .cup.cam.ac.uk 40W est zothS treeNte,w Y ork,NY IOOII-42TJISIA, hrrp:ww/w/ .cup.org 10S tamforRdo adO,a kleigh, Me3l1b6o6Au,urn setralia Ruizd eAl arcon1 3,28 01M4a dridS,p ain ©CambridgUeni versiPrtesys z ooo Thisb ooki si nc opyriSguhbtj.e tcos tta tutory exceptiaonndt ot hep rovisoifor nesl evant collecliticveen siangrge emenntosr ,e podructioonfa nyp armta yt akpel acwei thotuhte writtepne rmissioofCan m bridgUen ievrsiPtyr ess.