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  1. Even more important was the influence (positive and negative) of Hegel on the "classic" American philosophers, especially Dewey, Peirce, James, and Royce. Dewey discovered Hegel when he was a graduate student at Johns Hopkins. In his autobiographical sketch published in 1930, Dewey tells us what Hegel meant to him at the time.

  2. Why is/was Hegel considered so important... Because he's a monumental figure in the histories of epistemology, metaphysics, ethics, aesthetics, philosophy of the social sciences, political philosophy, philosophy of religion, historiography of philosophy, and meta-philosophy--or, in short, on the short list of great philosophers, both in terms of his influence on particular fields and of the ...

  3. POLITICS: 1.1. Wasn’t Hegel a totalitarian? No. “Totalitarianism” is a relatively new concept. It was employed for the first time in the XXth century, mainly to define a form of political organisation where there is the attempt to subordinate the whole behaviour and the consciousness of each single individual and the complexity of an entire society (and its different institutionalised ...

  4. Hegel may have been more directly influenced by Schelling and Hölderlin--and I stress, may have--but Fichte made a good deal of all this stuff possible, and from an intellectual-historical point of view is probably almost as important as Kant. From a strictly philosophical point of view Fichte is probably less interesting, though a handful of ...

  5. German idealism is the name of a movement in German philosophy that began in the 1780s and lasted until the 1840s. The most famous representatives of this movement are Kant, Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel. While there are important differences between these figures, they all share a commitment to idealism.

  6. Hegel’s theory of dialectics constitutes the last great philosophical system. History is a process that includes everything and everyone, a process in which we all participate. Hegel’s fundamental idea is that history is not a matter of dates and battles and events, but of ‘logic’.

  7. Jan 30, 2017 · What is exciting about transcendence is that Marx credits Hegel with seeing it as what made him grasp objectivity and because he does that, though Hegel lives in an alienated world (and as a philosopher is the most alienated of all individuals) and uses the philosopher as the yardstick, nevertheless Hegel does not take the last step—boredom ...

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