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Hegel's Naturalism - Mind, Nature, and the Final Ends of Life (Hardcover)
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Hegel's Naturalism - Mind, Nature, and the Final Ends of Life (Hardcover)
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Terry Pinkard draws on Hegel's central works as well as his
lectures on aesthetics, the history of philosophy, and the
philosophy of history in this deeply informed and original
exploration of Hegel's naturalism. As Pinkard explains, Hegel's
version of naturalism was in fact drawn from Aristotelian
naturalism: Hegel fused Aristotle's conception of nature with his
insistence that the origin and development of philosophy has
empirical physics as its presupposition. As a result, Hegel found
that, although modern nature must be understood as a whole to be
non-purposive, there is nonetheless a place for Aristotelian
purposiveness within such nature. Such a naturalism provides the
framework for explaining how we are both natural organisms and also
practically minded (self-determining, rationally responsive,
reason-giving) beings. In arguing for this point, Hegel shows that
the kind of self-division which is characteristic of human agency
also provides human agents with an updated version of an
Aristotelian final end of life. Pinkard treats this conception of
the final end of "being at one with oneself" in two parts. The
first part focuses on Hegel's account of agency in naturalist terms
and how it is that agency requires such a self-division, while the
second part explores how Hegel thinks a historical narration is
essential for understanding what this kind of self-division has
come to require of itself. In making his case, Hegel argues that
both the antinomies of philosophical thought and the essential
fragmentation of modern life are all not to be understood as
overcome in a higher order unity in the "State." On the contrary,
Hegel demonstrates that modern institutions do not resolve such
tensions any more than a comprehensive philosophical account can
resolve them theoretically. The job of modern practices and
institutions (and at a reflective level the task of modern
philosophy) is to help us understand and live with precisely the
unresolvability of these oppositions. Therefore, Pinkard explains,
Hegel is not the totality theorist he has been taken to be, nor is
he an "identity thinker," a la Adorno. He is an anti-totality
thinker.
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