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Critical Analysis Of Hegelian Idealism And Its Implications For The Individual Human Person
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The “Phenomenology of
spirit†appeared in 1807 despite the war, but Hegel himself was at loose
ends. Two volumes of his science of logic were published in 1812, and a
third in 1816, and he was offered professorships at Erlanges,
Heidelberg, and Berlin. He accepted the invitation to Heidelberg, but
after the publication of his “Encyclopedia of the philosophical
sciences†in 1817, the offer of Berlin was renewed and accepted and he
occupied the vacant chair following the death of Fichte.
His thirteen
years of professorship at the University of Berlin brought him to the
peak of his career and made him a recognized leader of philosophic
thought in German world. His prestige thus rose until his name was
linked with that of Goethe. His publication of “The philosophy of
Rightâ€, was significant as the last of the large works published in his
life time. His lectures on aesthetics, the philosophy of religion, the
philosophy of history, and the history of philosophy were constantly
revised and improved and finally published posthumously. In 1830, he
became the rector of the university and was decorated by Frederick
William III of university of Berlin until his death from Cholera in 1831
at the age of sixty-one.
[1] F. Copleston, A history of Philosophy, Vol. 7 (New York: Continuum pub. Co, 2003), P. 6.
[2] Ibid., P. 12.
[3]R.M.
Hutchins (ed) Hegel-The Philosophy of Right – The Philosophy of History
(Chicago: Encyclopedia Britannica Inc., 1982), P.V.
[4] F. Copleston, A History of Philosophy, vol. 7 (New York Continuum Pub., 2003), P. 160.
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