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Habit, reflection, and freedom: From anthropology to ethics in Hegel.

机译:习惯,反思与自由:从人类学到黑格尔的伦理学。

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摘要

Recently published lectures allow a new interpretation of G. W. F. Hegel's anthropology in terms of three dimensions of human development. Pursuing the implications of this anthropology for ethics and politics in some cases reveals that Hegel's views are not as conservative as they are often claimed to be and in other cases supports a "Hegelian" critique of Hegel's own explicit positions.;As developed in the recently published Vorlesungen uber die Philosophie des Geistes, Hegel's anthropology consists of three stages of human development: We initially subordinate spontaneous, natural drives and inclinations to habits. Through the development of self-consciousness, we come to reflect upon and distinguish ourselves from these particular habits. Finally, through both theoretical and practical activity, we pursue freedom through the progressive overcoming of the duality between our consciousness of ourselves and our world, on one hand, and our activity in the world, on the other. In contrast to some interpretations of Hegel that have not focused on his anthropology, what is most striking here is the dialectical interplay of cognitive and active dimensions of human existence.;The analysis of these three levels provides a new perspective on the Philosophy of Right that distinguishes the pre-reflective appropriation of ethical life in habits, the overcoming of this immediate identification through the self-consciousness that characterizes morality, and the unity of the two brought about by a conscious recognition of the rationality of the existing ethical life. We are only fully free in a society in which the final stage is possible. This distinction allows us to separate Hegel's impressive account of the requirements of human freedom from the more problematic issue of judging the existing order rational. On this basis I examine central topics in Hegel's account of a free society---property, poverty, classes, and the relation between civil society and the state---arguing that the anthropology supports a Hegelian critique of Hegel's own views on these issues. Similarly, the relationship between theoretical and practical spirit developed in the anthropology requires a much more dialectical relationship between philosophy and practice than Hegel's explicit statements suggest.
机译:最近发表的讲座允许从人类发展的三个方面对黑格尔的人类学进行新的解释。在某些情况下,研究这种人类学对伦理学和政治学的影响表明,黑格尔的观点并不像人们通常声称的那样保守,而在其他情况下则支持对黑格尔自己明确立场的“黑格尔主义”批评。黑格尔的人类学由《人类哲学》一书出版,​​涵盖人类发展的三个阶段:我们最初是服从自发的,自然的驱动力和习惯习惯。通过自我意识的发展,我们开始反思和区别于这些特殊习惯。最后,通过理论和实践活动,我们通过逐步克服我们自己和我们世界的意识与另一方面我们在世界上的活动之间的对偶来追求自由。与黑格尔的一些不以人类学为重点的解释相反,这里最引人注目的是人类生存的认知维度和活动维度的辩证相互作用。;对这三个层次的分析提供了一种关于权利哲学的新观点,即区分习惯中对道德生活的反思前的挪用,通过表征道德的自我意识来克服对这种直接认同的克服,以及有意识地认识到现有道德生活的合理性所带来的两者的统一。我们只有在一个可能进入最后阶段的社会中完全自由。这种区别使我们能够将黑格尔对人的自由要求的令人印象深刻的描述与判断现有秩序理性的更为棘手的问题区分开来。在此基础上,我研究了黑格尔关于自由社会的论述中的核心议题-财产,贫困,阶级以及公民社会与国家之间的关系-认为人类学支持黑格尔对黑格尔在这些问题上的观点的批评。 。同样,人类学中发展的理论与实践精神之间的关系比黑格尔的明确陈述所暗示的,要求哲学与实践之间具有更多的辩证关系。

著录项

  • 作者

    Lewis, Thomas Abner.;

  • 作者单位

    Stanford University.;

  • 授予单位 Stanford University.;
  • 学科 Religion Philosophy of.;Philosophy.;Anthropology Cultural.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 1999
  • 页码 286 p.
  • 总页数 286
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:48:09

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