Terry P. Pinkard

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Terry P. Pinkard



Average rating: 4.26 · 754 ratings · 136 reviews · 17 distinct worksSimilar authors
German Philosophy 1760-1860...

4.29 avg rating — 337 ratings — published 2002 — 16 editions
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Hegel: A Biography

4.30 avg rating — 156 ratings — published 2000 — 12 editions
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Hegel's Phenomenology: The ...

4.36 avg rating — 83 ratings — published 1994 — 7 editions
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Hegel's Naturalism: Mind, N...

3.95 avg rating — 22 ratings — published 2011 — 8 editions
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Does History Make Sense?: H...

3.62 avg rating — 21 ratings2 editions
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HEGELS PHENOMENOLOGY OF SPI...

really liked it 4.00 avg rating — 10 ratings3 editions
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Hegel's Dialectic: The Expl...

2.75 avg rating — 4 ratings
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Practice, Power, and Forms ...

3.67 avg rating — 3 ratings2 editions
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Hegel: Il filosofo della ra...

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Democratic Liberalism and S...

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“Hegel’s account avoids falling into a careless historicism by virtue of its appeal to the infinite ends at work in subjectivity, but it maintains its strong historicist commitment by virtue of the way in which Hegel takes himself to have shown that the universal has to particularize itself— a thesis we could formulate rather abstractly as the notion that for speculative (philosophical) concepts, meaning is determined by use but not exhausted by use, such that within a certain historical development, such concepts can be developed into better actualizations. Hegel’s type of philosophical history is not an a priori theory about how those historical particulars were necessitated to line up with each other, nor is it some happy talk Whig account of progress, nor is it a self-congratulatory tale of progressive enlightenment and error-correction, nor is it the explication of any laws of history or any claims about how various regimes inevitably converge at some final point or inevitably lead to a certain result.

It is rather an examination of the metaphysical contours of subjectivity and how the self interpreting, self-developing collective human enterprise has moved from one such shape to another in terms of deeper logic of sense-making and how that meant that subjectivity itself had reshaped itself over the course of history. It is not a thesis about what constitutes true causality in history, nor is it even a thesis that unintelligibility causes such breakdowns. Hegel’s philosophy of history is concerned with what various things mean to subjects, individually and collectively, in the historical configurations into which they are thrown.”
Terry Pinkard, Does History Make Sense?: Hegel on the Historical Shapes of Justice



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