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Allen Wood, Ward W. and Pricilla B. Woods
Professor of Philosophy, Stanford University
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Georg
Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel is without doubt one of the most influential
philosophers of all time. He has, however, been largely ignored by
American "analytic" philosophers of the twentieth century. John in
particular, and Ken to a lesser extent, don't know nearly as much about
Hegel and his philosophy as they should. They will be lively if
somewhat obtuse students for Allen Wood, Stanford's resident expert on
virtually all aspects of modern philosophy, when Philosophy Talk goes
to the bookshelf and pulls down the big volumes of Hegel's collected
works.
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Notes
Ken and John admit their ignorance about Hegel. When Ken and John
received their education, Hegel was thought of as "the anti-christ of
analytical philosophy". Ken quotes Rorty as saying "the problem with
analytical philosophy is that it is stuck in a Kantian moment The great
thing about literary criticism is that it has advanced to a Hegelian
moment."
Ken and John introduce Allen Wood, professor of philosophy at Stanford
University. Wood asserts that Hegel was the outcome of the German
Idealist movement that Kant had begun. Hegel's mature system was the
culmination of that idea. A widely held idea at the time was that what
French did in the political realm, Germans were to do in the
philosophical realm, namely revolutionizing it in a positive way.
Hegel was a constitutional monarchist, even though he believed in
representative institutions. John tries to draw an analogy between
current conservatism and Hegel's political orientation at the time.
Wood points out that Hegel believed in the regulation of free markets
so that the gap between the rich and poor would not reach a harmful
degree. This side of Hegel would not be favored by current
conservatives. Wood identifies underpinnings of the Marxist idea of
proletariat as a revolutionary class in Hegel.
Allen Wood debunks a common misconception about Hegel. Hegel actually
did not invent the "thesis, antithesis, synthesis" but Fichte and
Schelling originated these terms. Hegel used these terms only when
discussing their work.
Hegel's dialectic is best thought of how different concepts show their
limitations and develop into other concepts. Some concepts run into
philosophical contradictions at their limitations and the way one
resolves these contradictions is by moving onto the next concept.
Fukuyama's "End of History" wasn't inspired by Hegel but by a Russian
named Alexander Kurjev. Hegel thought that we were limited about what
we could know about the future. He cheekily asserted "the history ends
in the present." Hegel doesn't think that history is just accidents and
bad behavior. Even human bad behavior plays a rational role in history.
Hegel's idea is that history can be understood based on reason.
- Polly
Stryker The Roving Philosophical Reporter (Seek to
04:20): Polly
Stryker interviews John McCumber, the president of Hegelian Society.
- Ian
Schoales The 60-second Philosopher (Seek to 49:40): Ian
Schoales
discusses Hegel's life, what was said about Hegel and Hegel's influence.
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