Freedom and Reflection : Hegel and the Logic of Agency

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Freedom and Reflection : Hegel and the Logic of Agency

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  • 製本 Hardcover:ハードカバー版/ページ数 292 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9780199794522
  • DDC分類 193

Full Description

There are many insightful discussions of Hegel's practical philosophy that emphasize the uniqueness of his expressivist and social theory of agency, but few recognize that these two aspects of Hegel's theory of the will are insufficient to avoid the traditional problem of free will. In fact, the problem can easily be shown to recur in the very language used to express why Hegel's theory is a theory of freedom at all. In part, this lack of recognition results from the fact that there has not yet been a study of Hegel's theory of the will that has formulated the problem against the background of the contemporary literature on free will, where basic concerns about the explicability of action loom large. By using the continuity between the contemporary concerns and those of Hegel's predecessors (particularly Kant), Yeomans shows the necessity of reference to the Logic in order to supplement Hegel's own practical philosophy and the scholarship based on it. In addition to adding significantly to our understanding of Hegel's theory of agency and recapturing its significance with respect to continuing modern reflection on free will, this study also shows that Hegel's Logic can do some real philosophical work on a specific problem.
Though Hegel's logical terminology is notorious for its impenetrability, Yeomans translates Hegel's jargon into a more easily comprehensible vocabulary. He further helps the reader by providing introductory discussions framing the central issues of each chapter both in terms of the problem of free will and in terms of the development of Hegel's argument to that point in the Logic. Presenting the reader with frequent use of examples, Yeomans leavens the abstractness of Hegel's presentation and makes the topic accessible to readers new to Hegel as well as those well versed in his work.

Contents

Acknowledgements ; Abbreviations ; Part I: Introduction ; Chapter 1: Hegel and Free Will ; 1.1: Hegel and the Traditional Problem of Free Will ; 1.2: Hegel's Theory of Free Will ; Chapter 2: The Problem of Expression as the Problem of Reflection ; 2.1: Introduction ; 2.2: Internal and External Determination in the Doctrine of Being ; 2.3: Internal and External Determination in the Concept of Reflection ; 2.4: Elements of the Theory of Reflection in Hegel's Moral Psychology ; 2.5: The Shape of the Project ; Part II: Agency as Self-Explanation ; Chapter 3: The Externality of Explanations and the Problem of an Infinite Regress ; Chapter 4: Self-Explanation as the Basic Form of Explanation ; 4.1: Ground as Expression ; 4.2: Internal and External Determination in Explanations ; 4.3: The Argument for Explanation as a Three-Term Relation ; 4.4: The Role of Conditions as the Third Term in Explanation ; 4.5: The Infection of Internality by the Conditions ; 4.6: Holism about Explanation ; Chapter 5: The Agent as a Locus of Self-Explanation ; Part III: Agency as True Necessity ; Chapter 6: The Necessity of Action and the Problem of Alternate Possibilities ; Chapter 7: Modality in Hegel's Logic ; 7.1: Modality as the Structure of Self-Expression ; 7.2: Contingency as a Unity of Actuality and Possibility ; 7.3: The Modal Continuum ; 7.4: The Necessity of Alternate Possibilities ; Chapter 8: Agency as True Necessity ; 8.1: Willkur and Wille ; 8.2: The Modal Argument for Hegel's Conception of the Free Will ; Part IV: Agency as Teleological Reciprocal Interaction ; Chapter 9: The Mechanistic Challenge and the Problem of Passivity ; Chapter 10: Teleology, Mechanism and Causation ; 10.1: The Question of Priority ; 10.2: Productivity as Expression ; 10.3: Freedom as Substance-Causation ; 10.4: The Passivity of Mechanical Causation ; 10.5: Causation as Reciprocal Interaction ; 10.6: Reciprocal Interaction as Freedom ; 10.7: The Teleological Form of Reciprocal Self-Determination ; Chapter 11: Teleological Agency ; 11.1: Arguments Against Determinism ; 11.2: A Teleological Philosophy of Action ; Chapter 12: Conclusion ; Bibliography ; Index ; Notes

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