Abstract

Preface Introduction Part I. Philosophy and Cultural Integration: Hegel in Context: 1. The origins of the Hegelian project: tensions in the father's world 2. Revolution and Romanticism: the generational context of Hegel's ideology of cultural integration 3. The reconciliation of Reason and reality: Hegel's differentiation from Romanticism Part II. The Historical Appropriation of the Absolute: Unity and Diversity in the Hegelian School, 1805-1831: 4. Hegel and Hegelianism: disciples and sympathisers in the formation of the Hegelian school 5. Hegelian politics during the Restoration: accommodation, critique, and historical transcendence 6. Christian religion and Hegelian philosophy during the Restoration: accommodation, critique, and historical transcendence Part III. The Reduction of the Absolute to 'Man': The Division of the School and the Emergence of the Hegelian Left, 1830-1841: 7. Right, centre, and left: the division of the Hegelian school in the 1830s 8. Strauss and the principle of immanence 9. Bruno Bauer and the reduction of absolute spirit to human self-consciousness 10. Feuerbach and the reduction of absolute spirit to human 'species being' Epilogue Notes Bibliography Index.

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