This article proceeds as an annotative reading of McGowan’s Emancipation after Hegel. In one way it could be considered a type of annotative dialectic, a dialectic on the page written out of the provocations and – it could be said –emancipation occasioned by reading this most stimulating work. It is also the annotations of a radical theologian whose starting point is ‘the death of god’ and who then attempts (for too many years now) to think through to what this might mean. In this essay I am thinking and annotating, in direct encounter with McGowan’s Hegel, what emancipation might arise. [ All references to the text are signaled as EH
Arguments from the nineteenth century concerning whether Hegel was an atheist or a theist are still ...
Hegel: The End and Fulfillment Of Religion With Genuine Philosophy-Why does Hegel praise the Neo-Pla...
In this article, I draw upon the ‘post-Kantian’ reading of Hegel to examine the consequences Hegel’s...
The majority of recent Hegel scholarship on the death of God focuses on issues such as the cultural ...
For a fellow disciple of what, in my estimation, is the single most important tradition informing To...
This article critically engages Todd McGowan's book, Emancipation After Hegel. Through McGowan's boo...
This paper engages with Todd McGowan’s Emancipation after Hegel by changing the perspective regardin...
This article engages with Todd McGowan’s Emancipation after Hegel by taking seriously its overall am...
A number of contemporary authors (e.g., Catherine Malabou, Slavoj Žižek, and John Caputo) claim that...
In the opening of his brilliantly insightful book on Hegel, Todd McGowan makes good use of the apoch...
This article engages with the changing perspective regarding the role that contradiction plays in cu...
While I am deeply in accord with the basic thrust of Todd McGowan’s reading of Hegel, inclusive of h...
Emancipation After Hegel argues that Hegel’s philosophy as a whole has not been properly received; t...
Hegel never made any claim that he wanted to change the world. Hegelians since Hegel have been a dif...
This paper covers the theme of the death of God considered from a Hegelian standpoint. For Aristotle...
Arguments from the nineteenth century concerning whether Hegel was an atheist or a theist are still ...
Hegel: The End and Fulfillment Of Religion With Genuine Philosophy-Why does Hegel praise the Neo-Pla...
In this article, I draw upon the ‘post-Kantian’ reading of Hegel to examine the consequences Hegel’s...
The majority of recent Hegel scholarship on the death of God focuses on issues such as the cultural ...
For a fellow disciple of what, in my estimation, is the single most important tradition informing To...
This article critically engages Todd McGowan's book, Emancipation After Hegel. Through McGowan's boo...
This paper engages with Todd McGowan’s Emancipation after Hegel by changing the perspective regardin...
This article engages with Todd McGowan’s Emancipation after Hegel by taking seriously its overall am...
A number of contemporary authors (e.g., Catherine Malabou, Slavoj Žižek, and John Caputo) claim that...
In the opening of his brilliantly insightful book on Hegel, Todd McGowan makes good use of the apoch...
This article engages with the changing perspective regarding the role that contradiction plays in cu...
While I am deeply in accord with the basic thrust of Todd McGowan’s reading of Hegel, inclusive of h...
Emancipation After Hegel argues that Hegel’s philosophy as a whole has not been properly received; t...
Hegel never made any claim that he wanted to change the world. Hegelians since Hegel have been a dif...
This paper covers the theme of the death of God considered from a Hegelian standpoint. For Aristotle...
Arguments from the nineteenth century concerning whether Hegel was an atheist or a theist are still ...
Hegel: The End and Fulfillment Of Religion With Genuine Philosophy-Why does Hegel praise the Neo-Pla...
In this article, I draw upon the ‘post-Kantian’ reading of Hegel to examine the consequences Hegel’s...