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1. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 48 > Issue: 1/2
Kenneth R. Westphal Hegel’s Natural Law Constructivism: Fundamentals of Republicanism
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Replying to my four commentators allows me to clarify some distinctive features and merits of Hegel’s natural law constructivism; how Hegel’s insights have been obscured by common, though inadequate philosophical taxonomies; and how Hegel’s natural law constructivism contributes centrally to moral philosophy today, including ethics, justice, philosophy of law and philosophy of education.
2. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 29 > Issue: 1
Will Dudley Freedom and the Need for Protection from Myself
3. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 29 > Issue: 1
John Burbidge Hegel's Absolutes
4. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 29 > Issue: 1
Stephen Houlgate Hegel and the "End" of Art
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The aim of this article is to explain why, in Hegel's view, art's history brings it to the point at which it can no longer afford the highest satisfaction of our spiritual needs and so fulfill its own highest calling, and why, nevertheless, we moderns still need art and still need it to create beauty. I argue that Hegel advocates a modern art of beauty because he believes that what has to be given aesthetic expression in the modern world is concrete human freedom and life (ratherthan the abstract, subjective freedom of Romantic irony) and that the aesthetic expression of such concrete human freedom entails beauty.
5. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 29 > Issue: 2
Angelica Nuzzo An Outline of Italian Hegelianism (1832-1998)
6. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 29 > Issue: 2
Michael Baur Sublating Kant and the Old Metaphysics: A Reading of the Transition from Being to Essence in Hegel's Logic
7. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 14 > Issue: 3
Eric von der Luft A Reply to Professor Williams
8. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 14 > Issue: 3
Robert F. Brown Hegel’s Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion: A Progress Report on the New Edition
9. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 14 > Issue: 3
Arnold V. Miller On Translating Hegel
10. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 14 > Issue: 4
John Burbidge A Reply from Professor Burbidge
11. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Howlers
12. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Clark A. Kucheman Abstract and Concrete Freedom: Hegelian Perspectives on Economic Justice
13. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Wilfried Ver Eecke Negation and Desire in Freud and Hegel
14. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
H. S. Harris The Hegel Renaissance in the Anglo-Saxon World Since 1945
15. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Merold Westphal The New Flight of the Owl at the End of the Hegel Revival: An Official Welcome to the New Owl from the President of the Hegel Society of America
16. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Norbert Waszek The Division of Labor: From the Scottish Enlightenment to Hegel
17. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 15 > Issue: 1
Arnold V. Miller Absolute Knowing and the Destiny of the Individual
18. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 15 > Issue: 2
Michael G. Vater Response to Doctor Marti
19. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 15 > Issue: 2
Richard Dien Winfield Conceiving Reality Without Foundations: Hegel’s Neglected Strategy For Realphilosophie
20. The Owl of Minerva: Volume > 15 > Issue: 2
Fritz Marti Doctor Marti’s Response to His Critics