PHILOSOPHY / Movements / Idealism
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Kant's Worldview
Kant’s Worldview offers a new interpretation of Immanuel Kant’s theory of judgment to clarify how the German philosopher increasingly expands the role of judgment from its logical task to its reflective capacity to evaluate objects and contextualize them in worldly terms.
Hegel's Energy
This book integrates Hegel’s The Phenomenology of Spirit and contemporary conversations about energy. By interpreting actuality as energy in the Hegelian corpus, the author provides a new lens for understanding the dialectical project and the energy‑starved condition of our contemporaneity.
Between Heidegger and Novalis
Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy
This book brings the poet and philosopher Novalis into dialogue with the work of Martin Heidegger, demonstrating that both should be understood principally as thinkers of relation.
Subject Lessons
This collection of eleven philosophical essays addresses current trends in materialist philosophy dealing with subject-object relations, amounting to a polemical corrective that insists on the organizing role of the subject within materialist thought.
Prolegomena to Any Future Materialism
Prolegomena to Any Future Materialism, Volume Two: A Weak Nature Alone is the second part of a trilogy on subjectivity in the natural world. Johnston weaves together major works in Western philosophy in a visionary theory that is materialist yet antireductive.
Speculation
Speculation: Politics, Ideology, Event develops Hegel’s radical perspective of speculative thought as a way of reclaiming and revitalizing the sense of the future and its possibilities.
Thinking and the I
Thinking and the I aims to show what thinking means for Hegel and how Hegel's notion of thinking is a critical response to Kant.
Hegel and Spinoza
In his book Hegel and Spinoza, Moder formulates the question that interested Hegel in Spinoza as the question of whether it is possible to think contradiction or movement on the level of the absolute substance or whether it is possible to think the absolute as a fragile absolute.
For Badiou
For Badiou serves both as an introduction to the influential French philosopher Alain Badiou’s thought and as an in-depth examination of his work. Ruda begins with a thorough and clear outline of the sometimes difficult main tenets of Badiou’s philosophy.
Binding Words
Topics in Historical Philosophy
In a provactive work that brings new tools to the history of philosophy, Karen S. Feldman offers an elegant account of how philosophical language appears to produce the very thing it claims to describe. She demonstrates that conscience can only be described and understood through tropes and figures of langugae. If description in literal terms is impossible, as Binding Words convincingly argues, perhaps there is no such thing. But if the word "conscience" has no tangible referent, then how can conscience be constructed as binding? Does our conscience move us to do things, or is this yet another figure of speech?
Kant's Worldview
Kant’s Worldview offers a new interpretation of Immanuel Kant’s theory of judgment to clarify how the German philosopher increasingly expands the role of judgment from its logical task to its reflective capacity to evaluate objects and contextualize them in worldly terms.
Hegel's Energy
This book integrates Hegel’s The Phenomenology of Spirit and contemporary conversations about energy. By interpreting actuality as energy in the Hegelian corpus, the author provides a new lens for understanding the dialectical project and the energy‑starved condition of our contemporaneity.
Between Heidegger and Novalis
Studies in Phenomenology and Existential Philosophy
This book brings the poet and philosopher Novalis into dialogue with the work of Martin Heidegger, demonstrating that both should be understood principally as thinkers of relation.
Subject Lessons
This collection of eleven philosophical essays addresses current trends in materialist philosophy dealing with subject-object relations, amounting to a polemical corrective that insists on the organizing role of the subject within materialist thought.
Prolegomena to Any Future Materialism
Prolegomena to Any Future Materialism, Volume Two: A Weak Nature Alone is the second part of a trilogy on subjectivity in the natural world. Johnston weaves together major works in Western philosophy in a visionary theory that is materialist yet antireductive.
Speculation
Speculation: Politics, Ideology, Event develops Hegel’s radical perspective of speculative thought as a way of reclaiming and revitalizing the sense of the future and its possibilities.
Thinking and the I
Thinking and the I aims to show what thinking means for Hegel and how Hegel's notion of thinking is a critical response to Kant.
Hegel and Spinoza
In his book Hegel and Spinoza, Moder formulates the question that interested Hegel in Spinoza as the question of whether it is possible to think contradiction or movement on the level of the absolute substance or whether it is possible to think the absolute as a fragile absolute.
For Badiou
For Badiou serves both as an introduction to the influential French philosopher Alain Badiou’s thought and as an in-depth examination of his work. Ruda begins with a thorough and clear outline of the sometimes difficult main tenets of Badiou’s philosophy.
Binding Words
Topics in Historical Philosophy
In a provactive work that brings new tools to the history of philosophy, Karen S. Feldman offers an elegant account of how philosophical language appears to produce the very thing it claims to describe. She demonstrates that conscience can only be described and understood through tropes and figures of langugae. If description in literal terms is impossible, as Binding Words convincingly argues, perhaps there is no such thing. But if the word "conscience" has no tangible referent, then how can conscience be constructed as binding? Does our conscience move us to do things, or is this yet another figure of speech?