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Article
Reconciliation in Hegel’s Speculative Idealism
Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy (2008)
  • Howard S Ponzer, PhD, Molloy College
Abstract
In the following, the author argues that Hegel’s speculative idealism attempts to reconcile the competing philosophical positions of idealism and realism. Through an examination, first, of current scholarship and, second, of Hegel’s critique of the “Ideal of Pure Reason” in Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason, the author shows that one of Hegel’s main criticisms is that the exclusion of the thing-in-itself denies realism. The author argues that Hegel’s response to the problem of the thing-in-itself is to affirm realism. The author concludes by demonstrating how Hegel’s concept of Geist reconciles idealism and realism.
Disciplines
Publication Date
Fall 2008
DOI
10.5840/epoche200813113
Citation Information
Howard S Ponzer. "Reconciliation in Hegel’s Speculative Idealism" Epoché: A Journal for the History of Philosophy Vol. 13 Iss. 1 (2008) p. 49 - 66
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/howard-ponzer/4/