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Hegel, Luther, and the Owl of Minerva

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 February 2009

Extract

For a century or so after his death Hegel's system excited, if not wider diversity of interpretation and more bitter controversy, then certainly more bewilderment, than had ever before befogged the battlefields of speculative thought. A few fervent disciples maintained that their master had achieved a system substantially if not in all detail final and complete, a philosophy destined to set at rest forever all serious philosophic doubt. Others agreed that this claim to finality was inherent in the system, but mocked openly, proclaiming Hegel an arrogant megalomaniac.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Philosophy 1966

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References

page 130 note 1 See Nohl, , op. cit., pp. 347–8.Google Scholar

page 131 note 1 This is, I suppose, the meaning here of Eckhardt's Gerechtigkeit.

page 131 note 2 See Hegel', s Works, Jubilee edition, Vol. 15, p. 228.Google Scholar

page 135 note 1 Jubilee edition, Vol. 15, p. 80.

page 137 note 1 Sc. Protestant Christianity.

page 138 note 1 i.e. the Church.