Introduction
1: Intuitive versus Discursive Forms of Understanding in Kant's
Critical Philosophy: Introduction
2: Organic Unity as the 'True Unity' of the Intuitive Intellect
3: Hegel on the 'Subjectivity' of Kant's Idealism
4: Hegel on the Transcendental Deduction of the First Critique
5: Subjectivity as Part of an Original Identity
6: The Question-Begging Nature of Kantian Critique: Kant on the
Arguments of the Antinomies
Bibliography
Index
Sally Sedgwick is Professor of Philosophy and Affiliated Professor
of Germanic Studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She
received her PhD from the University of Chicago in 1985, and until
2003 was on the faculty at Dartmouth College. She has held visiting
positions at Harvard, the University of Pennsylvania, and the
universities of Bonn, Bern and Luzern. She has been awarded grants
by NEH, ACLS, DAAD, and the Alexander von Humboldt-Stiftung.
Her
publications include numerous essays on Kant and Hegel, and the
monograph, Kant's Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals: An
Introduction (2008). She is editor of The Reception of Kant's
Critical Philosophy:
Fichte, Schelling, and Hegel (2000). In the academic year of
2009-10, she was President of the Central Division of the American
Philosophical Association.
Hegel's Critique of Kant is a well-written attempt to make a
plausible case for Hegel's reasons for diverging from Kant, and it
is mandatory reading for anybody interested in the complex,
multifaceted relation between Hegel and Kant.
*Dennis Schulting, Kant-Studien*
her careful development of the Hegelian criticism of Kant's
theoretical philosophy makes available wholly new and helpful ways
of seeing the relation between these philosophers ... penetrating,
patient, and generous book.
*Sebastian Rand, Critique*
The volume is clearly written, impressively argued, and
transparently structured.
*Journal of the History of Philosophy*
Hegels Critique of Kant is a truly exemplary work of scholarship
and will hopefully become regarded quickly as a classic study on
one of the most interesting yet difficult philosophical
relationships one can encounter.
*Paul Giladi, University of Sheffield*
it is worth reiterating that the overall calrity and plausibility
that Sedgwick brings to the roots, structure and nature of Hegel's
Critiques of Kant here are going to prove a boon to anyone working
in this area.
*David Landy, Kantian Review*
written in admirably clear prose
*Sean Sheehan, Irish Left Review*
Hegel's Critique of Kant amply rewards the patience of those who
have been eagerly awaiting a book-length treatment of the position
Sally Sedgwick has been developing over a number of years through
her engagement with classical German philosophy. The book offers an
original thesis with characteristic clarity, fine conceptual
articulation and an expository style that combines the virtues of
immanent interpretations with those of reconstructive ones. Careful
reading of the primary texts is put to the service of showing what
is true in our philosophical past.
*Katerina Deligiorgi, Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews*
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