Acknowledgements Abbreviations and notes Introduction I. Hegel and the problem of the history of philosophy II. Hegel's conception of philosophy III. Hegel's proposed solution to the problem of the history of philosophy IV. Logic, metaphysics, history, and the future V. A criticism of Hegel's solution to the problem of the history of philosophy VI. Hegel's history of philosophy VII. The structure of this bookt Chapter 1.
Kant's ahistorical system of principles I. Philosophy as ahistorical II. The two sources of cognition III. The TD's central line of argument IV. The first step of the proof V. The second step of the proof VI. The schemata of the categories and a criticism of Kant's system Chapter 2. Fichte's Wissenschaftslehre I.
Introduction II. What is philosophy? III. Idealism and dogmatism IV. The method of the Wissenschaftslehre V. A history of philosophy VI. The philosopher's deduction: beginnings VII. A problem and an objection Chapter 3. Schelling's Identitätsphilosophie I.
Introduction II. Identitätsphilosophie III. Schelling's conception of the history of philosophy IV. Reduplication and seeing as V. The inadequacy of Schelling's Identitätsphilosophie VI. Concluding remarks: the logic of the unseen and unnamed Chapter 4. Hegel's Logic : from beginning to actuality I. Introduction II.
Beginning the science of logic: issues III. The beginning of the science of logic: from pure being to determinate being IV. The movement from essence to its appearing V. The essential relation and the absolute VI. Actuality VII. The philosophies of Spinoza and Schelling as essential and necessary Chapter 5. Hegel's conception of the fundamental structure of everything: the Idea. I.
The relation of reciprocity and the genesis of the Concept II. The Concept and subjectivity III. The original partition of judgement IV. Samples and the structure of exemplarity V. Syllogism VI. Objectivity and the Idea as life VII. The Idea of cognition to the absolute Idea VIII. The absolute Idea and method IX.
Exit Conclusion Bibliography.