https://doi.org/10.5325/philrhet.48.4.0443 • https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5325/philrhet.48.4.0443 Copy URL This article examines the figures of life and death as ...
In a memorable passage from The Philosophy of History, Hegel quotes a common saying of his day that runs, “No man is a hero to his valet-de-chambre.” This corresponds, in contemporary terms, to the ...
Explore recognition, from its philosophical origins to Native land acknowledgements. Is recognition really enough? In our final episode of Crash Course Political Theory, we’ll explore this concept, ...
I provide a thematic reconstruction of Hegel's positive concept of right. Against those who charge that Hegel denies any role to substantive political evaluation, I argue that the Philosophy of Right ...
Hegel, contrary to his many detractors, never said that History ended with the French Revolution. What he did say is that the French Revolution was the end, in principle if not in practice, of a ...
In 1952 the British don Isaiah Berlin delivered a series of radio lectures for the BBC titled “Freedom and Its Betrayal.” Each discussed a particular philosophical “enemy of human liberty.” Delivered ...
Jessica Benjamin’s The Bonds of Love (1988) is a landmark in contemporary psychoanalysis and feminist theory. It challenges conventional understandings of love, domination, and the formation of ...