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Hegel's moral philosophy
chapter
posted on 2023-06-08, 23:47 authored by Katerina DeligiorgiHegel’s criticism of morality, or Moralität, has had a decisive influence in the reception of his thought. By general acknowledgment, while his writings support a broadly neo-Aristotelian ethics of self-actualization, his views on moral philosophy are exhausted by his criticisms of Kant, whom he treats as paradigmatic exponent of the standpoint of morality. The aim of this chapter is to correct this received view and show that Hegel offers a positive conception of moral willing. The main argument is presented in two parts: (a) an interpretation of the ‘Morality’ section of the Philosophy of Right that shows Hegel defending a guise of the good version of willing; and (b) an examination of problems raised by this view of willing, some of which are anticipated by Hegel in in his treatment of the ‘Idea of the Good’ in the Logic, and of the interpretative options available to deal with these problems.
History
Publication status
- Published
Publisher
Oxford University PressPage range
496-514Pages
828.0Book title
Oxford handbook of HegelPlace of publication
New York, USISBN
9780199355228Department affiliated with
- Philosophy Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes