'Leading a universal life': the systematic relevance of Hegel's social philosophy

Quante Michael, Schweikard David

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

This article starts from two observations. The first is that some of the most prominent debates in social and political philosophy over the last few decades have been deeply obscured by the confusion of ontological/methodological and normative questions. And the second is that the renewed interest in Hegel's social philosophy has not yet yielded anything like a widely shared view as to whether it should be banned as a totalitarian or reappraised as a liberal account. The aim of this article is first to specify systematically the ontological/methodological and normative dimensions of social philosophy by giving precise definitions of core concepts and paramount positions. Secondly, it is argued that Hegel's social philosophy can be characterized as combining what is called vertical holism with liberal communitarianism. This, thirdly, sheds new light both on the nature of fundamental questions in social philosophy and on the systematic relevance of Hegel's social philosophy.

Details about the publication

JournalHistory of the Human Sciences
Volume22
Page range58-78
StatusPublished
Release year2009
Language in which the publication is writtenEnglish
DOI10.1177/0952695108099135

Authors from the University of Münster

Quante, Michael
Professur für Philosophie mit dem Schwerpunkt Praktische Philosophie (Prof. Quante)
Cluster of Excellence "Religion and Politics"
Schweikard, David Puleston
Professur für Philosophie mit dem Schwerpunkt Praktische Philosophie (Prof. Quante)