6533b830fe1ef96bd1296e71
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Hegel on the Productivity of Action: Metaphysical Questions, Non-Metaphysical Answers, and Metaphysical Answers
Edgar Maraguatsubject
Philosophymedia_common.quotation_subject05 social sciencesMetaphysicsHegelianism0506 political scienceEpistemologyPresentationAction (philosophy)Argument050602 political science & public administrationTranscendental numberProductivity (linguistics)media_commondescription
AbstractCharles Taylor claims that not only Kant, but also successors of Kant such as Fichte and Hegel, advocate a primitive concept of action, namely, a basic, irreducible, indispensable concept allegedly essential to our self-understanding. This paper shows how philosophers like Robert Brandom agree with Taylor explicitly with regard to Hegel, and attribute to him transcendental non-metaphysical arguments in support of such a concept. It then proceeds to challenge this attribution (both of the concept and the type of argument), offering a brief presentation of an alternative non-transcendental metaphysical approach to the Hegelian idea of giving actuality to a concept (or end) through a productive activity.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2019-07-22 | Hegel Bulletin |