Author ORCID Identifier

https://orcid.org/0000-0003-1870-2935

Abstract

The subject of space, time, sensation, and intuition in Hegel is complicated, more so in Hegel than in Kant, and for good reason. Hegel rejected Kant’s Transcendental Idealism; besides the subjective reality Kant attributed to space and time, Hegel also attributed to them a truly objective reality. According to Hegel, space and time qualify finite things as they really are. Moreover, I shall argue, space and time, in Hegel’s view, have two different modes of subjective presence. We can illuminate these distinctive modes of subjective presence by comparing Hegel’s with Wilfrid Sellars’ strikingly similar arguments against Transcendental Idealism.

Date Created

2016

Department

Philosophy

Publication Date

2016

Subject

Philosophy

Language

English

Publisher

Routledge Publishing

Medium

Print

Document Type

Book Chapter

Source

Hegel’s Philosophical Psychology

Comments

This is a preprint of a chapter published by Routledge in Hegel’s Philosophical Psychology in 2016.

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