Special Issue/Numéro thématique
Dialogue 39 (4):651-656 (
2000)
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Abstract
We live in the self-proclaimed time of difference, when particular identities and localities worry about or actively resist the global forces of modernization. This is the time of the other, the exception, the multicultural. Why, then, look again at Hegel, who is reputed to be the philosopher of unity, sameness, and absorption into the whole? Things may not be what they seem. Hegel may be surprisingly relevant; in a world in which particularity is alternately triumphant and resentful, Hegel offers more sophisticated ways to think about individual and social unity. Agree with him or not, you can learn from him.