Hegel’s Philosophy of God

Philosophical Studies (Dublin) 19:126-147 (1970)
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Abstract

THE thought of G W F Hegel, undoubtedly one of the greatest philosophers of all time, is by any standard exceptionally difficult. The great variety of interpretations which it has inspired is evidence of its inherent complexity and perhaps even ambiguity. It has frequently been impatiently dismissed as distorting the rich texture of lived reality into a phantom maze of obscure metaphysical tensions. The view is widespread that it is a barren system of abstract thought whose relationship to concrete reality is quite remote and artificial.

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