Lexington Books
Pages: 668
Trim: 6½ x 9½
978-0-7391-1615-9 • Hardback • August 2009 • $208.00 • (£162.00)
978-0-7391-1616-6 • Paperback • August 2009 • $95.99 • (£74.00)
978-0-7391-3979-0 • eBook • August 2009 • $91.00 • (£70.00)
Julie E. Maybee is assistant professor of philosophy at Lehman College, City University of New York.
Part 1 1. Entering the Gallery: Hegel's Overall Project and the Project of the Logic
Chapter 2 I. The Skepticism of Hume and Kant
Chapter 3 II. Reason Overgrasps Reality
Chapter 4 III. Essential, Necessary Universals
Chapter 5 IV. Reason Drives Itself: Semantics and Syntax
Chapter 6 V. Hegel's Argument
Chapter 7 VI. Hegel's Overall Project
Chapter 8 VII. The Conceptual and Semantic Project of the Logic
Chapter 9 VIII. The Syntactic Project of the Logic
Part 10 2. The Doctrine of Being
Chapter 11 I. Introduction
Chapter 12 II. The Doctrine of Quality
Chapter 13 III. The Doctrine of Quantity
Chapter 14 IV. The Doctrine of Measure
Chapter 15 V. Wrap Up Being: Comments on Syntax
Part 16 3. The Doctrine of Essence
Chapter 17 I. Introduction
Chapter 18 II. Essence as the Ground of Existence
Chapter 19 III. The Doctrine of Appearance
Chapter 20 IV. The Doctrine of Actuality
Chapter 21 V. Wrap Up Essence: Comments on Syntax
Part 22 4. The Doctrine of Concept
Chapter 23 I. Introduction
Chapter 24 II. The Doctrine of the Subjective or Formal Concept
Chapter 25 III. The Doctrine of the Object
Chapter 26 IV. The Doctrine of the Idea
Chapter 27 V. Wrap up Concept: Comments on Syntax
Chapter 28 VI. Epilogue: Hegel's Materialism, Optimism, and Faith
To anyone who takes Hegel's own self-conception seriously, there is no way around studying his system of speculative logic, since this was, to him, the basis of his other philosophical accomplishments. Maybee's book is a remarkable achievement in making Hegel's logic accessible to students as well as specialists.
— Allen Wood, Indiana University and Stanford University
One of the chief merits of her detailed account is its balanced approach….Maybee's account will provoke the reader to rethink what counts as logic. Even if we do not teach speculative logic in our introductory classes, Maybee's patient and persistent explanation of this difficult text is a rewarding read.
— Journal of the History of Philosophy