Lectures on the philosophy of religion
Saved in:
Uniform title: | Vorlesungen über die Philosophie der Religion. |
---|---|
Author / Creator: | |
Other Authors / Creators: | Hodgson, Peter Crafts, 1934- |
Format: | eBook Electronic |
Language: | English German |
Edition: | One-volume ed. |
Imprint: | Berkeley, Calif. : University of California Press, c1988. |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Click here for full text at JSTOR |
Table of Contents:
- Preface
- Abbreviations, signs and symbols
- Frequently cited works by Hegel
- Editorial introduction
- Hegel's four series of lectures on the philosophy of religion
- Sources and editions of the philosophy-of-religion lectures
- The structure, context, and distinctive themes of the lectures in brief
- Analysis of the text of the 1827 lectures
- The concept of religion
- Determinate religion
- The consummate religion
- The lectures of 1827
- Introduction
- Preface
- Comparison of philosophy and religion with regard to their object
- The relation of the science of religion to the needs of our time
- Survey of the treatment of our subject
- The concept of religion
- The concept of God
- The knowledge of God
- Immediate knowledge
- Feeling
- Representation
- Thought
- The relationship of thought and representation
- The relationship of immediate and mediated knowledge
- Religious knowledge as elevation to God
- The cultus
- Determinate religion
- Introduction
- Immediate religion, of nature religion
- Introduction
- The original Condition
- The forms of nature religion
- The religion of magic
- The concept of magic
- Less developed religions of magic
- The state religion of the Chinese empire and the dao
- The religion of being-withing-welf (Buddhism, Lamaism)
- The Hindu religion
- The one substance
- The multipllicity of powers
- The cultus
- Transition to the next stage
- Egyptian religion
- The elevation of the spirutal above the natural: the religion of the Greeks and the Jews
- The religion of beauty, or Greek religion
- The divine content
- The cultus
- The religion of sublimity, or Jewish religion
- The unity of God
- Divine self-determination and representation
- The cultus
- The religion of expediency: Roman religion
- The concept of purposiveness
- The configuration of the gods
- The cultus
- The consummate religion
- Introduction
- Definition of this religion
- The positivity and spirituality of this religion
- Survey of previous developments
- Division of the subject
- The first element: the idea of God in and for itself
- The second element: representation, appearance
- Differentiation
- Differentiation within the divine life and in the world
- Natural Humanity
- The story of the fall
- Knowledge, estrangement, and evil
- Reconciliation
- The idea of reconciliation and its appearance in a single individual
- The historical, sensible presence of Chirst
- The death of Christ and the transition to spiritual presence
- The third element: community, spirit
- The origin of the community
- The subsistence of the community
- The realization of the spirituality of the community.