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Early Theological Writings

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This volume includes Hegel's most important early theological writings, though not all of the materials collected by Herman Nohl in his definitive Hegels theologische Jugendschriften (Tuebingen, 19...
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  • 29 October 1971
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This volume includes Hegel's most important early theological writings, though not all of the materials collected by Herman Nohl in his definitive Hegels theologische Jugendschriften (Tuebingen, 1907). The most significant omissions are a series of fragments to which Nohl give the general title "National Religion and Christianity" and the essay "Life of Jesus."
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Price: $34.95
Pages: 352
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Publication Date: 29 October 1971
Trim Size: 8.00 X 5.25 in
ISBN: 9780812210224
Format: Paperback
BISACs: PHILOSOPHY / Religious, Theology
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"With the appearance of this book the English-speaking world will learn something at first hand of the genesis of Hegel's ideas, the dominant intellectual themes of his youth, and the struggle of his penetrating, comprehensive mind to achieve clarity."
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) was perhaps the most systematic of the post-Kantian idealist German philosophers. T. M. Knox translated many of Hegel's works into English.

Introduction: Hegel's Philosophical Development. By Richard Kroner

I. THE POSITIVITY OF THE CHRISTIAN RELIGION. Translated by T. M. Knox
Part I. How Christianity Became the Positive Religion of a Church
1. Preface
2. Position of the Jewish Religion
3. Jesus
4. Whence Came the Positive Element in Christianity?
5. The Conception of a Sect
6. The Teaching of Jesus
7. Jesus Has Much To Say about His Own Individual Personality
8. Jesus Speaks of Himself as the Messiah
9. Miracles
10. The Positive Element Derived from the Disciples
11. The Disciples Contrasted with the Pupils of Socrates
12. The Number of Disciples Fixed at Twelve
13. The Disciples Sent Forth on Their Mission
14. The Resurrection and the Commands Given Thereafter
15. How the Teaching of Jesus Came To Be Interpreted in a Positive Sense
16. What Is Applicable in a Small Society Is Unjust in a State
17. Common Ownership of Goods
18. Equality
19. The Lord's Supper
20. Expansionism
21. How a Moral or Religious Society Grows into a State
22. Conflict between Church and State: (a) In Matters Affecting Civil Rights Generally
23. (b) In Matters Affecting Property
24. (c) In Matters Affecting Education
25. Two Incidental Remarks about Church and State Relations
26. The Ecclesiastical Contract: Representation and the Power of the Citizens in Matters of Doctrine
27. Contract with the State
28. Defense of the Faith
29. The Form Morality Must Acquire in a Church
30. The Rise of Sects Inevitable

Part II. Materials for a Continuation of Part I
1. "Is Judaea, Then, the Teutons' Fatherland?"
2. How Christianity Conquered Paganism
3. How a Disinclination for Military Service Helped the Success of Christianity
4. Miracles

Part III. Revised Form of Sections 1-4 of Part I
1. Preface
2. Judaism
3. Jesus

II. THE SPIRIT OF CHRISTIANITY AND ITS FATE. Translated by T. M. Knox
i. The Spirit of Judaism
ii. The Moral Teaching of Jesus: ([alpha]) The Sermon on the Mount Contrasted with the Mosaic Law and with Kant's Ethics
iii. The Moral Teaching of Jesus: ([beta]) Love as the Transcendence of Penal Justice and the Reconciliation of Fate
iv. The Religious Teaching of Jesus
v. The Fate of Jesus and His Church

III. LOVE. Tranlsated by T. M. Knox

IV. FRAGMENT OF A SYSTEM. Translated by Richard Kroner

Appendix. On Classical Studies. Translated by Richard Kroner
Bibliographical Note. By Richard Kroner
Index