PHIL 393(F) Hegel: Freedom and History
Hegel pointed out that although freedom is one of our highest values, it is "open
to the greatest misconceptions." This remains true today: although appeals to
freedom are used to justify governments, institutions, policies, and practices
(and to sell cars, soft drinks, and rock-n-roll), those making and responding to
such appeals rarely thematize freedom explicitly, much less adequately. This has
the ironic (and perhaps dangerous) consequence of making our culture one in
which people follow appeals to freedom unfreely, without knowing what freedom is or why it is worth pursuing.
This course will begin with the Philosophy of Right, in which Hegel critiques the
most powerful "misconceptions" of freedom (those of liberalism and Kant), and
develops a new conception that grounds his own social and political philosophy.
We will then read the Philosophy of History, in which Hegel interprets history as
the temporal process whereby humans come to understand their freedom and
actualize it in the world.
Format: lecture/discussion. Requirements: Two short papers, one longer paper,
regular and active participation.
Prerequisites: Philosophy 101, or Philosophy 102. Enrollment limit: 25 (expected: 15). Preference given to Philosophy majors.
Hour: DUDLEY