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  1. The Young Hegelians (German: Junghegelianer), or Left Hegelians (Linkshegelianer), or the Hegelian Left (die Hegelsche Linke), were a group of German intellectuals who, in the decade or so after the death of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel in 1831, reacted to and wrote about his ambiguous legacy.

  2. The Young Hegel ( German: Der junge Hegel: Über die Beziehungen von Dialektik und Ökonomie) is a book about the philosophical development of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel by the philosopher György Lukács. The work was completed in 1938 and published in Zurich in 1948.

    • György Lukács
    • German
    • 1948
    • Der junge Hegel
  3. 9 de mar. de 2016 · Resumo. O presente trabalho analisa a interpretação que o jovem Hegel propõe para o pensamento de Maquiavel, tomando por referência o tópico “A Formação dos Estados Nacionais” da obra A Constituição Alemã (1798 – 1802).

    • Philippe Oliveira de Almeida, Ana Guerra Ribeiro de Oliveira
    • 2016
  4. Contents. Part I. Hegels Early Republican phase (Berne 1793-96) Part II. The Crisis in Hegels Views on Society and the Earliest Beginnings of his Dialectical Method (Frankfurt 1797-1800) 5 The first studies in economics. Part III. Rationale and Defence of Objective Idealism (Jena 1801-03) 1 Hegel’s role in Schelling’s break-away from Fichte.

  5. The Young Hegel Georg Lukács 1938. 3.2 The critique of subjective idealism. HEGEL’s first published works in Jena are essentially polemical in nature. The passion with which they are imbued springs from his conviction that the philosophical revolution he is proclaiming is but the intellectual expression of a great general revolution.

  6. Hegels Phenomenology of Mind. Little more than a year after Marx arrived in Berlin to study there, he wrote to his father that he was attaching himself ‘ever more closely to the current philosophy’ (MC 25).

  7. The Young or Left Hegelians were the radical disciples of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel who formed a rather amorphous school in Germany between the late 1830s and the mid-1840s.