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Philosophic idealist
Answer for the clue "Philosophic idealist ", 5 letters:
hegel
Alternative clues for the word hegel
- "Science of Logic" author Georg
- ''Science of Logic'' philosopher
- German metaphysicist
- German philosopher whose three stage process of dialectical reasoning was adopted by Karl Marx (1770-1831)
- German idealist philosopher
- Despicable man squashes grand philosopher
- Rejected member that went unheard as a philosopher
- Philosopher who influenced Marx
Word definitions for hegel in dictionaries
Wikipedia
Word definitions in Wikipedia
Hegel is a surname, and may refer to: Frederik Hegel (1817–1887), Danish bookseller Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770–1831), German philosopher Idora Hegel (born 1983), figure skater
The Collaborative International Dictionary
Word definitions in The Collaborative International Dictionary
Hegel \Hegel\ prop. n. Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel, a German writer (1770-1831).
Usage examples of hegel.
Hegel to the belief that all the essentials of the manifest world could be deduced by dialectical reasoning, and this led to his confusing of logical deduction with historical procession.
For Hegel, a rational State in which individuals could realize absolute Spirit acting in and through them in a mutual community.
In other words, the Jungian archetypes are not the transcendental archetypes or Forms found in Plato, or Hegel, or Shankara, or Asanga and Vasubandhu.
Thus, for both Schelling and Hegel, Spirit goes out of itself to produce objective Nature, awakens to itself in subjective Mind, and then recovers itself in pure Nondual perception, where subject and object are one pure act of nondual awareness that unifies both Nature and Mind in realized Spirit.
And this is why Hegel maintained that the central defining characteristic of Reason (vision-logic) was its capacity to unify opposites and see identity-in-difference.
Hegel: Self-positing Spirit returns to itself in the form of global Reason, the culmination of History itself.
She could discuss Dostoevsky or Freud, Hegel or Brahms, Dow Jones or the Bolshoi Ballet in four languages, knew how to get a floorside table or instant theater ticket anywhere in New York, and had preferred accounts at Tiffany's, Bendel's, and Saks.