Hegelianism: Difference between revisions

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'''Hegelianism''' refers to the [[philosophy|philosophical tradition]] following in the footsteps of [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel]]. [[Marxism]] is Hegelian in many respects, as is much of [[continental philosophy]].


'''Hegelianism''' refers to the [[philosophy|philosophical tradition]] following in the footsteps of [[Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel]]. [[Marxism]] is Hegelian in many respects, as is much of [[continental philosophy]].  
==Early Hegelians==
After the death of Hegel, two opposing philosophical schools quickly formed according to their general political alignment:
===Old Hegelians (Right Hegelians)===
The '''Old Hegelians''' or '''Right Hegelians''' were the [[idealist]] faction of Hegel's followers in the early 19th century. They followed Hegel in supporting the existing state of things as the completion of human history. {{cn}}
===Young Hegelians (Left Hegelians)===
The '''Young Hegelians''' or '''Left Hegelians''' were a faction which rejected the conservative conclusions of Hegel and supported [[progressive]] social change. [[Karl Marx]], [[Max Stirner]], Bruno Bauer and others were among the Left Hegelians in the early 1840s.


== Immediately after Hegel ==
== British idealists ==
{{Empty section|date=August 2023}}


After the death of Hegel, two opposing philosophical schools quickly formed according to their general political alignment.
== Analytic Hegelians ==
{{Empty section|date=August 2023}}


=== Right-Hegelians ===
==See also==
*[[Slavoj Zizek]]
*''[[The German Ideology]]''


=== Left-Hegelians ===
[[Category:Philosophy]]


== British Idealists ==
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{{hegelians navbox}}
== Analytic Hegelians ==

Latest revision as of 18:57, 21 August 2023

Hegelianism refers to the philosophical tradition following in the footsteps of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel. Marxism is Hegelian in many respects, as is much of continental philosophy.

Early Hegelians

After the death of Hegel, two opposing philosophical schools quickly formed according to their general political alignment:

Old Hegelians (Right Hegelians)

The Old Hegelians or Right Hegelians were the idealist faction of Hegel's followers in the early 19th century. They followed Hegel in supporting the existing state of things as the completion of human history. [citation needed]

Young Hegelians (Left Hegelians)

The Young Hegelians or Left Hegelians were a faction which rejected the conservative conclusions of Hegel and supported progressive social change. Karl Marx, Max Stirner, Bruno Bauer and others were among the Left Hegelians in the early 1840s.

British idealists

Analytic Hegelians

See also