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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Uneven handling of difficult material, August 12, 2000
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Douglas Doepke (Claremont, CA United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: History and Truth in Hegel's Phenomenology, Third Edition (Paperback)
Not much detail is presented in Westphal's book, nor are the contours of dialectical development laid out very clearly. A basic outline of the Phenomenology is followed, but without much attention to the crucial transitions between dialectical stages. The section on consciousness, (i.e. sense experience, perception, and understanding), is adequate; the section on self-consciousness, (i.e. master-slave, unhappy consciouness), is the weakest and murkiest.

Probably, the best section concerns the latter stages of spiritual progression, (i.e. religion, absolute knowledge). Westphal discusses developments here in a general context of Christian theology, showing how Christian themes are taken up and reproduced in philosophical terms. A traditional issue arises at this point: Has Hegel abandoned phenomenology (description) for Christian metaphysics (transcendancy). The author presents a thoroughly secularized interpretation of of spirit's fulfillment and Absolute Knowledge. Spirit's ultimate return to itself transpires on the this side of the temporal divide instead of the transcendent side. It's an historical and temporal event in which spirit recognizes itself in others in a mutual display of love and recognition. It's not a transcendent occurrence in which exteriority is somehow overcome. Just how this mutual recognition also includes recognition of nature as its own ontological creation is not clear to me from Westphal's text; yet some such must be present if Absolute Knowledge is to truly take place.

In the author's opinion, Hegel's error lies not in a departure from the phenomenological method, since correctly understood in its secularized interpretation, no metaphysics is involved. Rather, Hegel's error lies in the naive belief that this final spiritual stage of description was actually being realized in 19th century Prussia! In short, his mistake was not philosophical but historical. Westphal's reading of Hegel works fine as an interpretation congenial to modern secular readers.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars great second half, November 7, 2010
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This review is from: History and Truth in Hegel's Phenomenology, Third Edition (Paperback)
this book truly exists from page 80 to 220. that's when the author starts talking about the transition from the transcendental realm of correspondence to the historical and on., page 80 should have been page one. there's been tons written on recognition so i wanted this book specifically for "history and truth". i got it after page 80. he's knowledgeable and clear and systematic in his approach. but just realize that you're buying the second half of the book with regard to history and truth. i'm glad i got it; that's still a good number of pages on the subject.
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History and Truth in Hegel's Phenomenology, Third Edition
History and Truth in Hegel's Phenomenology, Third Edition by Merold Westphal (Paperback - September 22, 1998)
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