At the center of Hegel and the Problem of Multiplicity is the question: what could the term "multiplicity" mean for philosophy? Andrew Haas contends that most contemporary philosophical understandings of multiplicity are either Aristotelian or Kantian and that these approaches have solidified into a philosophy guided by categories of identity and different--categories to which multiplicity as such cannot be reduced. The Hegelian conception of multiplicity, Haas suggests, is opposed to both categories--or, in fact, supersedes them. To come to terms with this critique, Haas undertakes a rigorous, technical analysis of Hegel's Science of Logic. The result is a reading of the concept of multiplicity as multiple, that is, as multiplicities.
ISBN: | 9780810116702 |
Publication date: | 25th January 2000 |
Author: | Andrew Haas |
Publisher: | Northwestern University Press |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 400 pages |
Series: | SPEP Studies in Historical Philosophy |
Genres: |
Philosophical traditions and schools of thought Philosophy: logic |