Hegel, Logic and Speculation
Bloomsbury Studies in Continental Philosophy
Presents cutting-edge scholarship in the field of modern European thought. The wholly original arguments, perspectives and research findings in titles in this series make it an important and stimulating resource for students and academics from across the discipline.
Deleuze and the Diagram: Aesthetic Threads in Visual Organization, Jakub Zdebik
Derrida, Badiou and the Formal Imperative, Christopher Norris
Desire in Ashes: Deconstruction, Psychoanalysis, Philosophy, edited by Simon Morgan Wortham and Chiara Alfano
Early Phenomenology, edited by Brian Harding and Michael R. Kelly
Egalitarian Moments, Devin Zane Shaw
Ernst Bloch and His Contemporaries, Ivan Boldyrev
Jean-Paul Sartres Anarchist Philosophy, William L. Remley
Why There Is No Post-Structuralism in France, Johannes Angermuller
Gadamers Poetics: A Critique of Modern Aesthetics, John Arthos
Heidegger, History and the Holocaust, Mahon OBrien
Heidegger and the Emergence of the Question of Being, Jess Adrin Escudero
Hegel and Resistance: History, Politics and Dialectics, edited by Rebecca Comay and Bart Zantvoort
Husserls Ethics and Practical Intentionality, Susi Ferrarello
Immanent Transcendence: Reconfiguring Materialism in Continental Philosophy, Patrice Haynes
Lacanian Realism: Political and Clinical Psychoanalysis, Duane Rousselle
Language and Being, Duane Williams
Merleau-Pontys Existential Phenomenology and the Realization of Philosophy, Bryan A. Smyth
Mortal Thought: Hlderlin and Philosophy, James Luchte
Nietzsche and Political Thought, edited by Keith Ansell-Pearson
Nietzsche as a Scholar of Antiquity, Helmut Heit
Philosophy, Sophistry, Antiphilosophy: Badious Dispute with Lyotard, Matthew R. McLennan
Philosophy of Ontological Lateness, Keith Whitmoyer
The Poetic Imagination in Heidegger and Schelling, Christopher Yates
Post-Rationalism: Psychoanalysis, Epistemology, and Marxism in Post-War France, Tom Eyers
Revisiting Normativity with Deleuze, edited by Rosi Braidotti and Patricia Pisters
Schizoanalysis and Ecosophy: Reading Deleuze and Guattari, edited by Constantin V. Boundas
Towards the Critique of Violence: Walter Benjamin and Giorgio Agamben, Brendan Moran and Carlo Salzani
Hegel, Logic and Speculation
Edited by
Paolo Diego Bubbio
Alessandro De Cesaris
Maurizio Pagano
Hager Weslati
Myriam Bienenstock is Professor Emeritus at the University of Tours after having held guest appointments at Frankfurt, Zrich, Mnster and Berlin. Her fields of research are Hegel and German idealism, the practical philosophy of German idealism and Jewish thought in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Her major French publications include Politique du jeune Hegel (18011804) (Presses Universitaire de France 1992) and two editions of Hegels Philosophie de lhistoire. She also co-edited (with A. Tosel) La raison pratique au 20e sicle: trajets et figures (LHarmattan 2004). In English, she is the author of Between Hegel and Marx: Eduard Gans on the Social Question, in Politics, Religion, and Art: Hegelian Debates, edited by Douglas Moggach.
Paolo Diego Bubbio is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Western Sydney University, Australia. His research is mainly in the area of post-Kantian philosophy. In particular, he is interested in the relation of the post-Kantian tradition (from Kant to Nietzsche) to the later movements of European philosophy. His books include Sacrifice in the Post-Kantian Tradition: Perspectivism, Intersubjectivity, and Recognition (SUNY Press 2014) and God and the Self in Hegel: Beyond Subjectivism (SUNY Press 2017). He co-edited several collections of essays and authored numerous journal articles on nineteenth-century European philosophy in journals such as British Journal for the History of Philosophy, Hegel Bulletin, International Journal of Philosophical Studies and International Journal for Philosophy of Religion.
Alessandro De Cesaris is Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Naples Federico II. He studied in Naples, Vercelli, Freiburg im Breisgau and Berlin (thanks to a DAAD scholarship). He published essays and articles on Aristotle, Hegel, Natorp, contemporary metaphysics and the philosophy of technology. He also translated Paul Natorps Habilitationsschrift on Descartess philosophy (Aracne 2016). His doctoral thesis addresses the problem of singularity in Hegels Logic and is about to be published in Italian.
Riccardo Dottori is Professor Emeritus at the University of Rome Tor Vergata. He studied philosophy at the University of Rome La Sapienza and at the University of Tbingen. He was the holder of an Alexander von Humboldt scholarship that allowed him to study with Hans Georg Gadamer in Heidelberg (19681972). He also studied at the University Paris X, under the supervision of Paul Ricoeur. Some of his most recent publications include A Century of Philosophy: Hans Georg Gadamer in Conversation with Riccardo Dottori (Bloomsbury 2004), Die Reflexion des Wirklichen (Mohr Siebeck 2006), Lart et le Jeu de lexistence (Hermann 2018)and Giorgio de Chirico: Immagini metafisiche (La Nave di Teseo 2018).
Elena Ficara is currently Junior Professor at the University of Paderborn and Feodor Lynen Research Fellow at the Graduate Centre of the City University of New York. Her works include the monograph Die Ontologie in der Kritik der reinen Vernunft (Knigshausen & Neumann 2006), the edited collection Contradictions: Logic, History, Actuality (De Gruyter 2014) and the articles Dialectic and Dialetheism, in History and Philosophy of Logic, 34/1 (2013), and Contrariety and Contradiction: Hegel and the Berliner Aristotelismus, in Hegel-Studien 49 (2015).
Guido Frilli, former student of the University of Pisa and of the Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, has completed his PhD in 2015 at the universities of Florence and of Paris 1 Panthon-Sorbonne, and is currently Postdoctoral Research Fellow in History of Philosophy at the University of Florence. His research and his main contributions focus on German idealism and on the connections between early modern philosophy and classical German thinking. He has recently published a book on reason and artifice in Hegel and Thomas Hobbes (Ragione, Desiderio, Artificio, Firenze University Press 2017) and is now investigating Friedrich Heinrich Jacobis conception of reason and the relevance of Spinozas philosophy for early Romanticism and Idealism.
Campbell Jones is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Auckland (New Zealand). He has published numerous works on Hegel, Marx and contemporary continental philosophy always in relation to concrete issues of political economy, such as entrepreneurship, the market, financialization, collective subjects, wealth taxes and the end of the world. He is currently writing a book to be entitled The Work of Others.
Lauri Kallio earned his PhD at the University of Helsinki in 2017. His dissertation (J.V. Snellmans Philosophie der Persnlichkeit) discusses the philosophy of the most remarkable Finnish Hegelian, J. V. Snellman (18061881). Kallios research interests are focused on the history of late German idealism (18401880) in Germany and in the Nordic countries, the history of the Berlin journal
Next page