No. III-1, December 2004
Index
- Introduction
- Hegel's Logic of Freedom
- Why Hegel's Concept is Not the Essence of Things
- Hegel's Anti-Spinozism: The Transition to Subjective Logic and the End of Classical Metaphysics
- The One and the Concept: On Hegel's Reading of Plato's Parmenides
- History, Concepts, and Normativity in Hegel
- The Concept and its Double: Power and Powerlessness in Hegels Subjective Logic
- Ways of Being Singular: The Logic of Individuality
- The Types of Universals and the Forms of Judgment
- Why are There Four Hegelian Judgments?
- Hegel's Refutation of Rational Egoism, in True Infinity and the Idea
- Hegel's science of logic in an analytic mode
- Cognition and Finite Spirit
- The end of Hegel's Logic: Absolute Idea as Absolute Method
- The Antepenultimacy of the Beginning in Hegel's Science of Logic
- The system of syllogism
- The Prosecution of Cybergripers Under the Lanham ACT
- The More Things Change the More They Stay the Same: Mr. Tutt and the Distrust of Lawyers in the Early Twentieth Century