IT is curious that a book which professed only to be a study of Hegel, and deals with criticisms of the Hegelian method and principle current more than thirty years ago, should be reprinted to-day and ...
William Roper: “So, now you give the Devil the benefit of law!” Sir Thomas More: “Yes! What would you do? Cut a great road through the law to get after the Devil?” William Roper: “Yes, I’d cut down ...
The article explores the parallel between Upanishadic 'neti, neti' and Hegel's dialectic, highlighting their shared emphasis on negation and continuous inquiry to approach truth. Both systems reject ...
The documents here assembled are not meant as a contribution to the discussion for or against Marxism that has been conducted in this magazine for so many months. There is no use in discussing ...
Georg Hegel (1770–1831) occupies a rather strange position in the history of philosophical thought: he is both extremely influential and almost impossible for a non-specialist to understand. Is there ...
SOCIETIES change over time. For a healthy and progressive social transformation, civilised dissent is the key. Unfortunately, the space for dissent is shrinking with each passing day. Since dissent is ...
The purpose of this brief text is to stimulate interest in the well-known concepts of the dialectical method employed by Marx in his economic and historical works. It is intended to serve as an ...
MARXISM IS, in a nutshell, the theory and practice of working-class emancipation. Marxism is also a method of looking at the world. One of the most important foundations of Marx's method was ...
Upanishadic neti, neti, not this, not that, and Hegel’s dialectic, while distinct, share a common thread: the use of negation and movement to arrive at a deeper understanding of reality. Though ...