Hegel-Archiv

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The Hegel Archives (German: Hegel-Archiv) were founded in 1958 in North Rhine-Westphalia to encourage historical-critical efforts to study the collected works of Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel.

The North-Rhine/Westphalian Academy of Sciences and the Felix Meiner Publishing House, Hamburg, are publishers of the collected works of Hegel. Since 1968 the Hegel Archives has served as a facility for the faculty of Philosophy, Education and Journalism of the Ruhr University Bochum.

Research[]

Apart from publishing activity, the Hegel Archives also promotes Hegel research. For example, it coordinates the following efforts:

  1. the yearbook of Hegel studies (Hegel Studien) that since 1961 has provided a forum for research papers and a new bibliography;
  2. its own writings and conferences;
  3. a special library building that covers the work of Hegel's students;
  4. an entire research literature beside Hegel's own works; and
  5. Hegel's own monographs.

This library is open to Hegel researchers and international guests as well.

Director[]

The Hegel Archives was founded in 1958 by Otto Pöggeler, who is a German representative of phenomenology and hermeneutics.

The Director of the Hegel Archives is actually Professor , who is also the Editor of the publication of the Collected Works of Hegel. He is also the author of Reason in Religion: the Foundation of Religion in Hegel's Philosophy (1986).

Professor Jaeschke also assisted Dr. Peter C. Hodgson and a team of scholars at the University of California at Berkeley, who, in 1990, published a new translation of Hegel's Lectures on the Philosophy of Religion (1818-1831). This publication radically changed the direction of 20th-century Hegel studies, according to some researchers in the Hegel Society of America.

In the review Hegel Studien were published works by Otto Pöggeler, Ernst Bloch, Hans-Georg Gadamer, Martin Heidegger, Karl Löwith, Heinz Heimsoeth, Dieter Henrich, Annemarie Gethmann-Siefert, , Robert Brandom, John Sallis, Robert Pippin.[1]

Notes[]

  1. ^ "Contents of Hegel Studien". Archived from the original on 2015-03-02. Retrieved 2017-08-14.

External links[]


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