Kantian legacies in German idealism
In: Routledge studies in nineteenth-century philosophy
1. Introduction: The Legacy of Kant in German IdealismGerad GentryPart I. The Emergence of a New Logical Method2. From Transcendental Logic to Speculative Logic (with appendix: G.W.F. Hegel: C. The Science, translated by Martin Shuster)Eckart Förster3. Hegel's Logic of PurposivenessGerad Gentry4. Kant and Hegel on the Drive of Reason: From Concept to Idea through InferenceDean Moyar 5.'With What Must Transcendental Philosophy Begin?' Kant and Hegel on Nothingness and IndeterminacyNicholas StangPart II. Time, Intuitive Understanding, and Practical Reason6. Kant and Hegel on TimeDina Emundts 7. Intuiting the Original Unity? -- Modality and Intellectual Intuition in Hölderlin's Urteil und SeinJohannes Haag 8. The Fate of Practical Reason: Kant and Schelling on Virtue, Happiness, and the Postulate of God's ExistenceKarin NisenbaumPart III. The Organization of Matter and Aesthetic Freedom9. Kant, Schelling and the Organization of MatterDalia Nassar10. Aesthetics and the Experience of Freedom: A Kantian Legacy in Hegel's Philosophy of ArtLydia Moland11. Aesthetic Conditions of Freedom: Friedrich Schiller as a Complicated KantianAnne Pollok