Presentation

The commemoration of the 250th anniversary of the birth of Hegel provides an ideal opportunity to discuss Hegel’s groundbreaking interpretation of the meaning, task, and systematic structure of philosophy. The event will focus on philosophy’s relationship with other forms of human knowledge, especially with those considered scientific endeavours.
Hegel famously claimed that philosophy should no longer be “love of wisdom”, but rather become “real knowledge” or “science”. According to the dialectic of thought-categories and of particular scientific methods, the entirety of knowledge ought to develop into a “circle of circles”, centred on philosophy and philosophical sciences, but also open to dialogue with
other disciplines.

The III German-Latin American Congress on Hegel’s Philosophy aims to debate the current relevance of Hegel’s project. Hegel’s thought resonates nowadays not only in many fields of philosophy, but also within the ongoing epistemological debates of other sciences: in the awareness of the historicity of thought, in the social dimension of rationality, in our
understanding of the history of art or the history of philosophy, in the critique of the principles of modernity, or in the foundations of a postmodern age.

The Congress is organised by the German-Latin American Research and Doctoral Network in Philosophy (FILORED). We invite the international philosophical community to participate and submit proposals in one of the three official languages: German, Spanish and Portuguese. We will exceptionally accept papers in English, French, or Italian.


Themes and Sections:

  • Section I:      Hegel and philosophical knowledge
  • Section II:     Hegel and the science of logic
  • Section III:    Hegel and the history of philosophy
  • Section IV:    Hegel in the context of classical German philosophy
  • Section V:     Hegel and the natural sciences
  • Section VI:    Hegel and the human sciences
  • Section VII:   Hegel and law
  • Section VIII:  Hegel and the philosophy of history
  • Section IX:    Hegel and art
  • Section X:     Hegel and religion
  • Section XI:    Hegel and the plurality of knowledge and its forms
  • Section XII:   Hegel and his critics

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