Table of contents for Hegel and the freedom of moderns / Domenico Losurdo ; translated from the Italian by Marella and Jon Morris.


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Contents Translators' Note 
000 Hegel Source Abbreviations 000 Preface to the Italian Edition 000 Part One. A Liberal, Secret 
Hegel? Chapter I. Searching for the "Authentic" Hegel 1. Censorship and Self-Censorship 000 2. 
Linguistic Self-Censorship and Theoretical Compromise 000 3. Private Dimension and 
Philosophical Dimension 000 4. Hegel . . . a Mason? 000 5. Esoteric and Exoteric History 000 6. 
Philosophical Arguments and Political "Facts" 000 7. An Interpretative "Misunderstanding" or a 
Real Contradiction? 000 Chapter II. The Philosophies of Right: A Turning Point or Continuity 1. 
Reason and Actuality 000 2. The Power of the Sovereign 000 3. One Turn, Two Turns, or No Turn 
at All 000 Part Two. Hegel, Marx, and the Liberal Tradition Chapter III. Contractualism and the 
Modern State 000 1. Anticontractualism = Antiliberalism? 000 2. Contractualism and the Doctrine 
of Natural Law 000 3. Liberal Anticontractualism 000 4. The Celebration of Nature and The 
Ideology of Reactionism 000 5. Hegel and Feudal, Proto-Bourgeois Contractualism 000 6. 
Contractualism and the Modern State 000 Chapter IV. Conservative or Liberal? A False Dilemma 1. 
Bobbio's Dilemma 000 2. Authority and Freedom 000 3. State and Individual 000 4. The Right to 
Resistance 000 5. The Right of Extreme Need and Individual Rights 000 6. Formal and Substantive 
Freedom 000 7. Interpretative Categories and Ideological Presuppositions 000 Chapter V. Hegel 
and the Liberal Tradition: Two Opposing Interpretations of History 1. Hegel and Revolutions 000 
2. Revolutions from the Bottom-Up or from the Top-Down 000 3. Revolution According to the 
Liberal Tradition 000 4. Patricians and Plebeians 000 5. Monarchy and Republic 000 6. The 
Repression of the Aristocracy and the March Toward Freedom 000 7. Anglophobia and 
Anglophilia 000 8. Hegel, England, and the Liberal Tradition 000 9. Equality and Freedom 000 
Chapter VI. The Intellectual, Property, and the Social Question 1. Theoretical Categories and 
Immediate Political Options 000 2. The Individual and Institutions 000 3. Institutions and the 
Social Question 000 4. Labor and Otium 000 5. Intellectuals and Property-Owners 000 6. Property 
and Political Representation 000 7. Intellectuals and Craftsmen 000 8. A Banausic, Plebeian Hegel? 
000 9. The Social Question and Industrial Society 000 Part Three. Legitimacy and Contradictions 
of Modernity Chapter VII. Right, Violence, and Notrecht 1. War and the Right to Property: Hegel 
and Locke 000 2. From the Ius Necessitatis to the Right of Necessity 000 3. The Contradictions of 
Modern Economic Development 000 4. Notrecht and Self-Defense: Locke, Fichte, and Hegel 000 
5. "Negative Judgment," "Negatively Infinite Judgment," and "Rebellion" 000 6. Notrecht, 
Ancien Régime, and Modernity 000 7. The Starving Man and the Slave 000 8. Ius Necessitatis, Ius 
Resistentiae, Notrecht 000 9. The Conflicts of Right with Moral Intention and Extreme Need 000 
10. An Unsolved Problem 000 Chapter VIII. "Agora" and "Schole:" Rousseau, Hegel, and the 
Liberal Tradition 1. The Image of Ancient Times in France and Germany 000 2. Cynics, Monks, 
Quakers, Anabaptists, and Sansculottes 000 3. Rousseau, the "Poor People's Grudge," and 
Jacobinism 000 4. Politics and Economics in Rousseau and Hegel 000 5. The Social Question and 
Taxation 000 6. State, Contract, and Joint-Stock Company 000 7. Christianity, Human Rights, and 
the Community of Citoyens 000 8. The Liberal Tradition and Criticism of Rousseau and Hegel 000 
9. Defense of the Individual and Criticism of Liberalism 000 Chapter IX. School, Division of 
Labor, and Modern Man's Freedom 1. School, State, and the French Revolution 000 2. 
Compulsory Education and Freedom of Conscience 000 3. School, State, Church, and Family 000 
4. The Rights of Children 000 5. School, Stability, and Social Mobility 000 6. Professions and the 
Division of Labor 000 7. Division of Labor and the Banality of Modernity: Schelling, 
Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche 000 Chapter X. Moral Tension and the Primacy of Politics 1. 
Modern World and the Waning of Moral Heroes 000 2. Inconclusiveness and Narcissism in 
Moral-Religious Precepts 000 3. Modern World and the Restriction of the Moral Sphere 000 4. 
Hegel and Kant 000 5. Hegel, Schleiermacher, and the Liberal Tradition 000 6. Hegel, Burke, and 
Neo-Aristotelian Conservatism 000 7. Hegel, Aristotle, and the Rejection of Solipsistic Escape 000 
8. The French Revolution and the Celebration of Ethicality 000 9. Morality, Ethicality, and Modern 
Freedom 000 10. Hegel's Ethical Model and Contemporary Actuality 000 Chapter XI. Legitimacy 
of the Modern and Rationality of the Actual 1. The "Querelle des Anciens, des Modernes," . . . 
and of the Ancient Germans 000 2. Rejection of Modernity, Cult of Heroes, and Anti-Hegelian 
Polemic 000 3. Kant, Kleist, Schopenhauer, and Nietzsche 000 4. Modernity and the Uneasiness of 
the Liberal Tradition 000 5. Philistinism, Statism, and Modern Standardization 000 6. The 
Rationality of the Actual and the Difficult Balance between Legitimation and Criticism of 
Modernity 000 Part Four. The Western World, Liberalism, and the Interpretation of Hegel's 
Thought Chapter XII. The Second Thirty Years War and the "Philosophical Crusade" against 
Germany 1. Germans, "Goths," "Huns," and "Vandals" 000 2. The Great Western Purge 000 3. 
The Transformation of the Liberal Western World 000 4. An Imaginary Western World, an 
Imaginary Germany 000 5. Hegel Faces the Western Tribunal 000 6. Ilting and the Liberal 
Rehabilitation of Hegel 000 7. Lukács and the Burden of National Stereotypes 000 Chapter XIII. 
Liberalism, Conservatism, the French Revolution, and Classic German Philosophy 1. Allgemeinheit 
and Égalité 000 2. The English Origins of German Conservatism 000 3. A Selective Anglophilia 
000 4. Tracing the Origins of Social Darwinism and Fascist Ideology 000 5. Beyond National 
Stereotypes 000 6. Burke and the History of European Liberalism 000 7. Burke's School of 
Thought and Classic German Philosophy 000 8. Hegel and the Legacy of the French Revolution 
000 9. The Conflicts of Freedom 000 Notes 000 Bibliography 000 Index 000




Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication: Hegel, Georg Wilhelm Friedrich, 1770-1831, Political science Germany History 19th century, Liberalism