Table of contents for Lectures on the philosophy of religion / Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel ; edited by Peter C. Hodgson ; translated by R.F. Brown, P.C. Hodgson, and J.M. Stewart, with the assistance of H.S. Harris.


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EDITORIAL INTRODUCTION                                1
1. Text and Translation                         1
2. The Sources of "Determinate Religion"        3
3. The Structure and Development of
"Determinate Religion"                       12
a. Hegel's Lecture Manuscript                13
b. The Lectures of 1824                      30
c. The Lectures of 1827                      56
d. The Lectures of 1831                      72
Comparative Analysis of the Structure of
"Determinate Religion"                    88
PART II. DETERMINATE RELIGION
HEGEL'S LECTURE MANUSCRIPT                           93
Introduction                                      93
A. Immediate Religion                             98
a. The Metaphysical Concept of God            100
b. Concrete Representation                    104
c. The Side of Self-Consciousness:
Subjectivity, Cultus                        109
Brief Reflection on the State, Freedom, Reason  121
B. The Religion of Sublimity and Beauty          122
a. Metaphysical Concept                       127
b. Concrete Representation, Form of the Idea  134
a. The Religion of Sublimity               134
3. The Religion of Necessity               141
c. Cultus                                     152
a. The Religion of Sublimity               152
p. The Religion of Beauty                  160
a. Spirit of the Cultus;
Religious Self-Consciousness          160
Q. The Cultus Itself                    168
C. The Religion of Expediency or Understanding   190
a. Abstract Concept                           194
The Teleological Proof of God's Existence   199
b. Configuration or Representation of the
Divine Essence                             206
c. The More Specific Nature of These Powers
and Deities in General                     211
THE LECTURES OF 1824                                233
Introduction                                     233
A. Immediate Religion, or Nature Religion        238
Introduction                                  238
a. The Original Condition                  239
b. Immediate Religion in General           249
a. The Metaphysical Concept of God      250
I. The Representation of God            266
'. The Forms of Nature Religion         268
1. The Religion of Magic                      272
a. Singular Self-Consciousness as
Power over Nature                       272
b. Formal Objectification of the Divine Object  278
c. The Religion of Ancient China           299
d. The Religion of Being-Within-Self
(Buddhism, Lamaism)                     303
2. The Religion of Phantasy (Hinduism)        316
a. The Representation of God               316
b. The Cultus                              335
3. The Religion of the Good or of Light
(Persian Religion)                         352
4. Transition from Nature Religion to
Spiritual Religion: The Religion of
the Enigma (Egyptian Religion)             358
a. The Representation of God               360
b. Cultus in the Form of Art               373
B. The Religions of Spiritual Individuality     381
Introduction                                 381
a. Division of the Subject                 381
b. The Metaphysical Concept of God:
Cosmological and Teleological Proofs    390
c. The More Concrete Definition of God     421
1. The Religion of Sublimity (Jewish Religion)  423
a. God as the One                          425
b. The Form of Divine Self-Determination   426
c. The Cultus                              441
2. The Religion of Beauty (Greek Religion)   455
a. The Concept in General                  458
b. The Content and Shape of Divine
Representation                          459
c. The Cultus                              478
3. The Religion of Expediency (Roman Religion)  498
a. The Concept of Necessity and
External Purpose                        499
b. The Configuration of the Gods           501
c. The Cultus                              507
THE LECTURES OF 1827                               513
Introduction                                    513
A. Immediate Religion, or Nature Religion       521
Introduction                                 521
a. The Original Condition                  521
b. The Forms of Nature Religion            531
1. The Religion of Magic                     535
a. The Concept of Magic                    535
b. Less Developed Religions of Magic       541
c. The State Religion of the Chinese Empire
and the Dao                             547
2. The Religion of Being-Within-Self
(Buddhism, Lamaism)                       562
3. The Hindu Religion                       579
a. The One Substance                      582
b. The Multiplicity of Powers             583
c. The Cultus                             595
d. Transition to the Next Stage           604
4. The Religions of Transition              609
a. The Religion of Light (Persian Religion)  609
Transition to the Next Stage           621
b. Egyptian Religion                      625
B. The Elevation of the Spiritual above the Natural:
The Religion of the Greeks and the Jews     640
1. The Religion of Beauty, or Greek Religion  642
a. The Divine Content                     643
b. The Cultus                             662
2. The Religion of Sublimity, or Jewish Religion  669
a. The Unity of God                       670
b. Divine Self-Determination and Representation 671
c. The Cultus                             686
C. The Religion of Expediency: Roman Religion  687
1. The Concept of Purposiveness             688
2. The Configuration of the Gods            690
3. The Cultus                               696
APPENDIXES
THE TELEOLOGICAL PROOF ACCORDING TO
THE LECTURES OF 1831                              703
EXCERPTS BY DAVID FRIEDRICH STRAUSS FROM A
TRANSCRIPT OF THE LECTURES OF 1831                721
LOOSE SHEETS RELATING TO HEGEL'S LECTURE MANUSCRIPT  761
PAGINATION OF THE ORIGINAL SOURCES FOR THIS EDITION  767
BIBLIOGRAPHY OF SOURCES FOR HEGEL'S
PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION                            783



Library of Congress subject headings for this publication: Religion Philosophy