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Hegel's Dialectical Philosophy
Hegel was a German idealist who developed a comprehensive system known as absolute idealism. His work emphasizes that reality and history are driven by dialectical processes—where contradictions (thesis and antithesis) are resolved into higher truths (synthesis). For Hegel, this dynamic unfolding leads to the self-realization of reason or the World Spirit over time, with each stage of development paving the way for further progress.
View BranchAbsolute Idealism Explained
Absolute idealism, according to Hegel, is the view that all aspects of reality are interconnected as parts of a single, unfolding rational process. Rather than seeing the world as a collection of isolated objects or ideas, Hegel posits that everything—from individual consciousness to the broad sweep of history—is expressions of an all-encompassing Absolute or World Spirit.
This process unfolds dialectically, meaning that contradictions are not dead ends but necessary tensions that, when resolved, lead to higher levels of truth and self-awareness. Ultimately, absolute idealism holds that reality is fundamentally shaped by reason and that the development, in both thought and history, is the gradual self-realization of this underlying rational essence.
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