1st Edition
Justice and Freedom in Hegel
Introduction Paolo Diego Bubbio and Andrew Buchwalter
1. Freedom From, Freedom To, and Freedom In: A Hegelian Account Arto Laitinen
2. Hegel’s Contextual Theory of Freedom: How “The Free Will Wills the Free Will” Thom Brooks
3. Recognition and Justice in Hegel’s Cognitivist Ascriptivism Michael Quante
4. Philia, Recognition, and Justice between Aristotle and Hegel Italo Testa
5. Teleological Right: Stages of Expressive Validity in Hegel’s Theory of Justice Dean Moyar
6. A Legal Concept of Justice Jean-François Kervégan
7. Freedom and a Just Society—Three Hegelian Variations Heikki Ikäheimo
8. Reciprocal Recognition and Hegel’s Embedded Conception of Practical Normativity Andrew Buchwalter
9. Weltgeschichte as Weltgericht: History and the Idea of the World in Hegel Angelica Nuzzo
10. Hegel’s Dialectic of Enlightenment: The French Revolution as an Emblem of Modernity Espen Hammer
11. Hegel’s Externalization of Justice: From the Rabble to True Personhood Paolo Diego Bubbio
12. Hegel on Race, Gender, and the Time and Space of Justice Kimberly Hutchings
13. Hegel on Justice and Nature Elaine P. Miller
Biography
Paolo Diego Bubbio is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Turin and Adjunct Associate Professor at Western Sydney University. He is the author of Sacrifice in the Post‑Kantian Tradition (2014) and God and the Self in Hegel: Beyond Subjectivism (2017) and the co‑editor of Hegel, Logic and Speculation (2019).
Andrew Buchwalter is Presidential Professor of Philosophy Emeritus at the University of North Florida. He is the author of Dialectics, Politics, and the Contemporary Value of Hegel’s Practical Philosophy (2011) and the editor of Hegel and Global Justice (2012), Hegel and Capitalism (2015), and Culture and Democracy (1992).
"Construed as a fundamental articulation of freedom, justice is a category infusing the totality of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right. Hegel's concept of the state includes a modern theory of justice, and the state itself is regarded as an objective embodiment of justice. This volume brings together important contributions that elucidate this field of inquiry from various intriguing perspectives."
Professor Klaus Vieweg, University of Jena, Germany






